Family
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The Homecoming
Aaron OrullianElder Jeff Lee Johnson came home on January 24 at 2:14 in the afternoon. The plane had made its way north all that day, stopping in Miami, then Atlanta before finally arriving six minutes ahead…
Making the Shadow Conscious | Rachel Rueckert, East Winds: A Global Quest to Reckon with Marriage
Mel HendersonOne does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light but by making the darkness conscious. Carl Jung I’ll start with both a declaration and a disclaimer: East Winds: A Global Quest to Reckon with…
Knot Theory
Aurora Golden-AppletonA knot can be a beautiful thing. A knot can reveal truths about how the world works. Some people are so enraptured by knots, they dedicate their lives to studying them. I’m devoting no energy…
First Place: Times and Seasons
Margaret Olsen HemmingListen to the Out Loud Interview about this article here. They came to us just before spring arrived, at the same time I began putting seeds into the ground in my garden. Lettuce, spinach, arugula.…
Third Place: All Things Both Temporal and Spiritual
Mauri Pollard JohnsonListen to the Out Loud Interview about this article here. For by the power of my Spirit created I them; yea, all things both spiritual and temporal. —Doctrine & Covenants 29:31 The therapist I had…
Sister’s Visions
English BrooksHer eyelids were closing. It must have been the stillness in the room that made her realize. The two young elders advanced their slides across the laptop screen and it felt late. She nodded slowly.…
Fear, Faith, and Other F-Words
T BoydPodcast version of this piece. I’m sitting in the bishop’s office. My dress is slightly damp, but I can’t determine whether the moisture is a result of the snowstorm or sweat beading beneath the cotton.…
Thoughts on the Sacrament During a Pandemic
Lori DavisPodcast version of this Personal Essay. The sacrament feels like a medical procedure these days. It’s passed by men, not boys. I wondered about that requirement until I looked around the chapel at our scanty,…
The Other Crime: Abortion and Contraception in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Utah
Amanda Hendrix-KomotoDialogue 53.1 (Spring 2020): 33–47
In this essay, I discuss this history, present evidence that Latter-day Saint men sold abortion pills in the late nineteenth century, and argue that it is likely some Latter-day Saint women took them in an attempt to restore menstrual cycles that anemia, pregnancy, or illness had temporarily “stopped.” Women living in the twenty-first century are unable to access these earlier understandings of pregnancy because the way we understand pregnancy has changed as a result of debates over the criminalization of abortion and the development of ultrasound technology.
Bode and Iris
Levi S. PetersonListen to the piece here. It may seem odd that an experienced fornicator like Bode Carpenter would get the girl pregnant in the first place—particularly because he carried a condom in the watch pocket of…
Sweater
Theric JepsonMere Tears and Torrents, Signs and Seals: The Sweet Semantic Everything of Troubled Love Matthew James Babcock. Four Tales of Troubled Love
Jonathon PennyReview: A Private Revelation William Victor Smith. Textual Studies of the Doctrine and Covenants: The Plural Marriage Revelation
Gary James BergeraRoundtable: When Did You Become Black?
Gail Turley HoustonDialogue 51.3 (Fall 2018): 193–200
After taking a genelogy DNA test, Houston finds some African ancestory. “Where to begin in answering all those questions? But at the most basic level, I simply liked that I was from Africa. The percentage was small but the jolt large and wondrous. In the nineteenth century, the United States had the one-drop rule about race: if you had one drop of African blood you were considered to be Black.”
From the Pulpit: My Mother’s Eclipse
Steven L. PeckLight Departure
Ryan ShoemakerFor Doug Thayer There was a knock at the apartment door. My companion, Carr, slouched at his desk, tinkering with a delicate butterfly he’d just formed from a piece of thin copper wire he’d retrieved…
City of Saints
David G. PaceWhen Dennis Cormier arrived on the fifteenth floor of the Church Office Building in downtown Salt Lake City, his first appointment was already waiting. The visitor was fleshy, jowls and hips, about Dennis’ age, and…
The Shyster
Levi S. PetersonArne met Leanne Holburn at church during his final year in an MBA program at the University of Washington. He found her very attractive. Of medium height, she had sculpted cheeks, an aquiline nose, and…
Come to Zion
Annette HawsSix months after she’d divorced her most recent husband, Sue kicked back the silk sheets one chilly morning and decided to take back her maiden name. She packed her bags, grabbed a cab to Charles…
AMEN
Johnny Townsend“Dear Heavenly Father,” I began, “please help me do well on this test.” I was on my way to the Garfield Community Center in the Central District to take a skills test for a City…
Personal Voices: Still Making Sense of Suffering: Ruminations on Thirty-Five Years with Multiple Sclerosis
Marilyn D. WhitePersonal Voices: I Am Not Your Trigger
John Gustav-WrathallPersonal Voices: Spare the Rod
Russell Arben FoxThe Intimacy of Fatherhood
Patrick HemmingThe Home Teacher
Heidi NaylorBishop warned Brock Hartman ahead of time. “They’ll ask for a food order.” He opened a desk drawer and took out a binder filled with requisitions for the storehouse. “But they have a decent income…
What Happened Sunday Morning
Erika MunsonWhen Danny DiLorenzo got up to speak I was thinking about how I could loosen my tie. My mother makes me wear one, and after an hour my body fights back. I stand in front…
Personal Voices: Eyes to See
Kylie Nielson TurleyI. Seeing Not . . . because they seeing not . . . Matthew 13:13 My first pair of glasses had green plastic rims and Coke-bottle thick, anti-glare-coated lenses, which reflected green light. In every…
Personal Voices: The Unending Conversation
Frances Lee MenloveThe Missing Mrs.
