Te’o No. 5

overcoming

Editor’s Note: On Jan. 16, 2013, word started spreading that there may be more (or maybe less would be a better way to put it) to the Manti Te’o story than was previously reported. While details are still emerging, we will keep this story in our archives as is, but please keep in mind that, while Seti’s post was written in good faith and with the information that was available at the time, it appears the facts are not as reported.

While following football was a passion in my earlier years, it’s steadily become less so in recent years. And with the lackluster performance of my teams this year, plus a busy fall schedule, football has made barely a blip on my radar this season.

But one story that recently came through the stream in the middle of the MDB home page caught my eye. It appeared on the blog of Seti Matua, former editor of PolyInsider.com and MDBer on his blog called Le Folauga (The Journey).

The post highlighted Manti Te’o, a linebacker at Notre Dame. I would suspect that many people already know at least a little bit about Manti’s story. But for those of us who have been living under a football rock this season, Seti’s post is a feel-good, overcoming heartbreak story worth crawling out for. You also don’t want to miss the video Seti links at the bottom of his post.

It is a moving testimony of a young man who had the courage to follow a prompting that didn’t make sense to him at first, but in retrospect makes all the sense in the world (and then some). And, believe or not, it’s not just because he is now in contention for the Heisman Trophy.

Even if you’re not much of a football fan, read Seti’s post, Why I Would Vote for Manti.

Nursing Fathers

Photo by photosavvy. Creative commons license. Some rights reserved.

Thoughts on Fatherhood from The Book of Mormon Girl

Joanna Brooks has been busy. You may have caught her a few nights ago on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, where she had been invited to talk about her newly released book, “The Book of Mormon Girl: Stories from an American Faith” (watch her interview here or read her amusing behind-the-scenes account here). Or you may have come across her popular blog, Ask Mormon Girl, where she fields questions that range from the sincere to the hostile and offers an “unorthodox but friendly perspective on Mormon thought and culture.” Or perhaps you came across her name in Politico.com’s “50 Politicos to Watch” list or the Center for American Progress’ “13 Religious Women to Watch” list. All of this while teaching at a Southern California university. A busy Mormon girl indeed.

In the midst of all this, Joanna’s father recently passed away after a long, debilitating illness. As I read on her blog some of her thoughts about what her father has meant to her, I couldn’t help but be moved. Even though Joanna’s “Mormon journey” has been admittedly unconventional, and her choices may not have always been what he had hoped, he was always there for her.

I asked Joanna if, despite her busy schedule, she would be willing to share with our MDB readers any thoughts she had on how his example could help us with our parenting responsibilities, especially those of us who may be blessed with unconventional kids (is there any other kind?). Here’s what she had to say.

 

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Photo by photosavvy. Creative commons license. Some rights reserved.

The year before I got baptized, my father would sit with me in bed at night, and we’d hold the Book of Mormon on our laps, and read from it together.

He was a busy man:  a bishop, with four young children, a long commute to a demanding job, and a hectic travel schedule. But those nights he managed to carve out a few minutes at bedtime to open the Book of Mormon with me—I remember his warmth beside me, and the way he’d take a strand of my hair between his fingers and roll it back and forth, as we read verse by verse through Lehi’s dream, and in his tenderness I gathered a sense of how sweet and beautiful the fruit on the tree of knowledge must have been.  So beautiful, especially, against the closing darkness and chaos of the world outside.

It’s this story of Mormon fatherhood I tried to tell in the first chapter of The Book of Mormon Girl:  A Memoir of an American Faith, just released by the Free Press (available on-line and at bookstores and major retailers).  I wrote this book after a New York City editor told me Mormons were too “weird” for people to want to read about us.  Ridiculous, I thought.  And all the more reason to keep telling our stories.  Until the world sees the beauty and humanity in our faith.

 

Nurture

My father plays a tremendous role in my Mormon story.  He was a man who always took his faith seriously and was a dedicated local church leader, but he also had a tenderness that came, I think, from being raised by a single widowed mother. His example reminds me of the verses from Isaiah that read “kings shall be your nursing fathers.”  I love that seemingly contradictory image of the “nursing father.”  I think it points to an ancient wisdom that nurturing and affection can come naturally from both parents.

 

Plan

Just about a month before The Book of Mormon Girl came out, my father died after a long battle with Lou Gehrig’s disease, a debilitating neurological illness. I’ve thought so much since his death about his legacy to his children—a legacy of hard work, service to others, thoughtful parenting, and careful planning.  We laughed, his children, as we remembered how he would plan and spreadsheet out his goals for himself, his family, his church responsibilities.   He was, by education, a chemical engineer, and his career was in finance, so he was a man who loved a solid spreadsheet the way other men might love a thick steak or a fast car.

