Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Story of Isaac and the Teebles Family-Stake Youth Pioneer Trek 2013


Written by Bishop A. Kelsey Chatfield, June 2013

I was assigned as an uncle to a handcart trek family made up of Ma and Pa Teebles (a really great couple from a neighboring ward) and 11 youth of varying ages.  One of the young men was a 320 pound high school senior named Isaac who plays line for his high school football team.  Isaac was great right from the start, being front and center on the handcart and doing lots of hard pushing on the first day.  At that point none of the rest of the Teebles family really knew him or each other, but we quickly came to admire Isaac’s quick smile and his willingness to do a lot of pushing that first day, when we were scheduled to go about 10 miles.
Isaac maybe did too much that day; by about mile 7 he was really red faced and sweaty, and he asked if he could just walk instead of pushing.  He then began to drop back, walking very slowly.  Turned out that he had both heat exhaustion and was getting big sores on his legs from chafing.  Our stake first aid person finally decided to put him in a support vehicle to let him cool off and to give his raw legs a break.

That night Isaac did a good job of forcing fluids and taking it easy, and by the morning of day 2 he said he felt pretty well.  It was decided that he should ride in the vehicle until lunch time at least.  By afternoon he was walking with the family again, but was going slowly and was not pushing the cart.  But as the Teebles family continued to bond, he was right in the middle of all the trail talk and evening activities.

On day 3 Isaac walked the whole day with the family and took a few turns on handcart pushing and was otherwise like any other part of the family.  In the afternoon we stopped and set up camp, then had pioneer games against other trek families.  Isaac was pretty good at log sawing and cheered the rest of the family on at other games, but really came into his own in the stick pull competition.  He quickly threw all comers and qualified for the camp-wide stick pull.  With 200 youth gathered around, Isaac easily won his quarterfinal and semifinal matches, with our family cheering him on.  He ended up losing the final match and placing second, but he had solidly established himself as a strong man in the camp and as a favorite in the Teebles handcart family.  That night in our family testimony meeting, Isaac bore humble testimony of Christ and His church, and of the love he felt for, and from, his handcart family.  Others bore similar testimony.

At the start of the last day of our trek (because he felt better, but probably also because he was now a camp strongman), Isaac was back pulling the handcart with all of his great strength.  That was OK for the cool morning hours and the first few miles, but after a couple of serious uphill stretches and in the heat of the day, Isaac sadly reported that his chafing was very bad again, and that he needed to drop back and ride with the support vehicle again.  In a quiet voice Pa Teebles said that that was not the way that family does it, and he ordered 320 pound Isaac to climb up on top of the gear in the handcart, that his family would take him home.  After much urging, Isaac clambered up on the handcart and found a way to settle in.  At that point 3 miles and some very steep hills were between us and the end of the handcart trek.

Once we began to pull, Isaac again began to worry that he was burdening the family too much, especially seeing the big hill that we were nearing.  Pa Teebles had the answer for that too.  When we got to the bottom of the hill (and after 25+ miles of handcart trekking over 4 days, including a few hard hours that morning), out of nowhere our Pa yelled, “let’s run to the top!,” surprising the rest of the family and jerking the handcart as he started to run.  We all followed, and someone even started yelling, causing all the rest of the family to yell too.  Bouncing and rattling, up that steep hill like crazy people we ran, and over the yelling you could hear Isaac laughing and yelling too.

Word began to spread up the handcart company of Isaac’s wild ride and the Teebles family togetherness, and soon other families began to send one of their strong people back to help push our handcart.  The young man that beat Isaac in the stick pull finals even helped on the last stretch.  The last mile I simply walked beside the handcart because there were so many people pushing it that there literally was not a place to get a hand on the cart to help push.  Up on top, Isaac smilingly rode like a king.

There were lots of great opportunities to feel the Spirit and to learn during our youth conference handcart trek, but one of the best happened last.



No comments:

Post a Comment