September 26, 2014

yummy macaroni

Ever since I started this blog I have always posted about my moms birthday and reflected a little bit. I kept it on the blog because it's a bit more personal. A couple years back when I posted that it was my mom's birthday all my roommates wanted to celebrate with lime rickey's! I've always been more timid about this especially with people other then my family because I didn't want to be that girl. I wasn't looking for sympathy, just simply wanted to talk about it and be able to acknowledge it openly like anyone else who's mom's birthday comes around. I soon realized that my friends were the best supporters while I'm here at school. Of course they jumped on board...am I crazy? NUTS!

Ever since then it has opened up a whole different world for me. I don't have keep this a secret, I also don't have to advertise it. But maybe I kinda want to? Because my mom was an incredible woman and I want people to know that. Most importantly I want to always be living my life in a way that directly reflects her character. 


How we celebrated: 

For years my sister and I have talked about this macaroni my mom would make us. It was our favorite. Along the way it somehow became known as yummy macaroni. The recipe for yummy macaroni has been a mystery. Because of it's name a google search is pointless..... i've tried it, trust me. Katie asked everyone that might have known the secret ingredients. NO SUCH LUCK. Every now and again Katie will bring it up and we discuss the mystery. "the sauce is white and there's onions in it" I searched for it again last week and found one that I thought might be it with slight modifications. 


Today, the twenty-fourth day of September yummy macaroni was recreated! I feel like I cracked a secret code or something. When I was making it the exact same aroma filled the kitchen that I was used to smelling 12+ years ago. Some things really are unforgettable. And now my kids can grow up eating yummy macaroni and that is the best thing in the world.


grand babies doing some casual reading on Grandma Kathy

 

comfort food for the win. In the most ancient of ancient sandwich makers, we just call it the smasher though.


It's amazing to me how much joy and love I was filled with all day. Because Plan of Salvation you guys. It makes days like today a day of celebration.

recipe for yummy macaroni sauce:

2 tbs butter
2 tbs flour
1 cup milk
1/2 cup of chopped onion
1/2 cup of shredded cheese

Melt butter and stir in flour. Then stir in milk until sauce thickens on medium heat. Add onions and cheese.

September 18, 2014

xoxo, Meg

You know, sometimes my mind won't ever shut off.  Now that I'm on my semester of "lasts" it really gets me going. I compare myself to who I was my very first year of college.

Freshman Megan had too much energy and trust me I still have too much energy from time to time, so you can only imagine how terribly annoying I must have been. I used to blog about long study sessions, finals week, boys that I didn't talk to, and embarrassing moments I was sure I would never live down. I also thought I was pretty funny, but I try re-reading old posts and they don't make very much sense to me even. (except that one story where a group of girls pegged me as a home wrecker, that one really is funny) I didn't know what heartbreak was or disappointment and failure. The hardest decisions I made were picking out clothes for school and choosing things to buy from the grocery store. I thought I experienced everything in that short year of my life. I thought the friends I made that year would be my very best friends forever and ever. Despite my seemingly easy life looking back I remember thinking I was way old and stuff. I mean home was a whole 2 hour-drive away.

It's weird to finally have an end in sight. I don't want to leave and grow up and get a real job. No sir.

ENJOY IT little freshman, enjoy it.

dear freshman, 
Enjoy being annoying, enjoy not taking your classes seriously, and enjoy your new found freedom. Join that group of kids who are having a portable dance party through every apartment in the complex on a wednesday night. One day you will think that it's the most annoying thing, but not yet. Enjoy those late night McDonalds runs at 2 AM and most other poor decisions you make. 

Don't ever think you have figured life out. You will overcome things that are really hard which will in turn prepare you for the next thing that will be even harder. People in your life will come and go appreciate them for what they added to your life at that moment. There will be a few lucky ones who get to be stuck with you forever. Don't sweat it, you've got all of college to figure out which ones are deserving.  Don't rely on people or circumstances to make you happy. Be in charge of your life. Become YOU! 

hopefully when you graduate you will still be above water and you will still have a little faith in humanity. 

xoxo,
Meg



also take photos like this, you will never regret these. 

August 26, 2014

Big Bad Seniors

Yeah, you read that title right. S-E-N-I-O-R. Say what? Trust me i'm in disbelief too. Honestly, i'm the most terrified college student there is. AND I won't even have the full two semesters to soak everything in. You know like finally grow up and be ready for the post grad life. I'm taking off in December and leaving my beloved college town to student teach elsewhere. So that's approx four months left. What the heck, is all I have to say.


Our last, first day ever.

Yesterday I went to the longest class of my life. When your teacher gives you two breaks that's how you know it is long. Then I came home and my car was booted. In my parking lot. Sup senior year. It was kinda a rough start to the first day but really it has been so much fun to be back with my best girls and surrounded by so many friends.