Marianne Hales HardingLook at Me — I Am Your Son
Christie Lund ColesLook at me, man, look at me! Get your veined nose off the grindstone;remove your ground sun glasses;see the sun, feel it. It is there; I remember it from my childhood(Was it yesterday or forever ago?)prickling upon…
This-Worldly and Other-Worldly Sex: A Response
Lowell BennionCarl Broderick’s essay treats many aspects of sex in an objective, discreet, and interesting way which should be helpful to Latter-day Saints, both in personal and family living and also in their responsibilities in the…
Three Philosophies of Sex, Plus One
Carlfred B. BroderickThe question of human sexuality and how it shall be interpreted and incorporated into life is one that every comprehensive philosophy of life must cope with. My strong conviction of this grows partly out of…
The Death of a Son
Carole HansenThere was not even a 48-hour warning between the first x-rays of Kelden’s knee and the surgery which amputated his leg. When his physician-father took him for x-rays Sunday afternoon instead of waiting until Monday,…
The Divorced Latter-day Saint
Gayle NortonTwo marriages, two divorces, and years of living alone had helped make my aunt an independent, matter-of-fact sort of person. But she seemed almost too casual that night in 1956 when she told me my…
Why Latter-day Saint Girls Marry Outside the Church
Deon PriceQuestion: Why do Latter-day Saint girls marry non-Mormons? Answers: “L.D.S. boys are away on missions or at school, and those not away date non-L.D.S. girls.” “L.D.S. boys don’t date much, but L.D.S. girls want to…
Expectations and Fulfillment: Changing Roles in Marriage
Chase PetersonMormons have a deep spiritual belief in the validity of joy. While sorrow and frustration are accepted features of all lives, we believe that in partnership with God’s spirit and plan we can minimize sorrow…
Free Agency and Conformity in Family Life
Veon G. SmithThe scriptures[1] and the teachings of the Church leaders about free agency indicate that man should pursue life according to free choice and on the assumption that he can and should use his intelligence, capabilities,…
Church Influence Upon the Family
Stanton L. HoveyPresident David O. McKay described the two major purposes of the Church during the General Priesthood Meeting of the October, 1966, General Conference. The first is that of taking the message of the restoration to…
Technological Change and Erosion of the Patriarchal Family
Garth L. MangumTechnological change is adequately recognized as a pervading influence in American and, to a lesser degree, Western European life. Technological progress is measured by the ability of technology to increase the output of a unit…
The Mormon Family in the Modern World: Introduction
Lowell BennionNot only is the family the primary social institution in Mormonism, it is also much too large a theme for a special section in one issue of Dialogue. Hopefully, the Journal will be able to…
Grandpa’s Place
Edward A. GearyMy grandfather, for whom I was named, was born in 1878 in a four-room stone house built by his father in Round Valley, near Morgan, Utah. My great grandfather had a small farm there and a job on the Union Pacific Railroad, but in the spring of 1883…
A Latter-day Ode to Irrigation
Dean L. MayIn 1907 J. J. McClellan, then organist for the Mormon Tabernacle, published a new choral suite under the extravagant title, “Ode to Irrigation.” The first of five choruses described in heavy Victorian prose a truly…
Poor Mother
Laurel Thatcher UlrichWe have a new baby in our family. Soon after Amy was born, our oldest son introduced himself to the woman who was building a house behind ours. “And how many children are there in…
Greg
Douglas ThayerWhen Greg woke up he lay on his stomach. The shaft of sunlight coming through the window hit his gold tennis trophy, Kellie’s gold-framed picture and his clock on top of the dresser. Priesthood meeting…
Living with Alzheimer’s Disease: A Wife’s Perspective
Bethany Chaffin“Frank, please sit up here,” I pleaded, patting the doctor’s examination table and urging my husband forward. I was trying to be patient. By nature I move fast, and holding myself back to accommodate his slowness…
The Nursing Home
Elaine R. AlderMy mother was eighty-four, a widow of six months, and badly crippled with arthritis in the fall of 1981. She was also virtually blind. For the past six months, her eight children had watched anxiously…
Mary Ann
Marti Dickey EsplinIt was one of those crisp November days in Hershey, Pennsylvania, when I heard the news. Snuggled under a quilt, I was reading to my two young sons when the telephone interrupted us. It was…
And Baby Makes Two: Choosing Single Motherhood
Jerilyn WakefieldAs a school teacher in Tooele—junior high science/English—I carpool the forty miles from Salt Lake City every day. I had always assumed, as teens turned into twenties, that someday I would be married and raise…
Promise to Grandma
Kerry William BateWhen Sarah Roundy Sylvester was fighting death in the fall of 1938 she must have felt her life was unsuccessful. The promises of a good education, the status of a significant and unusual Church assignment,…
“In Jeopardy Every Hour”
Susan B. TaberWhen my two-and-a-half-year-old daughter, Abigail, and I went to the hospital, I left the pie crusts and rolls I had mixed up that morning on the kitchen table along with the dress pattern I had bought for my new niece. It had been months since I had felt this energetic, and so that morning I had begun a few projects while I waited for our sixth child to be born. The telephone awakened me from my after-lunch nap; the pediatrician wanted to see me in his office to discuss Abby’s blood test results.
Religion and Suicide: A Records-Linkage Study
Phillip R. KunzSince the early studies of the French sociologist, Emile Durkheim, suicide has interested sociologists. But suicide, by its very nature, has resisted study, and the problem of studying it has not eased over the years.…
Four Characteristics of the Mormon Family: Contemporary Research on Chastity, Conjugality, Children, and Chauvinism
Tim B. HeatonFrom its inception, Mormonism has been characterized by a blend of traditional American culture mixed with unique, sometimes even radical, elements. The nineteenth-century Mormon family combined aspects of Puritan family morality with a unique theology…
To Watch a Daughter Die
Kathie Rampton RockwoodTo watch a daughter die —
One could practice a lifetime
And never do it well.
The labored hell
Three Poems for My Mother
Philip WhiteFor Your Birthday: Planting in the Rain
Fall Canker
A Place for Roses
Grandpa’s Coffee
Dennis SmithIt is a morning flight. We have gained altitude and are somewhere over the Colorado Rockies. Below, through breaks in the clouds, a thin film of early snowfall covers the mountaintops like a veil. High…
I Married a Mormon and Lived to Tell This Tale: East Meets West
Wilma OdellI have enthusiastically accepted the invitation to share my experiences as a “cultural Jew” married to a “cultural Mormon.” Kenneth and I have been married almost twenty-three years. I have lived in Salt Lake City since 1971 and before that for nine months when we were first married.
