Monday, September 30, 2013

Heavenly Beings on an Earthly Adventure - a Guest Post by Catherine Patterson

I think every person on earth has that one (at least one) human being to whom they are very emotionally attached, who lives very far away. That person who they wish lived next door, or even that they wish was their sibling so they could be with them all the time. Some of us have more than one person like that. Some of us have many. And no matter how many people you feel this way about, it's hard (trust me: I've fallen into all three categories). Sometimes it leaves you feeling emotionally worn, exhausted, and beaten. Sometimes it leaves you feeling emotionally broken, torn, or shredded. The hole in your life where they should be can stab or it can ache; but however it hurts, hurt it always does. We attempt to allay the pain by writing letters, sending emails, talking on the phone, chatting, skyping, and everything else, but nothing really kills that persistent pain except actually being together.


Why the pain? Isn't it absurd? Why can't we either let go of our longings to be with that person (or those persons), or else quiet our fussy heart by reassuring it that we'll see them again sometime? I've tried both these strategies, and both offer only temporary respite. They last only as long as I can deceive myself into thinking that I don't miss them.


Well, after struggling for many years, I have finally reached this conclusion: we are not meant to get rid of those feelings. Those feelings aren't pointless pain, they are evidence of something more profound. There is supposed to be pain when we are away from those we love, because we are not beings of this world. If we were, we would adapt to the point where we could kill these feelings; but no. We are heavenly beings on a mortal adventure. Ultimately, we are meant to be with those we love forever. No goodbyes. No endings. And no unbearable distance. It will be perfect.


The pain really isn't fun at all. But we push through it, work through it, and try to be grateful for it, because it's another reminder of Heaven, and what is to come.




***
Bio thing:

Catherine is fairly certain that she was born with a pen in her hand (although her mom denies it). Writing is a little bit of an addiction for her, and she does it as much as possible. (To read more of her writing, you can visit her blog here!) She also enjoys studying, being quirky, and being in the company of her cool friends, among other things. She currently resides in a lovely corner of Pennsylvania with her amazing parents and awesome little brothers. She is super honored to have had this chance to write for Dallin's blog, and hopes what she said made a difference. :)

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Today My Monster Came For a Visit

Today my monster came for a visit - and I still wasn't stronger than he was.
But I'm getting stronger.
He came in the form of a lost family member. Not a dead family member, but one that decided to leave. I will not judge whether the decision was right or wrong - it is not my place. But that decision did hurt me very bad. And just as I started to come up from the pain of that beating, he came back. This time in the form of lost work. See, last week I decided that being 3 weeks behind on my schoolwork was far enough, so I did 4 weeks of school work and got caught up. But I realized today that I lost about 1/3 of that because of a document that didn't save. Oh, that was so discouraging. On top of that, I've been struggling with motivation anyways, so at that point I just wanted to go cry.
But now I'm tired of feeling beat up.
I just don't want to stay down any longer.
Those monsters have had their turns and it is time for them to move on. Maybe they'll come back, but for now they need to leave. I don't have time to be beat down. I don't have energy to spend dwelling on the pain. What I do have is hope. The hope that always follows the beatings. The hope that comes in the form of a friend or an idea. The hope that comes in the form of my God. You see, hope never leaves completely. Sometimes you just can't see it waiting to come comfort you.
Never lose sight of hope, my friends.
Everything will turn out just fine.
Love,
Dallin

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

The Dentist - A Guest Post-Story thingamabob By Dallin Flake :)



I enter the quiet office, soft chairs and comforting carpet. The receptionist smiles at me. “Good afternoon!” she says brightly. For a moment my fears are soothed, and I am calm. “You have an appointment at 2:30, yes?” she questions. I nod my head in confirmation. The fear is back. I am afraid to speak, to smile, to show my teeth, to show the plaque and tartar which have accumulated since my last visit. The receptionist points to the back. “First room on the left.” I nod my head in acknowledgement, and walk to the requested area.

The dentist is waiting.

“Hi, have a seat,” she says, gesturing to the chair of torture. I follow her instructions. “It’s been about two years since we’ve seen you, hasn’t it?” she says. “Yes,” I reply shortly. “Well, let’s hope you’ve been brushing, then!” she says. I avoid her gaze, knowing that if she can see my eyes, she will know the truth: I only brush on occasion when I remember to. It’s at this time I notice the tray of torture instruments; sharp, metal hooks that should definitely not go inside a person’s mouth lie upon it. She swings it away, out of my sight.

The x-ray is coming. I remember it from my previous visit. Sure enough, the dentist straps a lead coat onto me thick enough to stop a bullet. “Say ah,” she directs. I do so, and she sticks an object into my mouth at the back of my throat. It activates my gag reflex and I try desperately not to cough it out. After she swivels the machine to the side of my mouth, she leaves the room. I heard a click and a buzz. She repositions the object in my mouth, then does the other side. She takes whatever the thing is out of my mouth, clearly used to the large amount of saliva on the plastic wrapping.

