Mormon Morsels
Goal Setting
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| Free Digital Photos.net/thepathtraveler |
I know that this is the typical thing to talk about at this particular time of year. We all get in that GOAL zone don’t we? It is the perfect time to review/evaluate your life and see where you can do better, add some new goals, lose some old ones. Back in the mid-70’s, when I was a college Freshman, I had a class that was kind of a mix between consumer education and home management. I wish that I could remember the name of the course, but I am sure I could look back on my transcripts to find it. I won’t because I came in to the office today to do this post, as the message I wanted to share is on my work computer, and so I have no access to my home files at the moment. Anyway, we had a great teacher, Lynette Bartholomew, and she loved to share quotes and stories with us that she would run across that would pertain to the curriculum. The following is one of the things that she shared and I have carried around the original handout from class all these years, in all its purple mimeograph glory. Yes it is that old. So old I am not sure I even have the process name right.
by Evalyn Bennett
My goals 21 years ago included:
1. Keep an immaculate house which would be an ideal setting for the Spirit of our Heavenly Father to dwell.
2. Read at least one excellent book a month and become well-informed about the world around you.
3. Prepare well-balanced, attractive gourmet meals, experimenting with at least one new recipe a week.
4. Bear many children who will be well-dressed, well-pressed and well-behaved.
5. Keep an optimistic outlook on life. At the end of every week try to evaluate what created in you good feelings or frustrations.
6. Tell your husband, once a day, that you love him.
Then came the first child.
With the demands of burping, changing, loving, bathing, rocking, washing, praying, some of my goals needed to be modified. I must give up my immaculate house. My revised goals now read:
1. As you pass a table, blow hard on the top to rearrange the dust.
2. Put the vacuum in the middle of the living room floor so that anyone calling on you will think that sometime soon you intend to get debris from the floor.
Then came the second child.
With the demands of burping, changing, loving, bathing, rocking, washing, praying, some of my goals needed to be modified. I must give up my reading books. My revised goals now read:
1. But not my newspapers. I still snatch time for a little worthwhile reading of my favorite funny paper characters, Mary Worth and Dr. Rex Morgan, but only every other day. And who can live without Ann Landers?
2. To keep well-informed I rush to the door when I hear the mailman to discuss some pertinent problems: “Has the garbage been picked up down the street yet?”
Then came the third child.
With the demands of burping, changing, loving, bathing, rocking, washing, praying, some of my goals needed to be modified.
1. Instead of preparing well-balanced , attractive gourmet meals, experimenting with at least one new recipe a week, my goals now read “Serve one hot dish a day.” This means if you serve hot soup for lunch you can get away with peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for dinner. When I do find an extra hour and decide to go all out on a roast, potatoes, gravy and baked bread, the children ask, “Who is coming to dinner?” or “Is it Thanksgiving already?”
Then came the fourth child.
With the demands of burping, changing, loving, bathing, rocking, washing, praying, some of my goals needed to be modified.
1. Instead of reading “well-dressed, well-pressed and well-behaved,” my goals simply read “dressed.” If the diaper is hanging around the knees by noon, my neighbors know that I pinned it properly earlier in the day. I haven’t seen the bottom of my ironing basket for three years, and really don’t know when I ever will. Praise be for polyester.
Then came the fifth child.
With the demands of burping, changing, loving, bathing, rocking, washing, praying, some of my goals needed to be modified.
1. My goal no longer reads “Keep an optimistic outlook on life. At the end of the week try to evaluate what created in you good feelings or frustrations.” it now says “Keep your voice down until noon. At the end of every week count to see if you still have five children. Check your varicose veins to see if your legs will take you through another mad week.”
My last goal “Tell your husband, once a day, that you love him,” now simply says “Try to speak to your husband once a day.” With Cub Scouts, Little League, watching football, basketball, baseball, track, violin lessons, PTA board meeting, United Fund drive, Primary Blazers, Relief Society visiting teaching, Bar Auxiliary, Law Wives, University Women’s Club, chicken pox, rosella, hepatitis, Asian Flu, and tonsillectomies, I feel lucky to call out to him as we rush past each other going in and out of the front door. “Golly dear, I am overdrawn at the bank again.”
Twenty years later my goals are summed up by reading “Sustain Life and endure to the end.”
What Will You Give for Christ(mas)?
Tomorrow is Christmas Eve. December seems to have flown by. And now, I sit here at my computer wondering if I am ready. There is so much to do. Most treat plates have been delivered but a few remain to be handed out today. We have the Mormon missionaries coming over for a Christmas Eve lunch and I have sourdough biscuits, sweet potato casserole, and dressing to prepare. There’s cinnamon rolls to make tomorrow night for Christmas morning breakfast. Oh, and the dog needs to go to the groomer’s tomorrow morning or she won’t be able to even see what’s in her stocking! The Christmas presents are all wrapped and ready. And I am so excited for the kids to see their gifts.
