Articles/Essays – Volume 12, No. 1
Brother Anderson Counsels His Son the Night Before Being Sealed “For Time and All Eternity” in the Salt Lake Temple
[Editor’s Note: For the designed poet, see the PDF below]
“For behold, I reveal unto you a
new and an everlasting
covenant; and if ye abide not
that covenant, then ye are
damned; for no one can reject
this covenant and be permitted
to enter into my glory . . .“And for this cause, that men
might be made partakers of the
glories which were to be
revealed, I sent forth the fulness
of my gospel, my everlasting
covenant, reasoning in plainness
and simplicity . . . . ”
—Doctrine and Covenants 132:4, 133:57
and
whatever you do, don’t
go smiling
totally into it
because
after the wash and annointing, kneeling on velour pillows at the foot
of marble altars beneath the fairy lights, charmed
by your photogenic genius, dittoed
double down the forever funnel
of cross-firing mirrors, after
holy white hair, the gentle voices
beyond the veil
leading you down the brass
rod and back into flashbulbs, carnations, skyscraper cakes, the aisles
of hands and best wishes, the long tables
streaming with fruits and cheeses; after
retreating, unwrapping the His & Hers,
stoneware, your bride,
six fondue pots; after mocking
the August rain, car payments, the seed
that still can’t touch you; after
discovering headaches, celluloid
and Hamburger Helper; after washing the sheets, swapping
scuba tanks and shot guns
for Pampers and Winnie
the Pooh; after picking
hairs from the sink, the stony
nights smelling of gardenias; after rain
the sun slopped on your plate, the sky a burned out
bulb—
you can bag your fantasies
and sit
back down because
there’s still this matter
of covenants, of reaching over shoulder
without reacting, offering your blind side—the ring, the rice
the lithographs: peripheral, filler
for the society
page. My father, never eloquent: Wyoming dairy
farmer, part-time surveyor, lost his legs
so he could better say what he wanted. Shot straight.
Made his point: summer night, just down
from pasture, moon cruising the canal, smell
of sage and muddy hands: “Don’t
graze in someone else’s pasture . . .
Your mother, she couldn’t lace her boots
but I dragged her mumbling
in levis and plaid pendleton half way up Mt. Whitney
and she thanked me years later bursting
into an emergency room just
as the surgeon on-call
was smoothing the adhesive over
her brow—’Sara Mortenson-Anderson’—she’d
been getting that way, finicky about titles, activities—no more ‘Mort’
or ‘Smorgasbord,’ the Balboa Classic. She
was heading for her night class
at Cody CO They say she could have been
a concert pianist.
I’m still serving time: the sisters come in threes
and never stop
knocking. Remorse,
never regret.
You are Christ’s
younger brother, God’s child. But the cold north, a viking in your blood: be tamed
when tempted. Remember
the promises. And when you stumble, no
hari-kari cop-outs. No
weekends at Tahoe. The sacrifice
simple and rinsed.
Love
before making love. Remember
the Third-Party Mediator of this world.
Pray often, in your closet.
Now go, and be happy. Forever’s
a damn long time.”