Last week, my daughter and I spent several days in Idaho helping some of my siblings clean out my mom’s house. It has been almost five months since she passed away, and it is time to make some decisions about the future.
As you can imagine, it was a very emotional time. The main purpose of the trip, for all of us, was to sort through and pick up family and sentimental items, in order to distribute them to various family members.
For many reasons, I’m grateful to have so many siblings (I have seven), not the least of which is because it makes projects like this easier. While I found that tackling boxes of family memories was too much for me most of the time, my younger sister loved it. As she unpacked photos and family heirlooms, she was invigorated and excited about the contents.
In 2004, when I turned sixteen and should have been experiencing my junior year in high school, my parents had just ended a messy divorce. We were living in hiding from my dad and were experiencing homelessness for the second time. Just after my birthday and almost exactly twenty years ago to the day, we were taken in by a man named Lynn Steadman and his wife, Susan. My mom had met Lynn at a business conference about a year before and had stayed in touch with him. He and his wife were sod farmers in Raft River, Idaho—an area so small that the addresses are found by their postal routes rather than their house number. Although the Steadmans weren’t wealthy, through years of hard work and after raising their family, they had been able to build a beautiful home on a hill with a basement large enough to house our raggedy family for several months.
I will never forget the time we spent living with the Steadmans. At first, I was afraid of Lynn. I had grown up with a violent and mentally ill father and did not have much exposure to loving, patient, and caring male mentors. His unwavering kindness soon set me straight, and my family and I came to love and admire both him and Susan, and treasure their friendship.
Thankfully, they not only put up with but welcomed our crazy bunch to their home. We would clean up and sleep in their basement each night and then in the morning, my mom would load us all up in the car and drive the thirty or so miles north to Burley, where we would hang out at the park, buy grocery store food with our food stamps, and try to figure out the next steps for our family.
Eventually, another kind couple we attended church with offered for us to move into a vacant home they owned on a beet farm north of Rupert. We moved in just before Thanksgiving and I got enrolled in the local high school for choir and seminary (a religious class to learn the scriptures). The next year, I went back to school fulltime. Our homeless experience ended there, and although the places my family lived for the next several years were not what you would call luxurious (“sub-standard” was the way my aunt put it), at least they were ours.
As I mentioned at the beginning, I don’t tend to spend too much time thinking about this specific time in my life, but when my sister brought me the photo, some of it came back. Specifically, I remember standing on the Steadman’s porch while one of them took that photo of us, feeling guilty that my family needed so much help and embarrassed that we were the way we were. When we moved from their home, I vowed to do everything I could to someday become like them—to have a heart that would see the needs of others, a home to shelter them in, and selflessness enough to do something like that for someone else.
Miraculously, just a short 18-months later, I was given the opportunity to start on that path. Through what I can only describe as a series of miracles, I was accepted to study at Brigham Young University (BYU) in Provo, Utah, and offered a half-tuition needs-based scholarship. On top of the government grant I also received for school and the part-time early-morning custodial job I got, I was able to go to school and attempt a different path.
The difference that opportunity made in my life (and the subsequent miracles, opportunities, and angels working in my life thereafter, too), cannot be overstated. I would not be where I am today without it, and especially the generous donors to my college aid program. Their influence in my life was like Lynn and Susan’s—they helped save me, and I want to pay them back.
When I entered college, I made a promise to myself to one day fund a scholarship at BYU, which I want to call the “Lynn and Susan Steadman” award. I’m not quite there yet, but each time I am able to make a donation to someone’s college education, I feel a deep sense of gratitude for all the angels who helped—and continue to help—me along the rough roads of life. Their positive influence changed my story, and I hope to someday be found among their likes for someone else. I hope you will, too.
Thanks for reminiscing with me.
Happy legacy-leaving,
Kasia
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