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RevaBeth Russell (mother)
 
 Poem read at Brian's funeral

TO THE RELATIVE WHO DOESN'T UNDERSTAND

by RevaBeth L. Russell

 

When I was young I played with dolls and imagined.

Other interests replaced the dolls

But I would remember.

Marriage,

And as a couple we made plans

But we were to wait and wait

And wait.

After time

I knew that I would never be a birth mother.

 

Well-meaning people had their suggestions.

Silently crying

We smiled and nodded.

 

A nine-month pregnancy couldn't seem as long as my

two-year adoption pregnancy.

A doctor checking your weight and blood pressure

must be easier

Than the official lady

Checking

On your fitness

For parenthood.

No stranger questions a birth mother about her money,

marriage, home, and childhood.

No letters of reference are sought as to her character.

 

Well-meaning people discussed adoption,

Telling of  "so-and-so" and "It only took them two months."

We smiled and nodded.

 

Listening to the heartbeat

Feeling the strength of a kick

The final minutes of labor

Sitting carefully on stitches

Could not bring more pain than

"It will be eight months to a year

Before we can process your papers."

 

Well-meaning people inquired how many children we had

Telling of the joys we were missing.

We smiled and nodded.

 


When your boy was placed in your arms

And as a couple you realized this child was yours, forever,

Did you ever think that even when our child is placed in our arms

We would still have to wait

For the adjustment period to be over

For the judge to say he was ours

Legally.

 

Well-meaning people say,

"Oh, you had a baby the easy way."

We smile and nod politely.

 

I want you to acknowledge that this child is mine.

I have cried the same tears as you.

I have said the same prayers as you.

Your child was born from under your heart,

And close to your heart you fed him.

My child was born from within my heart,

And close to my heart he was fed.

 

Now I plead that you will accept him and his differences.

He may not look like us

As would one carrying our genes,

But he is ours:

Carrying our training, care, and love.

I watch him now at play...imagining...

And these words never rang more true:

"For unto us a child is born,

And unto us a son is given."

 

Lynda Peck
 
I have a lot of little memories of Brian.  As a little child I loved it when your family would come to Utah to visit.  I remember asking my mom how far away New Mexico was and wondering why we couldn't visit more often.  I even have a postcard that Brian sent to me (with obviously some help from his mother) so it must have meant a lot.  I remember visiting your family once in New Mexico and loving it  (the gravel frontyard was a little disturbing though).  When we went to visit some adobe indian village (I don't remember what it was really!), he found a pocketknife that had a feather attached to it.  I wanted it so badly.  He finally gave it to me.  Now that I think about it, I just wanted the feather, and he probably just wanted the knife, but he gave it all to me regardless.

Probably one of the earliest and most vivid memories would have been when we were maybe five.  We were playing "house" in my parent's basement.  We were sitting at the little table with our little plastic dishes.  I wanted to pretend that we were drinking coffee (which in my naive five-year-old mind was very naughty).  So Brian went along with it.  Then after a while, he threw the little cup over his shoulder and said, "I don't want to drink this stuff anymore.  So let's quit."  I was kind of irritated that he wanted to be so "good", but we didn't drink coffee anymore.  I find great irony in this memory!

He was always fun to hang out with at family things.  I always was too prissy to do a lot of the fun stuff he would suggest (playing in Hobble Creek, hiking up some treacherous mountain while camping), but he never made fun of me, although I probably deserved it.  We liked to think we were so much cooler than the younger cousins, and oddly they thought we actually were "cool".  He and I would go in the little root cellar in the garage acting like we were doing something special, when all we would do is sit in the dark and wait for the younger kids to leave...laughing the whole time. 

I remember when your family came up to visit or have dinner at my parent's house one summer evening.  The apricots were getting ripe and the adults kept sending us out to pick more.  Brian kept picking green ones.  RevaBeth was getting a little annoyed with him and I thought it was kind of funny.  He didn't seem to know what was so irritatating or what was so funny to me, he was just picking apricots.  My dad finally suggested that perhaps Brian was color blind.  Which he indeed was.  My dad pulled out some color blind test book and Brian couldn't see the oranges and greens like the rest of us could.  I just remember thinking how neat that was...and kind of wished I was color-blind too.  Brian just kind of shrugged it off, but I think he thought it was kind of neat too.