 

Let them govern themselves

But you can’t spreadsheet your children into a seamless Mormon future. You can try!  But learning to make independent choices is a part of Heavenly Father’s plan, even when it’s painful for earthly parents to witness.  Over the years, I certainly made some choices that diverged from my father’s plans for me.  I wrestled with my faith.  Really wrestled.  And there were difficult moments between us—moments when he was trying to grasp who I was becoming, and moments I wanted to be free from both his expectations and his disappointment.  He did not force me to righteousness, because he simply couldn’t.   Still, I found my way through, in large part because of how he raised me.

I imagine him, now, sitting up late nights in his home office, the kids asleep, the house quiet, the scriptures open on his desk, diligently plotting out goals and priorities, but reminding himself always of the fundamentals of faith–something to hold onto as he tried to guide his family through the mists of the chaotic world and to its tender sweetness.  Here are the three fundamentals I learned from my dad:  nurture, plan, and then—let go.

Abounding in Brave Women

katherine


Since starting this blog a year and a half ago, the MDB inbox has been inundated with press releases pitching story ideas from all corners of this odd little planet of ours.

The vast majority of pitches I ignore. I figure MDB readers probably aren’t that interested in the amazing tortilla, Alec Baldwin’s summer book reading suggestions, Ketel One Vodka, IHOP’s new trio of signature pancakes, pork buying basics, Connect Poker, or what’s new with Scientology (just a few of the pitches received this month so far).

But one pitch hit my inbox this month that caught my eye. Katherine Nelson’s long-awaited new album, “Born Brave,” is coming out Aug. 1. I’ve been a fan of Katherine’s since I had the opportunity to work with her on a couple of projects over the past few years. Talented actress with leading lady looks, gorgeous singing voice, yet very gracious and down-to-earth. You get the impression that there are very few doors that would be closed to her if she simply chose to knock. Yet she chooses her projects very carefully, and they are always about something that is important and good.

Not to put down an era when Lady Gaga and Madonna are going at it trying to out-crass each other, or where stars are being made with music delving into the deeper aspects of whether to be crazy and give the shirtless lawn-mowing guy a number and inviting him to call maybe (164 million YouTube views and counting), but it sure is refreshing to witness a talented artist dig deep inside to find something noble to share with and uplift us.

Katherine at work.

I’ve been listening to an advance copy of “Born Brave.” I’m not giving it back. It’s got a Nashville vibe, and I confess I’ve never been much of a country guy, but Katherine hits that groove where people on either side of the pop-rock/country aisle can come together and tap toes. Her rich, velvety voice coats track after well-produced track, each a heartfelt celebration of a different aspect of the album’s theme of women of courage. There are powerful anthems that will inspire women and girls as well as ballads that will tug at the heartstrings of even our manliest of MDB readers.

Now I know that our focus at MDB is typically on blogs by Mormon dads, I would suspect that many of our bloggers are who they are because they are blessed with an abundance of courageous women around them — their mothers, their wives, and their daughters facing the prospect of growing up in these challenging times.

Kudos to Katherine and her team for their work in bringing this project to life at such a time as this. It’s an album you’ll want to share with all the main women in your life.

It drops Aug. 1. You can listen to clips and find out more on Katherine’s website or her Facebook page.

Win a Copy

Share in the comments below a little bit about a woman in your life whose courage has inspired you. We’ll randomly pick one comment on Aug. 1, the “Born Brave” release day, and send you a copy of Katherine’s CD that you can share with her. We’ll also randomly pick one commenter on the “Born Brave” post in our facebook group. Our third winner will be randomly selected from those who belong to our facebook group.

Good luck!

In Every Way That Matters

allredgirl

I first met Corbin Allred in 2003 when a World War II movie he was in, “Saints and Soldiers,” was making the film festival rounds. He played the lead role of Deacon, a decent man trying to escape against all odds back to Allied lines.

He continues to act (that’s him with the spiffy ‘do in the follow-up, Saints and Soldiers: Airborne Creed, coming soon to a theater near you), but now he has the added responsibilities of being a husband and father.

Recently, Corbin and his wife, McKenzie, learned that the baby they were expecting had spina bifida, a developmental congenital disorder caused by the incomplete closing of the spine.

Their blog, Meet Me in the Apricot Tree, follows their experience from diagnosis. It’s a riveting account. Here’s an excerpt from “Our Lives Are Split in Two.”

The doctor walked in…shook my hand firmly…and sat down. He let out a big sigh and spoke words that I will foerever wish he could take back. “Well, I’m really worried about your baby girl.”