But after watching this video I wonder…..what did I give for the Savior?
And as the Christmas season winds down I find myself wishing that I had given more of those special gifts. And I am a little sad that I didn’t do more. But the good news is that Christmas really never ends! I don’t have to feel sad about not doing enough this season because Christmas is really about love, and love is always in season.
I am reminded of one of my favorite Christmas songs….The Secret of Christmas. It’s not very well known, but the message is beautiful and true:
Trouble At The Inn

Thanks to Audrey for sharing her favorite Christmas story last week. That story displayed the type of giving that “hurts so good”. I will share with you my all time favorite Christmas story. It has that same kind of tugging at your heartstrings. It always brings on the true spirit of Christmas in just three little words. I hope you enjoy it and will share it with your family, along with some candlelight and hot chocolate of course.
“For years now whenever Christmas pageants are talked about in a certain little town in the Midwest, someone is sure to mention the name of Wallace Purling. Wally’s performance in one annual production of the Nativity play has slipped into the realm of legend. But the old timers who were in the audience that night never tire of recalling exactly what happened.
Wally was nine that year and in the second grade, though he should have been in the fourth. Most people in town knew that he had difficulty in keeping up. He was big and clumsy, slow in movement and mind. Still, Wally was well liked by the other children in his class, all of whom were smaller than he, though the boys had trouble hiding their irritation if the uncoordinated Wally asked to play ball with them.
Most often they’d find a way to keep him off the field, but Wally would hang around anyway–not sulking, just hoping. He was always a helpful boy, a willing and smiling one, and the natural protector, paradoxically, of the underdog. Sometimes if the older boys chased the younger ones away, it would always be Wally who’d say, “Can’t they stay? They’re no bother.”
Wally fancied the idea of being a shepherd with a flute in the Christmas pageant that year, but the play’s director, Miss Lumbard, assigned him to a more important role. After all, she reasoned, the Innkeeper did not have too many lines, and Wally’s size would make his refusal of lodging to Joseph more forceful.
And so it happened that the usual large, partisan audience gathered for the town’s Yuletide extravaganza of staffs and creches, of beards, crowns, halos and a whole stage full of squeaky voices. No one on stage or off was more caught up in the magic of the night than Wallace Purling. They said later that he stood in the wings and watched the performance with such fascination that from time to time Miss Lumbard had to make sure he didn’t wander onstage before his cue.
Then the time came when Joseph appeared, slowly, tenderly guiding Mary to the door of the inn. Joseph knocked hard on the wooden door set into the painted backdrop. Wally the Innkeeper was there, waiting. “What do you want?” Wally said, swinging the door open with a brusque gesture.
“We seek lodging.”
“Seek it elsewhere.” Wally looked straight ahead but spoke vigorously. “The inn is filled.”
“Sir, we have asked everywhere in vain. We have traveled far and are very weary.”
“There is no room in this inn for you.” Wally looked properly stern.
“Please, good innkeeper, this is my wife, Mary. She is heavy with child and needs a place to rest. Surely you must have some small corner for her. She is so tired.”
Now, for the first time, the Innkeeper relaxed his stiff stance and looked down at Mary. With that, there was a long pause, long enough to make the audience a bit tense with embarrassment.
“No! Begone!” the prompter whispered from the wings.
“No!” Wally repeated automatically. “Begone!”
Joseph sadly placed his arm around Mary, and Mary laid her head upon his shoulder, and the two of them started to move away. The Innkeeper did not return inside his inn, however. Wally stood there in the doorway, watching the forlorn couple. His mouth was open, his brow creased with concern, his eyes filling unmistakably with tears.
“Don’t go, Joseph,” Wally called out. “Bring Mary back.” And Wallace Purling’s face grew into a bright smile. “You can have my room.”
Some people in town thought that the pageant had been ruined. Yet there were others–many others–who considered it the most Christmasy of all Christmas pageants they had ever seen.”
Source: Dina Donahue reprinted from the “Baptist Herald” (Dec. 15, 1968)
No Nativities to Be Found!
To Bring in the Christmas Season…
Christmas Eve 1921
Who Was I?
