Barefoot at the shoreline
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My Story

5/26/2015

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I have always been an optimist, it’s the way I choose to view life. I like to feel good and I like to help others feel and see good in themselves as well. Smiling, teasing, and laughing with my family and friends is something I enjoy most about this life. This attribute was definitely a gift from God, for this optimism has helped me conquer many hard things in this life. Heavenly Father obviously knew what I would be going through and He gave me this blessing in disguise that I have been able to use to help me through hard times.

I think back to the time I was 5 and I hadn’t quite understood that my Mom remarried. Our father at that time had left our family for our nanny. I just remember being excited that I had a new father and that we got to move to a new home. When I was 15 I was involved in a roll-over car accident. I was life-flighted to Primary Children’s Hospital where they diagnosed me with Pancreatitis and I found out my dear friend had passed away in that accident. The blame on myself, the physical pain I felt (that still continues today) and the heartache that wrenched within me was very difficult to handle, but I remember holding fast to the Gospel. Being blessed with a high spirit, I grew from that experience and was able to see the light in such a dark time. I accepted what happened and earnestly tried looking for the good, even when as a young teenager, it was the hardest thing that had ever happened to me thus far. Towards the end of my Junior Year in High School I remember getting ready for a date in my parents bathroom when, my Dad I grew up with, walked in and started throwing all of his belongings in a suit case. He said he couldn’t do it anymore and he was leaving. I remember following him around the house as he started gathering up all of his stuff crying, begging him to stop and stay. I ran to my brother, Jarom sleeping on the couch, grabbing him to tell him about our Dad. My brother didn’t want me to see my Dad leave anymore so he put me in my room, closed the door and had me talk to my other older brother on the phone while he tried to stop my Dad. I remember hyperventilating so badly that my brother on the phone made me say a prayer with him so he knew I wouldn’t pass out and that everything would be okay. When my Dad was gone Jarom came into my room, picked me up and held me tightly in his arms and together we cried. He kept whispering in my ear “Don’t let this tear our family apart, that’s what Satan wants”. My heart was racing so fast from my hard crying that my brother held me until our heart beats match up. I will never forget the love my brother had for me that night, but also the love Christ had for both of us. In such a difficult time, my family had never been stronger. My testimony of having a loving Heavenly Father who loved me grew over the next year as I made it through my Sr. year and prepared for college.

My first semester of college I attended BYU-Hawaii. I was extremely excited to attend a school that I felt like not only had culture, but was beautiful as well. I left for college a couple weeks earlier then the normal freshman would have to be able to find a job before the rush of students came. I packed my bags, said good bye to my family and began this whole new chapter of my life. Immediately stepping off the plane I felt this rush of excitement and peace like I knew this is where I was supposed to be and I couldn’t wait to begin the future I had planned out for myself! I was going to get a job dancing in the night show at the PCC, I grew up Polynesian dancing and it was always a dream of mine to dance there for school. I knew I was going to study Psychology. I got TBI from my car accident & I struggled with recovering over the last couple of years. I wanted to go into Psychology to become a therapist who helped struggling kids just like the one who helped me. I planned on going on a mission after my first year and then after my mission I had wanted to finish school back at BYU-H, get my masters at the U and then eventually get married. That was the plan. That’s what I felt determined to accomplish.

Within the first two weeks I was there I met lots of amazing people both on and off campus. I didn’t really know anybody when I first got to Hawaii and so I did lots of things on my own. I am a very independent person and I love time to myself, also meeting new people excites me, so it wasn’t that big of a deal to go off and venture alone. One day while at a local beach by myself I met a guy and we began talking. Instantly we hit it off and became friends. He invited me to do things with him and we grew close.  One particular night he picked me up to go to a party. He isn’t LDS and on the drive there we discussed the fact I was, we talked about my standards and we began arguing a little about a certain conflict. He became really upset and we didn’t talk the rest of the drive. Later that night at the party he pulled me aside and we began discussing the same argument we hadn’t finished earlier. I told him no multiple times on a certain issue and he left me alone mad. The party was getting pretty rowdy with lots of drunk people and so I left and walked to the lower part of the beach to be by myself.

