MUSIC FOR THE SOUL (under construction while Charles learns more about HTML)

Friday, October 17, 2008

A Day of Mourning


This was one of the saddest games of my life. It looks like I picked the wrong week to stop sniffing glue. It looked to me like BYU thought that TCU was going to be handed to them like most of the other teams. What many may have forgotten (coaches included) is that THE RESOUNDING difference in TCU's football team is their SPEED! They are faster than almost any team I've ever seen. That is perhaps the ONE thing that I've ALWAYS wanted to see BYU do better at. It threw us off our timing. Our receivers were one step behind and the ball was often thrown a few steps behind. I think they missed some interceptions because they were TOO fast and overshot the ball. I know that there's a slight elevation difference, but that's not enough of an excuse.
We also looked like we were afraid. When we saw their tenacity, we didn't try to match it, but instead looked like we needed to play it a little more "safely". I hope Utah beats them and gets a surprise upset from someone else so when we beat Utah, we still win the Championship outright. THERE GOES THE NATION'S LONGEST WINNING STREAK!!! *sound of Charles crying*
The thing that is going to upset me the most is that USC lost and fell from like 3rd or 4th place to about 11th place. I don't remember for certain, but I think it was 10 spots or less and they lost to a freaking unranked team!!!!!!! You just watch, Sunday the polls will come out, and BYU, who lost to a ranked team, will fall MORE than 10 spots. I'd bet my soul on it. And to boot, BYU is in a conference (Mountain West Conference) that has dominated USC's conference (PAC-10) this year 6 out of 7 games!!!!! So who's in a harder conference? What should our loss mean? Not as much. We should be ranked about 11th after that loss, but I bet we'll be ranked in the low teens or 20's.
This makes me extra grateful for a Judgment Day when we will all be judged by a perfect Heavenly Father. Can you imagine being judged by a panel of referees or BCS pollsters? I think I'd give up trying to live a righteous life altogether.

A Decent Game






















This game was also closer than I would have liked it to be, but I recognized that they were simply a better team than we had played yet. We just didn't play like I thought we would. But, in the end, we chalked it up to a bad day. We still only let them get 3 points. But you could just feel like we should have done better. This made us nervous about one of our biggest games of the year...TCU at TCU.

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Blue&White Mormons vs. Blue&White Mormons




















I haven't missed a game yet. I must admit that going to Logan isn't quite as exciting as going to Seattle. We didn't play super well, but I chalked it up to such a beating in the first quarter that we just got sloppy in attempt to not humiliate them like UCLA. We got some great pizza on the way up and we bought indian drinks for the way back. Very memorable game--probably the worst officiated game I've witnessed in my life.

Bludgeoning #2




vs


Don't ask me what happened to this team. They didn't show up either. It makes me wonder if BYU is pumping some sort of funky mist into the opponent's locker room before each game so they can't even put one lowsy point on the board. Wyoming isn't traditionally terrible, but wow. They didn't show. They did end up with the closest person this year to rush over 100 yards on our defense. I think he got something like 97. This game wasn't as fun as the last game. 44-0 is great, but it got a little boring because Wyoming just isn't a team I have much of a grudge against right now. Honestly, as I was trying to remember to blog about each game, I almost forgot this one altogether. It could have also been because I didn't sit next to a cute girl, but rather with my dad. Now, don't get me wrong, I LOVE to do anything with my dad, but I think he'd be OK with taking a back seat to a cute girl. He's understanding like that.

UCLA Bludgeoning

















So, this game was interesting. I'm usually not terribly interested in utter beatdowns, but when it's a team like UCLA, I love every single stinking second of it. I think the thing that fascinated me the most was that the guy that gave the prayer asked that both teams would play to their level of preparation. I'm sure he meant it, too. So, why did we beat them 59-0? I don't know. The prayer would suggest that UCLA has never actually held a practice this season. And since I'm pretty sure that's not the case, it could also mean that BYU was just THAT much more prepared than UCLA. Was that the case? Well, perhaps it meant that this man's prayer was simply not answered the way he wanted it to be for any number of reasons. Whatever the reason, it was glorious. I also got to take a friend, Julie O'Neal, who is a new girl in the ward and she seems like quite a quality person. It was a good opportunity to get to know her better and I hope that she didn't think I was a complete freak by the end of the game. I tried hard to help her understand everything that was going on so she wouldn't be bored to tears. I think we figured out that the ROTC did around 307 pushups or something like that. And another highlight was finding a water spout by one of the vendors hanging from the ceiling so I didn't have to stand in those insufferably long lines at the drinking fountains.

