Skip to main content

And So It Begins...Again

Mark entered the Missionary Training Center today.

Deep breath...

I can't believe it's starting all over again.  Just six days after Ethan comes home, Mark is gone.

I know, I know.  It should be a happy thing.  I should rejoice in the fact that my son is worthy to serve a mission, and that he will have such marvelous opportunities over the next two years.

I can say (and write) those words, but I sure don't feel them.

I can count my closest friends on two hands and those friends include my husband and kids.  Losing contact with Mark is just painful.

I would like to say "here is a list of things that I'm most looking forward to hearing/seeing again when Mark comes home", but in my mind I think "here are the things I will miss the most, and how am I going to get by without them":

1.  Mark's chipmunk voice.  It doesn't matter where he is, he always answers the phone in his chipmunk voice.  I think he learned through the years that if he answers that way, it gets me in a good mood, even if I was about to yell at him.  Good plan, Markie-Boy.

2.  Mark's dance moves.  He breaks them out in the most random places.  Shoot, I don't think he can even walk down the aisle in the grocery store without dancing.

3.  Mark's gratitude.  Mark has always remembered to tell John and me "thank you" for everything.  He thanks John for the lifestyle he provides our family.  He thanks me for teaching him how to be a polite, upstanding boy.  Over the last week, I have been sent many random texts from Mark, telling me again how much he appreciates all I have done for him in his life.

4.  Mark's love.  Mark has the biggest heart of anyone I know.  He is so good at showing love.  Hugs, kisses, pats on the back.  You always know that Mark loves you.

5.  Mark's excellence.  Mark excels at just about anything he tries:  horn, German, yo-yo tricks, beat-boxing.  I take great pride in being his mother. Shoot, here at Interlochen he's a star, and no matter where I go, I end up introducing myself as "Mark's mom".  Whereas before people didn't say "hello" to me, once they know I'm Mark's mom, they are friendly and kind.  He has excelled in so many areas of his life--it's truly an honor to be his mother.

How Mark posed
when I wanted a
serious missionary
picture...
6.  Mark's humor.  Mark has introduced us to all kinds of new experiences, and videos, and quotes, all of which make us laugh.  I told Mark that above everything else, I'm going to miss laughing so much with him.  It's the best feeling, at the end of a long, hard day, to be buoyed up by Mark and his antics.

Again, I take a deep breath.  The letters will begin again--writing letters almost daily.  The much-anticipated phone calls at Christmas and Mother's Day.  Watching for letters in the mail.  And worrying. Lots and lots of worrying, and praying.

I told Mark that for once, I can relate to a scene in a sci-fi movie.  In The Matrix, when the characters need to learn something quickly, it can be downloaded into their minds within seconds.  I wish, like nothing else, that we could do that with Mark.  Take all the learning and experiences of the next two years and download them into Mark's mind, so that he could come home tomorrow.

However, I am reminded of something that our bishop said in church this past Sunday when Ethan gave his homecoming talk and Mark his farewell talk:  we will never know the influence for good both of these boys will be on the people of a country.  They may, at times, feel as though they made little to no difference, but their example will stretch through generations of time.

That can't be done in seconds.  And so it begins...again.  Two years.

Comments

  1. Can you please post Mark's mailing address! :) What an exciting and emotional time for all of you!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Mark is going to be an amazing missionary!!! So happy for him that he gets to have this experience!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I am so excited for Mark! He will be a fantastic missionary. I am definitely missing him already, but he is where he should be.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I can't imagine having them back-to-back like that! I am so grateful that they at least got to see each other before Mark left so that they didn't have to wait four years for that! I just realized that if my kids go on missions, they will be going back-to-back like that since they are all 20 months apart! AHHH!

    ReplyDelete
  5. We will be your friends Mommy Aris, you can depend on us, but I don't do a chipmunk voice, I can do italian accent, chief voice and indian voice. Let me know what you want.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

SURPRISE!!

When the pizza guy came to the door last night, here's what John saw: It took a few seconds for John to process who the pizza delivery man was, but when he did, he was incredibly happy (and couldn't stop saying "heeeeyyyyy....".  It was Jared Moran, John's best friend. And me, I just knelt down, right then and there, and began repenting of all the lies that I have told over the last four months, hiding this most amazing surprise :-)  I told Sarah the other day that I was glad to see the light at the end of the falsehood tunnel, because if I kept this up much longer, I was destined to end up in liars' hell... Jared ran the Air Force marathon with John last year.  It was his first marathon, and from what he told us, his last.  However, he called in June and said he was coming again, but I was supposed to keep it a surprise from John.  I'm not sure what changed his mind, but we sure are glad he did.  John hates runnings marathons alone, and ther...

Getting Hannie Home

Knowing that Hannah was leaving on her mission to Ecuador February 7, I needed to get Hannie home.  To her credit, she took care of mostly everything out in Utah, including finding someone to buy her apartment contract.  When I got there, it was all about driving her around so she could take care of last minute things (selling back her books, mailing back a rented book, turning in her work stuff at the library), but really it was about some good old girl time too.  Eating at some of Provo's great eateries and buying cupcakes. Kitty, sampling some of the goods. Ah cupcakes.  Sweet Tooth Fairy bakery has become a tradition every time I visit Utah.  Seriously, they sell the most delicious cupcakes and cookies there.  It made sense to me to buy eight cupcakes for the two of us for a three day drive home.  Little did I know... One of the things that I have done too many times to count now is helping my college-age kids move in and out of their apart...

A Quick Trip to Mackinac Island

 Allow me a pity party for a paragraph.  As much as John is earning buckets of money for us and for our retirement, his weekend calls have been infringing on our time together.  Like I said, it's a complete pity party, because my logical mind reminds me that I should be happy he's making so much money, but my heart feels rather lonely at times as I reminisce about trips we have taken that we don't have time to take again. I love John.  I don't need him around all the time, but I find that the best quality time with him is when he doesn't have other distractions like work, and call, and hospital credentialing. Anyway, I guess that was two paragraphs, and I don't need to take it any further than that, because I don't want the body of this blog post to be about me and my loneliness. I've been wanting to go to Mackinac Island for two years now (I can hardly even believe that it's been that long since I was there).  With Lake Michigan getting colder and t...