I sat down in the sand, put my head down by my knees and began crying. Someone I came to have strong feelings for was angry with me because I wouldn’t give him something I wasn’t comfortable with. I felt stupid for not dating someone within my church standards, it might have been easier to deal with if we both understood why we didn’t do certain things. All I wanted to do was leave the BBQ and go back to my dorm.

 A couple minutes later I heard someone yelling from behind me. It was one of his drunk buddies that I had met once or twice at a couple of things, but I didn’t know him well. He was very drunk and I couldn’t quite make out his face at first because it was darker in the night. He hopped down the rocks and came at me quickly. I was very confused because even if he was drunk, surely he would still have seen me. Well I wasn’t wrong, he for sure saw me. He knew I was down there by myself, because he knew me and his friend just had another argument about the same thing and it was as if he was trying to defend his buddy for him. He seemed to be breathing heavier as he approached me and I stood up really confused as he was mocking me about something, but I couldn’t quite make out what he was trying to say. Out of nowhere he grabbed my hair and yanked it. I was confused and caught off guard as I fell to the ground and he pushed my body deeper into the sand. It took me a minute to process what was happening, what was going on? I had just been crying to myself and the next minute I was being thrown into the sand with this freak drunk on top of me and then it clicked what was happening.

I froze, it was like my whole body just broke, someone caught off my oxygen and I couldn’t breathe. My shorts were being pulled off and he was forcing himself on me. I couldn’t move. I didn’t fight. I did nothing. I couldn’t, my body wouldn’t respond. I literally couldn’t move a muscle. I automatically went numb. I was so scared and unsure if this was actually happening and I didn’t know what to do. I remember it was like a waterfall of tears were streaming down my face, but I didn’t scream, I just sobbed, it was just like tears coming out of my eyes and I remember hurting really bad, but it was like I wasn’t connecting with my body to move. I have never experienced fear like this in my whole entire life. I just remember this dark figure over me and pain shooting to my brain, but I was like a dead body that didn’t move. I’m not sure if I was even breathing, or even alive when it happened, I was so shocked with fear. I’m not even sure how long I laid there in the sand afterwards. I was terrified to move, to get up, to walk. Was he in the trees waiting again? I didn’t know what to do. I was so scared. It all just seemed so unrealistic, just a blur of clouded fear. Eventually my tears stopped and I felt like from that moment on so did my whole world.

I don’t remember when I finally made my way back to Laie and my dorm, but I remember laying in my bed and staring at the light bulb above my head in the ceiling. I stared at it for a couple of hours and I didn’t sleep. I didn’t do anything but lay there and stare. I couldn’t believe what had happened, I was so shocked. That night I decided to pretend it never happened. To not tell anyone and to never speak of it. Just pretend it didn’t happen. I put it in the back of my head and decided to pretend that everything was okay.

I was embarrassed and ashamed. I felt humiliated and disgusting. I felt so unworthy, gross and worthless. I felt like I couldn’t even be a part of the church anymore, I can’t even begin to explain to you the kind of person I felt I was. Around this time too I got released from my calling, because our President was moving out of our ward, so I didn’t really have a reason to attend church anymore. Or that’s what I was telling myself. Slowly I began to stop reading my scriptures or saying my prayers. I felt so unworthy to read them. I just remember telling myself that I couldn’t let anyone know or find out.

Eventually I started acting out in weird ways that I didn’t even realize. Because no one knew what had happened and I didn’t want anyone finding out I tried my hardest to prove to my close friends and my family back at home that everything was normal with me. I started shopping lots! I felt like if I had better clothes and bought things I loved it would make me feel better about myself. I blew so much money out in Hawaii, it was ridiculous. I was trying so hard to seem normal to my friends, that I had no idea that my emotions from my rape were coming out in different ways. I argued more with my family over the phone and fought constantly with my best friend back at home. I became very immodest. Buying and wearing things I normally would have never even thought to purchase and justified it all in my head. I started sleeping through my classes and if I wasn’t sleeping through them I was constantly late. My eating became really weird, sometimes not eating at all. My pancreas was really acting up and I threw up 1-2 times a day from all my stress. I began mocking other girls and making fun of all the couples I saw on campus. I thought that if I could get as far away from the girl I used to be then the rape never happened. That’s what I kept feeding to my conscious at least. Before I knew it I was the furthest thing away from the person I used to be and because of that, I made some awful decisions and drew further away from Christ.