Monday, October 6, 2008






VS.














It's about time I blogged again about BYU Football. This game was a joke in a way. We beat them severely in so many aspects of the game--in every way except the score. And how were we rewarded? We dropped in the poles. Oh well. It was FUN! Definitely a game worth driving all the way to Seattle for. It reminded me of the good ol' days going to Seattle with Doug Call to watch European exhibition soccer games. We had a fun group of people in two cars. We stayed with relatives of Trent Boulter. We ate good food, saw cool things, we were sworn at quite a bit and BYU brought one ROCKIN' band to the stadium for our tailgate party. I couldn't believe it. Washington had quite a tailgating crowd, bigger than BYU's home tailgating crowd, but BYU's AWAY tailgaiting crowd rocked my world. I wish we had gotten there earlier for food and what not. There were a few cool things in the stadium.

First, one of their players got knocked out cold and they brought the ambulance on to the field. The cool part there of course was that he wasn't paralyzed, but at one point we heard the crowd booing and we noticed on the other side of the stadium that a woman was being held back by security. We thought it was some freak trying to steal the show and then realized the crowd was booing because it was his mother who wanted to see him. We joined in the booing and then all cheered when they decided to let her go. It was tender. I cried. Most did, I think, or at least had GREAT respect for the graveness of the circumstance. The second coolest thing was that at half time the Washington band played the Cougar Fight Song! We went nuts! I thought that was great sportsmanship and heard that they've been trying to get the BYU band to do that at our home games for the other schools and they won't. Jerks. The third cool thing was at the beginning. We thought we were sitting in the BYU section because we were surrounded by what looked to be a couple thousand cougar fans and we were proud of the support around us and all down the sidelines as far as the eyes could see there were cougar fans. Then, when the team came out, the entire other endzone (a full sized endzone compared with our endzone which was just temporary bleachers) rose and cheered. We couldn't believe it. It was like a home game practically as far as our loudness went. I estimated over ten thousand BYU fans and later heard on the news that it was just past 11,000. Wow! The End since I'm tired of typing.

Monday, September 1, 2008

BYU vs. UNI



















This game was nuts. It started out like the blowout we all anticipated and then during the third quarter I think we started playing like the game was over and the Panthers started playing like they were going to upset us. And while I was never really worried about winning, I was VERY worried about looking bad and not getting the kind of quality practice that I thought we ought to be getting to prepare us for other teams. I'M GOING TO WASHINGTON, BABY!! We'd better win because I get motion sickness and that's a TON of driving to do in three days and the only way I'll make it through is if we win. Go COUGS!!

Monday, August 18, 2008

Klune Industries, Inc


I got a job!!! And that's a picture they have on their website.

It was a really tough choice whether to work for Klune or for O.C. Tanner. Both had high points and low points, but in the end, I felt like Klune just seemed like the better pick.

I'll actually be working for...

Klune Precision Casting produces completely machined and finished ferrous and non-ferrous castings with certification approval by major aerospace and defense prime contractors.

I would try and put that in my own words, but for now I'll just put what the website has because I haven't actually been to work yet so I can't describe it that well. I'll no doubt be talking much more about this later!!

Sunday, August 17, 2008

New Clergymen

Well, when you google Glen Mella, you get a picture like this of our new bishop. The changing of the guards is usually a bittersweet experience. If it's not, something is seriously wrong.

Just a day or two past his calling as our new High Councilman, I realized that this man was going to be our next bishop. I teased him about it the next Sunday and the poor guy had to play stupid for a really long time.

A tribute to our last bishopric: I've never had a better bishopric than Bishop Hunsaker, Brother Miner, and Brother Bowman. I learned a LOT during their reign. I used to think it would be hard to be a bishop, and as I thought that, I thought it would be hard in a very negative way. Granted, it is hard, but it was easy to see how these men had the types of attitudes and other godly attributes that would make it a fun hard, an exciting hard, a playful hard, and those types of hard made up for the downright ugly spiritually hard times. I love those three men and hope to keep in touch with them my whole life.