I Married a Mormon and Lived to Tell This Tale: Through a Stained-Glass Window
Juliana Boerio-GoatesLet me start by saying that I did not pick the title for this panel —I am not yet convinced that I have survived the experience intact. How ever, after more than fifteen years of…
I Married a Mormon and Lived to Tell This Tale: “To Celebrate the Marriage Feast Which Has No End”
Wendy S. LeeFriends often ask me what it is like to be an active Lutheran layperson married to an active Latter-day Saint. I think I can best describe my marriage experience by addressing my comments to my…
I Married a Mormon and Lived to Tell This Tale: Introductory Remarks
Karen Marguerite MoloneyMembers of other religions, or persons with no religious affiliation, take on special challenges when they marry Latter-day Saints. In addition to the same problems any inter-faith marriage might encounter—conflicts over church attendance, child-rearing, value…
Heart of the Fathers
Thomas F. RogersThe Child is father to the Man Wordsworth You wake before the alarm you’d set for 4:30. You dress, almost ritually, and decide to fast. Today of all days you must maintain the proper mood—and…
Confessions of a Utah Gambler
Russell BurrowsThe old hometown, Ogden, Utah, has long been an overlooked sports town. That is, if you take the adjective overlooked in an underground or an underworld sense, and if you broaden “sporting men” to include…
Rhythms
Marni Asplund-CampbellMy father’s heart is strong and scarred, bound in spots by thread, a delicate patchwork of veiny fabrics. I imagine, when I talk to him on the telephone, his physical presence. I can hear his…
Why Am I Here?
Gay TaylorI found this philosophical bit by Chip Janis in In the New World (1988), a little book of poems put together by young Indian students at the Pretty Eagle School and St. Charles Mission in Ashland, Mon tana. Why am I here? It is a question most of us come face to face with. I have heard that Leo Tolstoy, after he had fathered thirteen children, helped Tsar Alexander II free the serfs, and written dozens of articles and books, still tortured himself with the question: “Why am I living?”
For Meg — With Doubt and Faith
Karen RosenbaumIn times of drought, it is hard to remember times of flood. After yet another California winter without sufficient water, we take quick showers, rarely flush the toilet, let our lawn grow long to hide…
Hallelujah?
Angela G. WoodFatherless Child
Angela B. HaightA Jew Among Mormons
Steve SiporinDemographics of the Contemporary Mormon Family
Tim B. HeatonWho We Are, Where We Come From
Linda SillitoeBlessing the Dog
Brian EvensonHe waited, but the dog didn’t come. He went back into the house. His wife was strapping on her brassiere, skin spilling over where the strap was tight. “Seen the dog?” he said. “Haen’t my…
If I Hate My Mother, Can I Love the Heavenly Mother?
Margaret Merrill ToscanoDialogue 31.4 (Winter 1998): 31–42
A series of questions began to occur to me: If I hate my mother, can I love the Heavenly Mother? If I hate my mother, can I love myself? If I hate God, can I love myself? If I hate myself, can I love my mother or theHeavenly Mother? I wanted to put these questions in the sharpest terms possible—love/hate. There was no room for ambivalence at this point. I had to let myself feel my strongest and darkest feelings, about mymother, about myself, and about God.
“One Flesh”: A Historical Overview of Latter-day Saint Sexuality and Psychology
Eric G. SwedinSparrow Hunter
Douglas ThayerOn Meditation
Marion BishopBrother Melrose
Douglas ThayerThe old man walked out from under the line of high, heavy trees bordering the cemetery. He stopped. He looked up, blinking his eyes. He held his hands palms up to the fading April sunlight.…
Measures of Music
B. W. JorgensenIt came then that Sara dreamed of the flood. It had been the news for weeks, cities all along the Front sandbagging streets, sidewalks, driveways, window wells, a mudslide that made a lake over a…
Elijah’s Calling: 1840-41 (from This Could Be the Dawning of That Day)
Darius GrayThe following chapter is excerpted from One More River to Cross, the title of the first novel of a trilogy to be called Standing on the Promises being published by Deseret Book beginning in August…
There is Always Someplace Else (From There is Always Someplace Else)
Reed McColmIn 1957, a year and a half before she married the man who would leave her, Kören Dixon was almost the Carnival Queen of Conjuring Creek. There were only three nominations for the job, and…
Down on Batlle’s Farm
Patrick MaddenGay and Lesbian Mormons: Interviews with James Kent, Former Executive Director of Affirmation, and with Aaron Cloward, Founder and Coordinator of Gay LDS Youth
Hugo N. OlaizDialogue 33.3 (Fall 2000): 123–136
Hugo Oliaz intervews two important figures in LDS LGBTQ organzing, a former diretor of Affirmation and the founder of Gay LDS Youth, a group that briefly flourished in the early 2000s. A great resource for learning more about LDS LGBTQ organizing in this period.
The Truth, the Partial Truth, Something Like the Truth, So Help Me God
Clay L. ChandlerPhilosophical Christian Apology Meets “Rational” Mormon Theology
L. Rex SearsOn “Defense of Marriage” A Reply to Quinn
Armand L. MaussIn a reply to Quinn’s article in the same issue, Armand Mauss questioned whether the church was motivated by homophobia or a more benevolent force.
