Monday, September 26, 2016

Oops I Did It Again

It was the phone call that every parent dreads.

“You need to take your son to the children’s emergency room at Sunrise Hospital tonight. I will call and instruct them to admit him as soon as you get there.”

 What? Can’t this wait until tomorrow?

 “No. It has to be tonight.”

 A call like that will strike fear into the heart of the strongest of fathers, and I am not the strongest of fathers. I’m a mid-forties desk jockey with a pot belly and male pattern baldness. Working out from me involves pushing away from the dessert tray. So when a pediatric orthopedist calls and tells you that your son has a serious bone infection and that he needs to be admitted to the hospital THAT NIGHT it is terrifying.
 
We called our bishop and our home teacher. Neither were home, so we left messages. Before long we had 6 of the best men I know in my house giving a priesthood blessing to my son.

And then we were off to Sunrise Hospital. The triage nurses gave him THE interview (you know, the one about whether your parents are abusive) and apparently we passed. So that was good. And then they wheeled him off to his room.

For about a week prior to all this Clayton had been dealing with some severe pain in his legs. He would wake up and almost couldn’t get out of bed. Clorinda had dutifully dragged him from doctor to doctor for two days—first to the pediatrician, then to the orthopedist, then back to the pediatrician and off to a lab for blood work. He was poked and prodded and examined ad nauseum. Nobody seemed to have any real answers, but we were hopeful that it was something minor that would soon be remedied.

Hopeful, but very, very scared.

The orthopedist’s opinion was not quite so optimistic.

 He diagnosed that Clayton was suffering from a bacterial infection deep in his leg bones. He would have to be hospitalized for at least two weeks, and would have a PIC line for the whole summer (which is just what a twelve-year-old boy wants to hear one week after school lets out) that would permit a course of very heavy antibiotics. 

Summer. Ruined.

Clayton was supposed to leave the following Monday to head to Brian Head for a week of camping, mountain biking, and fishing with the Young Men from our ward. He was so excited to go, and now he wasn’t going to be able to. In fact, he wasn’t going to be able to do much of anything that summer.

We didn’t really tell him that.

 Despite the pain and he less-than-ideal living arrangements, Clayton fell right in with the Hospital staff. He sweet-talked a nurse into giving him a wheelchair, which he would use to cruise the hallways in the Children’s Hospital. (Sidebar: this is actually an incredible talent this kid has—it really doesn’t matter the setting, Clayton will make friends quickly with anyone. I’ve watched him start conversations and make friends in line at Disneyland, sitting in an airplane, and jumping into a volleyball game in Waikiki. He is everyone’s friend.)

And we’re back. The hospital had Playstations and DVD players for the kids in their rooms, so Clayton was all over that. Some friends lent him an iPod that was loaded with all kinds of music and movies, too. The best part was all the Gatorade he could drink (of course, the flip side was that they wanted to measure the fluid passing through him, so he had to pee in a bottle, which he was not crazy about).

We had a hard time getting his doctor to come visit, but the doctor on staff at the hospital was very attentive. When Clayton’s doctor did finally get there, he asked Clayton how he was doing. Clayton was sitting in the wheelchair at the time and literally JUMPED out of the chair to the absolute SHOCK of the doctor. “Wait a minute—you could barely STAND when you were in my office two days ago! What happened?!”

As it turned out, Clayton was in the hospital only four days. Although he still had to take antibiotics, they were considerably less intense than first expected. And they were oral.

So it was all good.

Clayton was able to go on the bike trip and enjoyed a really good summer. Crisis averted.

Clorinda and I are both the oldest of 8 children. Not the same 8 mind you, and none of them, on either side, are children anymore. At least legally. In fact, not only are we each the oldest of 8, in both of our families there were two girls and six boys. Clorinda’s sister is no. 6. My sisters are no. 6 and no. 8. Both sets of parents had a knack for producing boys, and lots of them.

It was a sign. (It’s a sign alright. Going out of business!)