Christmas break came and I went home. My family found the new “Kauri” strange. I was constantly looking at myself in the mirror and making sure I looked my very best. I became very vain. I fought a lot with my Mom and became very distant from my family, they knew something was wrong. One day my sister and Mom began talking to me and I finally broke, they found out the truth. I had been sexually abused. Together we all cried.

 Immediately I met with my Bishop, saw a Dr. and got into counseling. It was all very hard for me to take in, talk about and admit. I am always looking for a quick fix and trying to prove to others that I am okay, that I can do things on my own. I struggled deeply with accepting the help my family tried to offer, I felt like they didn’t understand and that I was okay, that what happened wasn’t that big of a deal. I hardly ever cried or showed genuine sadness. I was just angry all the time. Fighting and trying to find the quick way to happiness. But I came to realize, I was wrong. I couldn’t heal on my own. Because I had held what happened to me in for so long, it was difficult to talk about it and accept that it wasn’t made up, it was real and it happened and I had to face and deal with it. A position I would have never imagined myself ever being in.

I knew the decision to not go back to BYU-Hawaii would be a tough one, but I never knew it would be as hard as it was. Obviously I was not mentally, physically or emotionally stable, but I longed for the experience that I had always dreamed of. Of going to school one year, a mission, going back and graduating and then getting married, none of that happened and that’ s not what I had planned. I once again dealt with all of this through anger and without God. I was mad my life wasn’t going the way I wanted it to. None of this was part of MY plan.

 When I didn’t return to school, I got many questions on why I didn’t go back, or what I was doing now in my life. I became very depressed. I wanted to yell at everyone when they asked me why I chose cold Utah over beautiful and warm Hawaii. No I’m not stupid, I would much rather be there!!! But I wasn’t. And I couldn’t tell anyone why. The road to recovery was harder than I ever thought. Not only physically, mentally and emotionally, but spiritually as well. I really struggled with knowing if my Savior really did love me. If he did, why would he let that happen to me after everything I had been through in life? I guess I thought that after my hard teenage years I automatically got a free pass of trials in life, but obviously that’s not how life works. I became very depressed and at times I didn’t even want to live anymore, to exist. The pain of depression is so real and deep, another experience I had never known until now. I began to accept that the road to recovery would take time and be very hard. There are no quick fixes.

PRESENT DAY

                It’s only been about eight months since I was sexually assaulted and so much has happened since then. I have had many ups and downs. Made some bad choices and suffered hard consequences for those actions. I have lost relationships with some people in my life and have gained stronger ones with others. I still suffer from depression, but am becoming stronger every day. My Mom has helped me see that along the road to recovery the only way I can do it is through and with Christ. I can’t do it alone and it won’t be the way that I want it to be. I not only need to accept that, but I also had to forgive myself before I could ever move forward. Something I struggle very much with, but am so grateful to have a loving Mom to keep picking me up when I want to stop and sit down.

 So this is what I have learned and this is what I’m trying to work on every day.

Just like anything in life, if you want to build something good, it will take time. I am someone who likes to fix things quick, I want things to be better fast and I always want things to go back to the way they were, but this is life. You won’t heal over one day, things won’t be like they always were and I never will be the same person I used to be. It’s a fact and first, to ever get better or to begin to get better I have to accept that. No I won’t be the same person I once was before, because so much has happened to me since then, but because so much has happened I can choose to become better than I was. To become stronger, braver and fight hard to prove to Satan he has no power over me. Yes things will take time, because in order to gain a testimony of Christ you have to take the time to build it every day. I have to read my scriptures again, say my prayers and try my hardest to be obedient to the Gospel. Will I be perfect all the time? Will I do this every day? No. But the most important thing to Christ is that I never give up, that I continue to build even when it’s hard. Most importantly I have learned that in order to have faith in Christ and His atonement I have to believe in His will. I can’t set out for my own plan and be angry when it doesn’t turn out like I wanted it to be. I am learning to accept Gods plan for me every day. Every day I am working on things to become more like Him and have His spirit in my life. It takes sacrifice of things I used to do and be and it takes time and faith.

