Author: Arianna Rees

  • Lindsey Stirling’s Billboards Dress Doesn’t Matter

    Lindsey Stirling’s Billboards Dress Doesn’t Matter

    Last month, I watched as a picture Lindsey Stirling posted on Instagram was flooded with dozens of negative, shaming comments. One read, “You’re so talented and smart. Why would you dumb yourself down with religion?” Another: “Go crawl back to your little church and beg for your faerie tale god to forgive you for being the very thing you think he created, little slave.”

    It was a picture of the Savior with her testimony.

    This week, I watched as another picture Lindsey Stirling posted on Instagram was flooded with dozens of negative, shaming comments. One read: “You were a role model until you publicly shamed your religion. Sad to see you go.” Another: “I found her appearance on the red carpet appalling.”

    It was a picture of Lindsay smiling in front of the cameras before the Billboard Music Awards in a sheer-lined, cutout dress. The comments were from Latter-Day Saints.

    If I were to set last month’s picture next to this week’s, I would see an obvious difference in the comments. Her picture of the Savior was filled with ridiculing, venomous voices that insulted her talent and her intelligence because of her religious beliefs. Most of the negative comments on her Billboards photo didn’t go beyond expressing severe disappointment. But as I consider these two photos and the reactions they prompted, I’m reminded of an alarming trend that both members of the church and nonmembers alike get caught up in.

    When it comes to the people who represent us (our interests, our relationships, or our beliefs), we are all or nothing. The minute they slip up, whether they really do or we just think they do, we abandon them without mercy, as if they were never an imperfect human being to begin with and we can’t stand that they are.

    That’s what I have a problem with.

    I won’t express my opinion on Lindsey’s outfit. I won’t analyze whether or not her garments could be worn underneath her dress, and, in extension, whether or not she is keeping her covenants. That’s not my responsibility. At all. It’s between her and the Lord, and frankly, the only covenants that are any of my business in the first place are my own. But when I see my fellow brothers and sisters unforgivingly calling out another member in public for one choice they have made, expressing their disappointment with “I’m not judging, but…,” when I notice how it shifts the tone in public forums from “I love her” to “wow, I didn’t realize Mormons were so judgemental,” I mourn at the loss of an opportunity we too frequently destroy: the opportunity to love rather than to criticize. The opportunity to reinforce the truth that members of the church are imperfect, but that’s what makes the Gospel so precious and good, because everyone belongs in it. I believe that it is our efforts in our imperfections that make us true followers of Christ, not our perfections, and if the standard we set for ourselves is not as high as the standard we set for others, if we aren’t looking first and foremost at ourselves, we have an issue.

    Whether or not we think Lindsey’s dress was modest, or that she’s completely destroyed her example as a role model, we’re overlooking how many times that beautiful girl has publicly expressed her love for the Savior in a forum of over 3.2 million followers, many of which ridicule her for it. We’re choosing, by making her dress an issue, to look on the outward appearance instead of on the heart, to hold a person’s wardrobe choice against them as if that is what defines them and the church, and it misses the mark. “We forget that teaching modesty does not have to include shaming or nitpicking other people” We forget that teaching modesty does not have to include shaming or nitpicking other people, and quite honestly, when we do that, we often aren’t very unassuming and modest in our censure. We could argue all day long about the ifs, ands, or buts about modesty and tell people how we think they should dress or look, but often, the cost of doing that is love and our own self-improvement.

    Probably the most heartbreaking example of this that I’ve seen is when Al Fox, one of the most inspirational and beautiful people I know, was featured on the cover of LDS Living magazine last year. In the next issue, there was a letter to the editor by a member who condemned Al as a bad example of a covenant-keeping Mormon. In essence, it stated that LDS Living should be ashamed of featuring a Latter-Day Saint with tattoos because she set a terrible example for the youth. As a girl who looks up to Al for her amazing love of the Gospel and testimony, that letter horrified me. It horrifies me even more to think that there are other members of the church who are just as merciless toward other members and are very proud to cast the stones they throw.

    The truth is that Lindsey Stirling’s dress and Al Fox’s tattoos — in extension, the way our brothers and sisters look or dress — matter far less than we act like they do. I know that we are human, and our first reaction is to make a judgement. Our first reaction is often to think about the example someone sets, how other people would react to what an individual says, does, or looks like. But in all our judgments, we might remember that we are asked to be Christlike, not Christ. What He thinks, not even necessarily of the outfit, but of the person inside is far more important than what other people think. For Pete’s sake, teach your children about covenants and modesty. Make sure that they understand why those things are important. But don’t do it in a way that would cause them to look down on or needlessly hurt another person.

    Some of my best examples have been people who, like me, are utterly imperfect, people who live differently than I do and think differently and, yes, even dress differently. The common denominator is the Atonement and their love for the Savior. So, she wore a dress that a lot of people are analyzing for the sake of modesty right now. So what? Lindsey’s courageous effort to defend her beliefs against the ridicule of others is a much greater example to me than the clothes she wears.

