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| Driving route from Provo to Riverton (North is up). Wasatch Front seen on the right, and Point of the Mountain is in the top central part of the photo. |
Do not misunderstand me. I am most definitely not a mountain biker. There have been many small communities build in the Traverse Range recently, and so there is a paved highway winding up to the top and back down again. However, it is a 2,000 foot elevation gain in not very much distance, which was much more than I had ever attempted before. All this after riding 20 miles just to get to the base. So I decided to try it, and if I couldn't make it over the top then I would come down and get to Riverton the low way.
Off I went on Friday at about 11:00, and I could not have wished for a more beautiful ride. It was a clear, sunny day, the road wove largely along a canal road with the mountains towering to the right and views of the lake to the left. I rode 20 miles and was already feeling fairly exhausted. Then I saw the mountain in front of me and started the long trudge up them.
It was every bit as hard as I thought it would be, but nothing like I expected. A wrenching burn with every turn of the wheel, and I was in such a low gear that progress was barely faster than walking. I was looking at each bush several feet ahead, pushing myself just to reach that one goal--and then picking a new goal another several feet ahead. There were several large, sweeping curves that I passed, eagerly wondering if I was at the top--to realize I still had a ways to go.
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| The winding road going from bottom right to top left is Traverse Ridge Road. It gains 2,000' in about 2 miles, then quickly loses it all in the same distance on the way back down. |
This was an example to me of just how much God loves me. He had given me a wonderful experience, something amazing and practically perfect to me that I could remember all my life. We don't need to be perfect, or even all that great, for God to bless us. We just need to be trying our very best to pass the tests that He gives us to make us into better people.
It doesn't ever really matter at what point we are in our journey--or even, for that matter, what our specific path is. We may be the holiest and closest to God you can be, or we may be just beginning to get to know God--we may be just emerging or attempting to emerge from a terrible addiction, or we may be striving to make little changes to be better each day--God does not love any of us less or more than the others. We do receive more and more blessings the closer we grow to God, but it does not matter how recently you turned to God or how much more of your journey to Him still remains. What matters is which direction you are going.
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| The view as I was coming down from Traverse Ridge Road, going north into Draper. |
I cannot make a mountain, or a lung, or a flower, or a giraffe. Heavenly Father is obviously SO much smarter than I am. He has perfect intelligence. Amazingly, too, He has perfect kindness, which is why we can absolutely trust Him. If we choose to do His will instead of ours He will give us so much more happiness and growth than we could ever get by working on our own. This will always be true. Following God's will instead of our own will lead to much greater happiness than we could ever obtain on our own.
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| Along the Murdock Canal trail before getting to Riverton. |
Lately, though, with plenty of hiccups, I have become slowly better at accepting God's will, of trying to do what He wants with a good attitude, trying to learn whatever I can from the experience, be it lots of homework, helping someone out, or something truly tragic like going shopping. And I have learned from this that following God's will, even when it does not align with mine, definitely will bring me the most joy. Cheerfully following God's is so miraculous that it can turn a torture-ridden shopping trip into a fun date night with my wife.
The more we follow God's will, the more we will have challenges, but the more and greater rewards we will have as well. For example, on Friday I went to climb the Lake Mountains, which is the mountain range just to the west of Utah Lake. That was another perfect experience--a beautiful walk alone through an amazing land, an incredibly clear sky, and some of the best views I had ever had in Utah, with the whole Wasatch range and more laid out before me. I feel like that experience might not have happened, or might not have been nearly so good, if I had not been setting my goals and trying to align my will to God's.
Jesus Christ, in speaking to the prophet Moroni in the Book of Mormon, said, "If men come unto me I will show unto them their weaknesses." That's a scary thought, isn't it? If we grow close to God, we will see our failings, and exactly what we need to improve on will be laid before us. But then the Lord says, "If they humble themselves before me, and have faith in me, then will I make weak things become strong unto them." God shows us our weaknesses so we can do something about them. And then He helps us to do it. I know that our weaknesses will become glorious strengths, and we will be happier, better, higher-quality people if we every day seek to align our wills more closely and completely to God's.
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| View from Israel Canyon (Lake Mountains Communication Road) looking east at Timpanogos (right) and Box Elder Peak (left) |






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