“How’s the rest of your family?” she asks. “They’re doing well,” I answer. The dentist points to the x-rays of my mouth on the laptop beside me. “You have your father’s teeth,” she says. I can only imagine what she does in her spare time - perhaps studying the teeth formations of her victims. “Mmhm,” I mutter. The dentist continues to bustle around, then swivels the tray of torture in front of me. I can already feel her shoving the instruments into my tender mouth.

After positioning the chair so I’m leaning back, the dentist swings the bright, blinding light into my face. It hurts just to look at it, like staring at the sun. “All right, open wide,” I am told. I do so obediently. I close my eyes, shutting out the light, waiting for an excruciating few moments. First, she presses down on each of my teeth in turn, checking for a reaction of pain, I assume. I give none, as I cannot feel my teeth. Then she selects a different tool off her tray. I can feel the scraping against my teeth, as the dentist scratches clear the built up tartar and plaque from my last visit.

And then the pain begins.

I can feel the sharp hook like a knife against my tender gums, poking and clawing and tearing it raw. At first the pain is minimal, in only one area of my mouth. Then she moves on to more teeth, picking away at my tender pink gums. Saliva begins to accumulate in the back of my mouth. I dare not move my tongue, for I am sure that the spit tastes of blood. After a few minutes, the dentist inserts a sort of vacuum nozzle into my mouth, and sprays my tenderized jaw with a few squirts of water. I can feel the blood washing away, but the pain remains, as prevalent as ever. “Close,” the dentists directs. I do so, watching something pink go up into the nozzle. I shut my eyes in horror.

And she continues.

As she does so, I want to scream out in pain. To cry out, to end the suffering! Mouths were not made for this prodding and poking and tearing! Mouths were made for eating delicious food, for speaking words of goodness and mercy, for soft kisses. As the dentist scrapes off more impurities, the pain spreads until my whole jaw is ablaze with it. Moving to my front teeth, she places a gauze pad in front of my teeth. This, I know, means blood in enormous amounts. “You doing okay?” the dentist questions. I cannot give in to this inhumanity. I will not give up as she wants me to. I will not show the pain. I lie, giving a thumbs up. “You’re one tough cookie,” she remarks, beginning the work on my top front teeth.

Fifteen minutes later, it is finished. I sit up, saliva and blood mixing in my mouth. I cannot speak until I spit this horrendous much out of my mouth. Grimacing, I push the mixture into my cheek. “Can I spit this out?” I ask desperately, gesturing to the sink. “Go ahead,” she replies. “There are cups to the right.” I empty my mouth of the gunk, highly disturbed to see my saliva bright, raspberry red. I wash my mouth out 4 times, not satisfied until my spittle turns a nice, pale brown. I turn around, gums still in pain, to see pads saturated with blood upon her torture tray. I shudder in horror.

An hour later, my gums still sore, I reflect on the past incident. Perhaps the dentist had my best interests at heart - or perhaps not. Perhaps I should spend more time brushing my teeth, and definitely more flossing. I may even have to resort to mouthwash if it means avoiding this type of torture. But, as we all know, the lessons of the past are wasted upon the young, and the next morning I completely forget to brush my teeth.

I must be asking for cavities.

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Today I Learned Something From a Fortune Cookie

My friends, I have to say that sometimes, fortune cookies are profound. :)
I went to Panda Express with some family today, and got some awesome food. Seriously. It was good. :D But something that was better than my food was the fortune I received. It said,
"Look towards the future, but not so far as to miss today."
This is something that I need. I spend so much time thinking about what I'm going to be one day, one day that may not even exist for me in the future. Maybe I won't make it to the day I think and dream about. Today is what determines tomorrow's success, but without today, tomorrow will never happen. Tomorrow is good to think about, but today is the time to act. Now go spread joy.
Love,
Dallin :)

