Katie Hamstead's Blog
April 19, 2023
Getting Back On Track

Yes, it's been a few years since I last published. A lot has happened in this time, both personally and professionally, but I am excited to say I am back!
A few years ago, my publisher for the Kiya Trilogy and the Fairytale Galaxy series collapsed. It coincided with certain things in my life perfectly, so I can't complain there. The rights to the books all reverted back to me. The other books I had out I either let the contracts lapse of I asked for completely new contracts, which is why my current portfolio of available titles is limited at the moment. This is due to my divorce, because yes, he came after my books. Since Arizona is a common property state, my intellectual property was also legally his, so all contracts made in the marriage he claimed as his own and he was ordered by the court to receive 50% of my royalties. This was a major reason why I pulled most of my titles. A couple I had signed after our separation, which is why they are still available, but it was also at this time the publisher imploded, which made things simple for me in that regard.
However, it also meant Kiya and the Fairytale books were no longer available.

All of this combined made for an environment not terribly conducive to writing and finding a new place to release my books, so I kind of let it all slide. I'd deal with it when I could.
However, my publisher for the Cadence books noticed Kiya was available and they approached me. REUTS is currently doing a complete rebrand to be a boutique publisher, so they wanted solid titles for their relaunch. I loved working with REUTS for Cadence, so I was more than happy to sign up the Kiya Trilogy and all seven books of the Fairytale Galaxy. They also had one title in the works, but they asked for another one which the head editor had read previously, and then I also offered some more. During this time, Quest for a Popstar reverted back to me as well, so I asked if they wanted it. They said yes!
And so, here we are. The Kiya Trilogy will be getting relaunched into the world this year, completely overhauled, rebranded, and with some extra bits for fun. Next year, the Fairytale Galaxy will begin its releases as well, with all seven books coming out over a two year period. I'm also excited to get some new titles out there, two of which I am eager to share for different reasons. Secret Admirer is fun, amusing, romantic, and sweet, while Reruns of My Life delves into some hard topics as it follows a strong teen who is forced to face the past she tried to wipe from existence by faking her suicide.
So, yes, new books, old books redone, all are in the line up! I have an email subscription on the side here for notifications when they release. I am so excited to be getting books out again, and I hope you are too!
Release Schedule
2023:
Kiya Trilogy
KiyaBook 1 = May 15th
KiyaBook 2 = June 27th
KiyaBook 3 = August 8th
NewSouth Wales:
Latefall/early winter.
2024:
Secret Admirer:
TentativeFebruary
FairytaleGalaxy 1-4:
Everycouple of months.
2025:
Fairytale Galaxy 5-7:
Everycouple of months.
Questfor a Pop Star
2026:
Reruns of My Life
October 30, 2021
Finding Personal Peace
Over the past few days, some things happened that made me pause to think about how I have come to be at the place I am now and yet remain composed, for want of a better word. So, I have pondered over this and came to this conclusion; there are three things in my life that keep me on course; Lilly, Lucy, and most of all, Christ. All these three things are tightly connected as well.
Going back to the beginning, I was in a place of darkness. Emotional abuse that had carried on for years had left me in a pit of confusion and uncertainty. I had lost the very essence of who I was, no, who I am. The only things keeping me going and moving onward were my girls. I clung to them, making them my purpose to go on when I felt so battered that I didn’t even know if I deserved to be their mother.
In the year or two leading up to this point, the Lord had begun to test my trust in Him. Various small things occurred, things that made me pause and remember how faithful I had once been, and I began to turn back to it. As time passed, things in my life declined, and the Lord called me to trust Him. I have always been someone who clings onto things, needing to have plans, needing to feel in control, so this call to let go and trust came hard for me. But as soon as I did, it was as if a light turned on in my life. Throughout the divorce, that trust He had instilled in me saved me and kept me on course.
Growing up, my mum called me tenacious. I always called it stubbornness, although, I think I have a strong defiance streak as well. If someone says I can’t do something, I work my butt of to prove them wrong. If someone expects me to lay down and die, to be quiet and take what I’m given, I come back swinging. Although, I think sometimes people believe that being quieter in general, I’m weak and stupid. I know I may not be the smartest person in the room, and I know I still have much to learn in so many things, but confusing quietness for stupidity or weakness is a poor judgement. When I think of Christ, I think of a gently spoken man, one who is thoughtful, patient, and kind. But He is so strong. Stronger than anyone else who has ever lived. To willingly suffer as He did, and give up His life for everyone, knowing some will accept and many won’t, that takes incredible courage and fortitude of character. To me, Christ is the ultimate example of strength through quieter nature, and I strive to be like Him. As I have grown older, I have become quieter. Many who knew me when I was young will attest to me having a loud side. Most people who know me now have probably never seen that part of me. But I have grown quieter not because I have nothing to say, but rather, I would prefer to say something meaningful. I would prefer to listen more. I do often speak silliness still, but generally I prefer to hold my tongue and ponder over things instead.
While going through my divorce, a lot of mud was slung around about me. So many lies spread to cover the truth I had uncovered. It was devastating. I was isolated living in a country on the other side of the world to my family and fighting to keep the only family I did have; my children, while being told I didn’t deserve them, and I was a useless mother. I quickly learned to hold my tongue during this time and speak when needed. I visited the temple weekly, and this became the fortification I needed to not only survive, but to fight back. During this time, I began to hear Christ’s voice clearer with each visit. It was profound and life changing. He reminded me who I am. He told me so much about my potential and my path forward. Most of all, He showed me that I have always been one of the strongest daughters of God and I am unbreakable. My tenacity, as my mother called it, or defiance as I call it, comes from who I have always been. My children chose me as their mother, which makes me beyond worthy of them. Those two wonderful, high energy, brilliant girls chose me and that is profoundly powerful. It gave me the fortitude to realize I do deserve to be their mother. I am capable of being a good mother. More than anything, it gave me the determination to stand my ground. I needed to be their mother, an example of conviction to them in faith and in womanhood. I needed to be a model to them for what they could become. They gave me my purpose; Christ gave me the way and the inspiration. To this day, as I go through yet another divorce, the Lord stands by me and tells me, “You are mine. I will take care of you.” And He does. I see it every day. I feel it in the peace I find even in hard times.
I think back to how I was several years ago, and I am sad for who I had become. But I think of where I am now, and I am glad for it. I have made the mistake of falling back onto old habits and it did more harm than good. I fell prey to the blame game which never helped anything. When it came down to it, when I stripped away all the drama and noise, I just needed to know who I am. I needed to toss out the labels—wife, mother, employee, student—everything I thought defined me and see who I truly am. I needed to see the value in me. It’s not easy to get to that point. It took a great deal of soul searching. But when I reached that point, and God said, “There’s my girl,” everything seemed so much easier. I could forgive. I could unburden myself of anger and hurt, all things I was completely justified feeling, but they just made everything so much harder. Without my burdens, who I am began to come out again and it didn’t matter what others said about me. No one else could define me anymore.
I’m not saying hard things aren’t hard for me, because they are, but I have a new perspective on them. As long as I keep moving forward, doing right by my girls, and allowing the Lord to guide my path, I know everything will turn out. There is immense peace in that.
And so, my advice is to find you. To turn to God. To open your heart to forgiveness and allowing all the things that you think define you drift away. Be you. Be the shining light that no one else can be. See yourself through heaven’s eyes and the transformation will come. When you find your peace, you will also find your strength.
August 16, 2020
Chapter ??: (Title Undecided)
It's the silent kind. It sneaks in quietly, subtly, unnoticed. It leaves its victim wondering if its really there. It makes them feel paranoid, as if they're maybe going crazy.
If you know what I'm talking about, you're doing better than so many people.
During the process of my divorce, I submitted almost two hundred screenshots of evidence detailing descriptions my ex gave of his sexual escapades and deviancy. Details that while I was collecting them made me sick to the stomach and left me crying harder than I've ever cried before. These screenshots led my attorney to change his attitude of just another client to "geez, this is messed up and I need to get this woman out!"
These screenshots resulted in, much to my ex-husband's chagrin and protest, the judge ordering him to undergo a forensically informed psychosexual evaluation. Due to confidentiality laws my ex instated because he is afraid of people discovering the truth about him, I cannot discuss in detail what was uncovered, but I can say that this highly trained professional diagnosed him as narcissistic. This Narcissism was the element of him that tortured me for years unnoticed by almost everyone around me, even myself.
That's right, the beast I mentioned in the beginning is emotional abuse. I was abused. My mind was twisted, altered, strangled, all by the person who was supposed to love me. The person whom I gave up my whole life to build a new life with. The father of my children.
The thing with emotional abuse is that it comes slowly. I've likened it a lot to the story of the frog in the pot. If you toss him in while it's boiling, he'll jump right out, but if you put him in and slowly heat up the water, he won't realize what's happening until it's too late. That is exactly what emotional abuse is like. I think back and remember a time when things were good. We had a lot of love in our marriage. But I can't pinpoint exactly when things changed because of this slow disintegration. It was likely a little thing here and there I let slide to keep the peace, then he added more and more inch by creeping inch. Once I was in too deep and floundering, I believed deeply it was all my fault. I had ruined everything.
I think the worst part is that people can't see it from the outside. There are no bruises, no broken bones or black eyes. It's completely invisible, and the victim can't even see it happening to speak out for help. So they're stuck in a torture pit believing they deserve it because they somehow caused it. Especially with a narcissist at the helm. The only way it can be noticed is someone seeing that the victim's personality is altered.
