A Trip to St. Louis 7-17 May 2025

We were so excited to go visit our kids and grandkids in St. Louis!  This is the best thing about coming home from a mission–the reunions here.  We hopped on Frontrunner in Orem and went right to the airport, no stress, then on to STL.

Let the fun begin!  We loved hanging out with the kids.  We spent hours catching up, reading books (Harry Potter is BIG right now in this family), going to ball games and dinners out.  We caught bugs and survived a real tornado.  We cooked and danced and ate and played.  It was a bit of heaven on earth.

Castle gifts for the kids:

A tornado blew through St. Louis and through our neighborhood.  It was pretty exciting the power and wifi on our street was down for a few days.

The kids were kept at school until the skies cleared.  Everyone on the street quickly cleaned up their yards and the fallen branches.

Down the street, we looked at this fallen tree in awe.

Torching a cockroach:

Ted Drew’s Frozen Custard!  Our favorite treat spot in St. Louis!

Here are a few fun videos of the kids:

The girls have attended a Lutheran pre-school in the neighborhood.

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My Cancer Check-ups and Updates

It’s been 2 years now since my breast cancer surgery.  I’m on a 5-year hormone treatment plan.  Today I went in for my yearly check up.  Oh, the memories that flooded back.  This is where I went for daily radiation treatments 2 years ago.  Today they took 5 vials of my blood to send off to labs far away to see if there is any of the same kind of cancer anywhere in my body now.

I take a daily hormone treatment pill (that will find and starve cancer cells should they appear in my body) and I’ve been taking a weekly pill to help my bone density.  Now that I’m back in the States, I’ll stop taking the bone density drug and do an infusion every 6 months.  These meds have side effects.  They make my joints ache and cause fatigue.  (Or is it just my older age??)  In any case, I’m grateful to be healthy and feeling quite well.

Here’s the report that came some weeks later:

See that wonderful NEGATIVE word?  That means there is no cancer in my body!!

Here’s a walk in the yard to celebrate!

The next week I went to have the transfusion.  This is the chemo room where patients go for their treatments.  My heart goes out to those battling cancer.

I was hooked up for about 35 minutes.  The medication is called Zometa.

After a day had passed, I felt like I’d been hit by a truck.  My entire body HURT, every joint, every limb.  It took about 3 weeks before I felt back to normal.  I wasn’t expecting that.  They say it gets better after the first time.  I really hope so!

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Germans in Salt Lake

Today we had lunch with some Frankfurt missionary friends at Siegfried’s in Salt Lake.  We’ve decided to get together every few weeks because we really like each other and we miss serving together.  As the months go by, more and more will be returning to this side of the ocean.  We are grateful for these friendships.

The Argyles, Conlins and Garbers

Siegfried’s has a fun selection of German foods and treats.  It even smells like Germany!

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Family Updates

Caleb celebrated his 1st birthday on April 17th.  He’s so much fun.  We get to see him every time Claire comes to Utah for work meetings.  He is a happy pleasant boy who brings joy into every room he enters.

Clark was the concluding speaker in his St. Louis Ward’s Easter program this week.  We got to watch him read the account of Jesus rising from the tomb here in Orem.  What a miracle, both Clark, and Jesus!

Adam & Heidi with Clark, Josie, Margot, Vivian and Lenna on Easter Sunday 2025.

And back at Aaron’s new place in Salt Lake we spent a Saturday helping him rip out old brambles and bushes in his back yard.  It was a big job.  Friends and family showed up with tools, gloves and trucks to haul the overgrown mess away.

It’s good to be back with our kids.

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The end of the wooden generation

I’ve been feeling a bit like these old rockers that have been on our front porch for about 30 years.  I have spent many hours here on these comfortable wooden rocking chairs, watching the neighborhood, listening to lawnmowers in late afternoons and crickets in the evening.  I love things made of real wood, natural and solid, but, like my tired body, these chairs have worn out and they don’t look so great anymore.  Sadly, it’s time to retire them, maybe to the pool area out back.

Today I found a comfortable replacement at Costco.  These new chairs are made of some sort of pressed plastic material that won’t fade or weather or wear out, EVER.  I feel like I’m trading the real thing for something man-made, but something that will outlive me.  It makes me a little sad to think that someday I will also be traded out.  I feel like old wood that isn’t always as valued as it once was.

Now they’re telling us our home’s wooden shake singles have to go–they won’t insure our roof anymore–it’s a fire hazard.  We must replace the natural with fake man-made materials.  We’ve been looking at 100s of roofs to decide what kind of product we like.  I don’t like any of them.  I like the wooden shingles.  This is going to be a hard adjustment.  It’s feeling the the end of the wooden generation, which is MY generation.  In time, we will all be replaced.  I am feeling sad about that.

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Back to Quilting and some Coco Pud Treats

Do I remember how to make quilts?  Found these blocks in a stack where I left them before going to Germany.  I’m trying to ease my way back into my fabric world.  There is something so therapeutic about putting pieces together to create a new whole.

Here’s another fun quilt I put together this week from a stack of blocks sewn before we left.  these fabrics are called “low volume” because they are mostly background fabrics.  They are really fun to look at and play with.

John’s therapy is making cookies.  Today it was Puds for this evening’s Cookie Walk (the Sunday evening tradition continues!).  We learned about these ugly little treats years ago at a Cub Scout event.  They’ve been a family favorite ever since.  At our house, we call them “Puds.”

