I’m probably not the only one who wonders about that sometimes: The pains of all of them he carried?
How could that be? I mean, looking around us, it doesn’t seem real. In fact, quite the opposite, it seems completely impossible! And in one sense it is. You would have to be blind not to see that there is so much suffering in the world today, much of it heaped upon children. That has always been the case. Maybe it always will be. The fact is, many times children suffer for the sins of others. I was not the only child to have suffered. And the list of ways in which children can be hurt is depressingly long. Fear. Abuse. Pain. Starvation. Slavery. Hunger or sexual exploitation. Being separated from or losing the people they love. In many cases, they are put in absolutely impossible situations where they can’t even begin to protect themselves.
Are their pains eliminated? Are they saved from all this suffering?
In some cases they aren’t, at least not in this world.
Yet if their pains are not eliminated, how then are they comforted? How are their burdens lifted? How are their pains “carried”?
I don’t have all the answers. But this much I know.
Sometimes there are miracles—“tender mercies” some have called them—that comfort us in ways that other people may not see. Sometimes things are offered that we may not know about. Things that give those who suffer strength. Things that give them hope. Things that help them to hang on.
That certainly was the case with me.
I felt some of these miracles along the way.
*
My grandfather Francon died a few days before I was kidnapped. In fact, that was one of the memories that I tried to lock inside my brain after I had been captured; how beautiful my mother looked on the day of his funeral.
I was very close to both of my grandfathers, so Grandpa Francon’s passing was a very sad day for me, but kind of sacred, too. He had dedicated pretty much his entire life to helping others. He was a good man, a good father. He served in many positions in our church, including about twenty years working in the Salt Lake City temple as a volunteer. He worked in various positions right up until the time he got sick.
One of the great memories that I have of when I was young was going to his home for summer picnics. Grandpa and Grandma had a huge backyard, and my cousins and I could play there for hours. They would flood the backyard from the irrigation ditch. We’d have little bonfires and roast hot dogs and marshmallows and have water fights. I remember this old tin basin where we used to bob for apples. Then when the apples were gone, Grandpa would throw in candy, which would, of course, sink to the bottom of the basin. Still, I’d go in after it, getting completely soaked. They had a big garden in the back. He spent a lot of time working there. He was always very active, very healthy. I don’t think he ever took any medicine a single day in his life.
But not long before I was kidnapped—it was about the same time that the Winter Olympics were being played in Salt Lake City—Grandma noticed that Grandpa was starting to slow down. Then he started having trouble getting up once he had sat down. When Grandpa went to see doctors, they discovered a massive tumor in his brain, strands of sinewy fingers stretching in all directions. They operated on him immediately. It seemed like he was getting better for a while. He started to eat again; he seemed to be a little more alert, a little stronger. But it wasn’t real. The fingers were too deep. They couldn’t get out all of the cancer inside his head.
My mom was going to their house almost every day to help Grandma and to spend some time with her dad. Sometimes I’d go with her. They didn’t live far away, maybe twenty minutes to the south, their house nestled up among the Wasatch Mountains. I had a small harp that was a little easier to move around than my big one, and I took it to their home so I could play for him. Sometimes I’d rub his feet and talk to him. Sometimes I’d just sit and hold his hand. I wanted him to know that I loved him, that I wanted to help him if I could. “He knows you are there,” my grandma would tell me. And I know that he did. Right after his surgery, I remember kissing him on the cheek and telling him I loved him. I put my hand in his, and he held it very tight.
He died on May 28. He was seventy-eight years old on the day he passed away.
The funeral took place the day before I was kidnapped.
Which brings me to one of the tender mercies that helped me to carry the horrible pain.