About JA Benson

Joanna entered the world as a BYU baby. Continuing family tradition, she graduated BYU with a degree in Elementary Education and taught for several years. Growing up in Salt Lake County, her favorite childhood hobbies were visiting cemeteries and eavesdropping on adult conversations. Her ancestral DNA is multi-ethnic and she is Mormon pioneer stock on every familial line. Joanna resides in the Southeastern USA with her five children ranging in age from 8 to 24. Her husband passed away in 2009. She is an avid reader and a student of history. Her current intellectual obsession is Sephardic Jewish history, influence and genealogy. She served as a board member for her local chapter of Families with Children from China. She is the author of “DNA Mormons?” Summer Sunstone 2007 http://www.bycommonconsent.com/2007/04/dna-mormons/ and “Becoming Hong Mei`s Mother” in the Winter Sunstone 2009 http://theredbrickstore.com/sunstone/becoming-hong-meis-mother/.

I Hope They Call Me on a Mission So I Can Date a Babe or Two

News Flash…

 Entertainer Steve Martin has joined the LDS Church!

 Proctor and Gamble, Inc. has close ties with the Church of Satan!!

 Remember when you heard these stories? Maybe for a moment, you might even been suckered in and believed one or both of these urban myths. Truth be told, the Steve Martin story had me going for a day, but Church of Satan with Proctor and Gamble not so much.  There is another urban myth circulating about missionaries who work hard on their missions who will be blessed with a super gorgeous babe wife.  Ok, I see you rolling your eyes at me.  I will now illustrate the impact of this seemingly harmless Mormon urban myth with some true to life stories. Now put on your thinking caps, questions will be asked… here we go.

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Tears in Heaven: A LDS Perspective on Stillborn and Miscarried Babies

I have a box tucked in the back of a closet with his sonogram, a white Winnie the Pooh onsie he never wore, a statue of a baby angel, a sympathy card and the book Gone to Soon: The Life and Loss of Infants and Unborn Children by Sherri Devashrayee Wittwer. There is no other earthly record of his short life. Some might even debate whether he had been a life at all. Continue reading

Film Review: Slumdog Millionaire

Critics have accurately called Slumdog Millionaire a masterpiece and a hymn. Director Danny Boyle’s Slumdog Millionaire is a modern day fairytale set in Mumbai, India. Slumdog Millionaire explodes with rich cinematography revealing the horrific vibrant tapestry of the Indian slums.

Jamal Malik, an uneducated eighteen-year-old Muslim orphan, has survived a lifetime of deprivation in the most gut-wrenching poverty imaginable. Young Jamal searches for his childhood sweetheart Latika. A stroke of good luck propels him onto the Indian version of the TV game show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire. As the time clock ticks loudly, and each question answered, a nervous Jamal finds himself on the edge of winning an astounding twenty million rupees. Jamal’s success results in accusations of cheating. During police questioning, Jamal reveals his hope is not the jackpot, but of finding Latika who is his destiny.

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Called to Serve: Red-Shirting Kindergarten for a Mission

 I taught elementary school for a number of years and observed, while teaching in Texas, parents deliberately holding their boys back a year to give them the advantage of size in sports participation.

Sports reasons not withstanding; is there a trend, in the North American LDS church community to red-shirt* five year old boys with an additional year in Pre-Kindergarten; when they are otherwise ready to attend Kindergarten for reasons to do with serving a mission?

Jared** is a four, almost five year old LDS boy, who is attending a Christian based Pre-Kindergarten program in our small southern town. Jared, unlike most of his peers, will not start Kindergarten in August. Jared’s teacher Miss Mamie** was understandably perplexed as to the reason behind this decision. Miss Mamie believed Jared could attend with his peers and do just fine. Miss Mamie went to Jared’s parents for an explanation. Jared’s parents told Miss Mamie they were thinking ahead to fourteen years in the future when young Jared would be nineteen.

Starting Jared in Kindergarten when he was six rather than five, would delay his graduation from high school just as he turned nineteen. Theoretically Jared would march to Pomp and Circumstance straight on into the MTC.

I have witnessed nineteen-year-old young men, who have left for missions the summer after their senior year in high school. However these young men were held back as five year olds because of readiness issues. Similar to the sports minded parents in Texas, is there now a trend to red-shirt five year olds for missions?

I can clearly see the advantages in the argument to hold back for a mission. The biggest advantage would be avoiding the freshman year away in college with the temptations any young man would surely encounter. Perhaps you like me, have observed many a nice young man who after a year away from college came home full of sin, debauchery, and maybe remorse.

I also see the disadvantages. My younger brother, who served in the Toronto, Canada mission in the early 1990’s shares the opinion of his mission President, who believed a year away from home attending college was the best training for a prospective Elder. It was this year away from home the young man learned to sink or swim. This mission President believed it was better for missionary service if the young man learned adult responsibility on his own rather than on the Lord’s time. This particular mission President also believed Elders with a year of college had learned the study skills necessary to be an effective missionary right out of the MTC.

So, in your humble opinion, dear reader, do you think a year in college before a mission is an advantage? Or do you think the temptations a prospective Elder will likely encounter during the year between 18-19 is just not worth the risk?

Finally is red-shirting LDS five year olds a trend or a rare anomaly?

Inquiring minds want to know.

 *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redshirt_(college_sports)

**The names have been changed to protect the innocent