I mean, Clorinda was reading the (herbal) tea leaves from our respective parents’ teacups and decided that we needed to match their outputs. We would have 8 kids too! (Sidebar: we didn’t—we had 3—but that’s a story for another day.) This shows a serious flaw in her decision to marry me. She needed to marry for MONEY (not the thick wavy hair, perfect smile, and “the most beautiful blue eyes” Jerone (a 6’7” 280 lb straight, married black man) had ever seen). Critical error on her part, but DON’T TELL HER THAT! I’m pretty sure she’s already caught on to a number (a LARGE number) of critical-errors-on-her-part, and I don’t want to overwhelm her.

I had always figured I would have a son. You can read a little about that here. But I’ll be honest, the months before Clayton was born, I was terrified. I didn’t know that I could love someone the way that I loved his sister (no really, go read the other blog entry if this sounds bad), and I was SURE that there was no way I could love another child.

Not that I didn’t want to, or that I didn’t want another baby. I was just convinced that I was physiologically incapable of any more love. I would have to divide my love for Marien, but I couldn’t figure out how that would happen, either.

I learned something, though. God makes room for more love. I COULD love this new baby just as much as I did his sister, and it didn’t require me loving her any less. So that was crazy.

Clayton was big, right from the beginning. When he came out he was seriously cone-headed, like Sloth-from-Goonies cone-headed. But he was happy and content and he brought some real joy to our home. He had caught his sister in height by the time he was 3, and people often thought they were twins. When it came time to start school, Clayton stood a head taller than anyone in the class—and he was the youngest in the class! It was never hard to pick him out of a line-up.

High school meant basketball. Or at least that was Clayton’s plan. As luck would have it, the Freshman basketball coach was also one of the coaches on the Football team, and he promised Clayton a spot on the basketball team if he came out for football. 

You know, because no freshman basketball coach wants a 6’5” kid on the team unless he plays football first.

So Clayton played football. He was a tall receiver on a run-every-down team. And he hated it. Basketball season finally came around, and Clayton (surprise surprise) made the team! Also surprise surprise, the linebacker-coach-turned-freshman-basketball-coach wasn’t a very good fit for Clayton, and the season didn’t go the way Clayton had hoped. In fact, he was pretty discouraged by it all.

Fortunately, the school had just hired a new men’s volleyball coach, and when he saw a 6’5” freshman walking the halls, he knew he wanted that kid on the team. Not to say it didn’t take some convincing—Clayton was of the opinion that volleyball was a girls sport, and that he (Clayton) was destined to play golf during the Spring season. But Coach Davis was persistent, and told Clayton that if he came out to play volleyball, they would win state.

Clayton took the bait.

So here’s a fun story: the men’s volleyball team at Clayton’s high school had something like 2 wins TOTAL over the previous 3 years. They were, in a word, terrible. They were the worst of the worst. But this happened:

  • Freshman year: lost in the State Championship game in 4 sets.
  • Sophomore year: State Champions.
  • Junior year: Back-to-Back State Champions
  • Senior year: first ever in Nevada Back-to-Back-to-Back State Champions.

But this story isn’t about volleyball. Well, not directly. It’s about airplanes and school.

A year ago I watched as Marien packed up her car and headed off to college. I cried and fretted, no, I worried, nay, I was PANIC STRICKEN at the thought of my little girl heading off to college. Really, you should read that other blog entry—you'll get the idea.

I’m pleased to report that she had a wildly successful freshman year.

So a year later when Clayton decided to head off for college in Virginia, to play volleyball at Southern Virginia University, I thought I would be cool with it. I'd been through this before, I'd survived it. Here was my son, my boy, going off to college. There was no reason to have those same feelings—I mean, this kid is 6’7”, nobody is going to mess with him.

All of that leads to just one month ago (that's hard to believe in and of itself). I found myself sitting in the airport with Clayton waiting for the announcement that it was time to board. When his turn came, he walked to the agent at the gate and I stood behind, off to the right side just enough, and watched. I watched my boy walk down the jetway and turn, just before he got too far, to waive good-bye to his old man.



