This Young Woman
By Brandon Boey
Editor’s
note: This story was submitted by Jeanmarie Cook, who is the
first counselor in the stake Primary presidency of the Tucson
Arizona West Stake. She lives in the Wildwood Park Ward.
She was a shy young girl. She
had attended a private Catholic school for more than eight
years. Upon eighth grade graduation, her parents told her
that they could not afford the tuition necessary at the only
Catholic high school in town, so she would have to attend
the local public school where she lived.
She didn’t know a single person
at that school. There were so many students attending the
high school that they had to hold classes in double sessions
— meaning that half the students started school early in the
morning and the other half started later just to get everybody
to fit. She was one of more than 600 students in her freshman
class. Her mother introduced her to the daughter of a friend
she worked with a few weeks before school started, at that
was the only other girl she knew.
She had never been taught by
a man. She had never worn anything to school but a uniform.
The last time she had boys in her classroom was in the sixth
grade. She’d never had a locker. In fact, she had never even
eaten in a cafeteria. Yet there she was, eating her lunch
alone in the crowded lunch room. The halls were filled with
strangers as she made her way to each class — which itself
was new practice since she never had to change classrooms
before. Her freshman year consisted of math, English, social
studies, PE, and science. And then there was her one refuge
each and every day — choir.
She felt it the very first moment
she walked into his choir class. She felt peace. She felt
joy. She had found a sanctuary in the midst of all the confusion
around her. Her teacher, Mr. Thompson, was like a breath of
fresh air. He was charming, and she loved to sing. She had
been singing her whole life and music had always been a part
of her home environment. She grew up with it. She was eager
to be taught. She practically ran to his class every day —
it felt like a warm blanket around a shivering child. She
had never been in a choir with so many boys and girls. It
was like magic to hear the harmony as voices blended. It was
only a beginning class but, to her, it was the very reason
she even came to school at all sometimes.
The fears, the newness and isolation
of her freshman year slowly, but surely, began to dissipate.
She became more confident, more social in her interactions
with other students and gradually immersed herself in the
culture she so desperately wanted to be included in. She developed
friendships and felt more and more comfortable as that first
year progressed. Choir continued to be her favorite class
and she loved to be able to perform in concerts for her family.
She longed to be a better musician so that she could be part
of the larger school choir — the one that impressed her the
most.
And it was in choir that she
first noticed them. Those kids — those kids that were just
… different. Different is a good way. They were friendly,
they were good musicians, they wore modest clothes, they didn’t
speak bad language, they didn’t go smoke in the bathrooms,
they were just different from the other kids — and she longed
to be part of their circle — but she didn’t know how. She
finally asked someone how all those kids got to be so close
and to have so much fun together. They told her, “Oh, those
are the Mormon kids.” She had no idea what a Mormon was. She
had never heard the word before.
During the sophomore year, she
decided to write her historical research paper about Mormons.
So, she took it upon herself to find out as much as she could
about them. She read about the history of the Church in the
encyclopedias at the school library. She knew the story of
Joseph Smith and the western migration. She sang in the choir
with a number of Mormon kids and began to hang out with them
because they did the kinds of things she thought were fun
— without alcohol, tobacco, bad language or deceit of any
kind. She watched those Mormon friends all the time, observing
how they dressed, what they said, whether they gossiped or
not, how they treated each other, and she found out that they
attended some kind of religion class every morning very early
before school even started. She missed having religion classes.
To her surprise, she even discovered that her beloved choir
teacher was a Mormon too.
By the time she was sixteen,
her transformation into the typical teenage girl was complete.
She was excelling in school, she was a member of the advanced
choir class she had so admired when a freshman, and was even
dating boys. She really liked those Mormon boys the most —
they were all just the nicest boys on campus. Most of them
were in the choir, so being friends with them was easy. The
Mormon kids had accepted her into their circle of friendship,
even though she was not Mormon. She found out that they not
only had religion classes in the morning before school, but
they also had organized activities in the evening during the
week, dances at their church on weekends, and went to worship
services every Sunday. She didn’t even know any other Catholic
kids that went to Mass like she did every Sunday.
She learned a lot about the Mormon
Church just from watching and associating with her Mormon
friends — and her music teacher. He was different from all
the other teachers. There was just something about him that
made you feel like the most special student in any class.
He helped her understand that it was okay for music to be
her refuge in the storm of life. She wasn’t his most talented
music student. Not the best sight reader. She didn’t really
have the range of a true soprano or alto … just somewhere
in between. But she sang her heart out every day to please
him. There was nothing she wouldn’t do for him. He was dedicated.
He was a true example of all she had learned about the Mormons.
He didn’t raise his voice. He didn’t judge students by their
looks. He was a true professional. He instilled confidence
in his students. He devoted his time and talents to the program.