“I don’t want to drive up to the pearly gates in a shiny sports car, wearing beautifully tailored clothes, my hair expertly coiffed, and with long, perfectly manicured fingernails. I want to drive up in a station wagon that has mud on the wheels from taking kids to Scout Camp. I want to be there with a smudge of peanut butter on my shirt from making sandwiches for a sick neighbor’s children. I want to be there with a little dirt under my fingernails from helping to weed someone’s garden. I want to be there with children’s sticky kisses on my cheeks and the tears of a friend on my shoulder. I want the Lord to know I was really here and that I really lived.”–Marjorie Pay Hinckley
“Bee” Anxiously Engaged
The worldwide General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints took place one week ago. It’s a time when our leaders address members across the globe, delivering messages of hope and inspiration. One of my personal favorites was a talk given by Elder M. Russell Ballard entitled “Be Anxiously Engaged”:
I won’t spoil your joy by telling you everything in his talk (he can do it much better than I can), but I will tell you that he shared some fascinating facts about bees and the beehive collective. I found it particularly interesting that a single worker bee, in its whole lifetime, will contribute only 1/12th of one teaspoon of nectar to the hive. I was surprised by that number! Such a small amount. And yet, without all the little bees collecting nectar, there’d be no honey.
Now, how does this relate to us? To me, it’s about service.
Our efforts toward service can be diminished in our own eyes in one of two ways. We either think that our small, consistent efforts aren’t enough OR we justify inaction by rationalizing that it wouldn’t make a difference anyway.
Neither approach is helpful. Nor true.
Small and simple things DO matter. The smile we give to a stranger, the hug we give to a child, the secret prayer for a friend. The size of the deed is not what matters but the size of the heart performing the deed. We all matter. We all contribute.
Elder Ballard said:
Imagine what the millions of Latter-day Saints could accomplish in the world if we functioned like a beehive in our focused, concentrated commitment to the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ.The Savior taught that the first and great commandment is:“Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind. …“And the second is like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself.“On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets” (Matthew 22:37, 39–40).The Savior’s words are simple, yet their meaning is profound and deeply significant. We are to love God and to love and care for our neighbors as ourselves. Imagine what good we can do in the world if we all join together, united as followers of Christ, anxiously and busily responding to the needs of others and serving those around us—our families, our friends, our neighbors, our fellow citizens.
Imagine what millions of people of all religions could accomplish in the world if we functioned as a beehive in bringing happiness and peace to this world.
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| Photo Credit: Microsoft Office Clip Art |
So, how will you collect your 1/12th of a teaspoon today?
We Thank Thee, O God, For A Prophet
General Conference for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints is next Saturday and Sunday. View or Listen to it here.
I have listened to conference almost my whole life. Scratch that. I have always “attended”–whether in my parent’s Utah home, over the internet with only audio, at a church via satellite, in our own home watching on the Church’s website–but truthfully, ashamedly, I have not always listened.
When I walk into conference wishing to learn something, I always do. Whether I have something I am specifically searching for an answer to or I just want to be enlightened, I ALWAYS am. Sometimes answers come for me that I didn’t even know I was searching for.
This is a testimony to me that our Heavenly Father knows ME. He knows my concerns, my needs, or in some cases (as in April conference of this year) he knows when I need a little chastisement in order to set myself straight.
Yes, I Thank Thee, O God, For Prophets. I am thankful for the men and women who lead our church are so much more wise than I–that we have a way to be uplifted every six months.
Wet Pants
I want to share a story with you that I received in one of those forwarded emails that I don’t always read, but this one was really good. I don’t know the origin of the story, but all credit goes to whoever they are!!
“Come with me to a third grade classroom….. There is a nine-year-old kid sitting at his desk and all of a sudden, there is a puddle between his feet and the front of his pants are wet. He thinks his heart is going to stop because he cannot possibly imagine how this has happened. It’s never happened before, and he knows that when the boys find out he will never hear the end of it. When the girls find out, they’ll never speak to him again as long as he lives.
He looks up from his prayer and here comes the teacher with a look in her eyes that says he has been discovered. As the teacher is walking toward him, a classmate named Susie is carrying a goldfish bowl that is filled with water. Susie trips in front of the teacher and inexplicably dumps the bowl of water in the boy’s lap..

The boy pretends to be angry, but all the while is saying to himself, ‘Thank you, Lord! Thank you, Lord!’
Now all of a sudden, instead of being the object of ridicule, the boy is the object of sympathy. The teacher rushes him downstairs and gives him gym shorts to put on while his pants dry out. All the other children are on their hands and knees cleaning up around his desk. The sympathy is wonderful. But as life would have it, the ridicule that should have been his has been transferred to someone else – Susie. She tries to help, but they tell her to get out. ‘You’ve done enough, you klutz!’
Finally, at the end of the day, as they are waiting for the bus, the boy walks over to Susie and whispers, ‘You did that on purpose, didn’t you?’ Susie whispers back, ‘I wet my pants once, too.’ “
This is one of the best illustrations that I have seen to show how so many times in our crazy lives God answers our prayers through someone else. I hope you will think of this story the next time you are praying desperately for something, but don’t quite know where the answer is going to come from.
Images courtesy of Free Digital Photos –Photographers: David Castillo Dominici, digitalart and Microsoft Office Images.












