Back row: Pops, Mom (love the hair), Nancy (love the scarf), me (dang, I'm ugly, but I had a cute dress and shoes)
Bottom row: Marv, Dennis and Dave.My brother Marvin and I were about 22 months apart. As with most brother/sister relationships I always thought it was a love/hate thing until I was a sophomore in high school and Marv was a senior. That's when I discovered how much I really loved the guy. He truly was a wonderful brother and a great friend. We had a lot of great times together. I really miss him.
It was Friday, Jan 3, 1969 and a beautiful winter day. The boys in 6th hour T & I with Hazen Gilgen were working on a car and decided to push start it down the 1st Ward hill. A couple of boys jumped into the car while Marvin and two others decided to push. When it got rolling, the three pushers jumped on the back hood. Marvin told me he had the darkest, most awful feeling that he was going to get hurt, so he jumped off. His foot hit some ice and he went up and landed on his head. Unconscious, Stan Palmer rushed him to the hospital and called Pops. Both he and mom rushed to the hospital.
I didn’t hear about this at school which surprises me but found out later when I got off the bus. Wanda Goddard slid the back door of the store open while I was walking across the parking lot to our red brick house and worriedly told me to go to Grandma Peterson’s and get the kids. Marvin had an accident and our folks were at the hospital with him. I went directly to Grandma’s and picked up Ned and Connie (ages 3 and 5). By the time the kids and I got home, mom was there. She gave me the keys to the car and told me to fill-up at Glen B’s while she got ready. Marvin was being taken by ambulance to Ogden hospital.
As the car was being filled (back in the days when they did that with a smile while cleaning your windshield), the ambulance passed. There was our dad leaning over Marvin in the back. That was a sight that will forever be engrained into my brain. I can still picture it.
That Friday night was an extra special night. Soda Springs was playing Malad in basketball. Our cousin Eddie Thomas was the main player on the Soda team. I was so sad that I was babysitting and not being able to go to the game. I sat in my Pep Club outfit waiting for Mom and Pops to come home. When mom walked in, it didn’t look good. She told me Marvin had not gained consciousness. She had come home to look at the kids and get ready to go back in the morning. She wanted me to go with her. Pops had stayed there with Marvin. She gave me the keys to go to the game.
When I walked in, it was the third quarter. The old Malad gym was packed. When I walked down the stairs toward the gym, I stopped by door and looked for my friends. It was amazing. The entire gym went semi-quiet. Everyone’s eyes were on me. Uncle Henry Bolingbroke was the only one that moved. He came right down from the stands, walked up and asked about Marvin. I told him we wouldn’t know anything until he came to. He walked away sad.
He sat on one side of the gym and the students were on the other side. Some of the girls asked me about Marv before I climbed up to my seat in the back. The grapevine was in full motion. Within 5 minutes everyone in the place knew Marvin’s condition.
Malad won the game.
The next morning at 5 am, mom and I headed to the McKay-Dee Hospital. Pops had walked in the door 5 minutes before we left. Grandma Peterson came to our house to take care of things. Pops had to do the books and open the store by 8. He warned us about the fog. This was before the Interstate was completely done and the trip took forever. Marvin was in the Intensive Care Unit. It was a large room with about 10 beds in a row, 10 nurses and very quiet. The rules were: Only one person could go in for 5 minutes every half hour. Wow, that was a loooooong day.
Mom went in the minute we got there. She came back in laughing. She told me that Marvin was indeed unconscious because a very large black nurse was feeding him a runny egg. Everything in the scenario was wrong. Marvin hated eggs, never ate a runny one in his life, and being from redneck Malad was a little racist (something that was completely wiped away from him on his mission to the South).
Mom left to go home about 4 pm. She left me there. Pops came about 7. Dr. Van Hook arrived. The doctor told our dad that Marvin’s condition was “equivocal.” Pops pretended to know what that meant. He also said that if Marvin’s swelling did not go down on his brain that he would have to have surgery in the morning (before shunts they drilled a hole in the skull to relieve pressure). When we got home, I went straight to the dictionary and looked up “equivocal.” It said, “Ambiguous.” I still didn’t know what his condition was. I looked up “Ambiguous” and it said, “Equivocal.” Hmmm.
The process was long and slow. Marvin made slow, slow progress each day, but it was progress. He never had to have surgery.
A red letter day was getting out of Intensive Care. His roommate was a return missionary whose family lived west of Ogden. The day after he had returned from his mission, he and his friend were driving to Weber State to register for winter semester. On their way their car was hit by a train. His friend was killed instantly and he ended up in the hospital with the same head injury as Marvin. We watched this young man make slow but steady progress too.
He and his parents visited us in Malad about a year later.
Within a month Marvin was back to school full-time.
A few funny and not-so-funny memories:
A few days later, Tim, age 11, was allowed to visit in Intensive Care. The age limit was 16 but an exception was made. The entire visit, Marvin was trying to get Tim to hide under the bed so no one would make the too-young brother go away. Tim just smiled.
Mom, Grandma Peterson (always wore a dress), Me (freshman in college summer with my "shag" hairdo and bell bottoms) and Pops (in his store apron) in front of grandma's house next to the store.