We
were supposed to leave between 12:30 and 1:00 p.m. Life was wearing
us out a bit, so we took advantage of a chance to get away for a
couple of days. Just the two of us, and the place was virtually
free, because we needed to use up some points in our time-share
exchange program before they expired. (We had bought into this
program a long time ago, when times were better. We figured we might
as well use it.)
There
was an opening for two nights at a little town northeast of here,
pretty country settled by the Dutch. The place had a golf course (we
didn’t care) and a nice pool. Our company had bought into it
when this new little resort hit trouble, ready to open just in time
for the economy to crash a couple of years ago.
Our
budget barely had room to cover the gasoline, so we wouldn’t be
eating in the restaurants or doing anything extravagant. We planned
to carry everything we could with us. Under the circumstances, it
was a measure of my husband’s desperate need for a break that
we were going to forgo a day and a half of paid work and take off.
It was a three-hour drive and then only three miles to the Canadian
border.
Then,
between the reservation and our departure, two major problems arose.
I was in an accident and hurt my back (which was already a problem),
and a few days later he had a misstep boarding the commuter train and
wrenched his knee.
It
was laughable that I was suddenly the able-bodied member of the
household. I could go up the stairs by gripping the banister and
lifting the left foot and stepping up, bringing the right up to join
it, pause, repeat for the next stair — very slow, tiring, and
not to be done unless necessary. I was not dashing up and down on a
whim! He couldn’t go up the stairs at all; he stayed
downstairs and slept on the kind-of broken couch. We were supposed
to take off in three days.
We
wondered if we would have to cancel our plans, but it was his left
knee and he claimed driving didn’t bother it, so we decided to
go anyway. It would just be a quieter time. That was okay. Simple
decompression was what we were really after.
I
had planned and packed food, and meds, and clothes. We were taking
my car, not his, but I couldn’t carry anything. I could only
drive the car up onto the lawn as close to the front door as
possible, and then wait for him to arrive. He was in Olympia (30
miles away) for the morning. The 10:30 docket should be quick, and
we were scheduled to leave at 1:00p.m., with a cushion of an hour in
case of trouble.
He
didn’t call, he didn’t arrive until 3:00, and we still
had to get gasoline. Things had not gone as planned at the
courthouse, and we were really late. Instead of beating the traffic
and arriving at our destination with time to arrange a leisurely
dinner, we hit rush hour going north for both Seattle and Everett,
and didn’t make the 6 p.m. closing time for the check-in desk.
Calling for instructions, we managed to get the code on the lockbox
to work on the third try, and we had an envelope with a key in hand.
Did
I mention that we were tired? We were quite worn out, we were
hungry, traffic and travel conditions had been wretched, and we were
apparently on the third floor. I could walk better than he could,
which wasn’t saying much, and I went to scope out the location
of the elevator, which was at the end of the hall to the left.
There
was an exterior door, but it had no keyswipe to get in from outside.
However, one could park there, have someone (me) hold the door from
the inside, and get our things (him) into the building.
Have
you ever tried to carry a biggish cooler with crutches? Don’t;
it can’t be done. He had to dispense with the crutches for
that one, which was not good for him, and take very careful, painful,
small steps. I could carry the very lightest things, if I blocked
the door open for a moment; the cooler, painfully arrived at the
doorway, was good for that.
If
the door closed, I would have to walk back down to the other end,
unlock the front door, walk down the length of the hall, and push the
end door open again from the inside. Walking wasn’t my strong
suit either at that point, so we were careful not to get locked out.
Piling
the stuff outside the door, pulling it inside, a combination of
pushing and carrying it, got us into the elevator, then we had to
reverse the process to exit at the third floor.
Now,
where was our unit — close, we hoped. Nope, it was down
towards the other end again. Of course it was. Well, at least it
wasn’t the very
last door.
Fortunately,
I had packed food that could just be heated up quickly for that first
night’s dinner. We ate, collapsed, and figured out what we
wanted to do in the morning. We wouldn’t go anywhere until he
could go swim, and we hoped that we would feel better after we had a
chance to sleep. Meanwhile, at least we were safely here —
where’s my toothbrush? Oops, our bag was still in the car
because he forgot we had put it in the trunk instead of the cab, so
he had to go back out and get it.
The
next morning he came back from his early swim and said, “Guess
what? There are two luggage carts downstairs.” You mean
bellhop-type trolleys, like in every movie hotel lobby scene? Yes,
that’s what he meant. We must have walked right past them,
carefully nestled against the wall to the right, just inside the
door. We didn’t know to look for them, in a condo unit. If
the desk had been staffed, I’m sure they would have pointed
them out for us. Our whole focus had been locating the elevator.
Leaving
was a whole lot easier than coming in — smooth as could be. It
left me thinking, what help does our Father in Heaven have for us,
just sitting there, ready to offer, that we rush right past without
seeing? How many of our frustrations would be avoided, our moments
of panic unnecessary, If we checked in with him first, and talked
with him as we went along, instead of only after all else failed? If
we stopped to listen more? Probably a lot.
Marian J. Stoddard was born in Washington, D.C., and grew up in its Maryland suburbs. Her
father grew up in Carson City, Nevada, and her mother in Salt Lake City, so she was always
partly a Westerner at heart, and she ended up raising her family in Washington State. Her family
took road trips all over the United States and Canada, so there were lots of adventures.
The adventures of music, literature, and art were also valued and pursued. Playing tourist always
included the local museums as well as historical sites and places of natural beauty. Discussions
at home, around the dinner table or working in the kitchen, could cover politics, philosophy, or
poetry, with the perspective of the gospel underlying all. Words and ideas, and testimony and
service, were the family currency.
Marian graduated from Winston Churchill High School in Potomac, Maryland, and attended the
University of Utah as the recipient of the Ralph Hardy Memorial Scholarship, where she was
graduated with honors, receiving a B.A. in English. She also met the love of her life, a law
student, three weeks after her arrival; she jokes that she had to marry him because her mother
always wanted a tenor in the family. (She sings second soprano.) They were married two years
later and have six children and six grandchildren (so far). She treasures her family, her friends,
and her opportunities to serve.
Visit Marian at her blog, greaterthansparrows. You can contact her at
bloggermarian@gmail.com.
Marian and her husband live in Tacoma, Washington. Together they teach those who are
preparing to go to the temple for the first time, and she also teaches a Stake Relief Society
Institute class.