Prelude to the National “”Defense of Marriage”” Campaign: Civil Discrimination Against Feared or Despised Minorities
D. Michael QuinnThis is an early 50+ page article documenting LDS political activity in the 1990s on same-sex marriage, culminating in Prop 22. Quinn’s explanation was that homophobia provided the best explanation for LDS prejudice against same-sex…
David O. McKay and Blacks: Building the Foundation for the 1978 Revelation
Gregory A. PrinceA Voice from the Land of Zion: Elder Erastus Snow in Denmark 1850 to 1852
Val G. HemmingThe Danish Genesis of Virginia Sorensen’s Lotte’s Locket
Susan Elizabeth HoweEggertsen Men: Male Family Influences in Virginia Sorensen’s Kingdom Come and the Evening and the Morning
Sue SaffleHistory, Memory and Imagination in Virginia Eggertsen Sorensen’s Kingdom Come
William MulderKeepsakes
Steven CantwellOn the day of her funeral, my mother’s two sister-wives put on a dinner in her honor. Sister Karen and Sister Sharlene spent the morning before the services baking pies and fresh bread, making potato…
Grandpa and the Petrified Oysters
Charles ThompsonWhenever I visited my grandparents, I always knew where to check for Granddad. As a means of escaping household routine, he maintained a remote kingdom, a long shed deep in the interior of the backyard…
Our Big Fat Temple Weddings: Who’s In, Who’s Out, and How We Get Together
David G. PaceBelonging
Lisa Torcasso DowningMind, Body, and the Boundary Waters
Susan Sessions RughGrandpa’s Visit
Patti HanksCemetery Life
Kylie Nielson TurleyScenes from the Movie
Kim SimpsonPlinka, Plinka, Plinka
Bessie Loyd Soderborg ClarkWhat You Don’t Know
Melody WarnickThe Homecoming
Aaron OrullianElder Jeff Lee Johnson came home on January 24 at 2:14 in the afternoon. The plane had made its way north all that day, stopping in Miami, then Atlanta before finally arriving six minutes ahead…
Toward a “”Marriage Group”” of Contemporary Mormon Short Stories
B. W. JorgensenThanksgiving
Angela HallstromBeth: Listening “Take care,” says my Grandma Tess. She is the first one to leave after Thanksgiving dinner because she can’t drive at night. She’s got two hours’ driving to do, south to Salt Lake.…
Brown
Charmayne Gubler WarnockI’m mostly brown. I have brown hair and, in summer, brown skin. It’s not a pretty golden brown like the models in the tanning lotion ads. It’s a kind of ashy, dirty brown. My eyes…
Miracle
Eric SamuelsenLucille Wentworth sat in her working on her cross-stitch, watching Judy and Ray hold hands, sitting across from her on the couch. It was late, past one; they’d talked for hours, the conversation flowing around…
’Atta Boy
Kristen CarsonLatham Runyon wondered what time he ought to close his window. It was going to be a tongue-hanger today. But for now, the morning was still dewy and bearable. He pulled his half-glasses up to…
Homecomings
Larry DayAt Eastside School in Idaho Falls, they gave us a full hour for lunch; and like most of the kids, I went home each day. Mom always had my lunch ready. I’d gulp it down…
White Shell
Arianne Baadsgaard CopeThere are pieces of white shell sifted with the sands and soils of Dinetah that confuse newcomers and outsiders. Tourists look at the shells like puzzle pieces, trying to force them into what they know.…
Heloise and Abelard
Coby Fletcher“We’ll get there by ten.” Nod and look behind, dance a quickstep ahead of the noise of a thousand feet on the wet pavement of Liege. Feels strange to be thrown into a world you’re…
En Route: A Journey of the Spirit
L. Jackson NewellSister Love
Susan Morgan“You’re acting like a child,” said Karen. “I’m not,” said Lynn, and looked with determination at her dinner plate. She could feel Karen’s anger vibrating against her skin. “Oh, don’t talk to me—” Lynn glanced…
Follow Me, Boys
Kristen CarsonThe station hall echoed with the rumble of waiting buses every time the door opened. The restroom door squeaked. A mother on the far row of chairs scolded her child—“Don’t climb on that!”—as her breasts…
Frau Ruster and the Cure for Cognitive Dissonance
Roger TerryDepression and the Brethren of the Priesthood
Mack PattenSeeds of Faith in City Soil: Growing Up Mormon in New York City
Neylan McBaineThe Blessing
Larry DayYou never can tell what April is going to be like in Boise. Sometimes you get sunshine, sometimes you get rain, and sometimes you get blizzards that roar out of the canyons. I died in…
Entertaining Angels Unaware
Laura McCune-PoplinLucy hated arguing with her companion in public, even though they argued in English so most people couldn’t understand what they were saying, and those who did could probably care less. They didn’t argue often,…
The Beings I Love Are Creatures
Kate HolbrookA Visit for Tregan
Jack HarrellTregan Weaver was driving home from Madison High in his little black CRX on the first warm day of spring in Rexburg, Idaho. The trees along Main Street were in blossom, the lawns were turning…
Gentle Persuasions
William MorrisI I often went with my father on home teaching visits when I was ten and eleven. I don’t remember why his companions were never around. I suppose they were inactive. Back then, inactivity wasn’t…
Buildings
Tona J. HangenMay Many Phoenixes Rise
Allison PingreeA Deep Reverence in My Heart; Part of Our Family
Clayton ChristensenLooked like a Church, Sounded like a Church; How Beautiful Our Waters of Mormon
Molly BennionMove Back in a Heartbeat
Marilyn Lee BrownThe Bonds Endure; Freudian Analysis of Lehi’s Dream
Jim JohnstonTribute to a Building; Giving Church a Try
Arthur ShekNot Different from My Home
Katsu FunaiEqually Warm, Whether Empty or Full
Aja Fegert EyreNot the Building
Erin L. CrowleyAn Anchor for Me
Paula Kelly CaryotakisMatzoh for Sacrament
Steve RowleyTen Fictions about My Father
Nathan Robison1 First he went down to Pappy’s pasture. The pasture was a strip of marshy land down the hill from our house, sandwiched by the inter state and train tracks where Pappy kept his cows.…
Hurt or Make Afraid
Samuel M. BrownWe’ll find the place which God for us prepared, In His house full of light, Where none shall come to hurt or make afraid; There the saints will shine bright. William Clayton, 1846 I’m cold. We’ve been walking…
Fish Stories
Annette HawsAlthough it had never been formally declared or written in cursive on a piece of parchment, Jolene understood her place in the family hierarchy. She was right there between the ancient golden retriever and the…
That the Glory of God Might Be Manifest
W. Paul ReeveToward a Post-Heterosexual Mormon Theology
Taylor G. PetreyDialogue 44.4 (Winter 2011): 106–141
From Editor Taylor Petrey: “Toward a Post-heterosexual Mormon Theology” was actually the first major article I ever published. I did not know what to expect, but it ended up being a widely discussed piece, accessed tens of thousands of times. To this day I still receive notes of appreciation for this article.