  • Definitive Proof the Jedi Council and Quorum of the 12 are the Same Thing

    Definitive Proof the Jedi Council and Quorum of the 12 are the Same Thing

     

    jediapostles

    What do the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles and the most powerful group of Jedi in the galaxy have in common? Well, you might be surprised.

    1. Both groups work with “the Force.”

     

    Consider the following quote by Obi-Wan: “The Force is what gives a Jedi his power. It’s an energy field created by all living things. It surrounds us, it penetrates us, it binds the galaxy together.”

    Now consider the following from Chapter 13 of the Gospel Principles manual: “The priesthood is the eternal power and authority of God. Through the priesthood He created and governs the heavens and the earth. By this power the universe is kept in perfect order.”

    You can’t read those two quotes and tell us the Priesthood isn’t like the force. And with all the Priesthood keys, you could say the Twelve are Masters of “the Force.”

    Force, Priesthood, to-may-to, to-maw-to.

    2. Both groups meet in temples regularly.

     

    We are a temple going people, as, remarkably, are the Jedi. Both they and the Twelve use temples in strikingly similar ways.

    The Quorum of the 12 meets in the upper room of the Salt Lake City Temple every Thursday to receive direction from the Lord on how His church should be run. Similarly, the Jedi Council met in High Council Chamber in — get this — the top of the northwestern tower of the Jedi Temple to discuss issues regarding the galaxy.

    Coincidence? We think not.

    templesjed

    3. Both groups work closely with local and national governments.

     

    If you could stomach Jar Jar enough to get through the first Star Wars films, you’re probably aware of the interconnected relationship between the Jedi and the Galactic Republic. The Jedi are well-known for being the peacekeepers of the galaxy, fighting for justice, fighting against the dark side, and involving themselves in government to do so (that’s a pretty simplified version of what they do, but you get the picture).

    Similarly, members of the Quorum of the Twelve are actively involved in government to defend religious freedom and moral law-making. We frequently see church leaders shaking hands with government leaders in the news as they work with them on various policies. There’s even an LDS Public Relations office in Washington D.C. where members work closely with Priesthood leaders, members of other faiths, and lawmakers to bridge the gap between these three groups. The Twelve are just as concerned about good governing as the Jedi Council.

    4. Both groups are well-versed in modern technology.

     

    We probably won’t see a member of the Twelve in a holographic, droid-projected message anytime soon, but we do see them posting Facebook statuses and using hashtags today, and that’s a pretty big deal. The apostles like to stay just as connected as the Jedi do, and who knows? Maybe we’ll have holographic general conference in the near future.

    holographic1

    5. Both groups are very interested in the youth.

     

    One thing the Jedi are always concerned about is the spiritual well-being and training of the younglings chosen to become Jedi Knights. Case in point: Anakin. The Twelve Apostles likewise are concerned about strengthening the spiritual well-being of youth in the church. You could almost say that EFY, Duty to God, Seminary, and Personal Progress are latter-day Padawan training programs.

    deaconspads

    6. For both groups, age is just a number.

     

    Do you remember that one time in Attack of the Clones when 900-year-old, cane-using Yoda went all little, green fighting machine on Count Dooku? We’re not saying that the apostles are capable of stunts like that, but one look at 93-year-old Elder Perry’s spry walk makes us wonder if they’ve found the same fountain of youth the Jedi have.

    elder perryold

    7. Both have twelve members.

     

    There are twelve apostles and there are twelve members of the Jedi High Council. Need we say more?

    The-jedi-council-star-wars-2884888-1024-768

    8. Both groups are super boss.

     

    Yes. Yes, we can say more.

    hollandwindu

     

    Star Wars images © 20th Century Fox

  • How Not Serving a Mission Made Me a Better Missionary

    How Not Serving a Mission Made Me a Better Missionary

    Without realizing it, I had tears streaming down my face. I’d been online looking at what my friends were up to, scrolling through their lives with amusement and curiosity. Many of them had recently returned from serving missions, and I found myself clicking through their pictures. With each new click came a new, quiet heartache. They were beautiful, these returned sisters. Their hair fell in curls around their black nametags, their arms were around their companions, and wide smiles were on their faces. Their pictures were filled with comments in all sorts of languages, discussions held by members and converts who loved them and missed them. “My mission was the best experience of my life,” they posted, “and I wish I could go back. I miss the people so much.”

    When I turned my computer off and went to bed that February night, I wept, acutely aware that I had no name tag, no companions, and no mission.

    I hadn’t always wanted to serve. It was one of those “maybes” in my life that I’d figure out when I got to it. When general conference rolled around in October of 2012 — it was the year I turned 20 — I had just begun to consider it. The mission age announcement changed everything. It was all I could think about every day and every night for months. It was all I was ever asked about: “So you gonna serve? You really should. Have you even thought about it?” “Some people say that serving a mission is the hardest thing they’ve ever done. For me, the exact opposite is true” Girls all around me were submitting their papers, and there I was in the middle of it, particular about the fact that I did not want to serve just because everyone else was going. I was afraid of having the wrong motives, and I wanted to go when it was right. I must have prayed so many times that year, telling my Heavenly Father that I thought I had real desire to serve. Should I serve a mission now? I asked Him. The quiet and discomforting answer I received was, No. Not now.  