For me, I didn't have anyone. I'd left my family and people who had known me well on the other side of the world. They are the people who would have seen my personality shift in a blink, but my narcissist ex didn't have them watching him. When I came here, he basically severed my relationships with people who did know me relatively well. He would tell me my close friends didn't like him so we couldn't be around them, and he'd tell me how his friends thought I was useless and I shouldn't be around them. Whenever I tried to reach out and make new friends, he would make some excuse to block me from really forming solid, long term bonds. He and his family also kept me locked outside, never ever being able to be worthy enough for their acceptance. Isolation plagued me, and provided my ex the perfect cesspool for my torture.
Looking back, I can see the damage he caused. Hindsight truly is twenty-twenty. As I mentioned, my entire personality was altered. People who have known me before I married, and even people post divorce will tell you I'm a positive, friendly, a bit silly, confident, and driven person. I always liked who I am, and since going through a healing process, I've begun to like that person again. However, that person vanished. Anxiety always seemed present for me. Anyone who knew me in high school would know anxiety was never much of an issue for me, even during exams I'd usually be pretty chill compared to others. Even during my time of persecution, anxiety was never something I dealt with, it was more distress. But I did become anxious. I grew depressed. Worried. Stressed. Overburdened. Exhausted. Nothing was ever good enough. I'd reach and strive, and be cut down. Even my own connection to the Savior was undermined and my prayers and personal revelation ridiculed. Considering my prayers are a sacred gift that have always been so strong of a connection to the Lord, the fact that my ex managed to make me doubt my connection and caused me to cease using it is a testament to the power he had exerted over my mind. I was no longer me. I was afraid of making friends because he would breath into my ear that people didn't like me to the point where I would simply tell myself that without his prompt. I believed myself a hideous person inside and out.
I think the worst part is, again in hindsight, that people in the church turned a blind eye. I want it to be clear first before I delve into this; I love the Savior. I love the gospel. My spiritual connection with the heavens saved me and brought me through the darkest times. My testimony will never falter. However, the gospel and the people of the church are two separate entities. My ex is part of a long standing, well "respected" family within the area. Many people knew him growing up and knew his family for years before I even stepped into the picture. And so, when I was painted as a villain, they accepted it. Why wouldn't they? If these people they knew so well said so, then clearly I was. This blind eye fed my abusers. Because I wasn't a decent person, I could clearly lie about the way I was being treated or felt. Instead of seeing the way I was spoken of as the abuse it was, they allowed and even accepted it. When the divorce came, they didn't want to know the truth in that my ex had adulterated with barely legal young men, multiple of them, that he had a bestiality deviancy, that he'd delved deeply into a shady crowd known for their sexual "openness" of all varieties and would go to parties where he would drink until he passed out. No, it was my fault we got divorced. Because I wasn't a good enough wife and I drove him to madness. His choices were to be made accountable to me because I forced him to make them... apparently. And thus, the abuser taught those around him to abuse me as well.
Although, not all church members fell for this. My ward rallied around me. I have received such support and love from my ward I can't fully express the gratitude I feel for being placed among these wonderful people. And the best part? They watched me transform after the separation and saw the real me emerge. They told me they loved and admired the real me. After years of being told how worthless and ugly I was, this brought me back to life.
Although I still see the scars from the abuse, I know I am healing. My children also still suffer from the abuse they witnessed their father dish out on their mother and I struggle everyday to overcome the damage done to them, especially my oldest. He abused them too, not as much as me, but the abuse of me caused them considerable damage that will take me years to repair and may never completely go away. Nevertheless, I am grateful for a watchful Father in Heaven and Savior who have taken care of me and my girls and have broken us free of our bondage. They protected us through the divorce, and continue to protect us now.
I am so glad I am back to being me. Except, I feel stronger. Fear has been driven out. I can see nothing but hope for my future, all because I'm a survivor. I speak out because no woman deserves to feel the way I did. We were married in the temple, and so I clung to that for dear life, fighting even when my ex made it abundantly clear he'd prefer to break me than love me. Just because I married him in the temple, it didn't mean I had to stick around. The Savior taught me that. He told me to get out and gave me an escape, then promised me my temple covenants remained in tact. The Lord loves his daughters. When we are mistreated He grieves, and when we are abused His heart breaks and He wants to break us free. I am so glad I accepted His hand to liberate me.
Abuse isn't always beatings. I speak up because I want people to see this invisible abuse. When a woman becomes quieter, when her husband and/or his family speak badly about her, when she seems sad more than she's happy, when her husband always seems to speak for her or over her, these are some of the signs. I experienced them. I survived them.
I am not a victim. I am a survivor of emotional abuse at the hands of a narcissist.
April 18, 2020
Chapter ??: Secrets, Betrayal, and the Lord���s Divine Interventions
Chapter ??: Secrets, Betrayal, and the Lord’s Divine Interventions
December 24, 2019
Chapter ??: Decline
After years of generally being content in my marriage, something shifted. My husband never seemed to find job satisfaction and his inability to manage money added stress to our relationship. However, I was not naive and I knew finances often caused strain in marriage. He was attending college part time and coming close to earning his associates. I encouraged him to complete the classes, and often took the girls out when he needed some quiet to do online work. I knew that in the long run finishing college would benefit our family and maybe, hopefully, alleviate some of the financial strain and consequently the strain between us.Between semesters, he made the decision to go to train as a realtor rather than do the next semester of college. Like most of his decisions, he made it without talking to me, but rather told me what was going to happen. I figured if he wanted to do something and it would finally make him happy, then he should do it. He promised once he had completed the realtor school he would return and finish his college, so I trusted him and supported him.When he finished realtor school, he signed on with an agency. Keeping up the fees that came along with it would place an added strain to our already tight income, especially because he kept talking about quitting his job to focus entirely on drumming up clients.I was not a fan of him quitting his day job. Real estate is commissions, and he had little to none lined up. Somehow, I managed to talk him out of quitting. Meanwhile, I grew concerned he would quit anyway, because he had a habit of coming home and telling me, By the way, I quit today. My mind turned to me getting a job. I agonized over this as our youngest was just over a year old. I felt the need to stay home with her and to raise her the best I could, and like I felt I needed to do, but, if I hoped to help my husband keep the family afloat, I needed to work.I prayed over the issue extensively, until I received the prompting to apply to work part time at a school. So, I did. As soon as I began to apply, my husband told me to look for full time positions starting at a minimum of $14 an hour. Coincidentally, that was what he was making. He wanted me to be the breadwinner so he could quit. Except I wanted to be a mother, not the breadwinner, and I felt that was what was most important.It didn’t take me long to find a job. My second interview at the schools landed me an almost instantaneous offer. I had another interview the next day, so I asked to have that interview before I accepted. They agreed. Except, over the next twenty-four hours I felt a strong pull to take the position. It felt right, even if it was six hours less a week than the position I was interviewing for, and also $2 less an hour. So, after the interview, even though I hadn’t received a response from the later interview, I accepted the job offer with the elementary school.My husband was not happy with me. The twenty-nine hours at minimum wage was not enough of an income to allow him to quit. He pestered me to keep looking for other work, despite my explanations of how this would fit into our eldest’s school schedule and I would have more time at home with our youngest. My income was supposed to be supplemental, to assist him with alleviating the pressure on our finances enough to manage some real estate and get the ball rolling. To him, this job meant I was being unsupportive and that was all he could see. He refused to see that I needed to be a mother first, but I was doing everything I could to help him.I thoroughly enjoyed my job. Once I settled into it, I found wonderful friendships with my coworkers and fell in love with the kids. It became a reprieve from the strain of my marriage. Things at home began to slowly decline. At first, it was little things. A snide remark here, a small insult there. I would bite back because I didn’t like being insulted and belittled and so arguments would break out. He stopped telling me I was beautiful, and I, with lingering postpartum depression and image issues due to the significant weight gain over the years, began to believe he found me repulsive. It didn’t help that he would turn down my sexual advances, but I would find him often relieving his own needs.Meanwhile, I was struggling with finding people to watch my youngest while I worked. My husband refused to pay for daycare, and so I had to beg and plead for people to watch her for as little as $10 a day. He never helped me find people to watch her. He would tell me that was my job. His parents watched her once a week, begrudgingly. I found it frustrating that they called me unsupportive of my husband, yet they didn’t support me working and made it clear watching their granddaughter was a hassle. Eventually, they told me they wouldn’t watch her anymore. So, I had to scramble to find someone else willing to watch her for pennies. When I found someone who said they would watch her for $15 a day, my husband got after me for it being too much money and tried to force me to find someone else. I refused to budge, which made him upset and again, tension grew.On July 2nd, 2017, I wrote, “As much as I’ve enjoyed working at the school and working with the kids, I’ve been getting some serious mommy guilt about leaving (my youngest). She’s such a sweetie, and I feel like other people are raising her. I wish (my husband) would get serious about working to earn more so I can be with our children.” My frustration had grown, and I was feeling the strain. Despite this, my entry remained positive, talking about the fun we were having camping, my time at summer school with my oldest, and my efforts with weight loss using HCG shots.By the summer break however, I was thinking about leaving my husband. He had broken his promise to return to college, he had done nothing with his real estate, and the insults and bullying was slowly increasing.I went to visit my family in Australia that break. My parents were about to leave on their mission, and my sister had recently had her first baby. The three weeks down there I viewed as a break from him to clear my head and refocus on what to do. Friday, August 4th I wrote, “Before I left, I was broken. I went to Australia needing a break from everything, especially my marriage. I was considering the pro’s and con’s of leaving (him) because I felt like there’s no love in our marriage anymore and despite my efforts to support him and keep our family afloat financially, emotionally, and spiritually, all I was getting in return was ignored, yelled at, and emotionally abused. Sundays were always a huge fight when all I wanted was to get to church on time. Every day I would get both girls ready and out of the house before he even got out of bed. He wouldn’t even get up to read scriptures with us. I got no attention, no praise, no thank yous, and our sex life had fizzled into basically nothing…“I hate that he bought himself a brand new car with a car payment using money from my book sales that I had planned to use to pay off some debts. Now we have another debt on our plate and he’s more in love with his car than me and the kids….