I love my family with all my heart and I have seen that the things I went through before Hawaii were given to me to grow and learn from so that they could help me for where I currently am in my life today. To remember how Christ pulled me out many times before and just because this trial was very new and different to me, didn’t mean He was going to leave me stranded. He was never waiting for me, He had been there with me the whole time. I have been the one waiting around, deciding whether or not to let Him help me.

The abandonment of both of my father’s used to make me feel insecure about myself and when I was sexually assaulted I also felt like that’s just how men were. They leave and take every part of you, feeling hopeless and not keeping their promises. But then I remember back to when my brother held me in his arms when I was crying and he showed me unconditional and true love. He showed me what a worthy Priesthood holder was like and that there were good guys out in the world. When my dear friend passed away, it taught me loss and how recovery takes time, but also how blaming myself for his death didn’t fix anything. I’m trying really hard every day to remind myself the rape was not my fault. But things like this are easier said, then done. Again, I’m working on it. I’m learning that although someone took my virginity away from me, through Christ I can be healed and become whole. It will take time, but one day I will be whole again and I will be able to share that special gift with someone who loves me. It’s funny how I had no idea why I went through certain trials before, but because I did go through so much I have been blessed and reminded of my Savior’s love for me now.

I know God lives. I know He really does look out for all of His children. I have realized that you don’t just convert to the church when you are 8 and are baptized, but that like anything in life, you have to work on your testimony every day. Consistently converting yourself to the Gospel and taking time for God. He does care, but you have to build that relationship with Him, you can’t expect one night of reading the scriptures to carry you throughout the rest of your life. We keep building His kingdom every day.

When you are in your deepest despairs, or depressed beyond measure. Pray to Him. Go to him. Just open a page of your scriptures and look upon his words he has written for YOU. Never give up on the hope of our Savior Jesus Christ. The one who understands the true intentions of our hearts and understands that the pain will be excruciating, but that we can do it and if we trust in His plan then He will comfort and heal us. Don’t worry, it’s something I’m still working on every day, something I’m still not 100% good at. But the Savior isn’t giving up on you, so you don’t give up on yourself either. It’s not about being saved by God’s Grace, but being changed by God’s Grace. Faith without works is dead, you have to put in work in order to be saved. I am changing and growing every day and with Christ I am changing and growing closer to Him. Day by day. Step by step. Don’t worry about how many times you’ve fallen, but how many times you are determined to get back up.

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The Sacrifice of the Real MVP of my LIFE 

5/10/2015

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People rise and fall based on how hard they work. Sacrifice comes along with the price of success or failure and it’s something we all experience in one way or another. The sacrifices one makes continuously after falling shows a great deal about their character and this truth of the matter comes down to who the person truly is and what values are important to them. As I have been thinking about my own life and where this significant and unique word stands to me I have come up with a couple definitions through research online and books I have been reading. After learning about other people’s view of the word, I reflected on my own life and came up with my own definition of true and complete sincere sacrifice; the act of giving up something good for something better is my mother, Laura Tye.

Although indeed it’s Mother’s Day and you’re all probably thinking “how sweet, she writes something nice and beautiful about her mother”, NO, this isn’t supposed to be nice and sweet, this is honest and it’s real and it’s something I’m not even sure my Mother would want anyone knowing, but it’s something I feel strongly about and I think she deserves to be recognized and known for who she truly is and the complete and amazing sacrifices she has made in her life.