Consequently, the many awards his program won were evidence
of his dedication and influence in the lives of his students.
Her junior year came and she
found herself actively involved in the choir and acquiring
friends, including the Mormons. She got to know a number of
them and started socializing with them. She was finally fully
immersed in the culture of the high school, was active in
choir, and had friends. She even had a special boyfriend —
a Mormon boy. He was special because of how he treated her.
He was nice. He was trustworthy. He respected adults and her.
He had a wonderful family. He was fun and liked her a lot.
He was a great tenor, too.
She asked him lots of questions
about his religion. He finally invited her to Church one time.
It was a confusing event (a Fast and Testimony meeting) and
she didn’t much care for it. He invited her to Church dances
… those were a lot of fun! He invited her to family events
— those were fun too and his folks were really nice. She began
to understand what made those Mormons different: They had
standards. They had values. They actually believed in what
she had been taught as a child — Do unto others as you
would have others do unto you. Although she really liked
her Mormon friends, she continued to go to her own Mass faithfully
every week.
By the time high school graduation
rolled around, she completed the transition from a shy, quiet
freshman to a successful student involved in student government.
She was an officer in choir and had been accepted to the state
university. Her high school experience, although very frightening
at first, had turned into the best four years of her life.
How she hated to leave! Yet a transition to adulthood was
waiting.
Her boyfriend told her about
the temple. How told her he would marry someone there some
day. She knew what that meant. So, when he told her about
his upcoming two-year mission service away from home, she
decided the best thing for her to do was find a good Catholic
boy for herself to marry. Even still, they were friends when
he left America for two years, so she decided to write to
him in spite of this. His departure pretty much ended her
daily experiences with the Mormons. He left the summer she
graduated from high school, so she simply went forward as
any normal 18-year old would.
One crisp winter afternoon, she
was working at her job near her university campus when one
of the Mormon guys she knew from high school asked her to
the Christmas formal at the Latter-day Saint Institute. He
was a boy from the choir she knew well, so she decided to
accept his invitation. Her mother made her a new formal dress
for the occasion, she got her hair done and then went to the
dance. Little did she know that this singular decision would
prove to be so life-changing. She knew lots of her
Mormon friends from high school who were at the dance, and
she and her date had a great time. But she felt something
that night. She felt a comfort she had never felt before,
as if she belonged in that building — as if she was meant
to be part of the crowd of people there. She wanted to know
something that they all seemed to know — whatever it was,
she felt like there was just something she needed to
find out. But she wasn’t sure what it was she was supposed
to learn. She talked with her date about it. He suggested
that she talk to the local Mormon missionaries. She knew what
the missionaries were. She had seen them before at the home
of her high school boyfriend as well as others from school.
Her friend arranged for the missionaries
to meet her at the Institute. They talked to her about basic
concepts of the Mormon Church. She liked what they taught.
She wanted to know more. She wanted to read the Book of Mormon.
She was especially enthralled by the teachings about the Plan
of Salvation, otherwise known as “the Plan of Happiness.”
However, her parents wanted her to have no part of the Mormon
religion. In fact, one night they found her copy of the Book
of Mormon in her bedroom and threw it out the front door.
She found it when she was coming home in the driveway. They
firmly told her that night that she could not live at home
and learn about the Mormon Church at the same time. She didn’t
know what to do. She told the missionaries that she couldn’t
continue the lessons because she was not “honoring” the wishes
of her parents, and therefore breaking the fifth commandment.
She was confused. She was afraid. She had many fears and doubts.
She didn’t want to have to choose between her parents and
this religion that she still didn’t know very much about.
Yet, the feeling she had that
night at the dance would not leave her soul. As she read the
Book of Mormon, 2nd Nephi, Chapter 2, verse 11
struck the very core of her heart:
For it must needs be, that there
is an opposition in all things.
But did it have to hurt this
much? The missionaries (Elder Lawrence Stockham and Elder
Michael Parish) counseled her that she must obey her parents
“in righteousness” and that learning about the Church was
righteous — whether others believed that or not. She begged
her parents to let her stay at home and continue to find out
more about this Mormon Church, which was formally named The
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. They would not.
They told her if she became a Mormon she could never be part
of their family again.
She decided to talk to the Catholic
parish priest. Late one night, she knocked on the rectory
door and asked if she could talk to Father Wagner, a priest
she admired, but did not know personally. She told him of
her desire to know about the LDS religion and that she was
not there to discuss that matter, but was concerned
about her parents and their reaction to this desire. He said,
“Who are your parents?” She told him their names and he told
her he was not familiar with them or her family, probably
because she was really the only member of her family that
actually ever went to Mass. When asked what he would say to
her parents if they came to him for counsel, his very wise
answer was, “I would ask them how they expected their daughter
to be something they are not.” She knew the Spirit had guided
her to that discussion, for it allowed her to follow her heart.
