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Welcome to my blog! I have initially created this blog for a course I am taking through Brigham Young University Idaho's online progra...

Saturday, January 25, 2020

Week 3 - Traditional Marriage

“Marriage arose in the nature of things to meet a vital need: ensuring that children are conceived by a mother and father committed to raising them in the stable conditions of a lifelong relationship” – 576 U.S. _ (2015) p. 5
Ah. Marriage. To be honest, I did not really consider the significance of marriage until I was a teenager. As a child I did have the typical daydreams of one day marrying my 4th grade crush but I did not consider the impact of marriage. The whole ordeal about folks with a same-sex attraction did not cross my mind until I was about thirteen years old when I realized Mr. Smithers from the Simpsons cartoon was in love with Mr. Burns.
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Some may consider me oblivious, sheltered, or even naïve, I don’t care. Call me what you want. However, I was raised to be a thinker and to stand up for what I believe in. Even though my parents divorced, I am still a strong advocate for traditional marriage. I have friends and relatives with successful marriages as excellent examples for me to strive for once I get married someday.
Back in 2014, Russell M. Nelson, who is now the current President, also known as the Prophet, of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints has said the following regarding the importance of marriage, “Male and female are created for what they can do and become, together. It takes a man and a woman to bring a child into the world. Mothers and fathers are not interchangeable. Men and women are distinct and complementary. Children deserve a chance to grow up with both a mom and a dad.”
I feel really strongly about the fact that every child deserves a chance to grow up with both a mom and a dad. I can definitely feel my dad should have been more present in my life. Fortunately, my mom did manage to raise me to be a decent human being. I know how to cook, clean, and manage my finances responsibly. I have also developed good work ethics, be honest in all that I do, and be diligent on any task I am supposed to do. I am sure if my dad actually took over the role of the father, my mom would have had a much easier time raising me and my brother.

Saturday, January 18, 2020

Week 2 - Special Circumstances


“Marriage fosters small cooperative unions—also known as stable families—that enable children to thrive, shore up communities, and help family members to succeed during good times and to weather the bad times.” – The State of Our Unions: Marriage in America 2012 p. xii
To start off, I come from a home with a single mom. My parents divorced when I was about nine years old. I knew there was something different about my parents compared to my classmates’ parents. My parents often fought and argued at home. Tensions were often very high while in public. My mom tried to keep the marriage intact by tolerating his behavior, but he still initiated the divorce process. Just like with all the other ongoing trials I deal with on a daily basis, having divorced parents just became a way of life for me. I cannot speak for my brother Charlie, but I think he took it a little harder than I did. The two of us spent the week at our mom’s then went to our dad’s, or Gramma’s (my dad’s mother), for the weekend for about ten years.
“But Shannon, doesn’t your religion, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, consider divorce a bad thing?”
Yes, and no, divorce can be considered traumatizing for many individuals within the family and surrounding the family. I think people should do their best to fix their marriage. They should first turn to the Lord, Jesus Christ, and repent. They should also counsel with their bishop as a married couple. Next, they should do what a member of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints named Elder Dallin H. Oaks has recommended on what a bishop has once suggested as follows, “keep the commandments, stay active in their Church attendance, scripture reading, and prayer, and to work on their own shortcomings.” Elder Oaks then said, “...couples who followed this bishop’s counsel and stayed together emerged with their marriages even stronger” as opposed to married couples who chose not to seek counsel from the Bishop and assistance from the Lord.
However, divorce can also be a reasonable option for a certain limited number of circumstances. This option should not be considered lightly though. President James E. Faust, whom was first sustained as an Apostle of the Lord Jesus Christ for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in 1972 then later became the Second Counselor in the First Presidency of the entire Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints back in 1995, has once said, the reason for divorce “should be nothing less serious than a prolonged and apparently irredeemable relationship which is destructive of a person’s dignity as a human being.”
My parents did not take divorce lightly. They did try to make things work but, in the end, some things just did not pan out the way they should. Choices were made and my parents had to pay for the consequences of their actions. Years have gone by and my mom is doing far better than when she used to be with my dad.
I would like to share one last piece of advice from Elder Oaks, he once said, “the best way to avoid divorce from an unfaithful, abusive, or unsupportive spouse is to avoid marriage to such a person.” I’m sure in retrospect, my mom wishes she did not marry my dad. She could have avoided the whole divorce process if she just stayed far away from him but what happened has already happened. However, I know that in due time, through the help of our Savior’s Atonement, each member of the family can learn and heal from the past pertaining to this divorce.