I realize that I am slow in getting this included  in the blog, but here goes.
 I am the oldest of five children.  The next  oldest is my sister, Lynne Lorraine Brown, who is three years younger than  I.  My clearest memories of Lynne is that when we were young we fought  incessantly.  I don't remember ever having any kind words for my sister, or  she for me, until we were both married and had children of our own.  In  particular, there was a time in Fairbanks when Lynne (about age 6) had some  jelly beans and I (about age 9) asked her for some.  She refused, so I  stole some and hid them inside my school lunch sandwich wrapper.  Of  course, I got found out and was punished, but that only added fuel to the fires  of our dislike for each other.  I remember one time my mother told me that  some day I would love my sister with all my heart, and I thought Mom was  nuts.  That could never be.  But, she has proven once again to be  right (don't you hate that, when your parents are right?).  Lynne is now a  mom, with two daughters and two grandchildren, and I do love her  intensely.  She is a good lady who tries hard to do what is  right.
 My next sibling is my brother, Robert, who is eight  years younger than I.  Robert was born while we lived in Fairbanks,  Alaska.  He is enough younger than I that we never had much in common until  later in life.  I have always had a special respect for him because he  served a mission to the Navajo indians, where he was treated rather badly by  those whom he was trying to help.  Had his Christmas box from home stolen  out of his apartment.  Had his camera stolen.  Etc., Etc.  
 The same is true of my brother, Mike (that is, that  he was enough younger than I that we didn't have a lot in common).  He,  too, was born in Fairbanks.  My earliest memory of him is when I was in  high school in Mullan.  Mike was only in about the first or second  grade.  He had some kind of seizures where he would crouch down on his  haunches, with his hands clenched into fists and his eyes closed, and he would  start to cry.  Nothing could get through to him when one of those  hit.  They were very infrequent and disappeared within a couple of years,  but it was terribly disconcerting to have him doing that for 10-15 minutes at a  time, and not being able to make it stop.  It bothered me especially when I  was babysitting and I couldn't do anything for him.  I confess that I even  tried slapping him on a couple of occasions, but I might as well have been  blowing on his face.  He was completely unaware.  And, he never had  any memory afterward about what had happened.  Wonder what caused that and  why he outgrew it?
 Jon was a kind of surprise.  He is 15 years  younger than I.  He was born in the Wallace, ID, hospital, which is now  gone.  Jon was my favorite in the early years of his life and when I went  on my mission, I was particularly upset to have to leave my neat little brother  who was only four.  That sadness was compounded when I came home two years  later and found that he had become a rather pesky and obnoxious kid.  I was  disappointed.
 But, I have come to love all of my siblings with a  very deep love.  I think most of you know that Mike publishes "The  Lauritzen Ledger" every quarter.  He used to do it every other month, but  cut back some.  He has been doing that faithfully for 24 years.  It  used to be just a newsletter with nothing but print.  But now, it includes  a lot of very interesting photographs, too.  I have a copy of every issue  in my Family History archives.  Anytime you want to read them, just drop  in.  It is a clear testimony of the bonds that exist between us  all.
 Perhaps the highlight of my sibling relationships  was the trip that Robert, Mike and I took from Springville, up through Glacier  National Park, into Alberta, through Red Rock park, Banff, Jasper, Lake Louise,  the Columbia Ice Fields, and back through Yellowstone National park.  This  was in 1963 after I got home from my mission.  I wanted to see some of the  scenic wonders of Alberta that we were not allowed to visit while I was a  missionary.  Some bonds were built then with Robert and Mike that have only  grown stronger over the years.
 I feel particularly blessed to have the loving  relationship that exists with my siblings.  I only wish that my children  were universally as fond of each other as I and my siblings are.  There is  nothing that provides a sense of security like knowing that you have a strong  family and that you can depend upon each other any time.  
 Grandpa Lauritzen
 

 


 
 
 
 
 
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1 comment:
it sound like you and john had a similar relationship in the early years as Nico and I. I left when he was 3 1/2 and when I came back to visit a couple years later I was like "Who are you?!" in good ways and bad. It was a sad moment because I realized he wasn't my sweet little tag along any more...
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