“The point is, I left the U.S. considering what it would cost me and the girls to leave him to all his selfish madness. He thinks he’s head of the house, but all he does is think of himself and dictates what will happen in our lives. He yells at me when I make my own decisions. Our biggest fights are when I decide to do something on my own accord, or I want to do something other than his dictated outline. I was miserable. I was lonely, brokenhearted, and I hated myself. The worst part was that I LET it get that way.” I fasted every Sunday while I was in Australia and attended the temple to help me find direction. My focus turned to the Lord. As I said in the same entry, “I used to receive inspiration with ease… But it’s been years since I felt the Lord’s hand guiding me.” I resolved to be open to every voice He placed before me and be conscious and sensitive to any direction I might receive. My efforts didn’t go unnoticed! It was as if the Lord had been standing at that door just waiting for me to crack it open. All the revelations seemed to have built up like a clog in a pipe and with the opening of the door, they rushed over me.Of my experience in the temple, I wrote, “It hit me, (my husband) hadn’t been hearkening to the Lord, but to himself. So I needed to listen to the Lord for the sake of my family… I knew the Lord wanted me to step up.”My entry from this time says it all quite clearly, so I will quote directly from it for now.“So, I sought out how He wanted me to do that. As the mother, my primary role is to care for my girls, so I trusted He would show me the best path. (My husband) wants me to work forty hours a week, but that felt wrong to me. Heavenly Father wants me to raise His children and be their example of womanhood. Right now, I’m showing them how to be an emotionally abused, broken, doormat wife. I need to show them that they can be smart, strong, and instruments in the Lord’s hands.“So, I took on that angle; how can I be the example the Lord wants me to be for my girls?“Meanwhile, an old friend was placed before me. I have known this woman since I was younger than (my oldest, who was six). She is one of the most beautiful people I know, inside and out. But she had a disastrous marriage. She opened up to me… about her experiences and the events leading up to, around, and after her divorce. Hearing her story broke my heart, but I knew I wasn’t in the same boat as her. She explained how now she has different priorities for a spouse and I agreed with her (priorities); Loves the Lord completely and everything follows from there. She also explained that before they married, she was prompted to call things off. I was never prompted to do that. In fact, I remember clearly receiving confirmation to marry (my husband) and being with him was the right choice and the Lord would bless me. Because of that, I knew I could trust my decision and the Lord would provide a way for our marriage to work as long as I stay true and faithful and seek His counsel.“So, (my friend) inspired me to find a new angle. Things in my marriage aren’t as bad as they could be, and they are issues the Lord can help me overcome. Armed with a new resolve to find a path to mend our marriage and be the example of womanhood my daughters need, I set out in search of the Lord’s answers.“They came fairly quickly after that. I think the Lord needed to change my heart and open my eyes first. The answer came that I needed to return to school and finish an education degree. I’ve felt for a while that I need to be a teacher, so although this prompting wasn’t surprising, it was enlightening. About a year ago I felt the powerful urge to return to school, but due to the lack of finances, support, and the need for me to work, it fell through. But it’s so strong now. He made it clear that I need to start in the new year and save up as much as I can while working this semester so I can… focus on my children and schooling. I grew very excited to have the heavens open to me again and I felt deeply happy for the first time in a long time. That, for me, tells me my answer is what the Lord wants…”More revelation is written in here, but it is too painful to recount. Because I was unable to follow through with it, the blessings I had felt would come from it never came to fruition. The blessings promised would have saved my marriage. However, my husband had lost any ounce of spiritual sensitivity and fought me regarding the topic anytime I raised it for discussion. He told me my revelations were false and stupid and he refused to listen. It breaks my heart to read the promises I was given back in 2017 for if I would follow the Lord’s will, but I was unable to obey due to my husband’s refusal to hear me.After the revelations given, I wrote, “But I knew getting all that would be an uphill battle. (My husband) has no money skills and refuses to see anything outside of his personal expectations. So, I asked the Lord to help me. The Lord replied, “That’s all I’ve been waiting for.” From every direction, His answers flew at me. (My husband) and I needed to do the self-reliance classes, specifically the finances class, and until he can show responsible spending, I need to keep my income out of his grasp. I can then be a protective barrier for his poor money skills and begin building a savings for education and our girls.“I needed to push (my husband) to find better work because his work as a realtor isn’t going to be a blessing to us anytime in the near future. He needs to prove his ability to manage money selflessly before we will be blessed like that. The Lord has given (my husband) direction, but he doesn’t listen to it.“On the flip side, I haven’t played my part either. The Lord saw that I am flexible where (my husband) is rigid. I am adaptable, where (my husband) refuses to change. I am long suffering, whereas (my husband) is short tempered. I was supposed to soften him, but I failed so I am paying the consequences. But I am determined to change that.“It’s up to me to heed the Lord and teach (my husband) how to find the Lord’s desires for us so (my husband) can lead our family in righteousness. It was my responsibility to teach (my husband), but I failed. I won’t fail anymore.“I know (my husband) will fight and resist me, but I cannot deny what the Lord has revealed to me. So I will stay the course the Lord has placed before me no matter how hard I’m kicked and bruised. In the long run, I have been promised a beautiful marriage and a happy family as long as I obey. So I will obey, no matter what. I love my Father in Heaven and my Savior too much to deny the things revealed to me, or to back down on what they have shone a light on. They have provided a way.”And so, my time in Australia set me on course. I was right too, my husband resisted me at every turn. When I told him I wanted to go back to school, he told me I was being stupid and selfish. He forbid me from quitting work to focus on schooling and our children. When he discovered I had set up a bank account to place my paychecks to help curb his spending, he yelled at me for twenty minutes, then went and set up his own bank account to keep money away from me. He played tit for tat, and refused to listen to anything I felt prompted by the Spirit to say or do. I felt like I had married a teenager with all his temper tantrums and belittling of me, but I gritted my teeth and pushed through. The Lord had told me to stick to it, and so, I would. When I made arrangements to do the finances class, he went briefly, then refused to go. He said it was because I humiliated him, but no one felt that way. The class was about learning and growing, and I had asked questions to help both of us. I had never sought out his humiliation, but rather, I wanted us to grow together in developing money management skills in the way the Lord intended. Everyone else asked similar questions, and other spouses pointed the finger at one enough just about every week. However, like what was becoming frequent, I was to blame for all my husband’s problems and I was supposed to fix all of them while making him feel like he was the one in charge and fixing them.My work situation was still in question as well. While I still felt I needed to go to school, my husband had made it clear I wasn’t allowed to quit working. I prayed fervently over a course to take, and my answer came as simply, “Trust Me.”I feel like that’s been the catchphrase of my life ever since. I cannot count the times I’ve gone to the Lord begging for direction because I am out of ideas and He simply says, “Trust Me.” I’ve learned now that when He tells me that to let go, sit back, and watch miracles unfold.This time, He opened my eyes wide. The librarian at the school where I worked was retiring and they needed to fill her position. One of the aides qualified and would be filling the job. That, however, opened up a fifteen-hour position, and my team leader asked me if I would like to take it. That would be fourteen less hours a week, fourteen hours I could be with my youngest and working on college classes! I couldn’t believe how easily and perfectly it all fell into place, and all right after the Lord told me to trust Him. I couldn’t stop the prayers of gratitude!However, when I recounted with great excitement how things had panned out to my husband, he scoffed at me and told me I was being stupid. It wasn’t the Lord, he told me, just coincidence and I was seeing things that weren’t actually there. This really perturbed me. I walked away from him, feeling like I’d lost him. It was in that moment I knew he had lost any ounce of faith. It hurt my heart, but I’m obnoxiously stubborn and I refused to give up fighting. We had been sealed in the temple, and so help me, that meant everything and I would fight with everything I had to ensure that covenant remained intact.I signed up for the BYU-I Pathway program to ease back into my studies. My husband showed clear signs of not being pleased about it, but I ignored it. The Lord’s will had more sway with me by this point, and my husband’s foul demeanor and bullying was having less of an affect on my decisions. During General Conference on October 1st, 2017, I wrote my thoughts after the completion of conference regarding my education: “Earning this degree will make me an instrument in the Lord’s hands somehow. Being a teacher… is an important way for the Lord to bring His light to others in the future.”Pathway began in January 2018, and so did my position working fifteen hours a week. Less hours working and getting back into studying relieved so much of my stress and brought me happiness. I could be with my little girl more and I began my journey down the road the Lord had directed me to take.During this time, my husband did exactly what I had been expected him to eventually do; he quit his job. For the fifth time during our marriage. Thankfully, I had built a little nest