She decided to pursue that faint,
small prompting that would not let her soul rest. She left
her home and her family one night (never to return) and stayed
with a friend until she could find a place of her own. Her
parents threatened and screamed at her. They threw her belongings
onto the dirt. They allowed her to take her clothing and her
record player, but nothing else. No car, no money, no insurance,
nothing except what she could pack in her suitcase. They refused
to take her calls or speak to her on the phone. They warned
that they would call the police if they found her on their
property. She felt abandoned. She felt unloved. She was scared.
She was on her own at nineteen years old. She had a job and
could take care of herself, but it was lonely and difficult.
But she continued the lessons
with the missionaries.
In the meantime, her old Mormon
boyfriend had come home from his mission. She was confused
about her feelings for him and her feelings about the Church
and tried desperately to separate them. She did not want to
join the Church because of him or her feelings for him. She
finally finished the missionary gospel lessons. On October
21, 1972, she was baptized by her boyfriend and was confirmed
by her friend that had asked her to the dance the winter before.
She asked her parents to come to her baptism, but their disgust
for the Church only grew stronger and they distanced their
relationship to the point of greater sorrow and pain for her.
They didn’t want her around. The holidays that year were especially
hard without being able to spend them with her family. But
she kept attending the Church’s Institute program and enjoyed
the friendship, fellowship, support and love from her boyfriend’s
family and the members of her ward where she attended church.
By May of the next year, she
was engaged to her high school sweetheart! They planned to
get married in the Arizona Temple that fall. She made an effort
to talk to her parents about the wedding, but they would have
nothing to do with it. They refused to contribute any funds
to pay for anything. They told her they refused to have any
part of the event whatsoever. She had to be especially careful
about the wording of the invitation itself, so as not to inaccurately
represent that her parents were happy about this event at
all. As the date drew nearer and nearer, her parents continued
to be more and more distant, uncaring and cold toward her.
Despite this, in a miraculous
way, her extended family managed to be influenced positively
by the wedding announcement, and before long those other family
members were coming from all over the country to support her.
Her parents did not have the courage to tell the family members
how hurtful they had been toward her, and proceeded to plan
for the event by default and out of obligation. They finally
called her a few weeks before the wedding and told her they
were going to “show up” at the temple that day and would attend
the reception. Their support was superficial, guarded and
limited in nature, but she was glad their hearts had somewhat
softened. It was an answer to the fervent prayer of her heart.
The day of her wedding was bittersweet, leaving some of the
people she loved most in this world outside the doors of the
temple. Yet, she knew in her heart that her plan of happiness
must include all the blessings of the temple. She could not
deny her faith or belief in that.
The fragile testimony of this
young girl was firmly rooted in believing the blessings that
would come as a result of Heavenly Father’s plan of happiness.
It was that fragile testimony that helped her overcome tremendous
odds and reject all the attempts by the adversary to thwart
her growth, strength, beliefs and conviction of the truthfulness
she had learned, yet had not experienced to its fullest. The
“opposition in all things” had, in fact, burned her soul with
a sure knowledge of the truthfulness of the Gospel.
I was the young girl in this
story.
This happened more than thirty
years ago. Although I did not know it at the time, my conversion,
painful and traumatic as it was, was necessary for my testimony
and my growth in the Gospel. The struggle was necessary in
order to recognize that bountiful blessings in this life can
be given from the Lord through something as simple as a decision
to go to a dance one winter night. I felt the Spirit that
night and surely I feel it to this day. Just as I was grateful
for it that night, I continue to be grateful for it today.
Why is this a missionary story?
As David O McKay stated in 1959, “Every member a missionary.”
Those young men and women in that high school were missionaries
— they were teaching the gospel by their actions, their words,
their deeds, their behaviors, their examples and their very
lives.
How were they missionaries?
They were missionaries because
I watched them (including my music teacher) every minute.
Not once did they falter. Not once did they forsake their
values and succumb to peer pressure. Not once did they deny
their faith. Not once were they unkind to a stranger among
them. They were examples of all they had been taught. They
influenced my life without even knowing. They were the Book
of Mormon I had never read. They were true to the faith at
all times, in all things and in all places.
I joined the Church when I was
19 years old. I was baptized and confirmed by two young men
from that choir class. I was married to one of them in the
temple. My sons are Eagle Scouts. My daughter has her Young
Womanhood medallion. My oldest son served a mission and married
in the temple. My daughter married in the temple. My youngest
son is serving a mission in Italy.
You never know when your example
or very life will be the only Book of Mormon anyone ever reads.
We are all missionaries … at all times! We have the
privilege of being watched. You may not know it, but it is
always possible. I have never forgotten those Mormon kids
from high school. They changed my life forever, just by being
true to the faith.