    Not now, He told me when all of the girls in my Institute class expressed their excitement to serve, and I sunk lower in my chair. Not now, He said as I eagerly watched members of my ward open their calls and leave. Not now, He asserted when I heard another talk in Sacrament Meeting about how a mission changed someone’s life and I ached for that. Not now, He said during my senior year of college when I found a deeply rooted love for the gospel and the true desire I had wanted.

    Not now, He continues to tell me.

    Some people say that serving a mission is the hardest thing they’ve ever done. For me, the exact opposite is true — staying home is the hardest thing I’ve had to do. I’ve spent many heartbreaking nights wondering why it can’t be me in those pictures, me opening a call in front of family, me out serving, me saying how much I miss my mission. People tell me that the Lord has something else in mind for me, and as I’ve seen myself grow, serve, and progress in incredible ways these past few years, I’ve come to know that. But it doesn’t entirely alleviate the pain of being “the only one” not serving a mission.

    As I’ve asked my Heavenly Father about it, I’ve come to realize a very important thing: being a missionary has nothing to do with what I want. In aching for the personal perks and blessings of being a missionary, I missed the critical fact that a mission is not for me or any one of us at all: it’s for the Lord and His work. The truth is that our desire to serve, separated from our desire to open a call, can be met right here and right now. We might not have a name tag, but we take Christ’s name upon us every week, and if we live correctly, people will see that. We might not have companions or investigators, but we do have friends and neighbors. “We don’t need a letter from the First Presidency to serve a mission” The people in our communities and in our college classes are just as desperate to feel the peace the gospel brings as people in South America or Russia. We don’t need a letter from the First Presidency to serve a mission, but, as D&C 4:3 states, we need only have the desire to serve to be called to the work. The field is white, already to harvest, and that field isn’t 5,000 miles away. We’re standing in it right now. And while we pine away for our neighbors’ fields, we completely forget to harvest the one right beneath us.

    I’ve learned that we can all do more as members to truly serve. If you, like me, want to be a missionary, pray more often and more fervently for missionary experiences and make time for them. Don’t be afraid of running into them in an everyday setting! Study Preach My Gospel as a member and use it. Share your testimony often by actively using your social media accounts for good, and work hand in hand with the sisters and elders in your stake to find people who don’t have the gospel in their lives. You can always meet people, talk with them, and share the gospel with them, call or no call.

    Being a missionary is not about getting the tag, the travel, the friends, or the photographs. It’s about serving the Lord and His children. If we don’t have the opportunity to do that in a formal setting, there is no need for us to feel left out. We can do that every single day. What I never realized in my attempt to discern or change the Lord’s mind about a mission is that “not now” doesn’t mean “not ever.” The Lord always wants us to share the gospel with his children, whether we do so straight out of the MTC or straight out of our homes. I’d suspect that if I asked the Lord, “Should I be a member missionary?”, the answer would be a resounding, Yes! Now. Always.

    You and I might not have a zone leader, and we might not have a formal call, but we are missionaries. We can be one every day. And that’s something each one of us can look forward to if we truly desire it.

  • 9 Quotes That Prove That Mormons Love Planet Earth

    9 Quotes That Prove That Mormons Love Planet Earth

    In honor of Earth Day, here are 9 times that our prophets, seers, and revelators proved that Mormons love planet Earth

     1. Ezra Taft Benson

     

    Benson

    2. Brigham Young

     

    Brigham

    3. Gordon B. Hinckley

     

    Hinckley

    4. Joseph F. Smith

     

    Joseph-F

    5. Spencer W. Kimball

     

    Kimball

    6. Neal A. Maxwell

     

    Maxwell

    7. Thomas S. Monson

     

    Monson

    8. Russell M. Nelson

     

    Russell-M

    9. John Taylor

     

    Taylor

  • What Not to Leave Out of Your Finals Preparation

    What Not to Leave Out of Your Finals Preparation

    At about this same time every year, my friends briefly fade out of my life and my Facebook feed goes from looking like a highlight reel to more of a post-disaster cry for help. Essay due dates appear from seemingly nowhere and everyone panics. Practice exam scores are handed back and everyone panics. The gloom and doom of impending failure settles and everyone panics. Finals week has arrived, and for many of us, it seems like the beginning of the end.

    Because exams require you to produce information and results, not just receive them as in lectures, they are stressful. Your mind and body naturally react to the anticipation of these demands. Getting “psyched up” about finals helps you stay alert, attentive, and focused. To deal with the stress of tests, some experts already started to prescribe some of the best Budpop’s delta 8 products.

    Having buried myself in the basement of my college library more times than I can count, I know that feeling. College is hard and life is hard, and sometimes, it seems like you can’t succeed at one without failing at the other. Finals come in a hurry, and in order to guarantee the most success, you start doing things differently — hibernating in the library, locking yourself in your bedroom, and taking uncharacteristic amounts of notes outside of class, for example. Soon, you start using the process of elimination to strike out study distractions. That movie you were going to go see with your friends? Out. Swing dancing night? Out. A relaxing Saturday at the park? Out.