Notes of importance:

-Paige and I have every single class together because we're both EL ED majors so that totally rocks.
-There is not a single boy in any of my classes this semester, too.much.estrogen fills the room.
-I have not been on time to a single class. Senioritis at it's finest.
-My cousin McKinley is my next door neighbor and it's the funnest! everyone I meet says "Megan? ohh you're the cousin?" then we're fast friends. ;)
-My backyard has the best view of cache valley
-My room is seriously the same size as my whole apt last year
-My closest isn't full. So I need more clothes
-I keep seeing kids that I met Freshman year and it's the weirdest. that whole mission thing.... ya know
-The night I moved in I wanted to cry because people were being social and I forgot what that's like.
-It's my senior year and I just bought myself a lap top
-I made my dad move me in, not because I needed him but I just wanted him to. The older I get the more needy I become for my parents.
-Nothing in the world is right because this year Amy sent Ky and I off to school. :(





I force him to be my best cousin friend.

bring on senior year. (****insert fist bump emoji)




August 20, 2014

Living Without Feeling


The first day I got to the mission field, my mission president asked me to tell him about myself. "Well, President, I've had a fairly easy life. My family is practically perfect, loving, and faithful; my friends are great examples and are supportive of me; the trials I've had are just with little things like boys or not making student body officer--things that your typical teenager with an easy life goes through. I am excited to share the gospel and make other's lives easy. I feel like I owe my easy life to the teachings of this Church." President just gave me this look like, "you have no idea what you're getting into, little Sister." This was the day that my life started becoming a little less "easy". 

I started off my mission with a rough patch. I was terrified, lonely, confused, and I felt so inadequate. I was so scatter-brained and it frustrated people so much to anger them. Sadly, that led to some emotional and verbal abuse. This caused the first 19 year old sister in the mission great anxiety. I knew though, however, that obedience was the key. If I was obedient, I would be blessed eventually. 

I loved my mission, even though it was difficult. I loved the many good times I had. I loved feeling God's love and helping others to understand His gospel. 

The anxiety worsened as time went on. I started getting panic attacks triggered by simple things, similarly to the challenge of having Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. I had wonderful and loving companions that knew I needed help and encouraged me to talk about it. 

I reached out for help, but at first, they didn't know if it would pass or not or if they should believe me. I felt like the girl who cried wolf, and it was difficult to look at myself with confidence that I was loved. I picked up the bad habits I had in junior high like eating disorders and low self esteem. The panic attacks got more intense and more frequent, and my mission president's wife was doing all she could to help me. We decided I should go to a doctor to see what medical attention I further needed. 

The doctors decided to put me on some heavy anxiety medication immediately. At first, everything went smoothly. I wasn't feeling as uptight and always on the edge. 

Unfortunately, these medications that are supposed to help your anxiety have crazy side effects like anxiety (I know, right?), depression, weight gain (not good for the girl that's struggling with eating disorders), and the one that effected me the most was a numbing of feelings. I didn't realize that was due to the medication--I thought I must've been unworthy to receive revelation or to feel the Spirit. I didn't feel anything. I was just numb. 

I started having a bad reaction to the medication. We thought it was a violent flu, but my companion never got anything. I couldn't keep anything down except baby Pedialyte. I tried to still work but I could barely move. I was in immense pain and was completely exhausted. I had ran faster than I had the strength to. 

My mission president was so inspired, and I trusted him with everything. He felt that it was time for me to go home and receive the best medical attention I could get. I trusted his decision and flew home to my wonderful family. I figured it must have happened for a reason. I thought I would be getting married to the missionary I had waited for and had been writing religiously. 

I was still quite sick, and I switched medications, but we (my family, the doctors, the therapists, the homeopathic specialists, the emotional coaches) couldn't put our finger on why I wasn't getting any better. I had about two good hours a day and I spent those trying to feel the Spirit. Trying to go to the temple, read scriptures, go to institute--anything I could do to know that God still loved me and that my mission was not in vain. 

Summer came and the boy I had planned on marrying came home. We changed. It wasn't going to work out. I didn't understand. I thought I had received revelation that he was the one. Did I really receive that answer? Did I make it up? Do I know how to receive answers from God? Is there revelation? God is there, right? I couldn't remember because I had no feeling. Everything in my life was falling apart. I didn't understand why I couldn't just be little Sister Olsen in West Texas preachin' the good word for the rest of my life. I wanted to go back out on my difficult mission to escape all my problems (work, dating, having no feelings, etc). 

Well, finally I did start having some emotions. Confusion. Regret. Loss. Pain. Sadness. Resentment. Anger. Devastation. All these emotions boiled down to a deep and dark depression. If I wasn't working full time, I was sleeping or sobbing. I wanted it to end. I wanted life to end. I even made a plan of how I would make that happen. 

