"We seldom get into trouble when we speak softly. It is only when we raise our voices that the sparks fly and tiny molehills become great mountains of contention."
Today
my Young Women president called and asked me to speak about this
year’s Youth theme at the Youth Conference tomorrow.
You
may have already guessed that I love to talk. In fact, I talk a lot.
I talked so much in high school that my friends called me MOPS —
Master of Pointless Stories.
At
the time the name hurt, because my stories weren’t pointless to
me. On the contrary, they were desperately interesting. I know
because I was always dying to tell someone something. It didn’t
matter who the person was; if he was willing to listen, he’d
get an earful. It wasn’t an earful of nothing. It was an earful
of things I felt were most interestingly pressing on my young mind.
Talking
aloud is how I sort things out. If I have someone to talk to, I have
a sounding board, someone to bounce ideas off, someone to ask
questions so that I can unweave what can at times be a burdensome
thought process. Gratefully, as a youth I always had someone with
whom I could unravel those knotted strings of thought.
After
I became ill, the ability to talk with an abundance of friends
gradually dried to a few choice individuals who didn’t tire of
my endless babblings. When I think of embarking on a journey of
service in the Lord, I think of one woman in particular, The Gummi
Bear Queen.
The Gummi Bear Queen and me.
When
I was hospitalized in the fall of 2002, The Gummi Bear Queen’s
husband was the bishop of my singles’ ward. Daily, she (and
frequently he) came to visit me in the ICU unit where — I am
sure — I made very little sense.
I
think I was in the hospital for around three months, during which
time she came and laughed with me, brought me little quotes, and
reminded me of the person I once was back when I was the Camp Youth
Leader and she was the Stake Young Women President.
She
reached in to my mind and pulled out memories long dim of camp songs,
silly Young Women camp stunts and countless other treasures my
illness buried. In each effort she made, I could catch, if only for a
brief glimmer, the girl I once was.
When
it came time to be discharged from the hospital, I joked with her
that I would only get to see her once a week at church. Her response,
“Then I guess we’ll have to get together for ice cream
this week; how’s Tuesday?” It was the beginning of an
amazing friendship. Every week thereafter we went out for ice cream.
I
honestly don’t know how she did it. She was a busy mother,
grandmother, wife, stake Relief Society president, visiting teacher,
temple shift coordinator and a realtor. I know she wasn’t
wearing all those hats at the same time, but several she surely did.
She
tells me of this conversation that we had at one very point in my
illness. Evidently one afternoon while spooning in the frozen yogurt,
I looked at her with tears tracing down my warm cheeks and asked, “Am
I your service project?”
I
was just certain that someone like her, someone pulled in so many
directions, just had to have a hidden agenda. I knew it because at
that time in my life, I felt I wasn’t worth the effort. Surely
someone with a heart as large as hers would be willing to put up with
me on such a consistent basis only if she had made it a goal to serve
me.
She
was so taken back by my question that she didn’t even know how
to respond. Why? Because serving me wasn’t her goal. Loving me
was.
Little
did she realize just how desperately I needed her. Here I had
embarked on my own life’s journey with a destination in mind,
only to have my spirit’s little ship sucked into a brutal and
long-lasting typhoon.
Tuesdays
with The Gummi Bear Queen were like having a coast guard swoop in to
scoop out the water I’d taken on, patch up the holes, reorient
my compass and repair my torn emotional sails. By the time she
dropped me off, I was afloat and catching my breath. I even had a
smile on my face.
The
Gummi Bear Queen didn’t just take me out for ice cream; she
included me in her life. Tuesdays together meant participating in
grocery shopping for family meals, making cookies for stake Relief
Society board meetings, baking cinnamon rolls in the kitchens of
houses at open houses, choosing greeting cards for others she loved,
brainstorming stake service projects, typing up not-so-secret family
recipes and going on countless other adventures.
She
said that she believed I was her service project because she
always put me to work. It was just what I needed. The only reason
our weekly tradition lapsed was because she chose to embark on a
mission to Africa with her sweetie.
When
I think of embarking in the service of the Lord, I think of The Gummi
Bear Queen because she was someone who taught me the value of loving
others to the point that they finally recognize there has been
someone to love hidden within themselves all along — even if,
like me — current circumstances hide that scared someone
beneath the label of a serious mental illness. Thanks, Gummi Bear
Queen.
Sarah Price Hancock, a graduate of San Diego State University's rehabilitation
counseling Masters of Science program with a certificate psychiatric
rehabilitation.
Having embarked on her own journey with a mental health diagnosis, she is
passionate about psychiatric recovery. She enjoys working as a lector
for universities, training upcoming mental health professionals.
Sarah also enjoys sharing insights with peers working to strengthen
their "recovery toolbox." With proper support, Sarah
knows psychiatric recovery isn’t just possible — it’s
probable.
Born and raised in San Diego, California, Sarah served a Spanish-speaking
and ASL mission for the LDS Church in the Texas Dallas Mission. She
was graduated from Ricks College and BYU. Sarah currently resides in
San Diego and inherited four amazing children when she married the
man of her dreams in 2011. She loves writing, public speaking,
ceramics, jewelry-making and kite-flying — not necessarily in
that order.