    The Lord? For a lot of us, sadly, out.

    I don’t mean to say that the Lord Himself is a distraction to us, or that we eliminate Him from our lives entirely when they get crazy, but the truth is, we often allow the Lord to become less important and less involved. Finals week comes, and suddenly, our schooling and ourselves become priority number one, not Him. We take Him out of it.

    We forget about the Lord because all we can think about is that essay we’ve been struggling with. We stop going to our Institute classes, we miss home evenings, and we raincheck our Sabbath worship because we’ve “really got to study for a test.” We momentarily set the gospel, our ward activity, and, in extension, our Heavenly Father on a backburner, because we think that we are better off without those things getting in the way. The truth is that they are the only way.

    No grade is more important than the Lord and His plan. No test is more important than the one to obtain eternal life. The Lord, the great Designer of this test, gives us everything He can to help us make it through, and He is the best person to turn to when we need help. All He asks is that we listen to Him and follow Him. I know you think that skipping one night of Institute will give you desperately needed study time. I know you think that you’d do better on your exam if you could just spend a whole weekend in your class notes instead of in your scriptures. But I also know that putting the Lord last when He’s your greatest source of direction is a poor way to ace a final and an even poorer way to ace life.

    Don’t leave God out of your life, nor out of your finals week. Allow Him to be with you and make time for the things He would want you to do. Ask for His help — He knows everything, afterall — and then earn it. Just as we need to put a lot of effort into passing a class, we need to put a lot of effort into showing the Lord that we desire His presence in our lives. He’s always willing to help us, but He needs to know that we want Him to.

    When the weekend rolls around and you really want to miss a ward function to review your notes again, remember your Creator, the one who made everything about you possible. Put Him first and I promise He will put you first. It’s an equation that you won’t see on any test except the one that matters most.

  • 13 Moments Only Ward Music Directors Understand

    13 Moments Only Ward Music Directors Understand

    1. That moment when you think that a hymn starts on the up-beat, but it doesn’t.

    Quadruple Facepalm

    2. That moment when the melody’s way too high for you, so you totally lip sync it in front of everyone.

    3. That moment when someone makes it their business to tell you that you’re not doing your calling right.

    4. That moment when you’re seriously tempted to hold out the fermata an extra three or more seconds just to mess with everybody.

    disney animated GIF

    5. That moment when you have to struggle with the music stand during the song intro because it’s way too low.

    6. That moment when the organist is not picking up your cues to play faster.

    7. That moment when you’re so focused on singing the song right that you forget what your arms are doing.

    8. That initial moment when you realize that the next hymn is a 6/8.

    Internally Fighting

    9. That moment when you accidentally start belting out the wrong verse and lead everyone astray.

    scared animated GIF

    10. That moment when you tell everyone to sing verse seven instead of verse three and they all forget.

    11. That moment when you give everyone the opportunity to stand up during the intermediate hymn.

    What you expect them to do:

    harry potter animated GIF

    What they really do:

    12. That moment when Sacrament meeting has gone overtime and the last song is four verses and a chorus long.

    13. That moment when you notice that, in spite of everything, no one is paying any attention to you tryin’ to magnify your calling anyway.

    Invisible

    Have any funny or embarrassing music director moments? Share them in the comments below and we may feature you in a future post! 

  • How to Not Be the Mr. Collins of Your Singles Ward

    How to Not Be the Mr. Collins of Your Singles Ward

    “We are all fools in love,” author Jane Austen once eloquently penned 1 . Imagine what her reaction would be after sitting through a few YSA speed dating activities.

    The truth is that the search for love in the singles ward isn’t all that different from how it is in a Jane Austen novel. There’s the ward Mr. Darcy, whom every girl in the ward wants to date, but who, for some reason, doesn’t want to date one girl in the ward. There’s the ward Lydia Bennet, who’s too boy crazy for her own good and probably winks at all the elders passing the sacrament. There’s the stunningly beautiful and — stunningly — still single ward Jane Bennet, who all the other girls want to be. And then there’s the ward Mr. Collins.

    Oh, the ward Mr. Collins.

    If you aren’t well-versed in Austen, Mr. Collins is the “dreaded cousin” in Pride and Prejudice who is expected to both inherit the Bennet home when Mr. Bennet dies and marry one of the man’s daughters. He’s an awkward and shallow man with the tendency to make everyone in a room immediately feel uncomfortable. He uses flattery like it’s going out of style and pursues women like they are, too. Nobody really wants to date or marry Mr. Collins, and the one woman who does end up marrying him only does because she wants to move out of her parents’ basement. Romantic, eh?

    As much as I hate to say it, if you’re a young man reading this article, there’s a slight chance that you’re your ward’s Mr. Collins. You, like he, might be sabotaging your own efforts to find your eternal companion without even realizing it. And that’s a really bad thing, because THE PLAN.

    So, for the sake of your future potential dates and personal exaltation, here are a few tips on how to avoid being your ward’s Mr. Collins.

