Off to Deseret Industries

One task I have been looking forward to for awhile is to clean out the closet. As I have lost weight, I have slowly been shrinking out of my clothes. I have dropped from a size 38 waist to 34. My shirts have gone from extra large to medium. I have bought some new clothes, but have been somewhat hesitant because I am not at my target weight yet. Intermediate clothes seem like a waste of money. For the last month or so, I have been wearing extremely baggy clothes.

I finally decided it was time and ruthlessly started bagging anything that didn’t fit me. My wife was silently cheering in the background. She has been suggesting I do this for quite awhile. I went through the closet and drawers and tossed it quickly, even if I liked it. It was in some ways more difficult than I anticipated, while in others, much easier.

I like comfortable clothes. When I was tubby, I really liked baggy clothes. I have several pairs of jeans that just fit nice and feel good. I have sweatshirts and t-shirts that are old friends. To toss them was like tossing a memory. It was hard to do, but they all went into the bag. On the other hand, I don’t know why I waited this long. My closet is empty except for those things I will actually wear and fit. I don’t have to search through the big stack of old T-shirts to find one that fits.

It looks so empty...

I also discovered my wardrobe deficiencies. I have dress shirts for work and t-shirts for around the house, but very little in between. Last month it was my turn for the family clothes budget. I didn’t know what to buy because I didn’t know what I had. Now that I can see my entire wardrobe at once, I know what I need. When my turn for the clothes budget comes up in December, I am going to be ready. I will also be ready to retire the dress shirts and move to new, smaller ones. I may have to ask for clothes for Christmas! I must be getting old if clothes sound good for Christmas.

In the meantime, options are little thin, but I’ll make it. I hope to be at my target weight by then, so I won’t feel like I’m wasting any money. Other options? I am donating all the clothes to Deseret Industries Thrift Store. I could do a little shopping there myself. After all, someone is going to get some nice clothes that no longer fit me. Perhaps I can find something just as nice that no longer fits them.

 

When someone tells you to pay attention to the details, how detailed do you go? I learned a whole new level of detail a couple weeks ago. I will never look at detail the same way again. I have a whole new standard for what it means to ‘do a good job’ and ‘clean’.

I am a Mormon and we have temples. You may have seen a few around. These are not ordinary church buildings to us. They are very special buildings reserved for very sacred ordinances. We dedicate these buildings as the Houses of the Lord. And that is where this story begins.

Every six months, the temple is closed for two weeks for cleaning. Members volunteer to work in the temple to clean it and keep it in good shape. I had not had the opportunity to clean one of these special buildings until this year. I signed up for a four hour shift in January and June. Both times, I was lucky enough to get to clean chandeliers.

I couldn’t find a picture of the chandelier in the Mount Timpanogos Temple, but the one at left is close enough for you to get an idea of the task (This picture is from the Atlanta, Georgia Temple). There are literally thousands of glass rods, crystal chains and pendants in the large one in the center. It took twenty of us four hours to disassemble the glass and lay it out to be cleaned. Each level is unique and had to be kept together so that it would all fit back together again. We wore cotton gloves, never touching a piece with bare hands. The oils would transfer to the glass and attract dust faster. Each piece was then cleaned by hand by rubbing it vigorously until the glass heated up and released all the dirt onto the towel. Each piece would take 20-30 seconds of this active rubbing to come clean. Believe me, my arms and back were sore by the time I finished.

Every light bulb was checked and changed if necessary. We lost count of how many bulbs are in the fixture. Next, all the brass was cleaned and dusted, taking thirty minutes for a team of three working on ladders. Even after the fixture had been lowered, it was still over ten feet tall. Before my shift ended, we had only cleaned about 1/4 of the glass. Another shift came in the next day to finish and reassemble it.

The second experience in June was much the same, except I was assigned to one of the little chandelier sconces, like you can see on the wall. I was on that fixture alone to clean and reassemble. It took me all four hours to do just one.  Believe me, I never look at those beautiful chandeliers the same way again.

While I was cleaning, I got talking with one of the full time staff about the process of cleaning the rest of the temple. I asked just how thorough of a cleaning happens each six months. She started detailing out the entire list of things to do. The chandeliers are only the beginning of the task. Every table and chair, rail and banister is checked and painted if there is a scratch or nick in the finish. Then they start at the ceilings and wipe down every wall. The carpets are shampooed and dried. The tiles are hand cleaned with tiny brushes. The doors and railings are cleaned, using toothpicks to get every tiny crevice dirt free. The vents are cleaned with Qtip swabs. Every surface is cleaned top to bottom, including the furnace rooms. And that is just the inside. The outside often gets renovations in the gardens, cracked sidewalks are removed and repoured and all the trees pruned and shaped. It takes them every hour of those two weeks to get it all done.

So why the attention to detail? After all, how dirty can a chandelier get in six short months? It surprised me how much brighter the chandeliers were after being cleaned. I thought they were beautiful before, but the difference was noticeable. We believe nothing is too good for the House of the Lord. God will not dwell in unholy places and we will make His house clean for Him. It is worth every minute of work to be in that holy and peaceful place.

The lesson I took away from my latest experience of service was to examine my own life. Am I paying as much attention to detail to myself and my family? Am I letting our standards sag, turning a blind eye to a little dirt here and there? Do I get out the toothpicks to maintain my integrity and character? Do I make mistakes? Of course I do. I’m human. But I am working toward raising my efforts all the time.

The standard is set in Mathew 5:48 when Jesus said, “Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.” Naturally, I can’t make that goal in this life, but striving to come as close as I can is what I want. I try to keep that standard in mind as I go throughout the day. I don’t always make the grade. Some days I lose my temper or get impatient. Then I remember the lesson of the chandelier and the doors of the temple. I get out my toothpick and cotton gloves and get back to work.

images courtesy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints

 

FrontOur house is for sale and that means we get interruptions by real estate agents wanting to show the house to a potential buyer. Don’t get me wrong. We love the agents! We want more of them. Bring all your clients! We want an offer, please! However, each time the phone rings, we all stiffen just a little.

When we get ‘the call’, as we did tonight for a showing tomorrow morning, everyone has to drop their plans and clean. The kids are especially getting tired of it and I don’t blame them. It is tough keeping your room pristine every day of the week. It is like you never get to really live in your house anymore.

It isn’t that we are slobs and it takes hours and hours to get the house ready. It is just an unplanned inconvenience. It takes about a hour to straighten all the rooms, clean all the bathrooms, vacuum all the floors and clean up the kitchen. When we all work together, though, it goes more quickly. Many hands make light work. Thanks, kids!

The lesson is to enlist help when there is a lot of work to do. Offer to help someone else. It doesn’t need to just be family. I saw my neighbor roofing his shed a few months ago. I grabbed my hammer and went over. It was fun. I got to know him better in one hour of roofing than 6 years of living next door. Yes, I banged my thumb and ripped my pants, but it was worth it. Service always is because it generally comes back when you need it most.

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