Now, armed with counselors Clark Warnick and Brad Adamson, Bishop Mella will lead the 6th Ward on to new and more exciting heights than ever before!! Whheeeeeeeeee!

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Snake River Update!!!!


This will probably turn out too long and boring to read, so give up now.

President Stratton of my stake presidency knew something bad was going to happen and had an uneasy feeling about our trip. He prayed about it and ended up with an assurance that nothing permanently bad would happen and that the Lord teaching his flock a lesson. He didn't tell us that until afterwards.

21,000 cfs (cubic feet per second) was the highest in 9 years. The trip wasn't too terribly scary for the first large portion of it. The worst rapids weren't until Lunch Counter. Lunch Counter doesn't sound like a very scary name until you've almost lost your life in it. After almost losing your life in it, you start to think of yourself as the lunch at Lunch Counter for the vultures after death.

There's no going around Lunch Counter. Either side of the river has swirling pools of water ready to suck you in and flip you. The only really option is to go straight up the middle which is where four consecutive large walls of water running parallel to the bank of the river are ready to flip you into either of the two swirling vortexes. None of the pictures taken really portray the horror. I'm the bottom-most person in the picture except for our river guide in case you can't tell.

We went up the middle and got through the first three large walls with much grief, but the last was just too much. It was simply bigger and faster and more furious than our raft (which is quite large and fast itself). We flipped sort of diagonally backwards and people were mostly thrown out of the raft before the raft was even halfway tipped.

People like me who can't swim, thought we were going to die. Some girls who could swim just fine thought they were also going to die because two things made it harder. First, we were covered by a huge raft and had to get out from under it. Second, if you were lucky enough to do so, you probably also had someone land on top of you and as they were struggling themselves, they were inadvertently holding you under water. Then, as you came up out of the water and started choking and swallowing and spitting and gasping, you only had one second to do so before another rapid covered you and the process started all over again.

After clearing all of the rapids, we hit a point where now we could constantly keep our heads above water. Thinking straight was still a challenge. I tuned out everyone around me. Kali Browne tried saving my life and I kept saying, "No, no, no, no, no, no." But what I meant was, "No, thank you Kali. I'd rather have just me die then both of us." Most swam to other rafts that made it through. Luckily, they did make it. I can only imagine if more than one had flipped. A raft was screaming to me to swim to them but I was ignoring them. I wanted to make it to shore. I didn't realize that it was probably a bigger chore to make it to shore than to swim to the raft.

Some well-meaning individuals threw ropes out for us to grab. This was a huge morale booster until after grabbing it and it becoming taut, we went under water and started drowning again. I let go and thought, "That was a stupid idea!" Every time I would get close to the shore, the water currents would pull me away from it and boy are they powerful. Eventually, I swam with all my might towards a tree that was overhanging the shore and I grabbed it and it flung me to shore. That was painful.

I sat there amazed about what had just happened, but then my thoughts turned to everyone else out there. I started praying my guts out. My eyes popped open for a second and I could see my garments. I followed them up my leg and realized that I didn't have any pants on. At some point, probably during the rope incident, they came off. My keys were in there so that was an unpleasant thought. One other girl got to shore at some point and she hiked to the road and walked back to the buses. The river guide also got to shore and the two of us weren't at an area where that was an option so we hiked to a raft up the river that stopped to get us. Boy did I not want to get back in--especially in garments. But I had my life, and who hasn't seen their dad walking around in garments? They were cotton so not see-through like mesh, thank heavens. Once in, Sister Miner had an extra pair of capris that I put on for modesty's sake. Ashlee South put her arm around me to keep me from shivering so badly.

We got our raft flipped back over and got back in. We missed as many rapids as possible the rest of the trip. You could tell our river guide was humbled. What I heard was that he hadn't flipped a raft in ten years and he's done some of the ugliest rivers in Zimbabwe. When we were back at the buses, we exchanged hugs, made sure we were all accounted for, and I changed the capris for some more unisex shorts that Meridith had.

No doubt there's much more to the story that's not included. I won't go into the ugly details about having to leave my car in Jackson over the weekend with all of our valuables in it and having to get a key in Pleasant Grove and then drive back later the next week costing around $450.