egg for savings. Although, I did not realize he was raking up more debts behind my back. He wanted to focus on real estate, so I tried to keep calm. With the extra time, surely he could get out and canvas areas and drum up clients. He didn’t. In fact, I’m not really sure what he did with his time. He had a couple of clients with friends, but that was it. In hindsight, I know what he was doing with his time, viewing pornography, most of which was homosexual, and it alarms me to think he had our youngest in the house with him, risking exposing her to it.Hindsight is a remarkable thing. As part of the divorce, I submitted pages of screenshots and photographs to my attorney to help fight my case to protect my children from what I knew my husband was doing. I thought my attorney would take hold of all the drinking and driving and use it as evidence of possible child endangerment, but he took hold of something else entirely. As a result, the judge ordered a psycho-sexual evaluation on my husband. Part of the evaluation revealed my husband had begun his porn addiction three years earlier. It didn’t surprise me then that our marriage had begun its nosedive at about that time. Thinking back, I could see things shifted between us at that time, and the spirit left our home then too.The year continued, and we entered summer break. This meant we had no income whatsoever. This was frightening, but my husband kept telling me everything would be fine. Tight, but fine. Since he withheld all his commissions from real estate from me, I figured he had built up a savings from the few sales he had made. We went on a trip to San Diego and to Oregon that summer, and we seemed to be doing okay. I ended up having to use my credit more than I wanted before I started getting money again from work, but we didn’t fold. Yet, anyway.During that summer, I was offered a position at my daughter’s school. It would pay more and would be thirty-five hours a week. After struggling for many months, the position was too good to be true. Working close to my child and earning a bigger paycheck? It was a no brainer. I would be doing classes I knew I could manage with the bigger workload, so I felt comfortable with juggling my schooling as well.The initial adjustment was rough. The longer hours and shifting to SpEd proved difficult and tested my abilities. Our finances weren’t bouncing back either, so I began getting short tempered with my husband. He needed work other than real estate. He needed a steady income because I was growing tired from carrying everything. He saw this as being unsupportive and grew increasingly angry with me. Exasperated, I dug my heels in on this. How was I being unsupportive when I was working thirty-five hours a week, studying, and being expected to manage and maintain our house and family as well? All I wanted was for him to step up and bring in an income so we didn’t lose our home and to get back on track.By this point, I had also received some disturbing revelation. I needed to work on my education and build up a savings because I wouldn’t have my husband for much longer. I needed to become self-reliant of him to keep myself and my girls afloat and moving forward. I remember when I first received this information. It was an odd moment. I can’t find when it happened exactly, because my journal entries are sparse during this time and consist mostly of spiritual notes taken from conferences, Time Out For Women, and other scripture and church studies. Pathway had given me a spiritual shot in the arm and I went from spiritual starvation to spiritual feasting. This shift in closeness to the spirit was what opened me up to such a revelation. And so, one morning while I was in the bathroom and pondering on the direction I needed to take with my education and work and how to best support my husband by using them, the revelation unfolded. I was staring at my hands as it came, I remember that much. The Lord told me I needed to work hard on my studies so I could establish a career as a teacher. This would be important because soon I would not have my husband. In fact, I felt impressed that we would not make it much past our ten-year anniversary. I thought it was because he wasn’t maintaining his diabetes and it would kill him prematurely or something the likes. Divorce was never something I gave serious thought to, especially after my experiences in Australia that told me to stick to it. The revelation alarmed me, and, in fear that maybe I could have possibly made it up, I kept it to myself. At least, for a short while. Eventually, with the revelation weighing on me, I told my mum. She was concerned as well, but offered me comfort in that people can make choices to change and maybe, on our current course, things would end up that way, but I could change it with my choices.Unfortunately, it wasn’t my choices that were leading us down that path.
Chapter ??: Depression and Infertility
When I was eighteen, I was diagnosed with poly cystic ovarian syndrome. At the time, it meant very little too me. It gave me the advantage of rare periods, but that information was what clued my mum onto my possible health issues.When I was in year ten, I suffered from some severe pains in my reproductive organs area. Cramps, stabbing pains, the works. I was examined and had tests done, but at the time nothing was found. I believe though, that this was the time my condition started.My symptoms slowly crept up on me. Lack of menstruations isn’t uncommon in teenagers, so it didn’t bother me. I began to gain extra weight, but I wrote that off as being less physically active due to my HSC classes. I had gone from having two P.E. classes, playing school sports, doing swimming club in the summer and netball in the winter, to just netball. P.E. was no longer sports but sitting in a classroom basically studying biology and sports science. Doing school sports was traded in for TAFE on Wednesday afternoons. And so, my physical activity declined, leaving me with a reasonable assumption for that being the reason for gaining extra weight.During my time as an exchange student, I gained even more weight and had a total of one period the whole time. I started to notice dark hair on my face and other awkward places. After I arrived home, I was talking with a friend and told her I hadn’t had a period in six months. My mum overheard and booked me in to see a gynecologist.After blood tests and several ultrasounds, I was diagnosed. My left ovary looked like honeycomb it had become so bad. The gynecologist explained to me that I could be treated by taking the pill, but one of the side effects could be trouble conceiving in the future.I was eighteen, so I didn’t think much about that issue then. For the moment, I focused on getting my other symptoms under control; regular periods, reducing the hair issues, and losing the extra weight. I did, however, suffer from some severe pains during the early medication period. I felt my body trying to extract the cysts, and one occasion I curled up in my bed and cried from the pain.Eventually, my body settled. Time passed and I got married. My first child came along quickly. I hadn’t been off the pill a month and I was pregnant! This shocked me because I had assumed I would struggle to have children, but, here I was, pregnant without any effort. I wasn’t terribly overweight then and I had been careful to maintain the PCOS. I think those factors helped with the quick conception.What a happy and exciting time! Although my husband had said he didn’t want kids yet, he was excited along with me. Even when I projectile vomited on him in bed! He tended to me carefully and lovingly. He would make up songs about how much he loved me and laughed when I called him in tears over spilling ramen.Her delivery was traumatic on my body. I had just turned twenty-four when I gave birth to her. My waters broke at two in the morning, but I didn’t go into labor. It turns out, my body likes to do that; dump all the fluid then do nothing. The nurses didn’t believe me because I had no contractions and said I’d peed my pants. I insisted that I hadn’t, and when they tested the fluids, they found that I had, indeed, broken my waters. This meant I needed to be admitted and labor would need to be induced asap.Pitocin is not a friendly drug. It gave me these double, extremely painful contractions. I had wanted to avoid an epidural, so I was given medication through the IV. They made me loopy and apparently, I said some strange things. I saw bizarre images of pink bubbles that contained my pain, but I couldn’t make them pop and go away.Eventually, the pain meds wore off and I asked for an epidural. The Pitocin induced contractions hurt worse than anything I could recall. In fact, my contractions with my second daughter weren’t half as painful. With the epidural in, I relaxed enough to get some rest. I slept for an hour or two. When the nurse came in to check me, she immediately called for the doctor to arrive and told me not to push. I wasn’t pushing. She said she could see the baby’s head. The epidural had made me relax enough to go from five centimeters dilation to engaging the baby’s head and unintentionally pushing her out in a very short amount of time. We had to wait for the doctor though, which didn’t help anything. In fact, I believe being told to wait was what caused the problems that followed. The baby came out fast when the doctor arrived and tore me from the inside out. I bled like crazy while my doctor worked to stitch me up and the nurses took care of my screaming newborn. I ended up with forty-five stitches. I was ordered to be on twenty-four-hour bedrest and was treated like a cesarean patient.It soon became apparent that I had latching problems. Nursing required several hands on deck just to get my baby to latch on. With so many people looking at and touching my private areas due to the tearing and nursing, I began to feel no shame regarding my body.The nursing issues meant I had to pump and supplement my newborn with a bottle. She also developed jaundice. So, I had to deal with fighting to get her to latch, a bilirubin blanket, and the pain of my recovery. The jaundice soon passed and, slowly, after the pain of cracking and swelling, I began to get her to nurse. Except, my healing didn’t seem to be going so well. I still had pain when I sat. My mother-in-law told me to stop complaining because I should be fine by that time. I felt bad, like I had done something wrong. At my eight-week check, I told my doctor about my pain. She took a look and found there was something wrong. The scar tissue had overhealed and was too thick which was causing the pain. With a quick, sharp snip, she solved the problem. I smarted for the next few hours, but the pain vanished.After all that had settled, my baby developed colic, then reflux, then she started to cut teeth. In a letter I wrote to my former sister-in-law, which I will use since my journal entries weren’t well kept during this time, I wrote of these struggles by saying, “She would wake up at midnight like clockwork and scream for a solid two hours every night. I was exhausted and exasperated.” I sunk into a deep hole, a hole I soon learned was postpartum depression. I didn’t know what was happening at the time. I just thought my lack of sleep, my baby’s constant need to nurse, and all her sicknesses had driven me a little bonkers. Because postpartum depression can often make me feel a bit like I’m going insane. My temper gets short and I lose a lot of control over my emotions. It turned me into a person I didn’t recognize. I was definitely not myself anymore. In the letter, I explained, “My depression with (my oldest), looking back, was quite bad. I struggled to function in so many ways. I couldn’t keep up the house, there were even days when I wouldn’t shower and I’d lie in bed for hours. I even told (my husband) that I didn’t like (our daughter). I was in a dark place, and I wish I could have seen what was happening, or even someone else see it. Instead, I was criticized for a messy house and not making dinner every night.”I had married into a family who considered