    1. Give your ward crush space.

     

    We get it. Liking a person is a pretty big deal. It makes you feel light-headed and stupid happy. Whenever you see that special someone at an activity, you just want to rush to their side and be there with them always. Though that’s an admirable desire that will serve you well in your eternal marriage, it can be a bad plan before you’ve begun dating a person, especially if that person hasn’t communicated that they like you. Most girls like to socialize and mingle with lots of people at activities, so asking to be with one all night is potential relationship suicide that might make her extremely uncomfortable. If she says yes, but she’s taking lots of “bathroom breaks” and lots of “trips to talk with her friends,” chances are she’s not into ya, man. I’m sorry.

    Say hello to that girl you think is fine. See how she’s doing. But give her some space to do her own thing. Don’t monopolize her time, but hand her a hint of how her time could be spent to keep her interested, then move on. Less is more, and in situations like this, it’s ALWAYS more.

    2. Tone down the flattery.

     

    Flattery is a two-edged sword in the world of courtship. On the one hand, most girls really love compliments, but if all you ever talk to a girl about is the violence of your affections for her, expect to get shut down pretty quickly.

    You might be a Wordsworthian wordsmith who can write sonnets in his sleep and quote Shakespeare easier than most people can count to ten. That’s definitely impressive, and once you’re in a long-term, committed relationship, you go for it. But in the beginning stages of any relationship with a girl, sincerity and simplicity usually mean a lot more than carefully constructed flattery. Just as important is making sure that you can use the same words in real life that you use when you text or message someone. Make your words sincere and make them count. Compliment her, but don’t overdo it.

    3. Control your eye contact.

     

    It’s a truth universally acknowledged that brief eye contact between two acquaintances is only a few seconds away from being socially unacceptable. Staring is not caring, guys. Staring is scaring. most of us girls have seen way too many Criminal Minds and Castle episodes to not feel uncomfortable when someone looks at us for too long. It’s certainly okay to look at the people you like — how awkward would it be to not do that? But most of us girls have seen way too many Criminal Minds and Castle episodes to not feel uncomfortable when someone looks at us for too long. Make sure all of your eye, and for that matter, physical contact is respectful. It’s best to avoid doing anything that may make another person feel uncomfortable.

    4. Respect the ‘no.’

     

    Sometimes, after you’ve mustered enough guts to ask that lady you’ve been likin’ from a distance to go on a date, you’re told ‘no.’ You might be tempted to get upset, after all, she might not even know that she could really like you some day. If you can’t know someone by one date, how can she expect to know you by none? It’s a valid point, and you may press her a bit to get the answer you want, because all elegant females just say ‘no’ to keep men in suspense, right? She couldn’t possibly actually mean no.

    Well…yes. She could, and disregarding her feelings is a bad plan.

    Though persistence is a really great quality to have — many a Darcy and Elizabeth-esque relationship has come from one person who kept trying — lack of consideration for another person’s lack of interest is not. A girl may have good reasons for declining, or she may not, but remember that she doesn’t owe you a date, because agency. The choice is hers alone to make.

    It’s okay, though. Don’t take it too personally if she says ‘no.’ Move on and search for love in other places! If a girl doesn’t want to go out with you now, she might change her mind and express interest later. Even if she doesn’t, there is many a fine and accomplished young lady to be found in the world.

    5. Make your dating life about the girls you date, not about you.

     

    When you find a fine and accomplished young lady who accepts your invitation to go on a date, make sure you don’t pull a Mr. Collins and focus only on your own needs. A Mr. Collins date might go as follows: “A’right. We’re going to go see this movie that I want to see and go to this restaurant that I really like, and we’re going to talk about what I want to talk about.”

    make sure you don’t pull a Mr. Collins and focus only on your own needs. One thing that separates Mr. Collins from Mr. Darcy is that he’s far less willing to sacrifice his own desires to make the women in his life happy. Darcy, in contrast, does whatever he can to satisfy his leading lady’s needs, and he goes out of his way to make her happy. Even when Elizabeth puts him in the Last Man in the World Whom I Could Ever be Prevailed Upon to Marry Zone and his own needs aren’t being met at all, he’s meeting hers. That right there is love, my friends.

    Too often, we go about dating thinking, “How can I satisfy myself? How can I have a date that I will enjoy?” Well, if we want to eventually have an eternal marriage that works, we’ve got to start thinking in terms of, “How can I satisfy them? How can I make this a date that they will enjoy?” For heaven’s sake, have a plan when you ask someone out, but make your date more than just the person you’re picking up to spend money on. Her needs are important, too, so forget yourself and go to work.

    6. Be yourself. Mostly.

     

    The fatal flaw of Mr. Collins was that he tried too hard to sound cool, distinguished, and attractive to people. He had a nice job and a wealthy boss and he could kind of dance, so he thought that if he talked those things up enough, girls would find him interesting. The truth is that he spent so much time trying to live up to prestige and titles, no one ever really got to know him.

    Don’t be like Mr. Collins. Don’t feel like you always need to impress people for them to like you. Just do your thing and own it. Be yourself. Make sure, however, that you’re a good, enjoyable person to be around. If “being yourself” means you settle on being rude, unsociable, creepy, or unhappy, then try to be better. Live up to the best in yourself. One day someone will fall in love with that best self. You’ve just got to help her see it and then keep working at being it. And that’s THE PLAN.