I think the most overwhelming part of this has just been the idea of death. Coming that close to death makes you think of the Plan of Salvation so much more deeply. I, as well as about five others, were rather traumatized by the experience and have all no doubt grown closer to the Lord because of it. But it's not just the experience itself that has helped us grow closer to the Lord. It's the fact that we're all trying to be more Christ-like as a result of the experience. That's what brings you closer to Christ. We're speaking kinder words, we're serving more often, we're taking advantage of life's blessings more generously (e.g., not wasting so much time). We grew much closer as a ward (as if we weren't already the closest ward in the world), and now we can take these experiences and carry them to others and help them to see things the way we do.

THE END (but not really because didn't die)

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Job Hunt


In order to bore you all to death, here's a quick look at the companies I've applied to. Companies with an asterisk are companies with whom I've interviewed. Maybe ya'll can help me with other ideas...

1. The Wencor Group
2. Nuskin
3. Power Innovations International*
4. A nameless medical manufacturer (it wouldn't give me their name on the website)
5. A world specialist manufacturer in Baltimore area (same scenario)
6. Parker Hannifin*
7. Rinchem Co.*
8. Weir Minerals Rubber Engineering*
9. Schreiber Foods
10. Austin Allen Co.
11. MRINetwork
12. Select Comfort
13. L3 Communications*
14. Compeq Manufacturing Co, Ltd.
15. Klune Industries, Inc.
16. Arlington Scientific

So, have I really applied to that many places. Perhaps not. Of those five companies who have interviewed me, only two have turned me down. I think I'm most interested in L3 Communications which will get back to me in about two weeks.

I really should work on more applications, BUT it takes more time than you might think. To make sure that you're applying for a job that you are actually truly capable of and that you are interested in them, takes some time.

It's also interesting how many people actually get back with you. This is very reminiscent of finding an internship. You can just expect that only a fourth (if you're dang luck) of the people you try to contact will contact you back. And of those, you're probably equally lucky to get a fourth of those to respond in the affirmative and not turn you down.

Monday, May 5, 2008

Search for Car/Wife/Job

As many of you know, I got a Bimmer. It's fun BUT it's already broken!! I'm finding out what the damage is today. So, the car issue is still an issue.

On the girl issue, I gave a talk in church and managed not to mention dating EVEN ONCE, which no doubt shocked most of my ward. I decided that I haven't been twitterpated in a long long time and it's not because there aren't girls worthy of being twitterpated over...it's probably got more to do with me being overly analytical. And in my effort to be a more frequent covenant-making person (which is something that Brigham Young and others were adamant about), I think I've found a way to overcome this conundrum. I guess we'll see relatively soon!

And now I have a job issue. I'm glad that I'm finally getting calls and interviews. That's reassuring. Now I need to make it a matter of prayer as my patriarchal blessing encourages. Wish me luck. I need to pay for that BMW!

Monday, March 10, 2008

Search for Car/Wife

So, today I decided that my search for a car parallels my search for a wife in many ways. If you're single, see if this describes well your personal search for a spouse.

First, we all want a car that looks good to us. Lucky for us, society has a collectively wide variety of what appeals to them visually (there's no accounting for taste) and surely there's a car that looks good for everyone. Unfortunately, individually, we're all sort of picky--some more than others. And the longer we're without a car (single), the more we wonder if we're too picky. Do I want a car that's big, small, nice paint job or little paint, lots of custom work or all natural?

Second, the picky thing goes for not only what a car looks like but the inner workings of the car. Does the car have too little power (energy) or too much, or does the car handle the corners of life well or will it roll easily when things aren't perfectly straight?

Third, accessories. How tricked out is the car? Most of us long for a James Bond style car. Does the car have many bells and whistles (perhaps talents)?

Fourth, how much does the car cost? This isn't just a monetary cost although that's definitely an issue. Some cars do cost a TON of money. But what about the cost in time, in worry (emotional investment), etc? Are we going to put a lot into it only to realize that your bid on eBay was just not enough. After all that work and sweat, you put in $15,000 and still didn't make the reserve price and were rejected.

I could keep going, but I've probably wasted enough time as it is. In the end, as always, the Spirit will help us. But I'm a firm believer that most of the time you have to do A LOT of good hard work and thinking before you're ready for the inspiration that you're looking for. So, onward and upward.