And wouldn’t you know it, all those feelings came rushing back. Suddenly he was that fat little coneheaded Sloth from 18 years ago. "Hey you guyyyys!"

No, that’s not quite right. He wasn’t Sloth—no, what he was was the 12 year old kid, getting rushed to the hospital to be poked and prodded and MRI’d. My little boy (who even at 12 was as tall as me) was on his way to more testing, more poking and prodding. And I felt like the helpless dad. Again.

But he was (and is) more than that little boy. He’s also a back-to-back-to-back champion.

I found my way over and took a seat right in front of the plate glass window, looking out at the plane. I fought back tears as the plane backed out, and then turned to take its place in line for take-off. He had barely taken off and I already missed him. 

Clayton had sent me a text a few weeks before he was supposed to head out. He was worried that he didn’t have what it would take to go to college. Some pre-game jitters, I suppose. I don’t think he has too much to worry about though—thus far he’s playing college like a champion. I’m excited for this kid, excited to see what is in store for him in Virginia and in the years to come.

I love you son.

Sunday, September 4, 2016

20 Years, 8 Months & 19 Days

7568 Days

That’s 20 years, 8 months & 19 days for those of you counting at home. On September 3, 2016, Clorinda and I celebrated our 20 year 8 month 19 day anniversary in the very same place we were married. I’ve shared that story before—you can read it here—but our celebration on September 3, 2016 wasn’t about our wedding WAY back on December 15, 1995. No, this was about a couple of my kids getting married. To each other.

As my nephew Jack would say: “AWWWKWARD!”

Let me ‘splain.

I first met Travis Goldrup in January 2014. He was serving as a missionary in Las Vegas and had just been assigned to our ward. Paul Poteet had been here for six (6!) months, and on the way out he gave me some advice: Be sure to ask Goldrup about the desert in Maine.

What on earth does that mean? I’ve seen pictures of Maine. I had a cousin go to college there. I have read a lot of Stephen King novels. I’m something of an expert on Maine, and I LIVE IN LAS VEGAS so I know a thing or two about deserts, and I KNOW there’s no desert in Maine. Trees? Sure. Coastline? Lots of it. Desert. Um, no.

But if Paul Poteet suggested I ask about the desert in Maine, I figured I’d better ask about the desert in Maine.

Goldrup came to our house for dinner the first night he was here, and I think the desert in Maine was probably the second thing he was asked about. Big, exaggerated eye roll, accompanied by a laugh and something about Poteet. Goldrup (I still have a hard time calling him Travis) proceeded to tell some tale about how his great-grandfather Henry had found this desert in the middle of Maine and had developed it into a tourist attraction.

Desert? Tourist attraction? HELLO! I LIVE IN LAS VEGAS!

But whatever. Travis (there, I did it) was funny and personable and confident. I liked him. And the more I worked with him, I liked him more and more. He was bold and he knew what he was teaching. He was comfortable talking to just about anyone and had a remarkable ability to make people feel comfortable. He worked hard and was valiant in following mission rules.

When you’re a missionary, you have certain companions or leaders that you just come to love and admire. The one that changed my mission and had the longest lasting impact on my mission was a tall, broad-shouldered Clark-Kent of a Mormon Missionary who I’m pretty certain wore blue tights and a red cape under his white shirt and dark slacks—Dave (Dave who?) Dave Brown. Goldrup reminded me of Elder Brown.

And just like that he was gone. Poteet had been here six months; Goldrup was gone after six weeks. Missions are funny that way. Sometimes the Lord needs you here and sometimes he needs you there, and this time he needed Goldrup somewhere else. I was sent two new missionaries (whom I came to love, too), but Goldrup and his companion, JT Hoppins, were off to two new areas.

I ran into Goldrup from time to time. His new companion had been trained in our ward, and they had some leadership responsibilities for the Elders that were newly assigned here, so they were around. But I wasn’t out working with them like I had previously, and he was eventually transferred somewhere else in the valley.