mental illnesses something that could be brushed away by a simple decision. I wished I could brush my feelings away! Finally, I was medicated and the meds took the edge of my depression. It still lingered, however. My postpartum depression lasted between eighteen months to two years for both my girls.After getting out of the depression, I began to think about having another baby. With my PCOS and weight gain, I was in no denial that a second child would not come as easily. The months turned into a year and still no baby. I began to grow disheartened, especially with so many women around me making “I’m pregnant!” announcements. Especially the teenagers who only recently married. There were times at work or at church I would slip away to the bathroom to have a cry. I tried not to make a big deal out of it because, as my husband kept telling me, we were blessed to have one pretty great kid. Still, my heart ached for the life that never seemed to come.My husband’s younger brother was the perfect and favorite child. When he married, his wife could not be more perfect and I couldn’t be more ostracized. Even things we said and did the same, I was criticized for and she was praised. When, during my time of grieving for my infertility, they announced they were pregnant, I was crushed. Of this occasion, I said in the letter, “I said to (my husband) on the way, “If they announce they’re pregnant, I’m going to break.” He understood and agreed we would leave if need be. And you did announce it. My soul died. Although, I couldn’t cry there. I turned to (my husband), and he understood. We packed our things to leave and (my mother-in-law) pulled (my husband) aside to tell him that I was being selfish and needed to stay and be happy for you. I couldn’t stay, and (my husband) knew it. So, we left. At home, I put (our daughter) to bed and locked myself in our back room. I cried and ached and prayed. All I wanted was children, and I couldn’t even do that. (My husband) eventually came in and held me, letting me cry. He understood even if no one else did.”This pain was only compounded by my struggles with my daughter. “Meanwhile, (my daughter) had become a demon child. She would beat me almost daily. I had to lock her in her room and hold the door shut while she rampaged and screamed inside. Once, she even unbuckled and attacked me while I was driving. I had to pull over and hold her down until she was done. I have no idea even now where any of this came from. She only ever did it to me. Unfortunately, this was used as more proof that I was a terrible mother. I couldn’t control my child, so obviously I was doing something wrong.”My in-laws always seemed to make my feelings worse. Instead of letting me grieve, they told me I was selfish. Instead of understanding, they told me to shut up and stop complaining. “All of this pain, grief, feelings of failure, all swelled and mixed and drove me back into a dark place. During this time, (my husband) caught me contemplating self-harm. I think it was the first time he really saw how bad things were for me. He took me to the bishop who immediately sent me for therapy. The therapy helped me a great deal and I began to climb out of my hole. Still, I struggled to be around pregnant women without a wave of grief creeping up, and I’m pretty sure you saw me avoiding you during this time. Know that it wasn’t you, I just wanted to avoid the pain. But, again, this avoidance was taken as a massive offense. I was told by (mother-in-law) to stop being so selfish and be happy for you. More salt in that wound…“However, I was beginning to feel more like myself again. I was happy and having fun, and even went on a trip to Vegas with some writer friends. We were having a great time, until my phone started to buzz. Over and over. I looked at it and it was like a slap to the face. You’d had the baby. I tried to ignore it, but the messages kept coming, slapping me over and over. I felt sick, and left to return to my room, having the great excuse that I didn’t want to join my friends with their drinking. In my room I lost it. I collapsed in sobs, struggling to call (my husband). He knew right away what was wrong and hung up to tell (his brother) to take me off the text. Before he even called me back, I received an angry text saying how dare I ask to be removed from the group text. When (my husband) called me back, he let me cry as I said over and over, “I can’t do this.” The grief was back worse than ever. I hadn’t felt so much sadness and loneliness since I’d been persecuted in high school.”Infertility is a pain I wouldn’t wish on anyone. Sometimes, you feel on top of it, and other times it slaps you across the face and paralyzes you. During this time, I was blessed to have wonderful friends who knew the same pain as me. One friend in particular I had long and heartfelt conversations with as we both worked together in an office full of pregnant teenage brides. She had a harder time than me because she had also suffered from a string of miscarriages, but we both knew one another’s pain and consoled together. Having gone through that pain has given me the power to be empathetic to those who suffer from the lost hopes and dreams of infertility. As hard as it was, I am so grateful for it.Unbeknownst to me, I conceived my second either before or after my trip to Vegas. I have no doubt the Lord saw my agony, knew I had learned what I needed to learn, and sent me my little daughter. My daughter who would be so much like me. By the time she was born, my older daughter was almost five years old. It’s hard to be grateful for something so painful, especially when the people around you seem to compound the pain and drive a knife deeper at each turn, but I am grateful for it. My sister and my brother’s wife both struggle with infertility and miscarriages, so it has helped me love and appreciate their strength through their trials. It also helps me appreciate other women who, despite the cultural expectations placed upon young couples in our church, don’t have children. I never ask them why. I know what it feels like to be asked, “When will you be having another?” and the answer is, “I’m trying and failing!” I know what it feels like to have people treat me like that failure is some sort of sin that means I deserve to be treated like garbage, and if I feel pain, I need to get over it.When my second daughter was almost two, I began thinking about having another baby. However, I was wary. The pain of the struggle to conceive was still sharp in my memory. On July 2nd, 2017, I wrote, “I want to have one more child… I prayed about having another child because I’d been having doubts about having more kids. I felt very strongly impressed there’s a little boy waiting to join us… I also felt he would arrive very soon. I hope so… the toll the whole preconception takes on me emotionally and the post delivery problems I have with my body and PPD (worry me). We’ll see how it goes. When I prayed, I felt the promise of the Lord that He would help ease the struggles I face when having children and I have faith in that. He’s the only person I believe will always follow through and understand all of it completely.”This was more than two years ago, and I have not had another child. However, the grief of not conceiving has never come. The Lord promised to ease my struggles, and He has. He still tells me another child is waiting, even though I no longer have a husband. But, I’m at peace with it. I trust the Lord, and I know His “soon” is different to my “soon”. When the time is right, my child will come. The Lord took away my grief as promised, and so I know His promise to send me a child will also come.I know that I’m not alone with these feelings and struggles. I’m grateful for the friends and family who lent me their support and empathy, even when other family members used it against me. The Lord has a purpose for everything, and I have no doubt He had a purpose for me struggling with infertility.
December 22, 2019
Chapter ??: When I Fell In Love
Young Single Adult Conventions hold some of my favorite memories. Held annually, we alternated between locations in Sydney and Brisbane. These conventions were held at boarding schools that had closed for the summer so we could stay on campus for the entire time. The conventions were always held over New Years, so we always had a New Year’s ball/dance that was the highlight of the entire convention. I attended three in total for the entire time, and one in Sydney where I only went to a few events.My first convention was in Brisbane the New Years between being an exchange student and moving in with my grandparents. Conventions were meant to accomplish several things; help build strong friendships among the YSAs from two states, provide a wholesome and fun environment to help us build our testimonies, and, although it was never a spoken rule it was clearly known, to help us get married. That first convention I attended I was nineteen, so, although I was interested in guys, marriage wasn’t my top priority. I hung out with friends from my stake and had fun with them. I also rediscovered my super crush on the guy I had met at TFY and crushed on my entire eleventh grade year. But the most significant thing for me was making friends with people from my grandparents’ ward and stake. That convention helped me make the decision and get through the trials of the year that would follow.The next convention I went to was in Sydney. By then I had built some wonderful friendships with amazing people I loved so much. That whole convention was pure fun. We ran around in a box-bus, took weird photos in our dorm’s common room, had very little sleep, and drank too much non-alcoholic wine and ended up on insane sugar highs. My favorite memory, however, was on New Year’s eve laying in the moist grass with my best friends. We stared up at the stars as the music from the dance throbbed in the air. We just talked, I can’t remember what about, but I will cherish how close we were in that moment forever.Then, I went through 2007 which was a rough and heartbreaking year.The next convention was back in Brisbane. My sister went to that one with a long-time friend of ours. It was their first convention as they had turned eighteen that year. I had more friends after my time living out of home, so the fun had more potential. We also went to Dreamworld as part of this convention. I lovetheme parks, so this was amazing!During this convention, a group of guys from Queensland got together and made themselves shirts with ’08 on them. They set a catchphrase for themselves and said, “Set a date for oh-eight.” They came with the specific goal of finding a wife and getting married that year. The guys were proactive with meeting new girls, and I believe most of them were successful with getting married that year.For me, that set my mind on the question of marriage as well. I was twenty-one and a few months earlier had received the revelation to not serve a mission but to go to university. These guys made me wonder if maybe I could join their ranks and set a date in ’08. My friend who came with us ended up meeting a guy she married on my birthday in ’08 at this convention. She found a guy at convention, but despite making tons of friends and meeting guys who thought I was cool, no one showed any interest in me romantically. It was the story of my life; guys liked me as a friend and thought I was super fun and enjoyed hanging out with me, but none of them wanted to date me.I came home from that convention discouraged. Yeah, I’d had fun with my friends, but most of my friends had met guys during that convention or were on or about to leave on missions.When we arrived home, my sister turned on the movie Flag of Our Fathers. In the movie, there is a Native American man who is among those who raise the iconic flag in Iwo Jima. The actor reminded me of a friend I made as an exchange student. Strangely enough, the Spirit told me then that I would marry this friend... but I brushed it aside as me being silly.In my journal I wrote, “On Christmas day I called (my host family) as normal and amidst conversation (my host mother) asked if she could give (this male friend) my email address which he had asked for so he could email me… I said yes because I have always liked talking to him. I thought though, “I wonder if he still likes me?” It was a pleasant thought that even after all this time he might still.