Cocoa Puff Treats

Melt together until smooth in sauce pan:
1 c. Sugar
1 c. white Karo syrup

Add: (stir in and let melt until smooth and creamy)
1 c. Creamy Peanut Butter
1 c. Crunchy Peanut Butter

Add: (stir together until coated)
4 c. Cocoa Puffs
1 c. chopped pecans

Drop by spoonfuls onto wax paper, let cool

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Visitors from Germany at Thanksgiving Point

We loved working with Ivonne Tschiersch while we were living in Frankfurt.  She got to come to Salt Lake for General Conference and we got to visit with her and her son today.  We took a outing to Thanksgiving Point to enjoy the beginning of tulip season here.

We also got to see the new bronze sculptures called “The Tree of Life” exhibit.

After we had some genuine American food, then we visited This is the Place Monument.

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Blanket Stories — BYU Museum of Art

Another exhibit at the BYU MOA caught my eye as I was leaving this evening.  I immediately thought about my quilts–there are about this many.  The idea of this display was fascinating to me.  It’s a beautiful history of blankets used to comfort with love.

Aside from the steel pole that punctures each blanket at every layer (oh so painful), I would love to see my quilts, 100 years from now stacked like this, with the stories they’ll tell about who used them, loved them and felt near to me because of them.

Each blanket was tagged and told a story.

 

What a beautiful visual display of love!

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Brian Kershisnik: The Difficult Part, an Exhibit at BYU’s Museum of Art

Brian Kershisnik is one of my favorite thoughtful local artists.  Reproductions of several of his pieces hang in our home.  I went with a group of neighbor ladies to his show at the BYU Museum of Art this week.  It was both moving and enlightening.

“The process of becoming human, of striving to more fully understand others, myself and God, is filled with awkward discoveries and happy encounters, dreadful sorry and unmitigated joy.  I believe art should facilitate this process rather than simply decorate it, or worse, distract from it.  It should remind us of what we have forgotten, illuminate what we know and teach us new things.  Through art we can come to feel and understand and love more completely–we become more human.”  –Brian Kershisnik

Here are a few of my favorites from this gallery of Kirshisnik’s works:

Descent from the Cross was one of the most moving pieces I saw this evening.  I stood before it for a long time, considering this Easter season and the price Jesus paid for me and for my foibles.

I love the angels in Kershisnik’s paintings.  They are always near, hovering, blessing, helping, even though we don’t usually realize they are there.

This next series really spoke to me:  Death–a suite of prints.  You can look more closely at all of them here.

Death -A suite of prints

This one reminds me of my girlfriends who walk with me though this life.

“Perhaps we may never see the results of our endeavors, but our attempts at kindness and care will determine our character over time.”

A large reproduction of this Nativity painting hangs in our home.  I look at it every day, grateful for the wonder of Jesus’s birth.  Where was I on that sacred night?

I bought a print of this one for each of my kids to help us remember the gift of divine intervention in our lives and in the lives of our children–like when Vivy’s life was saved when the car hit her little body a few weeks ago.  Her life was protected and preserved.  Angels were involved.  I have no doubt she was saved by a miracle.     

This was an unexpected favorite–I’d never seen it before.  Jesus stopped the jaws of hell from gaping wide after us.  He paid the price in full.  Oh, what a gift!  And what a price He paid!

I purchased the book of all the pieces in this exhibit and I’ve enjoyed reading more about each one.

In the beginning room of this exhibit was a screen with this 13 minute BYU Ted Talk playing.  I’m so glad I stopped to listen to it.  Brian Kershisnik talks about Harvesting from Chaos.  He said, “It is interesting to me that in many of the religious traditions of the world, God creates a world out of chaos.  Creation comes from chaos.  Chaos is where all the stuff is, where the resources are.  I’ve found that to be true in my work as well.  Embracing chaos and harvesting from chaos is essential for fostering creativity.”

He advises us to do 2 things:  Take Notes and Make Mistakes.  I will listen to this advice again and again.  It makes perfect sense to me.  I hope you will do the same.  This will make me better at the things I am trying to do.

You can view it here.

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The End of the Joann Fabric Store Era

When I first started quilting in 1992 or so, there were two Orem stores where quilters shopped:  JoAnn and Fantastic Fabrics on State Street in Orem.  I took my first quilting class from Penny Stephenson at Fantastic Fabrics.  My new quilt friends and I found the pieces of fabric we needed at these two stores.

I remember shopping with my dear friend, Marjo Rietveld, at JoAnn.  We had conversations that went like this, “Aren’t you so glad that our husbands have great jobs at WordPerfect so we can afford to buy any fabric we need?”  Then we’d carefully select the bolts we liked and have 1/8 or 1/4 yard pieces cut from them.  We loved learning to quilt together and I love my memories of JoAnn fabrics.

This year JoAnn declared bankruptcy.  There are more than 800 JoAnn stores in 49 states (13 in Utah).  It almost seems unbelievable that this institution is going to go away.

Today I stopped by to pay my respects as our Orem store is slowly emptying.  I wanted to take a few pics of a place where I’ve enjoyed shopping these last 30 years or so.  During my years with Days for Girls, I purchased 1000s of yards of flannel here that was made into feminine hygiene kits that have gone out all over the world.  I’ve purchased notions and books and holiday things here.  I suppose I’ve done my share in keeping the business alive all this time.  But no more.  By May 31st, all the remaining stores will close (many have already emptied).

I’m sad to say goodbye.

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