Bones Heal Faster: Spousal Abuse in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Terence L. DayKaty, My Sister
Jenn AshworthWe didn’t have much stuff when we moved into the new place. Not carpets or a dining table, or even curtains or beds at first. My dad must have thought if we weren’t allowed our…
Making the Shadow Conscious | Rachel Rueckert, East Winds: A Global Quest to Reckon with Marriage
Mel HendersonOne does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light but by making the darkness conscious. Carl Jung I’ll start with both a declaration and a disclaimer: East Winds: A Global Quest to Reckon with…
Knot Theory
Aurora Golden-AppletonA knot can be a beautiful thing. A knot can reveal truths about how the world works. Some people are so enraptured by knots, they dedicate their lives to studying them. I’m devoting no energy…
First Place: Times and Seasons
Margaret Olsen HemmingListen to the Out Loud Interview about this article here. They came to us just before spring arrived, at the same time I began putting seeds into the ground in my garden. Lettuce, spinach, arugula.…
Third Place: All Things Both Temporal and Spiritual
Mauri Pollard JohnsonListen to the Out Loud Interview about this article here. For by the power of my Spirit created I them; yea, all things both spiritual and temporal. —Doctrine & Covenants 29:31 The therapist I had…
Sister’s Visions
English BrooksHer eyelids were closing. It must have been the stillness in the room that made her realize. The two young elders advanced their slides across the laptop screen and it felt late. She nodded slowly.…
Fear, Faith, and Other F-Words
T BoydPodcast version of this piece. I’m sitting in the bishop’s office. My dress is slightly damp, but I can’t determine whether the moisture is a result of the snowstorm or sweat beading beneath the cotton.…
Thoughts on the Sacrament During a Pandemic
Lori DavisPodcast version of this Personal Essay. The sacrament feels like a medical procedure these days. It’s passed by men, not boys. I wondered about that requirement until I looked around the chapel at our scanty,…
The Other Crime: Abortion and Contraception in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Utah
Amanda Hendrix-KomotoDialogue 53.1 (Spring 2020): 33–47
In this essay, I discuss this history, present evidence that Latter-day Saint men sold abortion pills in the late nineteenth century, and argue that it is likely some Latter-day Saint women took them in an attempt to restore menstrual cycles that anemia, pregnancy, or illness had temporarily “stopped.” Women living in the twenty-first century are unable to access these earlier understandings of pregnancy because the way we understand pregnancy has changed as a result of debates over the criminalization of abortion and the development of ultrasound technology.
Bode and Iris
Levi S. PetersonListen to the piece here. It may seem odd that an experienced fornicator like Bode Carpenter would get the girl pregnant in the first place—particularly because he carried a condom in the watch pocket of…
Sweater
Theric JepsonMere Tears and Torrents, Signs and Seals: The Sweet Semantic Everything of Troubled Love Matthew James Babcock. Four Tales of Troubled Love
Jonathon PennyReview: A Private Revelation William Victor Smith. Textual Studies of the Doctrine and Covenants: The Plural Marriage Revelation
Gary James BergeraRoundtable: When Did You Become Black?
Gail Turley HoustonDialogue 51.3 (Fall 2018): 193–200
After taking a genelogy DNA test, Houston finds some African ancestory. “Where to begin in answering all those questions? But at the most basic level, I simply liked that I was from Africa. The percentage was small but the jolt large and wondrous. In the nineteenth century, the United States had the one-drop rule about race: if you had one drop of African blood you were considered to be Black.”
From the Pulpit: My Mother’s Eclipse
Steven L. PeckLight Departure
Ryan ShoemakerFor Doug Thayer There was a knock at the apartment door. My companion, Carr, slouched at his desk, tinkering with a delicate butterfly he’d just formed from a piece of thin copper wire he’d retrieved…
City of Saints
David G. PaceWhen Dennis Cormier arrived on the fifteenth floor of the Church Office Building in downtown Salt Lake City, his first appointment was already waiting. The visitor was fleshy, jowls and hips, about Dennis’ age, and…
The Shyster
Levi S. PetersonArne met Leanne Holburn at church during his final year in an MBA program at the University of Washington. He found her very attractive. Of medium height, she had sculpted cheeks, an aquiline nose, and…
Come to Zion
Annette HawsSix months after she’d divorced her most recent husband, Sue kicked back the silk sheets one chilly morning and decided to take back her maiden name. She packed her bags, grabbed a cab to Charles…
AMEN
Johnny Townsend“Dear Heavenly Father,” I began, “please help me do well on this test.” I was on my way to the Garfield Community Center in the Central District to take a skills test for a City…
Personal Voices: Still Making Sense of Suffering: Ruminations on Thirty-Five Years with Multiple Sclerosis
Marilyn D. WhitePersonal Voices: I Am Not Your Trigger
John Gustav-WrathallPersonal Voices: Spare the Rod
Russell Arben FoxThe Intimacy of Fatherhood
Patrick HemmingThe Home Teacher
Heidi NaylorBishop warned Brock Hartman ahead of time. “They’ll ask for a food order.” He opened a desk drawer and took out a binder filled with requisitions for the storehouse. “But they have a decent income…
What Happened Sunday Morning
Erika MunsonWhen Danny DiLorenzo got up to speak I was thinking about how I could loosen my tie. My mother makes me wear one, and after an hour my body fights back. I stand in front…
Personal Voices: Eyes to See
Kylie Nielson TurleyI. Seeing Not . . . because they seeing not . . . Matthew 13:13 My first pair of glasses had green plastic rims and Coke-bottle thick, anti-glare-coated lenses, which reflected green light. In every…
Personal Voices: The Unending Conversation
Frances Lee MenloveThe Missing Mrs.