“Anyway, I went off to convention in Brisbane and forgot about it until the day we got back and (my sister) put on Flag of Our Fathers which the actor who plays the Navajo character caught my attention because there were some expressions he pulled and at the very end when they swam that reminded me of (my friend). It was the weirdest thing and unsettled me slightly.” (June 22, 2008)Because yes, during my time as an exchange student, this male friend had a thing for me. We went out on a double date, he tried to take me on a second date but his mother pulled me aside and told me he needed to focus on his mission and not be distracted by me. His best friend also cornered me not long before prom and told me I should ask him to go with me. I didn’t, because I didn’t go to prom, but it was pretty clear this guy was crushing on me, especially when he would get shy and tongue tied around me.In a journal entry from my time visiting Arizona for my friend’s wedding and when my grandad died, I said, “(His mother) was over talking to (Host mother) she asked me why I hadn’t written to (him). (Note: He was on his mission at this time.) I told her I did but he never replied. She told me he wanted me to write to him so should try again. I told her to tell him he needs to write back if he wants me to. So I wrote to him again.”This brings me back to the conversation I had with my host mother. She gave him my email address and we started to email back and forth. Unbeknownst to me, he did get a girlfriend during this time. His emails became sparse, and I said, “I’m a little confused… which is why I’m apprehensive. He wanted contact with me, then gave me the bare minimum. I don’t want to play games, I’m over games.” (22ndJune 2008)2008 was a great year for me. I loved doing my university course. The classes were right up my alley and I thoroughly enjoyed doing them. I made awesome friends, and had a ton of fun with them.I loved my calling in primary. I was the primary secretary and ended up going through three different presidencies due to various reasons. I ended up being allowed to basically run the Sunday process since I was so familiar with everything and the president trusted me completely. So was the dynamic of my ward. The love and trust people had for me in my home ward growing up was incredible. Even people from stake were like, “She’s got this. We’re all good.” That trust and love lifted me up and brought me such joy. I can’t remember a time I felt happier or more confident within my own skin. I had a small job doing a delivery route, I enjoyed university, and church made me so happy.I loved the primary kids I worked with too. In my journal I talk about them all and how they made me laugh. It’s funny to me now as they’re all grown up. Some have gone on missions or are currently serving missions, some are married, some have finished university degrees and entered the working world. It’s like you go away and don’t expect things to change, but they clearly do. These kids I loved and teased and joked with are now grown adults. Many of them, even if they don’t know it, I’m incredibly proud to see how well they’ve done with their lives.In June, the semester ended and we had our final exams. We also had a regional YSA convention over the long weekend prior to exams starting. The Monday the day before my first exam, which was biology, the convention took us ice skating. I have always loved ice skating! I’m not terribly great at it, but I could do well for someone who went every few months or so. The skating rink was close to where I lived, so most of the people from my ward and stake were familiar and more confident with skating than my friends from other stakes. So, I helped my friends from the other stakes by holding their hands and guiding them through the basics. One of my friends from my ward came up behind me and, as a joke, bumped me pretty hard. Under normal circumstances I would have balanced and chased him down for revenge, but, I had both hands with unstable people, so, to keep them upright, I stabilized them and hit the ice myself. Right on my tail bone. I got up in serious pain, but tried to ignore it. Until the second time I went down, landing right on the same spot. After that, I could barely walk, so I got off the ice and took off my skates. Sitting came as a painful issue as well, so my friends told me to call my mum because I couldn’t drive myself and get to the hospital.Mum came and helped me into my own car. The short trip to the nearby hospital was absolute agony. Every bump and turn left me in pain. At the hospital, we entered and found several other groups of people from the rink. I’m pretty sure the hospital staff wondered what the heck was going on down there to have so many young adults sustaining injuries! One group of Polynesian guys were there with their friend who needed stitches. He’d fallen over, and a friend skated over his hand.Anyway, it turned out that I had dislocated my coccyx, aka my tailbone. They gave me pain meds because that was all they could do. It’s not like they could put a cast on it or anything! I was told it would heal itself eventually. However, I had exams to sit, and I couldn’t sit! When I went in the next morning to work out what to do for my biology exam, my friends got a real kick out of my injury. Being a bio exam, we’d had to memorize the bones as part of the course material, so they knew exactly what and where the coccyx was and laughed so hard about it.I also started to feel nauseous during this Tuesday, and with my mum driving me everywhere, she started to notice me looking a bit green. On my way home from my voice lesson, I asked her to pull over. I threw up on the side of the highway. Turns out, codeine doesn’t agree with me, so we had to get me different pain meds. It was good to know as over the years I have been in situations where having codeine would have been far worse to discover my allergy to it than at that moment.Anyway, I finished my exams using a donut cushion, and sat my biology exam during the end of the testing period. After exams, I jetted off to the U.S.A. First stop: California. Because parks! I had a friend with me, so we had park hopper passes for Disneyland, California Adventure, Universal, San Diego Zoo, and Seaworld. Since it was the week of July 4th, we decided to go to the zoo on the 4thbecause the other parks would be packed. It was still a busy week, but I think it was the best choice. Every night Disneyland let off fireworks, and on the 4thwe watched the main show while having dinner. I love parks, which I mentioned earlier, so I had a blast that week.The next three weeks I spent in Arizona. My friend stayed with me for one of those two weeks before flying back. My friend when I was an exchange student took us to the Science Museum in Phoenix. I also spent time with another friend who had spent time in hospital for overnights due to a serious accident. We had been friends when I was an exchange student, but we had talked almost daily during her time in the hospital as it was late in Arizona, and I was usually just getting home from my classes.I had also agreed to spend time with the guy friend. That first week I didn’t see him much probably because I had my friend with me. I also spent time with my oldest host brother’s fiancé as she made plans and gushed over my host brother. She and I were friends when I was an exchange student, so I enjoyed seeing her so happy.But, if I wanted this guy friend to do something, I needed to give him a nudge. I started with trying to tell his younger brother that I was interested, but, his younger brother was useless. Next, I told his best friend who I knew had a big mouth and would spill the beans. And, as I anticipated, he did. This was Sunday. My friend who came with me left during the day the next day on Monday.Monday evening, this guy showed up at my host family’s house. A bunch of us from the neighborhood decided to play capture the flag, so he joined in. During the game, I snuck into the alley to slip around behind where the flag was being guarded. As I crept, someone called my name. I swung around to find the guy barreling after me. Thinking he had ended up on the other team, I ran for it. But he was fast and caught up with me. Turns out, he wasn’t on the other team and we walked back talking the whole way. He was no longer the shy guy I had known as an exchange student and spoke confidently with me and made me laugh. Two days later, while on our way to institute, he called my host sister’s phone. She answered and handed it to me, giving me a “What is this about?” look.My friend asked me on a date. I was delighted. He picked me up from the institute building and we went to see a movie. While waiting for the movie, we walked around nearby shops. To my surprise, he took my hand and held it. Throughout the evening he was charming, sweet, and made me laugh over and over.At the end, as we approached his car to go home, he stopped me during our conversation and kissed me. I couldn’t believe he kissed me, just like that! His mission had brought out a more confident side of him, while the sweet guy I’d been friends with remained.On Monday 21st July, 2008, I wrote, “we went away with his family… to a ranch to visit (his sister) who was working there as it is her birthday today.” His mother had invited me to go because I had been friends with his younger sister since my time as an exchange student and she was disappointed I’d be in town when she wasn’t.The drive up there and the time we spent together drew me to him. Of him, I said, “He makes me so happy and I feel safe with him…. He wants to be with me no matter what… I love that he comes to me when he sees me, or that he signals for me to come with him. That I’m not a waste of his time or a burden to him. I love that he always wants to kiss me, and that he wants me to kiss him and doesn’t make me feel stupid or cheap when I do…. I love that he wants to protect me from everything but lets me be my normal stupid self.