Thursday, August 29, 2013

To My Downtrodden Friends

My friends, sometimes life is just plain hard. Sometimes it is going to be a monster. And this monster is going to beat you down to nothing, and let you up a little just so that it can hit you again and again until you fall back down again. Then, after you believe that you have nothing left, that monster will leave. Life will no longer be in the form of a monster, but in the form of a person, or idea, and it will come back and pick you up again. And you will heal, and forgive that monster for what it did to you, and you will be stronger. Then life will change from that person or idea and once again become that monster. But this time the monster won't look so big and scary, because you will be stronger, and more experienced, but it will still be stronger than you. And it will once again beat you until you believe you are broken. But you will learn, and grow stronger. And so the cycle will continue until that glorious day when the monster returns, and you look at it with all the certainty and confidence that comes with past adversity and say, "No more." And that monster will look back at you with all the fear in the heart of a damned soul, because it knows that from that point, it will never be stronger than you again. Then, on that day, you will be unbreakable. Yes, the monster will hurt you still, that is inevitable. But it will never again break you. It will never again look down at your mangled and bloodied soul and laugh with that deep, evil laugh that always used to scare you so badly. You are then free of this monster.
So, to my poor, downtrodden friends: please don't give up. Please don't let this monster destroy your life, because it will if you let it. It cannot hurt you past what you can bear. So no matter how painful the beatings become, persevere, and know that there is someone waiting to help you at the end of the beatings. Please know that God has a purpose for you, so keep the faith! And know that God is there. He anxiously watches, hoping that you will make the right decisions, wishing that you wouldn't have to go through as much pain as you do to become as strong as you need to be, weeping because of your anguish. Please know you are loved. And, if you believe that nobody in the world loves you, know that I do. But, more than I ever could, God does. And if you don't believe in God, please do some honest, open minded study of the Bible and the Book of Mormon and if you really are honest and sincere in your study, and you ask God for yourself, you will come to know for yourself of the truth that God lives.
May God be with you through the pain you must endure, and may you learn to defeat your monster quickly.
Love,
Dallin Ward

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Home

My friends, the last two weeks have been quite an adventure. :) I spent a week in Veyo, Utah at Elevation (A camp that my school does 3 times during the year) and it turned out to be one of the best weeks of my life. I went climbing, repelling, ascending, swimming, caught crawdads, played a ton of koosh (Which, by the way, is one of the coolest variations of dodgeball that has ever been played :D ), did a service project, did a super intense simulation, spent a night alone in a canyon with only the clothes on my back, ran a 5:25 mile, spent 4 hours alone on a large rock overlooking a clear stream while nature moved around me, did yoga and meditation, had deep philosophical conversations with some of the coolest people alive, and with the same people stayed up until 2 in the morning laughing my head off. Then, after it was all over, we met again at Cafe Rio for one last meal with each other, and went and asked hair salon people for mosquito itch cream in a French accent and then watched the confusion on their faces while we accidentally busted out laughing. Needless to say, it was an amazing week. :D
Then, almost on a whim, I stayed another week in Utah with some cousins of mine, and went to BYU education week. Oh, that was so wonderful. I got to see the BYU campus which, by the way is amazing. I got to observe spectacular people such as John Bytheway and Hank Smith as they made me laugh, cry, and feel everything in between while helping me to realize what I need to do with my life, and how to change to fulfill my mission in life. I got to meet so many new people, people whom I have learned to love. I learned how to smile and really be happy, like, sincere happiness, nothing fake. It was funny, and kind of sad to see how shocked people were when I asked them how they were, and really cared to know instead of asking simply to be polite. I learned how to do the two step, the fox trot, the New York hustle, the three step, and the cha-cha in a dance class and at the dance itself. I met a girl named Amber who seemed happier than even I, which I did not think to be possible. I met a guy named David who taught me that appearances mean nothing, it is what's inside that counts. And I met so many other people who changed my perspective on life. I went to Legends Grill (Which I highly recommend) every day except Monday for lunch, and I learned that if you treat people with respect and kindness, they will treat you the same. I walked into Legends Grill on Wednesday and confidently walked right up the the cash register with a huge grin on my face to order my food. I walked up to the man at the counter and I said, "Hello Sir! How are you?" and then proceeded to order my food. Oh, the smile I saw on his face when I walked in the next day made me so happy. :D I walked in the next day and before I could say a thing, his face lit up and he said, "Hello Sir! How are you?" And he meant it! He really did! Oh, happiness is contagious, and it is something that I and determined to spread. :) It was so great to watch a girl's face, a girl who had sat on her phone in a corner for most of the dance, it was so amazing to watch how she smiled when I asked her to dance. And playing Monopoly with your cousins while making up new, fantastic rules as you go? That's the best. :) This, as well as the week before, was an amazing week. :)
But, yesterday morning when I woke up, I realized that it was time. It was time to come home. As much as I love adventures, I would choose home over endless adventures any day. I love my family too much to be gone for that long. Because I missed some things too much. I missed holding baby Nathan. I missed Rachel yelling "Dallin! Dance with me! :D" I missed how Rebekah would run up to me yelling "Dallin!" when I would walk in the door and give me a great big hug. I missed Ben's smile that never goes away. I missed Enoch's hilarious jokes. I missed talking with Spencer. I missed my Mom's muffins, and her loving care. I missed working with my Dad, and the example he sets for me.
Put simply, I missed home.
Now, I'm home, and I'm very happy to be here - it's where I belong. :)