Sometime later I was looking up an article on the Smithsonian magazine website. I have long since forgotten what I was looking at, but on the sidebar where they had all of the most popular stories listed was this little gem: “Why Is There a Desert in Maine?”

What?! It was clickbait at its finest and I was immediately sucked in. The story was all about this desert in Maine and how it had been developed into a tourist destination by some guy named Henry Goldrup. I’m still trying to figure out how Travis hacked the Smithsonian magazine’s website.

Four and a half months after Goldrup had been transferred from our ward, the area was “pink-washed” (meaning I got Sister missionaries instead of Elders. That was a MAJOR change in my life, but it proved to be a real blessing, for me and my family. That, however, is not the topic of this entry).

My third Sister missionary was an adorable, little jar of happiness from Houston Texas, Laekynn Davis.

“Houston, huh, my brother lives there. Did you know any Fontanos?”

“No, I don’t think so. Where did they live?”

“Oh, out on the Northeast side of the city.”

“I didn’t live by there, so no.”

OK, end of discussion. It was easy to love Sister Davis. She is a charmer of the highest order. There is always a sparkle in her eye and a smile that lights up her entire person. She quickly decided that I needed to be harassed often and she never missed an opportunity. She developed a little knock/doorbell version of shave-and-a-haircut that announced her arrival every time she was at the house (that lasted for the rest of the time I had missionaries here, and they still use it when they come back to visit).

One afternoon we were having a correlation meeting in my front room. Somehow the conversation turned to Houston again, and I got thinking about my other friends down in the Hell of Being Cut to Pieces (“Hell of being what?” “Chinese have a lot of Hells”). Sorry, I mean in Houston (having visited Houston in July, I can only presume the Chinese have some kind of Hell name for that place. I’ve been home from that vacation for 7 years and I’m STILL sweating.)

Back to the story, I thought I’d at least ask about the others. “Do you know any Ginns?” “No.”

“How about Haleys?”

Laekynn sat up in her seat, “Yes!”

“Josh and ...”

Before I could even finish my sentence she was off the couch and yelling, “TRISH HALEY! YES I KNOW TRISH HALEY! SHE WAS MY YOUNG WOMENS LEADER!”

Josh and Trish are more appropriately known as Uncle Josh and Auntie Trish to my kids. I could do a whole entry on Josh, and maybe I will one day. Suffice it to say, I met Josh at a youth conference in Hawaii when we were 15 and we became very fast friends. I love him like a brother and love his family. His wife Trish is an absolute treasure. His daughter Sarah is serving here as a missionary now.

And Laekynn grew up in their ward. So naturally we did what any good Ward Mission Leader and Sister Missionary would do. We took a picture and sent it off to Josh and Trish.

And just like that she was gone. Laekynn served her last twelve weeks in our ward and then left to go home. [Incidentally, the transfer that sent Laekynn to me was also the transfer that Travis went home to Maine. You know, back home to the desert.]

She headed to BYU in January and I kept seeing her on BYUtv when we would watch basketball and volleyball games. She seemed to be everywhere (her Dad says its because her cousin is a cameraman at the games, but I’m guessing that’s only part of the story). We traveled up to go to a wedding reception for another friend and went to a volleyball game with Laekynn.

I could go on and on, but she was like one of the family.  We loved to have her visit us, and we kept close contact.

In September 2015, Travis called and said he was bringing his parents to Las Vegas and they all wanted to come by the house. (I suspect that having tasted the thrill of the desert in Maine they wanted to drink in the expansive desert of Las Vegas.) We had them over for dinner and found kindred spirits in Travis’s parents Darrell and Stacey. We had such a fun evening. I’m thinking we need to go back and visit them in Maine so we can see what a REAL desert is like.

In the middle of that conversation I got to thinking about these two kids that I loved so much, and how they would make an incredible couple (Laekynn had been here just a week or two prior). I told Travis that he really should call Laekynn and take her out sometime. He admitted that he thought she was cute, but gave me some lame excuse about her being down in Provo and he was up in Rexburg Idaho going to school, so it was just too much work.