Marianne Hales HardingLook at Me — I Am Your Son
Christie Lund ColesLook at me, man, look at me! Get your veined nose off the grindstone;remove your ground sun glasses;see the sun, feel it. It is there; I remember it from my childhood(Was it yesterday or forever ago?)prickling upon…
This-Worldly and Other-Worldly Sex: A Response
Lowell BennionCarl Broderick’s essay treats many aspects of sex in an objective, discreet, and interesting way which should be helpful to Latter-day Saints, both in personal and family living and also in their responsibilities in the…
Three Philosophies of Sex, Plus One
Carlfred B. BroderickThe question of human sexuality and how it shall be interpreted and incorporated into life is one that every comprehensive philosophy of life must cope with. My strong conviction of this grows partly out of…
The Death of a Son
Carole HansenThere was not even a 48-hour warning between the first x-rays of Kelden’s knee and the surgery which amputated his leg. When his physician-father took him for x-rays Sunday afternoon instead of waiting until Monday,…
The Divorced Latter-day Saint
Gayle NortonTwo marriages, two divorces, and years of living alone had helped make my aunt an independent, matter-of-fact sort of person. But she seemed almost too casual that night in 1956 when she told me my…
Why Latter-day Saint Girls Marry Outside the Church
Deon PriceQuestion: Why do Latter-day Saint girls marry non-Mormons? Answers: “L.D.S. boys are away on missions or at school, and those not away date non-L.D.S. girls.” “L.D.S. boys don’t date much, but L.D.S. girls want to…
Expectations and Fulfillment: Changing Roles in Marriage
Chase PetersonMormons have a deep spiritual belief in the validity of joy. While sorrow and frustration are accepted features of all lives, we believe that in partnership with God’s spirit and plan we can minimize sorrow…
Free Agency and Conformity in Family Life
Veon G. SmithThe scriptures[1] and the teachings of the Church leaders about free agency indicate that man should pursue life according to free choice and on the assumption that he can and should use his intelligence, capabilities,…
Church Influence Upon the Family
Stanton L. HoveyPresident David O. McKay described the two major purposes of the Church during the General Priesthood Meeting of the October, 1966, General Conference. The first is that of taking the message of the restoration to…
Technological Change and Erosion of the Patriarchal Family
Garth L. MangumTechnological change is adequately recognized as a pervading influence in American and, to a lesser degree, Western European life. Technological progress is measured by the ability of technology to increase the output of a unit…
The Mormon Family in the Modern World: Introduction
Lowell BennionNot only is the family the primary social institution in Mormonism, it is also much too large a theme for a special section in one issue of Dialogue. Hopefully, the Journal will be able to…
Grandpa’s Place
Edward A. GearyMy grandfather, for whom I was named, was born in 1878 in a four-room stone house built by his father in Round Valley, near Morgan, Utah. My great grandfather had a small farm there and a job on the Union Pacific Railroad, but in the spring of 1883…
A Latter-day Ode to Irrigation
Dean L. MayIn 1907 J. J. McClellan, then organist for the Mormon Tabernacle, published a new choral suite under the extravagant title, “Ode to Irrigation.” The first of five choruses described in heavy Victorian prose a truly…
Poor Mother
Laurel Thatcher UlrichWe have a new baby in our family. Soon after Amy was born, our oldest son introduced himself to the woman who was building a house behind ours. “And how many children are there in…
Greg
Douglas ThayerWhen Greg woke up he lay on his stomach. The shaft of sunlight coming through the window hit his gold tennis trophy, Kellie’s gold-framed picture and his clock on top of the dresser. Priesthood meeting…
Living with Alzheimer’s Disease: A Wife’s Perspective
Bethany Chaffin“Frank, please sit up here,” I pleaded, patting the doctor’s examination table and urging my husband forward. I was trying to be patient. By nature I move fast, and holding myself back to accommodate his slowness…
The Nursing Home
Elaine R. AlderMy mother was eighty-four, a widow of six months, and badly crippled with arthritis in the fall of 1981. She was also virtually blind. For the past six months, her eight children had watched anxiously…
Mary Ann
Marti Dickey EsplinIt was one of those crisp November days in Hershey, Pennsylvania, when I heard the news. Snuggled under a quilt, I was reading to my two young sons when the telephone interrupted us. It was…
And Baby Makes Two: Choosing Single Motherhood
Jerilyn WakefieldAs a school teacher in Tooele—junior high science/English—I carpool the forty miles from Salt Lake City every day. I had always assumed, as teens turned into twenties, that someday I would be married and raise…
Promise to Grandma
Kerry William BateWhen Sarah Roundy Sylvester was fighting death in the fall of 1938 she must have felt her life was unsuccessful. The promises of a good education, the status of a significant and unusual Church assignment,…
“In Jeopardy Every Hour”
Susan B. TaberWhen my two-and-a-half-year-old daughter, Abigail, and I went to the hospital, I left the pie crusts and rolls I had mixed up that morning on the kitchen table along with the dress pattern I had bought for my new niece. It had been months since I had felt this energetic, and so that morning I had begun a few projects while I waited for our sixth child to be born. The telephone awakened me from my after-lunch nap; the pediatrician wanted to see me in his office to discuss Abby’s blood test results.
Religion and Suicide: A Records-Linkage Study
Phillip R. KunzSince the early studies of the French sociologist, Emile Durkheim, suicide has interested sociologists. But suicide, by its very nature, has resisted study, and the problem of studying it has not eased over the years.…
Four Characteristics of the Mormon Family: Contemporary Research on Chastity, Conjugality, Children, and Chauvinism
Tim B. HeatonFrom its inception, Mormonism has been characterized by a blend of traditional American culture mixed with unique, sometimes even radical, elements. The nineteenth-century Mormon family combined aspects of Puritan family morality with a unique theology…
To Watch a Daughter Die
Kathie Rampton RockwoodTo watch a daughter die —
One could practice a lifetime
And never do it well.
The labored hell
Three Poems for My Mother
Philip WhiteFor Your Birthday: Planting in the Rain
Fall Canker
A Place for Roses
Grandpa’s Coffee
Dennis SmithIt is a morning flight. We have gained altitude and are somewhere over the Colorado Rockies. Below, through breaks in the clouds, a thin film of early snowfall covers the mountaintops like a veil. High…
I Married a Mormon and Lived to Tell This Tale: East Meets West
Wilma OdellI have enthusiastically accepted the invitation to share my experiences as a “cultural Jew” married to a “cultural Mormon.” Kenneth and I have been married almost twenty-three years. I have lived in Salt Lake City since 1971 and before that for nine months when we were first married.
