
when i got to hawaii, i spent my a the week with two of my aunties: auntie sharon and auntie jadean. they aren't my real aunts, just two phenomenal women i'm so lucky to have. auntie sharron is from idaho. but she met this hawaiian surfer stud studying at ricks, fell in love, and the rest his history. a woman after my own heart. she and her husband traveled and lived all over the world. they went from idaho to canada to hawaii to seattle to provo to hawaii again. she told me stories from visiting jordan, israel, turkey, china, all over europe. she and her husband served a temple mission in new york and were mission presidents in the philippines. i especially loved her stories from the philippines. she would have been such a wonderful mission presidentina. she said when she got to the philippines, based on what she saw on the drive from the airport to the mission home, she would have flown back to the US immediately if there was a classy way to do so. the poverty was unlike anything she'd ever been exposed to and she truly did not think she could handle it. but then she knew that she was there to serve her missionaries, and that's what she did. she loved the people, but she loved her missionaries more.
the thing that i love about my auntie sharron isn't that she has been to so many places or how much she has changed about or added to herself, though those things are wonderful. it's what she has retained. how she has stayed the same. because i can see her serving various missions, moving to various places, visiting various countries and doing it all in her down-to-earth, idaho girl, warm, friendly, and inclusive way. she took what there was to take and gave more back in return. she knows how to make you feel welcome and comfortable. i think that is one of the greatest gifts.

auntie is from kansas and she is fiercely loyal to and proud of it. she can't tolerate people who say it's a waste-of-space state because the prairies there are beautiful, you just have to open your eyes to it. what a stark contrast to the obvious beauty of hawaii. i think that those rolling prairies and endless skies profoundly shaped my auntie because that is how she feels: open and easy, wise and timeless, a little wild and unconquerable. she and my uncle aren't members. but if they were, she would be the dream relief society president. she'd be devoted, creative, and tireless. she also doesn't have any children, which is one of the greatest sadnesses that i know of. everyone would benefit from having a mom like my auntie. people are her specialty. reading you and knowing how to tell you those hard truths while simultaneously bolstering you up is what she does best. i got a healthy does of that last week. and that's exactly what i needed.
being back in law school, what i'm thinking is that i want to bring those characteristics embodied in the women that brightened my week last week to everything that i do in my own life.