On a science teacher's trip to Mesa Verde, Brian insisted on helping me climb up the ladders and was quite chivalrous.  We both thought Julie was nerdy at the time (sorry Julie), but even so, he was nice to her (I wasn't).

Brian, Eric and I started a great water-fight, with several of the other campers from the campground joining in, when we were at Capitol Reef (I think that's where we were).  We laughed at Mina behind her back and secretly wished a skunk would get her. If I remember right, we actually tried to think of ways to get a skunk to go into her tent and surprise her.  Never did succeed on that one...unfortunately.  And we would spit cherry pits at each other.  That was a super fun family campout.

When I was an early teenager we were at Woody's house for something.  Brian, Eric and I were in the backyard and for some reason I thought that they were being mean and excluding me.  I went and sat in the living room feeling sorry for myself.  When someone asked why I wasn't out with them anymore I told all the adults that they were being mean.  I don't know who it was that went out and gave them quite a talking to, but they both came in and said they were sorry.  Brian was very sincere and apologetic and Eric agreed and backed him up.  I started to cry, mostly because I had gotten them into trouble and they didn't really deserve it.

After Brian's mission and while I was at BYU, he would sometimes stop by.  My roommates couldn't quite figure out exactly how we were related, so I told them that I was the adopted one.  They weren't quite sure what to say and were puzzled, but he and I thought it was hilarious.  I remember him telling about this girl from his mission that was really irritating him.  Her name was Peaches, or that is what he called her, and she was chasing him and being very obnoxious.  She was quite the "molly-mormon".  He couldn't stand her, yet didn't quite know how to tell her to get lost.  We came up with a "great" idea.  Since we didn't really look related (as before mentioned) we decided to have some engagement pictures done and send Peaches a wedding announcement.  So we went to the mall and searched all kinds of stores trying to find a huge, fake engagement ring.  It was so much fun!  Brian would always give the clerk very little information when they would ask a question about what we were doing, so we knew that they were totally confused, and we loved it.  We would walk out of every store snickering.  After we found the perfect ring (it was so ugly!) he took me to dinner at a hamburger place and bought me a huge shake.  He was so fun to hang out with.  We were trying to figure out how we were going to go about getting pictures done and how we would word the announcement.  We decided that it would be fun to make up some additional ones and send them to a few relatives because we knew their reaction would be HUGE, and it would be FUNNY!  Then we decided to send them to ALL the relatives.  Might as well get a reaction from everyone.  We hung out a few more times but didn't decide exactly what or how we were going to proceed with the announcements. (Digital photography and PhotoShop weren't available then, so it was a lot of work to get this kind of thing made...cheaply.)   I then got busy with school.  Brian called a few times and I didn't return a couple of his calls.  He probably didn't really care too much, but I have ALWAYS regretted it.  It was rude of me, and we never got to see the reaction to our "announcement" (maybe that's a good thing?).  We just didn't talk much after that it seems and Brian just went his way and I mine.

The past couple of years when Brian actually stayed for RevaBeth's Christmas party, and he stayed after for a long time to chat...or rather listen while we all chatted, I was so happy!  He was coming back.  I had really missed him. 

Needless to say, the horrid recent events of this past month were more than just devastating.  Having missed him for so long already I was a little surprised at how very, very sad I was. And the regret I felt at not returning his calls waaayyy-back-when was ever more present.  I had always wondered if maybe I hadn't been so rude and we had kept hanging out, that things maybe would have been a little easier for him.  That he wouldn't have gotten quite so lost and done such crazy things...as if I am some kind of a savior or something (stupid, I know)!  But I still wondered.  And still felt so badly.  So the night after his death, before I went to bed, I just plead that he would forgive me.  I had been a crappy friend and cousin.  The next morning I woke up feeling no more regret. None. And I still don't.  Clear as day I heard him say, "Forget it.  I would have done it all anyway." And I know he would have. That was just him.  But kind Brian, still wouldn't let me feel badly for something that really didn't matter.

And at the viewing before the funeral, I know he was there.  He was standing there with his small grin on his face shaking his head, probably a little humbled at the kind things people were saying about him, the comments about his being so handsome ALWAYS, and just how very loved he really was, and is. 