Oh well, I tried.

Several weeks later Laekynn was back in town and we had a similar discussion. I told her what had happened and what Travis had said, and SHE GOT MAD AT ME! Oh, she kept a straight face, but it’s apparently “bad form” to tell a girl about a guy who doesn’t think she’s worth the effort to go after.

Nobody said I was any good at this stuff.

Regardless, the seed had been planted in both of their hearts.

In February we were headed up to Provo. Marien was at school, and we wanted to see her, plus the Provo City Center Temple was having an open house. And BYU had a basketball game AND a men’s volleyball game, so we could make a whole day out of it. Laekynn and Travis had connected on Snap Chat (whatever that is) and so she sent him a message to let him know that the Fontanos were coming to town for a basketball game and he should come down. To see us. Naturally.

Travis bit.

He texted Clayton and confirmed that we were, in fact, on our way to Provo, so he and a buddy came down from Rexburg. We met them at the basketball game, where they sat so coolly, taking a very analytical approach to the game. Laekynn did NOT let that stop her. She cheered and yelled and stood up and made her voice heard.

At the end of the game I was convinced I was wrong about these two. No chemistry.

But Laekynn was not a quitter. After the game she asked where they were parked. She (conveniently) could not remember where she had parked so she asked for a ride. At some point between our good-byes and reaching Laekynn’s car she had tricked them into inviting her out to dinner. The girl had moves.

A few weeks later Clorinda and I were out at dinner and my phone started vibrating. It was Travis, interrupting my date with my wife. Rude. But I took the call anyway. “What’s going on?” I asked.

“Hey, I’m here with Laekynn, and she says you liked Sisters better than Elders, so…”

“Wait. Back up. What do you mean you’re ‘there with Laekynn’?”

Laekynn was in Rexburg and they were headed out to dinner themselves. Turns out they had been traveling back and forth between Provo and Rexburg every weekend to see each other.

Wuv. Twue wuv.

By the end of March they were down in Vegas visiting. One morning I went to the Temple before going to work and when I walked out of the dressing room there they were. The two of them, looking a little sheepish at seeing me. “Guess what we’re doing” Laekynn asked. “Going to the Temple” I guessed. Wrong again. “We’re scheduling the temple for our wedding!”

Oh, they have a little Fontano in them (more accurately, a little Clorinda in them (see the story linked above)) in planning a wedding before they were engaged (that didn’t come until July).

So yesterday these two kids were married. These two kids that were MY kids, my missionaries, were married to each other. They were kneeling at the same altar in the same sealing room that Clorinda and I had knelt at 20 years 8 months and 19 days before, making the same covenants we had made.

Clorinda asked me last night after the reception if I felt like a dad at the reception. I did, but unlike anything I think I will feel again. My parents and Clorinda’s parents were our parents at the wedding, but Clorinda’s dad didn’t feel like he was my dad. There was still all of the suspicion about the sketchy dude that was marrying his daughter. My dad didn’t think of Clorinda as his daughter, although that feeling has come over time. I felt like MY son was marrying MY daughter.

Cue Jack: AWWWKWARD!!

I love both of them like they are my own kids. Luckily they aren’t, they’re just a couple of crazy kids that I thought deserved each other.

Laekynn and Travis, you are a joy to me. There’s an obscure little Book of Mormon verse that struck me a while back. Mormon writes, “And they were married and given in marriage, and were blessed according to the multitude of the promises which the Lord had made unto them.” [4 Ne. 1:11] I hope you will always be blessed in your marriage, that you will find joy in each other. Congratulations! And here’s to another 20 years 8 months and 19 days (plus eternity).



PS. It turns out that Laekynn DID know my brother Pete—she actually lived quite close to him. I was telling Pete the TRISH-HALEY!-SHE-WAS-MY-YOUNG-WOMEN'S-LEADER story and he asked her name. When I told him, he said, "I know Laekynn." Turns out  he had substituted as her seminary teacher during her senior year. Laekynn, you make me smile.