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Dam
Washed Out Again
By Davis Bitton

Remains of Woodruff Colony Dam
(Image from LUHNA
website)
John Bushman was an Arizona pioneer.
With others he was called to leave Utah and settle on the Arizona
frontier in 1876. Like many others from 1847 on, he had to overcome
an initial reaction of wanting to stay put where life was pleasant
and where he had put down roots. Nevertheless, like pioneers
sent at other times to Utah's Dixie, to Bluff through the Hole-in-the-Rock,
to Star Valley, Wyoming, and elsewhere, he gathered his family
and joined a company that would proceed to the valley of the
Little Colorado.
It was a forbidding
environment. To raise crops, they had to irrigate. This required
dams. Available technology fell far short of the cranes and
reinforced concrete used today. They did what they could to
check the flow of the water by dragging into the river logs
and rocks and dumping load after wagon load of dirt. Finally
there was enough strength in the dam to back up the stream and
allow water to be channeled out into ditches.
The trouble, as we can well imagine, was that such dams did
not hold very well or very long. Year after year, the men of
these sparse settlements would build or strengthen the dam,
only to have it wash out later.
Wouldn't you be discouraged? Discouragement is a pretty common
human trait. We all have a taste of it. It must be one of those
trials of the flesh intended to "prove us herewith."
We have heard sermons on adversity from the beginning of the
restoration to the present, and books have been written on the
subject. Some of these are excellent in helping us to understand,
providing comfort in the short run and, in the long run, hope.
"This too shall pass away" — the gospel does
indeed provide a larger, eternal perspective.
But cheap advice is seldom welcome. Neither Job's counselors
nor Voltaire's Pangloss are good models for Latter-day Saints.
Those in the midst of severe trials are not helped by the jaunty
optimism of those who have somehow escaped the same pain. It
is a violation of Christian charity, Robert Millett has said,
for parents whose children have all turned out well to sit in
judgment on, or self-righteously lecture, those who, having
tried just as hard and with as many prayers, have had to endure
the pain of watching a child abandon the path.
I think of loss of employment and terrible illnesses that attack
those certainly not "deserving" of such an onslaught.
Alcoholism. Drugs. Abuse. Kidnappings. Entire families killed
on the highway. There is no scarcity of crushing negative experiences
that tend to produce discouragement. Carlfred Broderick, that
wise counselor, instructed us that clinical depression, or melancholy
as it was traditionally denominated, could be seriously immobilizing.
Very good men and women have been so afflicted.
Mere words seldom suffice in bringing about a cure; instead
they often simply increase the guilt and despair. Recognizing
the great difficulty posed by this illness not only to the person
afflicted but also to spouse and family, Broderick urged that
professional help be sought as early as possible. With acute
awareness of how difficult life can be for some people, here
is the question I would pose. Clinical pathologies with their
biochemical component aside, what is our discouragement threshold?
What does it take to immobilize us? How much of an obstacle
throws us into anxiety and depression, making us want to give
up?

Mormon settlements in the Little Colorado River
Basin.
(Image from LUHNA
website)
Here is what John
Bushman, our Arizona pioneer, wrote in his diary on one occasion:
"Dam washed out again. We are not discouraged." What
he meant, I think, is "We will not give up. We will keep
striving. Our courage and determination are still intact."
Hasn't that been the pattern of Latter-day Saint reaction to
trials from the beginning? When the Saints were driven from
Missouri in 1839, Eliza R. Snow wrote, "Though deep'ning
trials throng your way, press on, press on, ye Saints of God."
Press on — that was what they could do and what those
of faith did do.
One of the roles of prophets, in the midst of battle, has been
to keep the ranks organized, to buoy up spirits, to strengthen
morale. "Brethren, shall we not go on in so great a cause?
Go forward and not backward. Courage, brethren, and on, on to
the victory! Let your hearts rejoice, and be exceedingly glad"
(D&C 128:22). Thus the Prophet Joseph in 1842.
And who can fail to rejoice in the persistent cheerfulness of
President Gordon B. Hinckley? Over and over again he has said
in effect, "I know not what course others may take, but
I am not discouraged."
In October 1995 conference, for example, after being sustained
as president of the Church earlier that same year, he delivered
a great discourse entitled "Stay the Course — Keep
the Faith."
“There have been makers of threats, naysayers, and criers
of doom," he said. "They have tried in every conceivable
way to injure and destroy this church. But we are still here,
stronger and more determined to move it forward. To me it is
exciting. It is wonderful ... I invite every one of you, wherever
you may be as members of this church, to stand on your feet
and with a song in your heart move forward, living the gospel,
loving the Lord, and building the kingdom. Together we shall
stay the course and keep the faith, the Almighty being our strength."
Unless you are that rare individual from central casting who
has no challenges, whose children are always perfectly behaved,
who never has a bad hair day, disappointments come. But they
must not crush us. Praises go to those who can write in their
journals or say in their hearts, "We are not discouraged.
We will not give up. We will stay on track."
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© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Authors: |
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Davis Bitton died April
13, 2007, after having lived a long and a good life. In his own
words, he is cheerfully taking in the new state of affairs and accepting
the callings that will occupy himself on the other side of the veil.
During his lifetime, he was professor of history at the University
of Texas at Austin, the University of California at Santa Barbara,
and for 29 years the University of Utah, enjoying many congenial
students and colleagues. He presented papers at scholarly conventions
and published articles and books. He loved good food, good books,
the out of doors, music, art, the dappled things…
No one has been more important to him than his dear wife and companion
JoAn, a woman loved by all who knew her. She rallied to his side,
stood by him through thick and thin, grew with him, laughed with
him, made good things happen, and, marvel of marvels, agreed to
be his companion through time and all eternity.
His own epitaph was, “I have not lived a perfect life, but
I have tried. And I know in whom I have trusted.”
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