Tuesday, September 20, 2011

A Mother's Thoughts

These are the thoughts that I prepared to be read at Ashleigh's funeral, by my friend Lola Stansfield. I was tempted, briefly, to "edit" my writing (which I hope has improved through the years), but decided that it should be printed just as I wrote it twenty years ago.

It's hard to know where to begin when I talk about my Ashleigh. If you will just let me share with you for a few minutes some of my feelings about her maybe you will be able to understand in a small way what a great joy she has been to me and what a privilege and honor it is for me to be her Mother.

Ashleigh was a precious gift to me from my Heavenly Father. She was an answer to my prayers. This past year we have been hoping and praying for a miracle, but I have seen many miracles this year. I have seen the miracle of friendship, of sisterhood, of service given freely, of extended family bonding together all because of one little girl. I have seen the miracle of love. The unconditional love our Saviour has for each of us. That is the love that Ashleigh has for me. That is the love she has for her daddy and for her boys.

Ashleigh is such an important part of our family. She's our little Princess. She always loved to get dressed up pretty. On Sundays if she had on a new dress, she always came into the living room to twirl for her daddy and her boys. The boys used to sing to her, "Isn't she lovely, isn't she beautiful." or "hey, did you happen to see the most beautiful girl in the world, and if you did was it Ashleigh?"

You can see the boys love Ashleigh just as much as she loves them. When I asked my Heavenly Father to send me a daughter, I explained to him that I wanted my boys to have a sister in the home so that they would learn how important it is for them to honor the daughters of our Heavenly Father. They treated their sister the way a precious daughter of our Father should be treated.

There's always a special relationship between a daddy and his little girl, and Ashleigh was very smart. She knew she had a good thing going. Michael did everything he could for his little girl and more. If you came to our house on an evening you'd probably see Mike laying on the floor and Ashleigh sitting on his back reaching over his shoulder into a bowl of popcorn.

Occasionally Ashleigh and I would take a day off and go on the road with Mike to Preston, Idaho. While he visited his stores the two of us would visit our favorite stores. Mine was the craft store and Ashleigh's was the basement of King's. That was where they kept all of the toys.

Michael understood the special relationship that Ashleigh and I had also. He never denied me the joys of spoiling myself with frivolities for Ashleigh. If I came home from shopping and showed him a pair of Osh Kosh socks I'd spent $5 on just because they matched the outfit perfectly, he never complained. He just laughed and said, "Oh, won't my little girl make a fashion statement."

At the end of July he supported me patiently as I insisted on painting and re-carpeting Ashleigh's bedroom. It made me happy to see my little girls room, the way I'd always wanted it to look. I wanted it to be a beautiful room for angels to visit.

Ashleigh and I used to sit in the living room, and Mike would be on the floor or the couch, and I would point to him and say, "he's mine." Her eyes would light up and she'd say, "he's mine."

"He's my Babycakes." I'd say.

"No, he's my Babycakes." She'd reply.

After going back and forth a few times, the two of us would jump up and see who could get to him first, and we'd kiss him and hug him, and Mike would go along with the game by trying to decide who he belonged to.

Sometimes Ashleigh started the game first and sometimes I would. And then there were those days when Ashleigh would start, "he's mine" and I would say, "you can have him."

Can anyone in the ward forget the day that Becky and I sang, and Ashleigh and Morgan came up on the stand to entertain you? Poor Becky, they were standing right next to her, laughing and waving at the congregation. When I realized what was happening, I just looked at the music and thought, "just a few more lines and it's over." I could already feel the laughter rising in my throat. Ashleigh had a great love for Becky and Morgan.

Ashleigh used to say, "I love this" or "I don't love that." She didn't usually use the word like. One night Mike, Ashleigh and I were over at the Johnson's. We had been eating some treats and as we were leaving Steve picked up a piece of half eaten candy and said, "someone didn't love this."

I used to say to people, "I can't believe I got a girl, and a good one too." And she was good. She always obeyed me. When I lay in her bed with her at night, my favorite story to tell her was how I prayed to Heavenly Father for a baby girl, and that she was the baby girl I prayed for. That I wanted her to be a kind girl and to love others. She was a very kind girl and she did love others.

Sometimes you may hear me say that I have a family of fussy eaters. Ashleigh always ate everything I put in front of her and she always used a "dingelhopper."