    These tips won’t solve all of your dating woes, and they won’t make you a Mr. Darcy, but they will make you less of a fool in love and maybe a bit more cool in love.

  • 4 Ways to Be More Christlike Online

    4 Ways to Be More Christlike Online

    L ast May, I had the unique opportunity to watch a post on my personal blog go viral. It was picked up by lots of Facebook friends, LDS websites, and random blogs. Within one week, it had gained over 140,000 views (to put that into perspective, I usually felt pretty cool to hit 100 views in a month on a post). As those views increased, so, unfortunately, did the negativity. I watched as complete strangers skipped over the message of my post to go straight after me, ripping apart my character, my testimony, and my worthiness. Though a good 70% of the comments were positive, the negative comments were often very cruel and very loud. Most came from people hiding behind anonymity, but many came from other church members who used their pictures and their names to tell me how terrible they thought I was. I vowed to read every single one of those comments. I stopped because of how badly some of them hurt.

    When I read what some people said, I wanted to lash out. You didn’t have to click on it! I wanted to comment. How dare you say something like that. You don’t know me at all! The post I had written was about being Christlike, and ironically, there I was, not wanting to turn the other cheek, but to slap someone else’s. I only kept myself from doing it by realizing that I now knew how it felt to be attacked online. How could I do that to someone else? Had I let my anger dictate my behavior, I would have acted just as badly as those who hurt me and those I wrote about in my blog. I was not feeling nor acting very Christlike, and that was humbling to realize.

    The truth is that it can be very easy to not be Christlike when we’re online. This especially happens in public forums or comment sections where opinions are very strong and heated. If we aren’t careful, we can slip into contentious online conversations, and we can act in a way which disciples of Jesus Christ should not act. Though the world loves using the Internet as a tool to shame, fight, and bully, we cannot use it the same way. It is absolutely necessary that we act Christlike online instead of using the Internet to hurt others — as Latter-day Saints, we should really know and act better — and there are ways in which we can do just that.

    1.  Check your emotions before you check ‘send.’  

     

    One thing that most of us are pretty bad at when it comes to the Internet is waiting for a moment to respond to something instead of immediately reacting to it when we’re upset. We don’t often have the patience to hold ourselves back when it comes to a post mentioning religion, politics, controversial issues, or even something personal that we feel threatened by. There might be five hundred comments on it with a final plea from the poster to stop, or just three comments altogether. We’d still feel the need to express our opinion and knock everyone in the thread that we disagreed with down a few pegs. In three seconds, we could say something uplifting and Christlike that edifies the conversation and reflects our role as disciples, but in the same three seconds, we often leave a comment in blind anger that, like a drop of oil in a freshwater pond, taints the entire tone of an online conversation and poisons the opportunity to feel and share the Spirit.

    “The time to think about our comments is before we even post them. Give yourself a few moments before you respond to something.”

    Reacting without checking our emotions first can cause lots of damage to our relationships and also insult the covenant we’ve made with the Lord to always remember the Savior and have His spirit with us. The time to think about our comments is before we even post them. Give yourself a few moments before you respond to something. If necessary, walk away from your computer, or pick up something uplifting to read. Listen to soothing music or journal. Whenever I read a comment on my blog that gets me steamed, I try to sleep on it. Spending time away from it helps me to get back to thinking and acting reasonably. Most importantly, it helps me act more Christlike.

    2.  Use vocabulary that edifies instead of patronizes.  

     

    The Internet is filled with lots of things we disagree with, and when we disagree we tend to react in one of two ways: with childish anger and name-calling, or with an air of being more intelligent than the person we disagree with. We might sound very reasonable in writing, choosing our words carefully so as to appear both polite and clever, but sounding polite and clever doesn’t make you Christlike.

    We need to try harder to validate other people instead of making ourselves sound better than them in online conversations. We need to tone back on comments like “I’m sorry, but you are incorrect and do not understand” and start saying things like “I tend to disagree with you, but I’d really love to understand more of where you’re coming from. That’s important to me.” Imagine how different our online dialogue would be if we prioritized understanding over being right! Even when our Savior was right, and He always was, He chose to understand. He sets the greatest example for all of us.

    I don’t think I need to tell you that using the words “idiot,” “moron,” or any variation of those to prove a point online is inappropriate. But please note that when we use phrases like “your ignorance is obvious,” or “you’re quite misinformed,” or when we use ethnocentric absolutes like “this is the way it is” without making any effort to understand somebody and validate them as a person with thoughts and feelings, we’re not being very Christlike, either. When we disagree, we must make an effort to be kind and edify the other person, not patronize them. No disagreement should ever have to be void of the Spirit.

    3.  Share more goodness and less cynicism.

     

    When I was in high school, I had a major problem with sarcasm and cynicism. It was around that time that I realized that the world isn’t all peaches and cream, and my social media reflected a critical view of just about anything. I’d snark off about boys, school, teenage drama…the works. Being cynical and sarcastic made me feel smart, like I was proving something. Looking back at some of the things I said, I’ve realized that the only thing I proved was that I was mean and unhappy.