I know this doesn't sound like much, but he really had a special place in my heart.  And probably not so much because of the things we did together, but the way he treated me, and the way he made me feel.  I always felt special and liked by him.  Isn't that what we all want? I have missed him for probably 15 years, and do still.  But I have to believe that he is at peace now with whatever was haunting him.  I'm sure not all of his problems are gone and that he doesn't have his regrets too, but he has a better perspective of things.  He can now move forward, where maybe here he couldn't anymore.  I always hoped that he knew that I didn't judge him for how he chose to live his life, because like Eric said, "he had the courage to live how he wanted".  He was a great person and is still a very beautiful soul.

Much love,
Lynda Loveridge Peck
Arnold Loveridge
 
 Talk for Brian

April 16, 2011


 


Almost 39 years ago Brian was born, Boy, we have been lucky for so many years.  Two years later he was in an orphanage and soon a foster family, Later when we got Brian home and would tell his story; some people would say, "It's too bad that he couldn't have stayed with that family." Boy; were they dumb. Many have told us that he was lucky to have us. They never understood that we were the lucky ones. You all know what I mean because all of us have been blessed by Brian. And we need to remember that we were all so blessed to have him, even for such a short time.

In a BYU devotional in the late sixties, I heard that we should have lots of children for all the precious spirits waiting to be born. My thoughts were oppositional-as they always are. "What about all the abandoned children being born in Africa, China, or Korea?" I was unconvinced that a white Mormon child with BYU matriculating parents was any more important or loved by God than any other child born in the world.

I did not know it at the time, but my husband-to-be, who had served a mission in Korea, was reacting the same way to that Church-wide message.  Thus, it came to pass, that after we were married, we started the adoption process for a child from Korea. We worked with Holt Adoption Agency, which is a terrific agency. We also worked with Illinois Social Services, which left everything to be desired. The social worker asked us, "Do you realize that this child will not be born by you?" "Really? Then children are not found in cabbage patches?" we almost said. "Do you realize that this child probably came from an illegitimate affair?"  "Yes, and as soon as we can, we will tattoo a big red A on his forehead," (Bite tongues. Don't say anything that would label us as unfit parents.) Brian got some great tattoos for himself  when he was older.

 

As soon the Holt adoption agency sent us his picture, I knew he was my son from ages past-even with a face covered with dark chicken pox marks and a very bad haircut. Getting Brian home from Korea was delayed because Vietnam had fallen and those children needed to be evacuated first. I selfishly grieved.

The first Sunday we had him home, he hugged and kissed my husband all through the church meeting. Brian was inquisitive, happy, and social, and three years old. (I have

always wanted to thank his birth mother and foster mother for the gift they gave. I was never able to do that. Brian didn't care to find his birth parents. "You are my real mom," he said.) He was using complete English sentences within weeks of coming home. One day, Brian was telling Keith that he was a daddy. Keith said, "Brian, you are not a daddy. You are a son." Brian said, "you're a moon." He loved to play word games. A month later I would ten him, "you are my son," and he would reply, "you are my moon and stars."

We would play word rhyme games until I would give up in exhaustion. I had no idea one could rhyme "glue" so many ways. We would play a game of saying "you're a cow" and he would answer, "you're a goat." This exchange went on and on with the nouns changing.

It took him several months before he must have felt like he was home. Before that he had never spilled or made a mess and was hiding food for fear of not having enough to eat. For six months he climbed out of his bed and slept on the floor covering himself with a throw rug. It must have scared the little tyke to sleep high off the safe floor.

It took him a nanosecond to act superior to his 18-month-old sister that he got in the family package, and it took less time than that for him to realize that maleness in our house was not correlated to superior-ness, From then on, he was his sister's protector. Brian's cousin, Eric, wrote to me that he remembered Brian nearly beating a neighborhood kid senseless because that kid had made fun of Layna on her bike. Brian could be a little intense. All of us have felt that intense protection.

 

One day I came home frustrated because I had to pay extra money for wide shoes for Brian. Keith wondered out loud, why Brian would need wide shoes saying, "How come he needs wide shoes? Both of us have such narrow feet."