There have been times this past year that Ashleigh sometimes showed bad behavior, maybe a little bit of a temper. She didn't want her mommy to leave her. Often times I took her with me wherever I went, and sometimes if I left alone, Mike ended up bringing her to me.

She went through as lot for a little girl. She didn't understand what was happening to her. She was frightened, and fought this sickness from the very beginning. While in the hospital last year she looked at me and said, "ohhh... what a day!"

Ashleigh has a great love for all of her family. At Christmastime, I asked her Grandpa Leger if he would build a little crib for her doll, Comfort. We went to the store (Leger's Deli) in Park City one day and Grandpa had the crib finished and in a box. We tried to sneak it in the car and Ashleigh said, "is that my Comfort's bed?"

She loved to play with her cousins, particularly those closest to her (age); Russell, Melissa and Ammanda. She loved her cousin Christopher. I tended him for a while and the two of them were quite a pair. They used to watch videos, and one day the two of them were sitting in front of the TV watching Alice in Wonderland. Ashleigh pointed to the TV and said, "look, a fafa fly." Christopher turned to look at Ashleigh with a disgusted look on his face and said, "that's not a fafa fly, it's a butterfly, look a pink butterfly and a blue butterfly."

It broke my heart when Christopher passed away nearly two years ago. My cousin passed away when I was a child and I missed the friendship that we could have had, and now Ashleigh would grow up missing that too. But Ashleigh and Christopher are together now, and that thought has made it easier for me to let her go.

When Christopher's baby sister was born last October, I told Ashleigh she needed to take care of Tara because that's what Christopher wanted her to do. If anyone talked about babies around Ashleigh, she would say, "my baby is Tara." Even at the beginning of July, as she rapidly lost her speech, I would ask "Ashleigh, who's your baby?" and she would say, "Tara."

Ashleigh loved her friends. All last winter she talked about her birthday, and we planned to have a party with her friends. As her birthday approached, I knew her tumor was back, and I prayed, "Heavenly Father, please let her have her birthday." Her birthday came, her friends came, we had fun. She could hardly walk by then, but she was content and happy watching her friends have fun. The night of her birthday I prayed, "Heavenly Father, she's had her birthday, if you want her now, you can have her." But our Heavenly Father does everything in his own time. He knows His plan, he allowed us to have Ashleigh a while longer, so that we could learn true service and what it means to endure to the end, and what it means to love unconditionally.

We were able to take Ashleigh to California in June. Many of our extended family went and we had a great trip. On the way down we stopped to spend the night at the Peppermill. I took Ashleigh to the pools for a short time, but then the two of us returned to our room alone. It had been a long day of driving and Ashleigh was hot. As she lay on the bed I became scared, and I thought, "what have I done, I'm out here in the middle of the desert with a sick child and I don't even know where a hospital is." So I got down on my knees and said, "Heavenly Father I'm scared, my Ashleigh has a fever and I'm out here in the middle of nowhere. I'm just a mother asking you to make my baby well, and to let us have this trip we all need." Her fever went away.

The next day our drive to the beach house went great. Our entire week was uneventful and we had a marvelous trip together. My Ashleigh-O never complained. She sat patiently in the beach house waiting for any one of us to take her to the beach. On the beach we would sit her in a lounge chair with an umbrella to shade her, she'd sit there for hours, happy to watch the rest of us romp and play.

She was unable to sit up very well without her back supported, sometimes Granpa Marsden would dig a little hole in the sand and set her in it, and build the sand up to her waist to help support her. He's give her a bucket and spade to dig in the sand.

She tried so hard to communicate with us, but her speech was becoming very slow and slurred. She would say, "I want a..." but at times we couldn't understand the rest, so we'd run around the beach house, pointing at things until her face would break out in a grin and we knew we had the right thing.

I used to love to say, "I love you Ashleigh." Because when I did she always grinned and she said, "I love you too." When we drove in the car with just the two of us, often times we would be holding hands. I remember one day the two of us were driving to Preston with Mike, and we were enjoying our conversation. Mike got a little excited as he talked and Ashleigh misinterpreted his tone as anger. She said, "daddy don't get mad at my best friend."

Ashleigh is indeed my best friend. Our relationship has been very special. She has been my constant companion for four years, four months and four days. We loved to go shopping, to lunch, to go on walks, and to sing songs. We did everything together.