It’s funny how sometimes I find myself mocking young girls getting married right after high school or after dating for such a short period of time, thinking to myself “goodness what a huge mistake”, but in reality I can’t, nor should anyone judge anybody’s view on love or determine when somebody is ready or not, because although it may seem young, great things come to pass with following your heart, especially if it’s In line with Gods as well. My mother was married straight out of high school, as an 18 year old she experienced so much at such a young age. From what I’ve observed and learned my mom has turned out to be an AMAZING woman, despite her upbringing and circumstances she has experienced. I admire her so much for that, I can’t even begin to tell you. By the time she was 21 my Mom was raising 3 small kids and her husband at the time, although I’ve heard he was an amazing father (at the time) holding a job was hard for him and she raised her kids on little to nothing. Despite losing cars and homes, my Mom never let us kids know there were hard times, she made the best of any situation and was always finding ways to provide for her kids. She made the clothes we wore, it was rare to have store bought clothes with her first couple of children. She walked to the store with young kids and her brand new baby just to be able to buy groceries, because they had no car and she had no one to babysit her children. She held a day care at her home while raising her own kids to be able to bring in extra income never failing to make sure her children’s needs were met, all along providing a stable foundation in our hearts that all things are possible through Christ. The endless stories I hear from my older siblings about their life growing up weren’t anything but happy and good times, my Mom provided those memories for them and I too have experienced the same.

My Childhood-

As many people know and if you don’t I’m sure you wonder why I look different from my mother, growing up I have always been asked silly questions or have gotten rude remarks based on my ethnicity compared to my mother’s. I mean it’s only natural for people who don’t understand to ask the funny/rude questions about adoption, my family is an expert at answering the questions back with great responses-humor. One time a girl on my little league soccer team asked my Mom why I was brown and she was white, I remember my Mom simply replaying with a serious tone, “when Kauri was a baby we dropped her in the oven and she got a little burnt” – I will never forget the facial expression on that little girls face, she looked terrified and I couldn’t help but burst out laughing! The answer to that simple question, I was adopted.

It’s funny how when people meet my mother they comment about what a great person she was for “saving” us brown kids. Just because some children are adopted from a different country, does NOT mean adopting us was out of pity or charity, my Mom has always taught me and made me feel loved just like every other child in my family. Just because I was adopted did not mean she loved me any less or more then my siblings, we were simply given to my Mom a different way. She always told us that we may not have grown in her tummy, but we grew in heart. Something that still sticks with me to this day.

People sometimes comment that she must have adopted because it was easier then childbirth, what an UNDERSTATMENT that is! If anyone knew the process of how my mom adopted my two brothers, little sister and I they would never make that comment to my Mom. God played an important and vital role in making sure we got to our Mother, it was in no way easy at all and you would be surprised at the outstanding spiritual stories my Mom has about getting us, needless to say, my Mom once again worked hard in attaining her children, we weren’t just given to her.

I know despite things I may have said to my friends growing up when I was venting as a teenager or things I sometimes think about my Mom sometimes when I’m angry, I can honestly say I know everything she has ever done was out of best interest for me, not only as her child, but as a person as well. You may wonder why telling you all those things about my Mom raising her kids was important to share, because yes EVERYBODY’s life is hard, raising kids isn’t easy, financial issues are never easy and neither are marriages, but because of the way my Mom chose to deal with the card she was played in life has truly made all the difference in my own life. This is what I have learned.

It doesn’t matter how you grow up, you can always choose the circumstances for how you want your life to end up, by the determination you have to make a better future, with or without help, if you want it badly enough, you won’t make excuses of money, support or education, you’ll find a way to make it possible. My mom did. When I was 5 years old, my father who basically raised my 4 older siblings, left my family. He was an amazing Dad (so my Mom had said) but after some time something went wrong and he left our family for our nanny and he literally disappeared from our lives. I have never heard from him, nor do I know much about him, only that someone left us for something he felt was better.  My parents got in a divorce and we moved to Salt Lake from St. George. My Mom took all the complaints, horrible comments from family members and close friends on how horrible divorce was, but nobody knew the pain and back story my Mom went through. Instead she didn’t fight for her reputation or pride, some of my Aunts mocked her for the divorce saying horrible things. My mom held her head high and continued to make the best of the situation. It was hard for me to understand how family and close friends could be so judgmental and hard towards my Mom, because if they really knew her they would’ve taken the time to understand the divorce is not what was wanted, the situation my Mom was put in is what made it happen, she was just doing the best she could for her kids, he chose to walk away and she protected her children.