The world stopped turning. In that moment, there was nothing else in the world that mattered. The triviality of current challenges caused them to fade from existence and suddenly…everything we ever knew…changed. It was like this doctor took a sword and split the timeline of our lives in two. When it comes to the words he spoke…there will forever be…before we heard them…and after.

Lily was born a few days ago. As you can imagine, it was an ordeal for all involved, involving surgery almost immediately after birth. Through it all, I was moved to read Corbin’s account of his daughter’s arrival in Lily Norine Allred is Here:

Lily joined the world at 4:33pm on 6/29/12. She was so tiny and beautiful. 4lbs 11oz and 18.5in. Sadly…they took Lily for assessment before Kenz even got to see her. Kenz had to go to recovery and wait almost 3 hours before even getting to touch her. Let me just say…Lily is perfect in every way that matters!!! Seriously…just perfect and gorgeous and everything we could ever want in a little girl and more. I got to spend a lot of time alone with her during the first few hours of her life as she was already so strong…never needed oxygen…just calm…and content…and sweet as can be. Lily told me that I was her favorite and that she’ll always be a daddy’s girl…but Kenz doesn’t believe me. 

Follow Corbin and his family in their blog, Meet Me in the Apricot Tree.

As might be expected, there are many expenses involved in raising a child with spina bifida. A fund has been set up through Give Forward. You can find out more about The Little Allred Girl Spina Bifida Fund here.

Ever Have A Song Stuck In Your Head?

Photo by JD Hancock. Creative commons license. Some rights reserved.

Photo by JD Hancock. Creative commons license. Some rights reserved.

There are all kinds of blogs out there, financial blogs, family blogs, photography blogs. Brady picked an unusual topic to follow…something that happens to ALL of us…that song–annoying or otherwise–that gets stuck in our heads. Brady’s blog is simple. If there’s a song is stuck in his head when he wakes up, he blogs about it, be it awesome or embarrassing–it doesn’t matter.

Brady is the father of four and, husband of one, and occasionally shares his talents on the stage entertaining the masses. Check out his blog (The Songs Stuck In My Head). Maybe the song you have in your head is one Brady has had in yours.

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Image by JD Hancock. Creative commons license. Some rights reserved.

Bedhead Dads

bedheaddads2

A new blog, Bedhead Moms, encourages women to accept themselves for everything they are, a terrific and much-needed message that we whole-heartedly agree with. But what does it have to do with a blog about Mormon dads? Well, as it turns out, this week they’ve turned their attention to us. (This sort of thing happens a lot around this time every year. No idea why, but we think it is pretty great.)

In their “Bedhead Dad” series, Bedhead Moms introduces us via a collection of photo essays to a wide range of dads who share two things in common: their faith and their complete devotion to their families.

  • There’s The Cool Dad, who just welcomed a baby into his home after years of struggle, including an adoption that fell through.
  • There’s the Part Time SAHD (Stay at Home Dad), a photographer who also helps feed his family by turning nearly every square inch of the lot of his Southern California home into something his family can consume in Providing More Than Money.
  • There’s the distribution manager for a major motion picture studio who loves those small, unforgettable occasions with his children in Enjoying the Moment.

Bedhead Moms has capped their Bedhead Dads week with a beautifully produced video tribute to fathers that is both funny and warm, Dear Dad.

Bedhead Moms was created by Wendy Santiano, who is married to Rod Santiano, whose terrific cinematography blog we’ve featured many times on MDB. We welcome Bedhead Moms to the blogging community and wish them every success.

Club Unicorn

unicorn

We’ve featured amusing and clever blog posts by Josh Weed a few times before on MDB.

But this weekend, his blog took a more serious turn and has created something of a stir (2,046 comments and counting as of this writing).

Josh and his wife, Lolly, are celebrating their 10th anniversary (normally associated with tin and aluminum gifts) with a weekend away, including taking in the show, The Blue Man Group (which they really enjoyed, by the way) and publishing for the first time a dual Josh-and-Lolly post about something they’d never shared with their blog readers before.

Typically, such a declaration would be followed by a denouncement and hurt feelings on one side or the other, if not both. Here, there is only a call for love.

Regardless of where you stand on this frequently polarizing issue, this is a timely, sensitively written post that would be well worth your time reading.

Consider joining Josh and Lolly’s Club Unicorn.

The Revenge of Scoutmaster Henry

revenge

Call it “The Revenge of Scoutmaster Henry.”

When Topher Clark was a scout, he had a leader named Roger Henry. Here’s how he describes the love-hate relationship between the scouts and Bro. Henry.