I distanced myself from everyone. My friends thought I didn't care about them. I couldn't talk to my family without crying. My parents wondered if they would ever get their daughter back. 

I had been promised by God and His prophets, however, that if I kept the commandments (like reading scriptures, making institute a priority, attending the temple regularly, magnifying my callings, praying diligently) that I would receive direction. I stayed true to who I was and did all of these things, even though I saw no results and felt no answers. I could not feel any peace. That was all I wanted. 

One day, I went to my therapist I see weekly. I was telling her about the first panic attack I remember having as a three year old at Church. She got a light in her eyes, ran out, got a paper, and started asking me questions. I answered all but one with a resounding, "yes." "Gilly, I think your anxiety is caused by undiagnosed ADHD!" After she said that, my whole life made sense. That was it. That's why I did terribly in school. That's why after taking the ACT 5 times the highest I could get was a 23. That's why I could never keep my room spotless because I never finished the task. That's why I was a slower learner at my jobs--especially the one I have now. That's why I was the scatter-brained missionary who frustrated people. I knew that this was an answer from God. 

A couple months later, I started on ADHD medication. I saw the effect immediately! I COULD FEEL! I even got tummy butterflies for a boy! The most exciting thing for me though was feeling the Spirit. I first felt it when I was sitting in Sacrament meeting preparing to give a talk I had written a week before. I had an overwhelming feeling not to give it and to share my experiences with depression and anxiety. Since I was so grateful to hear the Still, Small Voice again, I did exactly what He told me. I said exactly what I felt. It was terrifying, but God was with me. There were angels bearing me up. 

People came up to me after in tears thanking me and saying that it was exactly what they needed to hear. 

I have only been on these ADHD medications for a week. For me, they are a tender mercy from the Lord. I feel God's love again. I recognize his voice again. I feel emotions like happiness, excitement, confidence, empathy, and love. The puzzle pieces of my trials are starting to come together to create a beautiful picture. 

I know that God lives. I know that Jesus Christ suffered for not only our sins--but our emotions. I know He suffered, for me, my lack of emotions. I know that obedience to God's commandments will bring us the happiness and peace He has promised. He will never let us down. I know that, because I've seen it. 

August 17, 2014

Birthday week

Tuesday rolled around and I finally turned the ripe old age of 21. I can legally do anything now, except rent a car I still can't do that. I guess i can't have it ALL.

Tuesday morning i woke up early and didn't sleep in because I wanted to take advantage of as much "birthday time" as i could. which basically just means more time to reflect on myself and my past year's accomplishments. hah okay but really I just woke up and drove to SLC so i could see my nephews and spend the morning with them. Everyone says boys are easier and wishes that they have all boys because they are supposedly "non dramatic" or "easy going". Maybe that's true when they're older but man i'll tell you these little guys are a handful. We're talking constant torture and body slams. I love them to death but it sure has been an adjustment from little girls who like to brush your hair, paint nails, and play dress up. For real though it was so fun to play with them. Hearing Ethan say my name is probably the cutest thing, it never gets old. Also it's way funny when he accidentally calls me Katie. Let's be honest though we are easily confusible-(roll with this new word, okay.)
(is this why all mom's cut their hair?)

Then came visit's to my parents house where my sisters gave me homemade birthday bracelets and letters that said things like "Happy birthday Meg, when i grow up i hope i'm just like you." Melted my heart. Afterward I had my first birthday cake of the day with my sister-in-law Jenn because we have the same birthday! 

Tuesday night my friends planned a birthday dinner for me. We met at the Blue Lemon and partook of some very delicious food. Then we went to Ky's house for birthday cake number two where even more friends were able to congregate. I don't think it can be a bad day when you get to eat cake twice and can't even feel guilty about it.



Saturday night my roommate Paige and I decided to have a combined birthday party- yes we threw a party for ourselves. There is a park by our parent's houses with this enormous hill. We managed to throw together a massive slip N slide which covered the whole 200 ft hill. SO FUN. and scary but mostly fun.

When we were cleaning up at the end some kids who were high school aged purposely threw their cups behind a construction area. I don't really know what happened next except this mama bear came out in me and I told them very matter of factly that we were in a public park that we need to leave it clean just how we found it.  That's when my friends all looked at me questioning what I had just said. I guess it was just very adult of me to stand up to rebellious teens. They seemed proud, ya know?

Last birthday thought and then I'll be done for a year. Everyone has told me time and time again that they have a word which they adopt (usually at the beginning of a year) and include that word in their life throughout the year. Maybe it's to overcome fears or stretch themselves farther. I was just at a fireside with Elder L. Tom Perry and when I left I finally decided it was time to come up with that word. My word for my 21st year of life is going to be CHARITY. So I guess i will try to live a more charitable life for the next year...kinda new to this word of the year thing.

I think 21 will be a year of a lot of change and a lot of growing up and a lot of adventure.