I Married a Mormon and Lived to Tell This Tale: Through a Stained-Glass Window
Juliana Boerio-GoatesLet me start by saying that I did not pick the title for this panel —I am not yet convinced that I have survived the experience intact. How ever, after more than fifteen years of…
I Married a Mormon and Lived to Tell This Tale: “To Celebrate the Marriage Feast Which Has No End”
Wendy S. LeeFriends often ask me what it is like to be an active Lutheran layperson married to an active Latter-day Saint. I think I can best describe my marriage experience by addressing my comments to my…
I Married a Mormon and Lived to Tell This Tale: Introductory Remarks
Karen Marguerite MoloneyMembers of other religions, or persons with no religious affiliation, take on special challenges when they marry Latter-day Saints. In addition to the same problems any inter-faith marriage might encounter—conflicts over church attendance, child-rearing, value…
Heart of the Fathers
Thomas F. RogersThe Child is father to the Man Wordsworth You wake before the alarm you’d set for 4:30. You dress, almost ritually, and decide to fast. Today of all days you must maintain the proper mood—and…
Confessions of a Utah Gambler
Russell BurrowsThe old hometown, Ogden, Utah, has long been an overlooked sports town. That is, if you take the adjective overlooked in an underground or an underworld sense, and if you broaden “sporting men” to include…
Rhythms
Marni Asplund-CampbellMy father’s heart is strong and scarred, bound in spots by thread, a delicate patchwork of veiny fabrics. I imagine, when I talk to him on the telephone, his physical presence. I can hear his…
Why Am I Here?
Gay TaylorI found this philosophical bit by Chip Janis in In the New World (1988), a little book of poems put together by young Indian students at the Pretty Eagle School and St. Charles Mission in Ashland, Mon tana. Why am I here? It is a question most of us come face to face with. I have heard that Leo Tolstoy, after he had fathered thirteen children, helped Tsar Alexander II free the serfs, and written dozens of articles and books, still tortured himself with the question: “Why am I living?”
For Meg — With Doubt and Faith
Karen RosenbaumIn times of drought, it is hard to remember times of flood. After yet another California winter without sufficient water, we take quick showers, rarely flush the toilet, let our lawn grow long to hide…
Hallelujah?
Angela G. WoodFatherless Child
Angela B. HaightA Jew Among Mormons
Steve SiporinDemographics of the Contemporary Mormon Family
Tim B. HeatonWho We Are, Where We Come From
Linda SillitoeBlessing the Dog
Brian EvensonHe waited, but the dog didn’t come. He went back into the house. His wife was strapping on her brassiere, skin spilling over where the strap was tight. “Seen the dog?” he said. “Haen’t my…
If I Hate My Mother, Can I Love the Heavenly Mother?
Margaret Merrill ToscanoDialogue 31.4 (Winter 1998): 31–42
A series of questions began to occur to me: If I hate my mother, can I love the Heavenly Mother? If I hate my mother, can I love myself? If I hate God, can I love myself? If I hate myself, can I love my mother or theHeavenly Mother? I wanted to put these questions in the sharpest terms possible—love/hate. There was no room for ambivalence at this point. I had to let myself feel my strongest and darkest feelings, about mymother, about myself, and about God.
“One Flesh”: A Historical Overview of Latter-day Saint Sexuality and Psychology
Eric G. SwedinSparrow Hunter
Douglas ThayerOn Meditation
Marion BishopBrother Melrose
Douglas ThayerThe old man walked out from under the line of high, heavy trees bordering the cemetery. He stopped. He looked up, blinking his eyes. He held his hands palms up to the fading April sunlight.…
Measures of Music
B. W. JorgensenIt came then that Sara dreamed of the flood. It had been the news for weeks, cities all along the Front sandbagging streets, sidewalks, driveways, window wells, a mudslide that made a lake over a…
Elijah’s Calling: 1840-41 (from This Could Be the Dawning of That Day)
Darius GrayThe following chapter is excerpted from One More River to Cross, the title of the first novel of a trilogy to be called Standing on the Promises being published by Deseret Book beginning in August…
There is Always Someplace Else (From There is Always Someplace Else)
Reed McColmIn 1957, a year and a half before she married the man who would leave her, Kören Dixon was almost the Carnival Queen of Conjuring Creek. There were only three nominations for the job, and…
Down on Batlle’s Farm
Patrick MaddenGay and Lesbian Mormons: Interviews with James Kent, Former Executive Director of Affirmation, and with Aaron Cloward, Founder and Coordinator of Gay LDS Youth
Hugo N. OlaizDialogue 33.3 (Fall 2000): 123–136
Hugo Oliaz intervews two important figures in LDS LGBTQ organzing, a former diretor of Affirmation and the founder of Gay LDS Youth, a group that briefly flourished in the early 2000s. A great resource for learning more about LDS LGBTQ organizing in this period.
The Truth, the Partial Truth, Something Like the Truth, So Help Me God
Clay L. ChandlerPhilosophical Christian Apology Meets “Rational” Mormon Theology
L. Rex SearsOn “Defense of Marriage” A Reply to Quinn
Armand L. MaussIn a reply to Quinn’s article in the same issue, Armand Mauss questioned whether the church was motivated by homophobia or a more benevolent force.