This last year has been a happy one. Our Heavenly Father was watching out for us. Our Christmas holiday was the best ever, our vacation as I have mentioned was wonderful. Ashleigh went through a lot for a little girl, nearly eight weeks of radiation therapy on a daily basis, three MRI's, and brown medicine. Ashleigh fought it the whole way. She also went through eye surgery, wore eye patches and glasses.

One day in the early stages of radiation I became frustrated. She wasn't cooperating. I couldn't get her to understand I was fighting for her very life. I said to her, "if you don't do it for yourself, do it for the loved ones in your life." She went through all that for me, because she loved me. Just so I could have her for a while longer.

We never told Ashleigh what the doctor told us. I didn't feel it was necessary to explain that to a three-year-old. I don't regret it now. I had to prepare her in my own way. Remembering I've always held fast to my faith that my Heavenly Father could heal her if it was His will. I taught her that Heavenly Father and Jesus love her. I taught her to pray to Heavenly Father and ask him to "make a me better."

These last couple of months as she lay semi-comatose, I talked to her. I told her it was okay if she had to leave me, that I wanted her to be with me, but if she had to go, I would be okay. And I am. Heavenly Father has made her better, he has given her the greatest gift of all, eternal life in the Celestial Kingdom. She has earned it, she deserves it. And we must all remember that she is His Ashleigh too, she was His Ashleigh first.

I could talk about Ashleigh all day, please let me. When you see me, don't be afraid to approach me. If I want to talk about her sometime, please just listen for a few moments. I want to share her with you. You all have seen how special she is.

Families please love each other. It is Heavenly Father's plan that we be in family groups, that is so important. On Tuesday night when Mike and I and the boys were alone together for the first time that day, we went into Ashleigh's bedroom. I pointed to her beautiful dresses hanging in the closet, to her toys, to all the beautiful things I have collected for her. I said, "boys, Ashleigh didn't take any of these things with her. These things are just objects, they are not important."

Yes, brothers and sisters we do enjoy our things, and some of them are important to us, but not if we put them ahead of our Heavenly Father, ahead of doing those things that we should be doing to ensure our place in the Celestial Kingdom. In closing, I would like to share a poem written for me by someone dear to me and to Ashleigh.

Answer to Prayer
by Terri Johnson

"Dear Father, please send me the gift I desire,"
Her plea from God's temple was heard.
An earnest petition from a daughter of faith
humbly taken before the Lord.

"My daughter," He answered, I've heard your prayer.
And your righteous desire will be.
I'm sending to you the most precious of gifts,
A daughter for eternity."

The grateful young mother held tight in her arms
a bundle more priceless than gold.
"Dear Father, I thank thee for answer to prayer.
I thank thee for this daughter to hold."

Then, another prayer from the temple was heard.
This one came with faith greater still.
"Dear Father, I place her life in thy hands,
Please help me to know thy will."

Heavy rains fell and all nature mourned,
as Father, Himself must have wept.
The gift given here could no longer remain.
She was peacefully called home while she slept.

The gift still remains that he promised to her,
for eternally she will be theirs.
And comfort He sends as He cradles the child
who taught them of answers to prayers.

I look forward to the day when my Heavenly Father puts my child back in my arms, and then I will sigh as Ashleigh did, and say, "Ohhh... what a day."


6 comments:

Bea said...

How can a comment be made? I don't know.
I'm just glad you posted this and have kept it over the years. Precious thoughts.
A precious Mother's tribute for a special daughter.
Yes "families are forever"

Terri said...

I wept then and now. She IS yours forever! A gift of love and faith. You are a wondeful mother...wife, grandma, & friend!

Melwel said...

Tears....you are the best to share this with all of us. I Remember that beautiful funeral clearly.
Love you.

Melissa said...

I felt very raw as I read this. Now that I understand the sacred, beautiful moments between a mother and daughter I feel so tender towards you as I read your blog. I haven't usually commented on this blog but I've read each post. There are just no words to describe the tenderness that I feel as you open up about this devastating and sacred time. You are such a good mother. You are also a great aunt to me :) Love you!

Pamela Shaw said...

Lesley, Thanks so much for sharing. You and Mike are so truly blessed to have such a sweet daughter. Your story's have filled me with faith. Love you Pam

Margie said...

Wow Les!! Thanks for sharing this again with us. What a beautiful tribute from a beautiful woman to a beautiful daughter. I love you Les!