    The world is a hard place to live in, and it is very easy to be cynical. It is easy to view the world with pessimism and share that pessimism on social media — how many times have you read or posted a vague “my life sucks” status, hmm? It’s equally easy and even fun to be sarcastic. Even now, I’ll indulge in a sarcastic tweet every once in awhile because I enjoy it. But the one thing sarcasm and cynicism rarely do is uplift.

    “As a representative of Jesus Christ, people will look to you for the truth and for happiness. They need that, and they need Him.”

    When you are online, focus on sharing goodness. Try to fix the world’s problems a little bit at a time with what you share, but don’t get so caught up in those problems that they deflate your optimism. Joke around a bit, but don’t cruelly joke about other people. Be genuine and kind, not bitter and mean. As a representative of Jesus Christ, people will look to you for the truth and for happiness. They need that, and they need Him, and if all you’re posting is depressing T-Swift lyrics or snide comments, how are they going to find Him?

    4.  See people in context.

     

    “Wow. That would have sounded bad out of context.”

    You’ve probably heard this phrase before, right? But have you ever thought about what it means? Context, when it comes to communication, helps us understand both the direction our message is going and where it came from. Without context, it’s very easy for us to misunderstand each other or misinterpret what someone has said. Unfortunately, on the Internet, reading things out of context happens every day, and we aren’t always very forgiving and merciful about it.

    Too often, we define a whole person based on one thing they post, tweet, or share online. It may have been something stupid they typed out in a rage, or just a thought they expressed poorly. Without knowing all of the facts, it’s easy for us to judge that person out of context and make false assumptions about them. One might read a single blog post, for example, and decide that the blogger is a horrible sinner. It’s easy to forget that they’re a real person with real feelings and a history that extends beyond that one thing you read. They aren’t just a profile picture with a status or a post.

    The popular phrase goes, “Don’t judge a book by its cover,” but in an era of widespread online miscommunication and mistreatment, we’d also do well to give validity to the phrase, “Don’t judge a person by one post.” If we can’t take the time to get to know somebody beyond one thing they put on social media, then we have no business assuming we know who they are or what they intended.

    “What would Jesus do if he was online?”

    The Internet is one of the greatest tools we’ve been given to change the world, share the Gospel, and uplift each other. Let us not use it to bully or attack, shame or insult, or consistently voice our complaints. Instead, let’s use it to help and understand each other. We cannot always heal the man with leprosy sitting on a narrow Jerusalem street, but we can certainly heal someone’s heart, make their day better with what we post online, or respond with kind words instead of cruel ones. What would Jesus do? We ask ourselves. Another great question we should consider is: What would Jesus do if he was online?

  • Why I’ve Stopped Leaving the Room When MoTab Starts Singing

    Why I’ve Stopped Leaving the Room When MoTab Starts Singing

    It’s conference Saturday. Three speakers have just concluded their remarks, and the camera is now zooming in on the organist, who has begun to play the introduction for the next Mormon Tabernacle Choir number. The director raises his baton, there’s a brief lull in the music, and then, after the director smiles and looks up at the choir…siblings and parents alike run for the bathroom or the kitchen or the backyard to madly work on or finish other things they had going on before the session started, leaving MoTab to play for an audience of none in the living room.

    Does this scene sound familiar? As a child, I became pretty used to it. Often, once the choir started singing, my siblings and I would treat ourselves to an intermission and run to every other corner of the house. Even though all of us are young adults now, it still sometimes happens.

    The truth is that we’ve all probably done it. We’ve, without realizing it, treated the choir performances like breaks in the real program, as if they’re just extra, fluffy things that aren’t as important as talks or our to do lists. One need only watch conference live and see all of the people streaming out during the hymns to know that. Sometimes, we have to use the restroom or take care of health needs, and choir numbers provide an opportunity to do so, but other times, we simply don’t want to give the same amount of attention to the music as we do the speakers.

    It hit me a long time ago that the Lord doesn’t like it when we do that.

    In D&C 25, it reads that the Lord’s “soul delighteth in the song of the heart; yea, the song of the righteous is a prayer unto [Him], and it shall be answered with a blessing upon their heads” (D&C 25:12). Do we recognize the significance of this, I wonder? Not only does our Heavenly Father delight in our hymns and songs, but He blesses those who sing them as He would those who pray to Him.

    You might read that and think, “So what? MoTab’s singing the songs, not us. This doesn’t involve us.” Well, think of the opening prayer at a sacrament meeting. You might not be the one saying it, but by bowing your head and listening, you are actively participating in it. The same, I’d imagine, goes for our hymns. When we listen to them and enjoy them, we, too, are blessed, because by the Lord. Imagine how He feels when we walk out on those hymns or don’t care about them at all.

    For me, paying attention to the choir during conference was never super important until I discovered a story a few years ago that completely changed my perspective. In that story, I learned that if it wasn’t for another person who listened to a choir, I might not be watching conference at all.