“I love that I am so comfortable with him. We can talk endlessly about everything, then sit quietly and just enjoy each other’s company…“Most of all, I love his heart. He is an easy-going, kind, and gentle man who loves the gospel. I know that he wants to do things the Lord’s way and that he has a testimony of the gospel.”I was falling for him for sure, and he while we had been kissing prior to this trip, stopped and told me he loved me. While on the trip, we began talking about marriage. Fast, yes. I had apprehensions, but he seemed so eager and I admired him greatly, so I took it to the Lord. It was Sunday and we’d had a mini sacrament meeting at the ranch. I retired to the room and spent the next while on my own sorting out my feelings and praying about what to do.The thoughts from convention earlier that year came to mind; set a date in oh-eight, the prompting while watching the movie that I would marry this man. So, I ran through all my apprehensions before I asked, “should I marry him?”First off, the Lord shook off all my worries. He showed me that what mattered was that I cared about him and I wanted to be with someone who had a good heart more than anything. Then, He answered my question of if I should marry him with a resounding yes. Peace wafted over me. Warmth filled my heart. The Lord told me I would be greatly blessed if I followed through and married this man. He was a good man who wanted to do the right things and follow the teaching of the gospel.And so, later that day, I emerged. We didn’t have the opportunity to be alone for several hours, but when we did, I told him that I had prayed about marrying him like he’d asked, and received a yes.I can’t say I was really in love with him at that point either. I liked him a whole lot, but my decision to marry him relied purely on faith. However, red flags began to wave even then. When his mother found out, she pulled me aside and questioned my motives. Why would I want to marry him? Wouldn’t I be more interested in my still single host brother? When I said I liked the way he made me laugh, she looked at me like I was insane. Everyone else seemed happy for us, so I let it slide and didn’t think much on it.When we arrived back at my host family’s home, I called my mum back in Australia to talk it over. She said that if I had felt it was the right choice, then she would support me whole heartedly. I don’t think I mention how much I love my parents and how amazing they are. Even though they knew they’d lose me, they never stopped supporting me and guiding me through the process.After I told her, I told my host mother. She said it was no surprise, especially when I asked to call home and spoke for more than an hour to my mum. She was happy for me, though, and like my own mother, her support has never wavered.News spread fast. My friend who had messaged me from her hospital bed helped him pick out and purchase an engagement ring for me. Since we didn’t have much time as I was leaving at the end of the week, at first he bought me a stunning promise ring and saved up for a proper engagement ring. He took me to the Mesa Temple grounds and proposed to me properly there, down on one knee and everything, and gave me the ring. Despite the fact that it was July in Arizona, I don’t remember the heat suffocating me, I just remember being incredibly happy. It was his twenty-second birthday.Afterward, we had dinner at his home, I returned and said my goodbyes to my host family and he took me to the airport to go home.Back at university, my friends were shocked. Engaged? They didn’t know I was dating anyone! But, the good friends they were, they supported me and got excited with me. They wanted to see pictures of him and of the wedding dress, they examined my ring, and attended our engagement party when he came over in November.People at church were less shocked. Some of my friends even teased me and said of course a trip to Mormonville in America would result in me being engaged.Still, I didn’t feel truly in love with him. It came slowly for me. I can’t pinpoint an exact moment where I was like, “Wow, I really love him.” In fact, when he came to visit in November, my apprehensions resurfaced. He went to a regional YSA dance with me where I had tons of friends and, admittedly, dances were my thing. He lacked any enthusiasm for it, and we ended up sitting outside for most of it because he didn’t want to be there. Red flag, yes, but I chalked it up to differences in likes.During his visit, I swear half the ward threatened him. If he hurt me, they would destroy him. I laughed it off because I knew how much they loved me. But he voiced his annoyance about it.I had grown irritated that he seemed uninterested in my world, so I took it to the Lord. He reassured me of my decision and said to trust that I would be blessed. So, plans moved forward.I finished my year of university and said goodbye to my friends there. I was heavy hearted to not be continuing with them and considered postponing the marriage until I could complete my degree. However, I could tell my fiancé wouldn’t wait that long as he had grown antsy waiting, especially as all his friends married over the months we were apart. I also felt that I needed to marry him then and not wait, as the Lord had a plan for me.By the morning of the wedding, I had love for my soon-to-be husband. He was a good man, and, despite the constant issues I had with his mother’s obvious disapproval of me, I trusted that the Lord would guide me through. And, as if as a sign, the sealer we had for our wedding spoke and looked similar to my grandad. I stared at this man as he spoke to us, in awe of his similarities, and I knew the Lord was sending me a message.At the altar, I watched my husband as we married and I knew then that I loved him. I knew that I would do all I could to grow that love and be a good companion with him. I felt the Lord wrap me in warmth as He approved of my feelings and the covenants I made. He blessed me to feel that love for my husband.And so, my new life began. A married life. A life in a different country. One where more often than not, I found myself… alone.
December 21, 2019
Chapter ??: Mission or Marriage?
If you read through my journals from 2004-2007 you will see me flip back and forth between serving a mission and feeling like maybe it’s not what the Lord wanted for me. While I was on my exchange, I become bound and determined to be a missionary, but during my time with my grandparents I served in the nursery and felt like the Lord was preparing me for motherhood.2007 was, well, a difficult year. I still carried a heavy heart for the loss of Grandad, but I also stepped all the way into being an adult. I moved into a flat near the city to be closer to work. At first, three sisters lived in the flat with me, but eventually two of them moved out. My job took me away for most of the day, and for the few hours in the evening I was home, the remaining sister, being fairly quiet and insular, didn’t talk to me much.I went to the YSA ward for a while, but most of the members didn’t speak English. I made friends through institute with some girls who lived within my family ward, so I switched and attended with them.My first job was pretty good. I liked the location in Chatswood as the office was literally right above the train station, and Chatswood is a pretty neat place. However, the office manager decided she didn’t like me. While the owner hired me and was happy with my work, the manager watched me and waited for me to make mistakes. The team would go out drinking on Friday nights and I would respectfully decline joining them. We were invited to stay at the Marriott for a night, and while I had dinner with them and took a hotel tour, when we were free to do our own thing so they decided to hit the clubs, I turned them down and retired to my hotel room. I don’t think she liked that I didn’t want to get wasted and hook up with randoms.We had an office mobile phone we took turns taking on the weekends. Once I had finished training, my turn came up to take the phone. She pulled me into her office and told me I wouldn’t be allowed to go to church on Sunday in case someone called. I explained that I would keep the phone with me, and I was less than a five-minute drive from my church building so I would be able to take care of any issues right away. She became firm and said if I wanted to keep my job I would not go to church and risk leaving a client stranded.I left that meeting feeling confused and deflated. When I talked about it with one of the other girls, she was confused as well. She said they often went out drinking or clubbing while they had the phone and the manager knew about it. She didn’t know why going to church would be a problem.But, it was. It got me fired.In hindsight, I should have taken it to court for unfair dismissal. Except, I was young, it had been my first real job, and I just wanted to move on. I needed another job fast to pay my rent and bills. Thankfully, the Lord was watching over me and wouldn’t let my steadfastness cause me grief. Within two weeks I started a new job. That was a great job that I enjoyed. The girls I worked with were fun and friendly, and Bondi Junction was, like Chatswood, an awesome location.I served as a TFY leader during this time. After loving TFY as a youth four years earlier, being a leader came as an easy choice. I had a wonderful time and made new friends and strengthened other friendships. During this time, a guy started showing an interest in me. It took me a little bit to notice, but when I did, he took me out.We dated for a while, and it was nice. He was a nice guy, polite, had all the checks in the boxes with being a returned missionary and coming from a good family. We were dating during my transition between jobs, and during my move out of the flat back home. In my journal I described him as being “all hot and heavy and full on.” Somewhere in there, he just changed gears and I became little more than an accessory. Whenever I would question him about ignoring me or abandoning me at events he took me to, he would get frustrated and upset with me. Eventually, he dumped me. In my journal, I explain that, “he said he didn’t love me and I was too strong for him.” It broke my heart. I felt so betrayed. However, looking back I can see it was for the best. I deserved better than the way he was treating me with his hot and cold, and on and off demeanor.It took me a while to nurse my broken heart to heal. I remember once talking with one of my netball coaches at our end of season party and she said that we all have at least one heart break before finding the one who will never break our heart. That has always stuck with me throughout the years, and my heartbreak with this guy I believed was what she was talking about. On Sunday, 30thSeptember, 2007 I said, “Already I have realized one thing; this disaster of a relationship I just went through is so I can appreciate the real thing more fully when it comes along.”However, with a heavy and broken heart, and still in many ways grieving from Grandad’s death, combined with the two hour each direction commute to work, life took a heavy toll on me. I recall 2007 as a dark year. I was depressed a lot and struggled often. Although I enjoyed my job in Bondi Junction, I needed a change.I found a new job at a travel agency, which is where I wanted to work from the beginning. I was excited to finally be a travel agent!I also sat the STAT test for university during this time. I had saved up a ton of money after working most of the year. I had saved it for a mission because, after the break up, I made up my mind to serve a mission. I was almost twenty-one, so the age of sister missionaries at that time. One weekend, I was waiting at the temple to meet up with some friends to drive up to Newcastle for a friend’s birthday. There, I was wandering and praying for comfort and guidance. The temple was closed that week for maintenance, so only the church office workers were present, but in general, since it was Saturday, no one was around. I sat on a bench and just prayed. My heart still hurt and I wanted direction. It was then that I received the revelation not to serve a mission. It was clear and specific. I needed to use the money I had saved to go to university and begin studying to be a teacher. I had enough money to pay for two semesters of full-time study with a few thousand dollars left over. “So, no mission?” I asked.“No mission,” He told me.I still have feelings of disappointment about not going all these years later, but the direction was so clear I couldn’t deny it.I worked hard at my new job, but things started to get weird. The owner of the travel agency had two offices, the main one in Merrylands, and the one I was hired to work in by the Flemmington Markets. He kept calling and telling me I needed to work at the main office. There were always four or five agents working there, so I didn’t see why I was needed, especially since I did almost nothing whenever I was at the office. The owner would sort of hover and talk to me and made me generally uncomfortable. When I got into my university course, quitting that job came easily.And so, another year passed. A hard year, probably my hardest year until 2019. Harder than 2002 when my high school friends turned on me and persecuted me. What I think made it so hard was that I went into it with a broken heart, and trials I faced seemed to fracture my heart further. But the Lord has a purpose to everything, and I learned how to be resilient and come back from dark places no matter what. I learned even more how to trust God, and I discovered that my personal revelations can be remarkably clear. I wouldn’t be serving a mission because the Lord had another plan for me. Trials are lessons, and like any classroom, some are much harder than others. But with perseverance and quite a lot of faith, I knew I could get through anything.