Prelude to the National “”Defense of Marriage”” Campaign: Civil Discrimination Against Feared or Despised Minorities
D. Michael QuinnThis is an early 50+ page article documenting LDS political activity in the 1990s on same-sex marriage, culminating in Prop 22. Quinn’s explanation was that homophobia provided the best explanation for LDS prejudice against same-sex…
David O. McKay and Blacks: Building the Foundation for the 1978 Revelation
Gregory A. PrinceA Voice from the Land of Zion: Elder Erastus Snow in Denmark 1850 to 1852
Val G. HemmingThe Danish Genesis of Virginia Sorensen’s Lotte’s Locket
Susan Elizabeth HoweEggertsen Men: Male Family Influences in Virginia Sorensen’s Kingdom Come and the Evening and the Morning
Sue SaffleHistory, Memory and Imagination in Virginia Eggertsen Sorensen’s Kingdom Come
William MulderKeepsakes
Steven CantwellOn the day of her funeral, my mother’s two sister-wives put on a dinner in her honor. Sister Karen and Sister Sharlene spent the morning before the services baking pies and fresh bread, making potato…
Grandpa and the Petrified Oysters
Charles ThompsonWhenever I visited my grandparents, I always knew where to check for Granddad. As a means of escaping household routine, he maintained a remote kingdom, a long shed deep in the interior of the backyard…
Our Big Fat Temple Weddings: Who’s In, Who’s Out, and How We Get Together
David G. PaceBelonging
Lisa Torcasso DowningMind, Body, and the Boundary Waters
Susan Sessions RughGrandpa’s Visit
Patti HanksCemetery Life
Kylie Nielson TurleyScenes from the Movie
Kim SimpsonPlinka, Plinka, Plinka
Bessie Loyd Soderborg ClarkWhat You Don’t Know
Melody WarnickThe Homecoming
Aaron OrullianElder Jeff Lee Johnson came home on January 24 at 2:14 in the afternoon. The plane had made its way north all that day, stopping in Miami, then Atlanta before finally arriving six minutes ahead…
Toward a “”Marriage Group”” of Contemporary Mormon Short Stories
B. W. JorgensenThanksgiving
Angela HallstromBeth: Listening “Take care,” says my Grandma Tess. She is the first one to leave after Thanksgiving dinner because she can’t drive at night. She’s got two hours’ driving to do, south to Salt Lake.…
Brown
Charmayne Gubler WarnockI’m mostly brown. I have brown hair and, in summer, brown skin. It’s not a pretty golden brown like the models in the tanning lotion ads. It’s a kind of ashy, dirty brown. My eyes…
Miracle
Eric SamuelsenLucille Wentworth sat in her working on her cross-stitch, watching Judy and Ray hold hands, sitting across from her on the couch. It was late, past one; they’d talked for hours, the conversation flowing around…
’Atta Boy
Kristen CarsonLatham Runyon wondered what time he ought to close his window. It was going to be a tongue-hanger today. But for now, the morning was still dewy and bearable. He pulled his half-glasses up to…
Homecomings
Larry DayAt Eastside School in Idaho Falls, they gave us a full hour for lunch; and like most of the kids, I went home each day. Mom always had my lunch ready. I’d gulp it down…
White Shell
Arianne Baadsgaard CopeThere are pieces of white shell sifted with the sands and soils of Dinetah that confuse newcomers and outsiders. Tourists look at the shells like puzzle pieces, trying to force them into what they know.…
Heloise and Abelard
Coby Fletcher“We’ll get there by ten.” Nod and look behind, dance a quickstep ahead of the noise of a thousand feet on the wet pavement of Liege. Feels strange to be thrown into a world you’re…
En Route: A Journey of the Spirit
L. Jackson NewellSister Love
Susan Morgan“You’re acting like a child,” said Karen. “I’m not,” said Lynn, and looked with determination at her dinner plate. She could feel Karen’s anger vibrating against her skin. “Oh, don’t talk to me—” Lynn glanced…
Follow Me, Boys
Kristen CarsonThe station hall echoed with the rumble of waiting buses every time the door opened. The restroom door squeaked. A mother on the far row of chairs scolded her child—“Don’t climb on that!”—as her breasts…
Frau Ruster and the Cure for Cognitive Dissonance
Roger TerryDepression and the Brethren of the Priesthood
Mack PattenSeeds of Faith in City Soil: Growing Up Mormon in New York City
Neylan McBaineThe Blessing
Larry DayYou never can tell what April is going to be like in Boise. Sometimes you get sunshine, sometimes you get rain, and sometimes you get blizzards that roar out of the canyons. I died in…
Entertaining Angels Unaware
Laura McCune-PoplinLucy hated arguing with her companion in public, even though they argued in English so most people couldn’t understand what they were saying, and those who did could probably care less. They didn’t argue often,…
The Beings I Love Are Creatures
Kate HolbrookA Visit for Tregan
Jack HarrellTregan Weaver was driving home from Madison High in his little black CRX on the first warm day of spring in Rexburg, Idaho. The trees along Main Street were in blossom, the lawns were turning…
Gentle Persuasions
William MorrisI I often went with my father on home teaching visits when I was ten and eleven. I don’t remember why his companions were never around. I suppose they were inactive. Back then, inactivity wasn’t…
Buildings
Tona J. HangenMay Many Phoenixes Rise
Allison PingreeA Deep Reverence in My Heart; Part of Our Family
Clayton ChristensenLooked like a Church, Sounded like a Church; How Beautiful Our Waters of Mormon
Molly BennionMove Back in a Heartbeat
Marilyn Lee BrownThe Bonds Endure; Freudian Analysis of Lehi’s Dream
Jim JohnstonTribute to a Building; Giving Church a Try
Arthur ShekNot Different from My Home
Katsu FunaiEqually Warm, Whether Empty or Full
Aja Fegert EyreNot the Building
Erin L. CrowleyAn Anchor for Me
Paula Kelly CaryotakisMatzoh for Sacrament
Steve RowleyTen Fictions about My Father
Nathan Robison1 First he went down to Pappy’s pasture. The pasture was a strip of marshy land down the hill from our house, sandwiched by the inter state and train tracks where Pappy kept his cows.…
Hurt or Make Afraid
Samuel M. BrownWe’ll find the place which God for us prepared, In His house full of light, Where none shall come to hurt or make afraid; There the saints will shine bright. William Clayton, 1846 I’m cold. We’ve been walking…
Fish Stories
Annette HawsAlthough it had never been formally declared or written in cursive on a piece of parchment, Jolene understood her place in the family hierarchy. She was right there between the ancient golden retriever and the…
That the Glory of God Might Be Manifest
W. Paul ReeveToward a Post-Heterosexual Mormon Theology
Taylor G. PetreyDialogue 44.4 (Winter 2011): 106–141
From Editor Taylor Petrey: “Toward a Post-heterosexual Mormon Theology” was actually the first major article I ever published. I did not know what to expect, but it ended up being a widely discussed piece, accessed tens of thousands of times. To this day I still receive notes of appreciation for this article.
Bones Heal Faster: Spousal Abuse in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Terence L. DayKaty, My Sister
Jenn AshworthWe didn’t have much stuff when we moved into the new place. Not carpets or a dining table, or even curtains or beds at first. My dad must have thought if we weren’t allowed our…