    One night in the late 1840s, my great-great-great grandfather and his son were walking down a road in Wales after a long work day. They must have been tired and hungry, excited to get home to their family and beds. On their way there, they passed a small church house where Mormon missionaries were holding a meeting. The missionaries had just begun to sing a hymn called “The Resurrection Day,” one that hadn’t been heard in Wales before that point, my grandfather claims. He stopped his son so that they could listen to it for a moment.

    Neither of them could leave.

    As they listened, the song completely enraptured them, filling them with inspiration and joy. When it was over and they continued walking home, they couldn’t get it out of their minds. They hadn’t heard a word those missionaries spoke, but because of that hymn, both of them knew that those missionaries were servants of the Lord and were teaching about the true gospel of Jesus Christ. Both my great-great-great grandfather and his son were baptized following this experience.

    I’ve listened to that hymn before, and, interestingly, it didn’t stir me like it did my ancestors. I wasn’t overwhelmed by the spirit, nor was I filled with more joy than normal. But I have had other songs stir me and move me to tears before. I’ve had my testimony strengthened by the hymns, and as I read this family story, I’m taught and retaught a valuable lesson: the spirit can touch us in different and incredible ways, even and maybe especially through song. Music, just like the words of prophets, can convert each one of us, whether we are not members of the church or we’re long timers. We only need to listen to them. I’m so grateful my grandfathers stopped to listen to a hymn when they were probably exhausted. As cliche’ as it might sound, I don’t know where I would be today if they hadn’t.

    Make music, just like my ancestors did, a part of your conversion story. Don’t just listen to the talks when conference rolls around, but stay for the music. Pay attention to the testimonies that the choir members bear with their facial expressions, because you will see them when you search for them. And when you listen with the intent to feel the spirit, you will receive inspiration and strength.

    Don’t equate “MoTab” with “break time.” You might be surprised at how much inspiration you can receive just by sitting on your couch during one musical number.

  • Crazy LDS Apostle Lookalikes

    Crazy LDS Apostle Lookalikes

    From the time most of us exited the womb, we’ve been well trained to recognize the faces of our beloved prophets and apostles. It’s almost second nature to us. Well, in that spirit, we scrounged up a few other familiar faces that look strikingly similar to our favorite church leaders. Here are some crazy apostle doppelgangers that you might recognize.

    Thomas S. Monson and the late senator Arlen Spector

     

    monson spector

     

    They say religion and politics don’t mix, but sometimes…

    President Eyring and Grant Wood’s “American Gothic” Painting

     

    eyring gothic

    President Eyring’s a lot more chipper than his famous doppelganger, but you get the ‘picture.’

    Dieter F. Uchtdorf and Chief Justice Warren Burger

     

    uchtdorf burger

    “Silver Fox” of the First Presidency? Meet “Silver Fox” of the Supreme Court.

    Boyd K. Packer and Donald Rumsfeld, 21st U.S. Secretary of Defense

     

    packer rumsfeld

    President Packer is basically the LDS Church Secretary of Defense, let’s be honest.

    M. Russell Ballard and Dave Thomas, founder of Wendy’s

     

    ballard thomas

    Quality is BOTH of their recipes.

    L. Tom Perry and actor Elliott Denholm (circa Indiana Jones)

     

    perry and demlin

    I don’t know about you, but L. Tom Perry and the Last Crusade would have made a pretty legit alternative title.

    Dallin H.Oaks and actor Yul Brynner (circa The Ten Commandments)

     

    oaks brynner

    Elder Oaks would have let your people go the first time, Charlton Heston.

    Elder Christofferson and actor Edward Herrmann (circa Annie)

     

    fdr christoffGo back and watch Annie and try not to picture Elder Christofferson singing, “Tomorrow.” We dare you.

    Quinton L. Cook and actor Jason Alexander (circa “Seinfield”)

     

    cook costanza

    The lovable personality store called, and they’re fresh outta Elder Cook.

    Elder Nelson and President Richard Nixon

     

    nelson nixon2

    President Nixon probably should have stuck to “strait is the gate and narrow the way,” like his beloved lookalike, instead of that other “gate”…

    Elder Bednar and Chief Justice John Roberts

     

    bednar roberts

    It’s not too hard to imagine Elder Bednar laying down the law. Oyez, oyez, oyez!

    Elder Hales and Al Gore

     

    hales gore

    Note: despite popular myth, Elder Hales DID NOT in fact invent the Internet, and neither did his famous lookalike.

    Elder Holland and Paul McCartney

     

    holland mccartney

    “It’s been a hard day’s night, but the triumphant and glorious return of the Messiah shall come.”

    Yeah. We can dig it.

    Elder Andersen and actor Gregory Peck (circa To Kill a Mockingbird)

     

    peck andersen

    One’s a debonair 1950s-era charmer, and the other’s some actor.

    Elder Scott and actor Ian McDiarmid (circa Star Wars, Episode II)

     

    scottpalp

    We can’t imagine Elder Scott hurting a fly, let alone the entire Galactic Republic, but if ever he wanted to be a stunt double, an opportunity was lost here.