Life was so new for all of us. Brian had never tasted 7-Up, He must have thought it was water and he took a big gulp of it. As the carbonation burned, his eyes widen and his little hands opened and shook. He swallowed, gave us a big grin, and we laughed.

Brian has always been social, helpful, and giving. Christmas presents, given to him would find their way to friends with greater needs-much to the dismay of Santa Claus who had worked very hard to obtain a few items. On his mission in cold Chicago, Illinois, I was told, he gave someone in need his coat.



Arnold Loveridge
 

I'm going to quote from Brian's cousin, Eric Loveridge, Woody and Wanda's son.

Once we were playing with air guns or BB guns in your back yard. He told me the gun he was using was my dad's old BB gun. When it was time to leave my dad came out in the back yard to get me. I told him Brian's gun was his old gun. As you know, my dad usually isn't the sentimental type, but we caught him during an unusual moment of weakness. My dad asked Brian if he could keep the gun, and although I could see Brian was not thrilled with the idea, he recognized my dad's anxiousness, shrugged his shoulders to cover the disappointment in his loss and handed over the gun. Brian showed respect that day,

When we moved to Utah in 1982, Brian became everyone's friend. He was 10. I was a little concerned that he knew all of the police officers 1 month after we moved here, but that was his nature, He was always outgoing, cheerful, and sensitive, even if he didn't forgive easily.

Eric continues:

I still fish using a particular knot Brian taught me, Every time I drink Cherry 7- UP I think of Brian driving me to the Mountain Springs truck stop off of I-15 in Springville, because he knew it was my favorite drink.

After he returned from his mission, Brian did something I have always admired. He did what he wanted to do and to hell with everyone else. I spoke with Brian once when I was visiting Utah after he returned from his Chicago mission. He told me some of his experiences, some were directed to his follow the mission president without thinking and Brian said he didn't want to be the stereotypical Return Missionary, so he did what he wanted to do. I loved Utah and would have preferred to stay there at one time, but if I chose to act a certain way I didn't have the courage to face the disapproval of my family and peers. Brian had courage."

Eric included a few more stories that I didn't know about which was a good thing.

Brian was fiercely my son and I was fiercely his mother. Melissa said he was "mama's boy, but in a good way." I know that. I know he fiercely loved you as his partner, or his friend, or his dad, brother, uncle or pseudo uncle.

We can always go back and "should"' on ourselves. "If I had only done this, or not done that," but we can't go back.  We all know this. We were loved by one of the best. I know Brian continues to love us, as does our Heavenly Mother and Father. (God is not a single parent.] I know God lives and holds us in His hands using the hands of others. We all have been feeling that the last few days. Thank you. I know someday I will see Brian face to face and again be wrapped in Brian's strong embrace. He will say he was sorry and I will say I will always love your-no matter what;

I've had a chance to tell you my stories of Brian, esp. his early years. I want to open the mike up to those of you who may feel moved to talk about Brian. Please keep your comments brief so that others can share.

After that I've asked a former student to sing "Bring Him Home." I am sorry it is so sad, but that is how I feel, and I need this. Thank you for loving my son.

 

Funeral Program
 
Officiating                               Bishop Russell Olson
Family Prayer (after viewing)      Elwood L. Loveridge, uncle
Prelude & Postlude                   Liz Graden
Invocatioin                              Arnold Loveridge, uncle
Life Sketch                              Richelle Hall, cousin for Sue Loveridge, aunt
Musical Number "Yesterday"       Sierra Bennett
Speaker                                  RevaBeth Russell
Remarks                                  Open to the congregation
Musical Number "Bring Him Home"  Payden Adams
Closing Remarks                        Bishop Russelll Olson
Closinsg Hymn "#152 God Be With You 'til We Meet Again"
                                             Alice Graham, conducting
Benediction                             Bernell Loveridge, uncle

Dedicatory Prayer at the grave    Mac Loveridge, uncle

Palllbearers
   Stefhan Bennett
   Andres Bernstein
   Rory Bullock
   Shawn Bullock
   Michael Peterson
   Shad Ruf
   Scott Sturgeon
   Yodi Yodo

Honorary Pallbearers
   Paul Ciesla, unclo
   David Russell, uncle
   Jim Kallbacka

Funeral directed by Wheeler Mortuary, Springville, Utah

Total Memories: 11
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