My mother remarried and my Dad I grew up with came into our lives. I never understood their marriage and it’s not my place to, but it wasn’t easy for my Mom and yet for years I had no idea what she was going through, no one did, my Mom is above amazing, she is fearless. It’s crazy when I think back on her life and wonder why she stayed in certain situations or why she took the verbal abuse from others. It’s a simply answer, for her kids. She sacrificed her own needs and her own happiness in life for us. For me. It’s true what they say, that you can’t judge anybody or a situation if you haven’t personally lived through it yourself, although that’s very true we all still continue to do it, I mean we’re humans, but understanding my Mom is something very few people know how to do. It’s funny because although she is wonder woman, she is also hated for it at the same time, you have to actually know her and her past to be able to judge her, she’s been through literal hell and back and she has risen above it to prove the woman she is. (I’m still not sure she knows that yet)

My Jr year in HS, my father left our family. ( Second times the charm eh?!)  It was very traumatic for me and super hard to comprehend. How could two men leave the same children? Were we not enough to love for someone to stay? As we experienced moving from our home and the process of abandonment all over again, my Mom strengthened us and mourned for us. It never crossed my mind she was hurting too, two men had left her in her life time and hurt her kids. Despite this trial my Mom moved us towards God and help us see that we don’t need to search for a father, we would always have a Heavenly Father who loved us and her. My mom’s love and devotion is something that will always carry me through life.

 She has always been constant. She has never left or given up on life even when it pushes her to the limits. She has sacrificed her pride and self-worth literally for her children wanting them to have everything she never did. Countless times in High School she would give us kids her own personal stash of money so we could just go out and be normal like our friends and get lunch, she sacrificed her sleeping time never going to sleep until all her kids were home for the night. In High School I won’t lie, I HATED IT! But that’s just the kind of mother she is, always looking out for her kids making sure they were safe and she seriously wouldn’t go to bed until we had gotten home! She has gone to ALL of our sporting and school events, never missing any, also as siblings she made us go too, we learned hard work and how to be supportive from her. Our testimonies in the gospel have grown to amazing amounts, because there was never a Monday we missed without having family night or family prayer, nor a morning without family scripture study or a vacation without spending Sunday’s at a random ward to make sure we had the sacrament. My mom is literally a spiritual giant! She sacrifices money for memories, creating the best with all of us kids and teaching us to interact with each other instead of just friends, and as siblings we have grown so much closer for that.

From the moment my mother became a Mom her life was dedicated to us kids. The amazing people we have become, though we sometimes forget it, is all because of our mother. With 9 beautiful kids and others waiting up in heaven, my Mom has been the #1 most constant thing in our lives, more importantly, mine. My Mom is more than amazing, she is unbelievably outstanding. When my father left when I was in High School, she took the crazy outburst from us kids left at home and stayed with us no matter how hard we pushed away. Because both fathers left, they didn’t understand the literal hell my Mom went through as her kids hurt in different ways and she was stuck to take care of the mess they left behind. I recall experiencing the pain of abandonment from my father in a horrible way and my Mom took my hardship and loved me despite the horrible things I said and did, something I will never be able to repay her back for.

To say the least, my mother has raised 9 beautiful kids in the Gospel of Jesus Christ and has managed to provide both parent roles for all of us. Sometimes I think she loves us too much that it’s a little much to handle, but I would take her constant love over no love anytime! My favorite memories of her tucking us in as kid and singing the “Christopher Robin” song are so special to me or when I would have growing pains and she would sneak in my room and rub my legs until I went quit crying and went back to sleep are memories of pure love and sacrifice from my mother and I will never forget them. My Mom is amazing, beyond amazing she is the literal rock for who I am and I physically wouldn’t even be where I am today without her. Mom you deserve it all, you deserve so much for the service you have provided for us as kids in this life. I am literally the person I am today because of you and I wouldn’t trade any hardships I learned along the way. You have loved us unconditionally and supported us through everything we’ve done. In the words of Kevin Durrant, you are the real MVP mamma. We don’t need a papa, when we have the best mamma around town. Love you beyond any words could explain! Happy Mothers Day to the greatest woman around <3

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    "Experience is a dangerous teacher---but you learn" -C.S Lewis

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