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Remembering

 My friends, how are you going to be remembered?
What is going to be the first thing to pop into a person's head when they hear your name?
I, for one, want to be remembered as a person with a sincere love of all people, and no regrets. I do not want to leave this life wishing that I had said or done something. I want to be remembered as a teacher, a mentor, a guide and an enlightener. I want people to say at my funeral, "Dallin was a man who changed my life."
So, having said that, allow me to exclaim to the world.
I don't care who you are - I love you. I want to help you. I want you to succeed. I sincerely hope that I have not hurt you. I pray for you. I want you to be a better person than I am.
So, when I tell you that I love you, I mean it. And I say it so that if something happens to you or I, I do not have regrets about not telling you how wonderful you are, and how much I love you often enough.
I refuse to leave this life with any amount of shame.
God bless you, my friends.
Now go spread joy.
Love,
Dallin

Saturday, August 10, 2013

The Brilliance of Children

My friends, children are brilliant. It's just that simple, they know how to live life. And then, as we grow from children and become adults, we learn self destructive habits that, when we finally regain our senses, we spend the rest of our lives lives fixing. One of these habits is the constant need for stimulation of some kind to keep our brains moving. We desire this stimulation for many reasons. Maybe it is because we hate to spend quiet time examining our character - because that hurts. Maybe it is because we have regrets. Maybe we are dealing with other kinds of pain. But, how will your inner brilliance release itself if you don't ever make time for it to grow? This, my friends, this is why children are brilliant. See, they haven't confined themselves yet to this addiction to stimulation yet. They go outside, they spend time alone.
They think.
Today, my little brother Ben came to me with a thought. He is 9 years old. Here's what he said, (With slight revision for clarity. :) )
"Dallin, the word natural shouldn't exist. See, Jesus Christ was a man, right? And he created the world. So, technically, the world is all artificial."
Wow! That's brilliant! Let me tell you, in the world of stimulation that I spend far too much time in, I would have never thought that deep. This is the kind of thinking that has changed the world.
So, let me challenge you. This is something that I intend to do as well. Be more like a child. Spend time alone examining your character and the deep concepts and mysteries of life. And, if you can't stand to be alone with yourself, fix that. Whatever is making it painful to be alone - fix it. I promise that you will be more at peace if you do. And, who knows? Maybe the next thought that will change the world is waiting inside of your head for a chance to cross your mind.
Now go do.
Love,
Dallin :)

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Thank You

Hey guys. :)
I just want to say thanks. :) It doesn't really matter what for, just so that you know, I mean it.
Thank you.
Thank you for all the good ways that you have influenced me, whether you know it or not. By reading this, you encourage me to write more, and make me feel like what I do is noticed by at least you. So, for that, thank you.
Thank you for taking time out of your busy day to read my posts, and for caring enough to leave a comment now and then.
Thank you for being who you are, and for your efforts to become a better person in a world full of sin.
Thank you for all the good you have done for me without my noticing. And, I'm sorry that I did not notice.
And for anything else where thanks is due, thank you.
God bless,
Dallin :)

Thursday, July 25, 2013

The Reality in America's Nightmare

This post will take a while to go through due to the amount of media which you will watch when you read the post. You will need about a half hour of free time to read this, so don't do it on short time. :)

Before you go any further, listen to this.
Paul Harvey: If I Were the Devil
The first time listening to that, the purpose was to understand the idea.
Listen to it once more to let it sink in.
That was recorded in 1965. Look around today. Everything that he said would happen is coming to pass. There is a news story for almost every one of those predictions.
My friends,
America is dying.
My country. My home. It is dying.
Glenn Beck recently did a show on this topic. Watch parts one and two below.
No Right and Wrong, Just Agenda: Part One
No Right and Wrong, Just Agenda: Part Two
You and I, we're in trouble.
The Devil himself is doing his best to corrupt us. Will we stand idly by while he proceeds to do so? What are you going to do? How are you going to resist his ever so tempting lures? You will never make a good change in the world if you let him into your life, and you were made to make a change. So keep him out. Don't just resist, but resist with vigor. And if he does get a hold of you, you had better be kicking and screaming all the way down to Hell. Because you deserve better than the Devil can provide there.
Stay strong, my friends.
"Be the change you wish to see in the world."
-Gandhi

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

I Am Useful

Today, while at work, I realized something profound to me.
I am useful.
I am important.
I am needed.
Say that out loud. Believe it. You are useful, important, and needed. I don't care what you do, don't do, say, or don't say, you are useful, important, and needed in some way and to somebody.
I am useful because I'm a hard worker.
I am important because I am a Son of the Highest King.
I am needed because there is work to do, and I'm willing to do it.
In what ways are you useful? What about important? Needed?
Think about it.
Focus on the good.
Find how you're useful, why you're important, and where you're needed.
And then go and do.
This is how you live life with purpose.
Now get off of your computer and go live life. :)