“We loved him because he was a former surf dude and drove a classic red MG, and we hated him because he made us do scouting things we disliked and he called us on all of our bull. He never let us get away with anything. Whenever we were too lazy to, say, put up a tent or roll-up a sleeping bag he would tell us that the tooth fairy wasn’t going to do it for us, and would wait until we did it. I think if I met Roger today he and I would be great friends, but at age thirteen boys are naturally distrustful of any adult who is more awesome than they are. I remember feeling that it was our job to be awesome, and that the adult’s responsibility was to be gullible, fat, allowing, and to roll up our sleeping bags.”

It was because of the Bro. Henrys of this world that Topher went on to become an Eagle Scout and somehow survive adolescence. But that doesn’t mean the scouts went soft on Bro. Henry. Topher goes on to describe one particularly memorable encounter with Bro. Henry involving mud, a Smurf, and a bolo tie.

It’s just one many engaging posts on a relatively new blog called Part Time Authors, described as “a conversation between four friends about life, fatherhood, what makes us laugh and what makes us tick.”

But back to Bro. Henry, who ended up getting the last laugh, as I suppose all former scoutmasters do. Writes Topher, “And now I have spent almost ten years in the young men’s program myself, and Karma sucks!”

Read the full account of Topher’s encounter with Bro. Henry in Scouting for Trouble.

Without a Safety Net

Photo by Thomas Gibbard. Creative Commons license. Some rights reserved.

Photo by Thomas Gibbard. Creative Commons license. Some rights reserved.

I never took a class in playwriting or theatre history at BYU from Eric Samuelson, but I was still sad to hear that he recently had to take early medical retirement because of an illness, an incurable muscular degenerative disease called polymyositis. While I don’t know him well, I know he has inspired a generation of writers to do their best work.

If there is a plus side to this bad news, it’s that Eric has found time for blogging, and his posts are as insightful as they are entertaining. You’d think his posts would be weighty matters, and some of them are. But pop culture frequently makes an appearance. He even recently blogged about this season of American Idol, a show he loves, which surprises me, but in a good way. (Sample: “My wife and I think Steven Tyler, in that rock star regalia, looks like the scariest old woman in the nursing home.”)

He tackles theological matters with equal alacrity. Here’s his recent take on baptisms for the dead, a concept peculiar to our faith and one that has attracted a lot of negative attention lately. Eric thinks we should do a better job at defending the practice. (He calls it “the most remarkable theological innovation of any Christian church of the 19th century,” and makes a compelling case.)

He is a frequent participant in SLAM, a 24-hour festival. Here’s how he describes it:

What happens is, we show up at the theater at 8 on a Friday night, are given headshots and resumes for three actors (sometimes up to five, but this year, three), are shown a set, and, most of the time, are also given a title.  We then have to write a ten minute play using those actors, that set, and that title, a hard copy for which we deliver the next morning at 9.  The actors rehearse all day, and perform, off-book, that night, at 8. 

He recounts the full experience in a recent post, Playwriting Without a Safety Net.

It is with pleasure that we welcome Eric, a father of four who makes his home in the Utah County area, to MDB, and look forward to following his blog, Mormon Iconoclast.

 

One in a Million

oneinamillion

Some guys just seem like they were made to be dads. Not that all of us guys can’t get there eventually, but some, like maybe one in a million, seem like they come ready made to be great dads.

Josh Tenney is one of those.

I’ve had the opportunity to know Josh through some key milestones in his life, from finally finding The One (took awhile, but she was worth the wait), to his marriage to her, to giddily expecting his first child, to her birth.

Anna Liberty Tenney. A little sweet-pea, if ever there was one.

I also saw Josh go through the pain of seeing his treasured Anna stricken with sunburns so severe, even with limited exposure to the sun and the protection of copious amounts of sunscreen, her eyes would blister shut.

Several trips to the doctor’s office later, as well as traveling cross country to the specialists at the National Institutes of Health in D.C., the diagnosis was confirmed. Anna has XP, an extremely rare condition that has changed how the whole family’s lives.

Some characterize XP as being allergic to the sun, but Josh points out it is much more than that.

“Each day, Anna’s skin is covered with sunblock and lotions,” writes Josh on his blog. “She must remain indoors to be completely safe. Before going outdoors on occasion, Anna must wear shoes, long pants, long sleeved shirts, gloves, sunglasses, and a custom made hat with a specialty UV-blocking plastic face shield.”

Josh has created a blog about his daughter’s life with XP. It’s called Anna Liberty: A Girl Who’s One in a Million, including this post here, which explains how the family is approaching the coming summer, with its longer days, but with the treasured warm, post-sunset hours, when Anna becomes a night owl.

Math for me seldom makes sense. But sometimes, when the one-in-a-million kid scores the one-in-a-million dad, it clicks.