Recently, my husband and I were in the car, and we broke down…right in front of the sewage treatment plant. We called for help, and started to wait. We immediately recognized that this was not going to be a pleasant place to wait in the summer heat. A few jokes about the aroma helped lighten the mood. However, as help arrived, we realized that we were not just out of gas, and that this was going to be a more difficult problem to fix. That’s when the silent prayers for help and strength from above began. With one more car in need of repair on top of our other current challenges, it was clear that our new situation was a little like our break- down. We were stuck in an unpleasant place, not wanting to be there, and not knowing why or how long before we would be delivered from our many stresses. It was easy to feel overwhelmed and discouraged.
We all face trials now and then, yet sometimes we feel like
Job, being assaulted with problems on every side. One of my favorite quotes is this: "If for a while the harder you try, the harder it gets, take
heart. So it has been with the best
people who ever lived” (Elder Jeffrey R. Holland). Perhaps a few
reminders we learned from this experience can help us get through difficult
times:
1. Choose your attitude.
When bad things happen, how we respond can determine our happiness, and
the attitude in our home and family.
Perhaps a little humor about the “stinky situation” can help keep things
in perspective. Definitely, turning to
the Lord for strength to deal with our present tests is the best way to keep a
good attitude. Elder Neal A. Maxwell has
said, “When some people face adversity, they complain and become bitter. They
ask questions like ‘Why does this have to happen to me? Why do I have to suffer
this now? What have I done to deserve this?’ But these questions have the power
to dominate their thoughts. Such questions can overtake their vision, absorb
their energy, and deprive them of the experiences the Lord wants them to
receive. Rather than responding in this way, people should consider asking
questions such as, ‘What am I to do? What am I to learn from this experience?
What am I to change? Whom am I to help? How can I remember my many blessings in
times of trial?’”
2. Ask for and accept
help. We were so grateful to our good
friend coming to our aid when we called, and he willingly stood with me under
the hood of the car in the hot sun with the sewage odor in the air. We were doubly blessed with another friend who
offered to loan us her car until ours was repaired. We love to see the care and service that we give our neighbor, but we have also sometimes seen friends struggle needlessly, because they feel they are
not that bad off and don’t want to bother someone else by asking for help. However, when we ask the Lord for help, who
does He send? President Spencer W.
Kimball said, “God does notice us, and he watches over us. But it is usually
through another person that he meets our needs.” What a joy it is to feel the love of the Lord
through others when we accept the service offered to us.
3. Trust in the Lord. Elder Richard G. Scott reminds us
that, “Just when all seems to be going right, challenges often come in multiple
doses applied simultaneously. When those trials are not consequences of your
disobedience, they are evidence that the Lord feels you are prepared to grow
more. He therefore gives you experiences
that stimulate growth, understanding, and compassion which polish you for your
everlasting benefit. To get you from where you are to where He wants you to be
requires a lot of stretching, and that generally entails discomfort and pain.” The lessons of life are not always fun,
sometimes life just stinks! But we can
trust in the Lord that this “fertilizer” in life is for our good - it will help us grow
stronger, forge our roots deep in Him, and bear beautiful fruit in our lives.


Keep posting! I learn so much from you!
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