December 20, 2019
Chapter ��� ??: Heritage
Upon moving in, I arranged to go to TAFE and study travel and tourism nearby. At first, things seemed pretty normal. My grandad was his usual, warm, loving self. We talked about things while Nana fussed about in the kitchen or cleaning. Nana seemed to always be cleaning something! Grandad liked to do things with me, maybe a little more than usual. I signed up for a netball team and he enjoyed coming to watch me. He enjoyed talking with me, and I showed him how to use Google Earth to look at where he grew up and see how it looked nowadays. He would show me things like his sealing ledger and tried to show Nana about the budget and bills. She would always bury her head in the sand and walk away. She and I were both in denial about how serious his health problems were.I settled in and made some amazing friends with the Young Single Adults in the ward and stake. I truly feel I was blessed with some of the most amazing people and wonderful friends at that moment because of what was to come. To this day, even though I don���t see her often, one of the girls in particular I call one of my best friends. When we see each other, it���s like we���ve never been apart. The families in the ward also welcomed me with arms wide open. I slotted in easily, and for a while I was so happy.During this time, my friend from my time as an exchange student got engaged. So, I arranged to go to her wedding back in the U.S. and my mum wanted to come with me.Unfortunately, Grandad���s health declined. I came home one day from TAFE to find an ambulance in the driveway. I had never been more frightened. They took my grandad to the hospital, leaving me with my irate nana. I had to do something, but since I was still quite young and distressed myself, I struggled to pull myself together, but I did manage to send Nana off to the hospital after him.He came home with an oxygen tank. I hated that thing. The noise it made set my nerves on edge. I would lie awake listening to it to make sure Grandad was still breathing.The whole ordeal seemed to drive my nana to the edge as well. They had been married for more than fifty years by this point. They had celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary in 2002 when I was in year ten. My journal entry for the 14thof April says that we had spent the weekend at their place and had a party at their favorite restaurant ���with heaps of old people Nana and Grandad have known for ages.��� They also had me sing, How Do I Live? By LeAnn Rimes. Now I can���t hear that song and not think about them. This was about four years after that anniversary, so my grandparents had been together for most of their lives. I can���t imagine how hard it was for her to watch him slipping away. I don���t blame her for it causing her distress.Unfortunately, since I was the one in the house, I was served a heavy helping of misplaced frustration and anger. Nana would yell at me for everything and anything. I couldn���t do laundry right, but I needed to do my own laundry, except, I kept getting in the way so she would take over and do it for me anyway. My room was never clean enough. I never got home at the right time. I spent too much time with my friends. I wasn���t dating enough. I ate too little, but I ate too much and I was getting fat. I didn���t know which way was up or what exactly I needed to do, so we would end up fighting. It was upsetting for Grandad, and it broke my heart, but it got so bad I packed everything and left. I had nowhere to go, so with everything I owned crammed into my hatchback, I floated between two of my friends��� houses for the week. Finally, with the intervention of my parents, Grandad convinced me to come home.Unfortunately, he was only getting worse. So while Nana struggled to help him, I struggled to watch him slowly dying. At nineteen, I was still basically a child in so many ways. It���s important to note that I had a close relationship with my grandad. I adored him. I always expected him to do my temple sealing when the time came, but here I was, watching him slip away and I had no marriage prospects. The worst part was, he really wanted to do my sealing too, but he knew he wasn���t going to have the chance. He had a book full of names of people he had done live sealings for, and he wanted to add my name to that list, but it would never happen. A lost dream is a shattering feeling.Soon, he ended up needing to stay in the hospital. I found it hard to visit him there because, like with Grandma, facing mortality was a hard pill to swallow, and I definitely didn���t want to face his mortality. I didn���t want to even consider him being gone.Being just me and Nana at home got rough. Her emotions were everywhere, worse than mine, and I could hardly deal with my own. We would fight and fight, then I���d feel guilty when she would hide in her room and cry. So, I would pray and write in my journal to help me find answers for what to do. The answer was always, ���Keep going.���The time came for Mum and I to head to the U.S. We talked to Grandad about leaving, and he wanted us to go. He knew it would make me happy. So I prayed and begged that he would stay alive for the few weeks we were gone.On Friday, 18th August 2006, I wrote: ���Grandad died on Sunday here, Saturday in Arizona. It was the strangest feeling��� we would have to leave for Australia asap. I was absolutely devastated. A huge jumble of feelings and thoughts overwhelmed me and I didn���t want to deal with Mum asking me what I wanted to do��� All I could think of was that maybe I hadn���t had enough faith in my prayers or it was a slight setback������I��� sat with Mum. We talked about the possibilities (for going back) When Dad called and told Mum Grandad had gone. My heart seemed to just shatter��� I knew my grandad was gone and I wasn���t ready to leave that happy place for the harsh reality of everything that was soon to come.���Grandad died while I was overseas. It made me question my faith and the strength of my prayers, but the reality is, when the Lord says it���s time, nothing can change that. I believe I was exactly where I needed to be when he passed. My host family brought me comfort and happiness, and the distance I needed from the reality of his death to be able to cope.We flew home right away, and so the journal entries came once we had arrived back in Australia and I had returned to my grandparents��� home, this time, with the rest of my family too.On Saturday the 19th, I went to his viewing. My journal entry says, ���It took me about ten minutes to even stand in the doorway, then another ten minutes to get close to him. I think it didn���t look like him at all. I cried a lot which was pretty embarrassing. That���s all I really want to say on the day except that I���m glad I got to see him one last time in this lifetime.���Monday the 21st was his funeral. Of the funeral, I said, ���the whole thing was nice, but sad.��� I had been asked to sing, because Grandad loved to hear me sing, but I couldn���t pull myself together enough to do it. I had sung at Grandma���s funeral and I had cried on and off through the whole song, so I knew I wouldn���t be able to get a single note out since I had been so much closer to Grandad.Something that helped me get through was my friends. I said, ���I was so glad (three of my friends) came. When (one friend) showed up, I burst into tears which was embarrassing.��� Yes, I hate crying and I find it embarrassing even now if people see me do it.It took time for Nana and I to settle, in a sense. On Sunday, 17thSeptember 2006 I wrote: ���After church I had a meeting with Bishop at 1:30. We talked about how Nana is driving me nuts and I hated feeling the constant resentment toward her because she���s always putting me down. We also talked about how she isn���t coping and how she just paces up and down the house and cleans constantly and ceases to function like a normal human being anymore, and how every now and then she says she just wants to die because there���s nothing left for her, and the time she was pacing the house and startled calling out, ���Where are you, Grandad?��� and how that was really distressing.���My bishop was perfect for me during that time. He listened and saw how hard it was for me, a teenager, to deal with my grief and my grandmother���s all at once. He gave me a blessing that reminded me to love my nana and serve her, even though it was hard to do with her grieving and taking it out on me. It���s interesting because, upon reading what I wrote was said in the blessing, I felt that the blessings given then are repeated and are relevant to me now. They were:�� I was blessed to feel relief from loneliness�� The Lord is aware of the desires of my heart and wants me to be happy and have those desires. �� Although Nana may not appreciate what I���m doing now, she will eventually, either in this life or the next.The first two are things I have felt in the temple a great deal lately, so to find them in my journal entry from thirteen years ago was rather timely. The last one, well, Nana is still kicking and I love her so much. Although that time was hard for both of us and we struggled to be in the same space, I appreciate that time we had together. Our abrasive relationship rubbed the edges off and helped us love each other deeply. I don���t know if she appreciates all I did, but I know Grandad does, I have felt him tell me so from the other side of the veil. I was little more than a kid, barely an adult, and I had to deal with some very hard issues. I didn���t handle them perfectly, not even close, but I made it through with the help of wonderful friends, family, and a bishop who was put in at the right place and time. I can see that nothing and no one placed in my life at that time was a coincidence.I still miss my grandad, but I feel him with me often, especially when I go to the temple. He loved the temple, so I have no doubt he enjoys visiting there with me. In fact, I heard his voice when I visited before I discovered my husband���s infidelity. When the Lord told me I had the strength to get through what was to come, I said I didn���t know if I did. And so He said, ���Then let them share their strength.��� Right away I felt four people around me. Three women, and then my grandad���s voice, clear as day with that English lilt said, ���Katie, I���m here.��� Yet again, I embarrassed myself by crying my eyes out. The way he spoke my name was exactly how I remembered it. I believe he was the one who spoke because I could recognize his voice anywhere. One of the others present was my grandmother, but I am still not sure who the other two women were. I think one was possibly my great-great grandmother Mary Ellen Monks. I have felt bonded to her for a while now. One day I will know, and that day I will hold them close and thank them for being with me through such heartbreaking times.My time living with my grandparents came to a close at the end of 2006. I had finished my TAFE diploma and found a job back in Sydney. I would be moving back south and turning to a new chapter. Although the grief for my grandad would linger well into the following year, I knew he was happy.
I have come from so many strong and faithful people. I am proud of my ancestry, the Yorkshiremen, the Irish, the Londoners, the stoic, the pioneers, the migrants, the soldiers, and most importantly, the faithful. All have come to a place in me. I have a great lineage, and a heritage of steadfast faith to live up to. In those who have come before me I find a beacon of light to move forward. They are with me always, even if I cannot see them. They lend me their strength when I feel like I can���t fight another battle and lift me up when I feel like hope is lost. For some reason they are standing with me always and helping me push onward. In me, they find hope, and in them I find the courage to keep pressing on.