Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Family. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Life Lessons from Tom

Day twenty-three: A picture of someone who inspires you.
          My grandfather, Thomas Kasparian.  He was a crazy yet incredibly brilliant Armenian who lived one of the most unique yet most inspiring lives I know.  He was born and raised on the streets of Bronx, New York, by parents who had fled to America to escape the Armenian genocide.  At the age of 16 he moved out on his own to Arizona, and eventually moved to California where he met my grandmother.
          Tom believed that there was no other way to live life but full throttle.  He had an uncanny ability to take a task and marry it with fun.  He lived his life almost in glory to God, recognizing that He's made all these great things and the best way to give thanks is to enjoy them!
          He had a sense of adventure in everything he did.  He walked to the beat of his own drum.  He had a different perspective on everything, and always thought way out of the box.  He was always honest; he was the epitome of the phrase "say what you want to say when you want to say it."
          He loved the gospel and he loved the priesthood.  He used it often and with so much faith that it forever affected all those who saw him.  There are so many amazing stories of him using his priesthood, like when he miraculously blessed a deaf and blind girl with her sight along with the return of 60% of her hearing, and commanded a girl, surely dead from being hit by a motorcycle on their street, to arise and live.  His testimony was vivid and apparent and he shared it with such color and power that people just sat on the edges of their seats while he spoke and loved it.
          He was always doing something for someone else, whether it was giving money or letting people stay at their home, as he did with 44 people over the years.  He was always faithful to my grandmother.  He never spoke any disparaging thought about anyone--that was simply unacceptable.  And people loved him for that--no one could ever tell him to walk a mile in their shoes, because they knew he already had!
          He was brilliant.  He double majored in Math and German, and spent his days as a genius computer programmer, working on military planes and later the space program.  He also helped develop the first online travel reservation system.  He had an intense and original love for history.  He passed on great pride for his Armenian heritage.  He also loved literature and had an unparalleled knowledge of the English language and a broad range of intellectual vocabulary.  He was creative and a home repair guru--if there was something you told him needed fixing, it'd always be done the next day.  He could restore some sort of functionality to almost anything.
          He was also a little bit crazy, like buying fuchsia polyester pants, taking his sons (age 16, 13, and 11) on a cross-country motorcycle trip of over 7,000 miles, and quitting his job while buying a mint-condition convertible Camaro on the very same day.
          He believed in his kids and supported them in everything.  He was the kind of dad that when his kids had long hair he said it looked great, or if they wanted to dance then he'd always pay the costume fee, of if his son Rhett loved Bon Jovi then he thought there must be something to it, so he started listening to Bon Jovi too.
          He wasn't perfect, but he was perfect in the important things.  He got baptized when he was 26 and never faltered in 56 years.  He died having lived a full life with no regrets.  What a man!

I hope I have some of him running on through me!


Love you, Gramps.

Saturday, October 15, 2011

More Than Biologically Related

Day twenty-one: A picture of someone you miss.
Let's expand this to the two people I miss:  Courtney Poulsen and Danielle Warnick.
     From Logan to Orem to St. George, we span the state of Utah.  Coming from a family of all boys, these two gorgeous women are the closest thing to my biological sisters.  And when you are as close to your cousins as I am, seeing them a few times a year is not enough.
     From the simple childhood days of slumber parties, fashion shows, and Mary-Kate and Ashley movies, to growing up and facing boy problems, bad-hair days, and changing friendships, they've always been there for me.  Through every shopping trip, Park City getaway, and family reunion, we've got good times coming till the end of it all.
     Here's to you, women.
                                LDC for life.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

The Source of Awesomeness

Day twelve: A picture of yourself and a family member.
I'm pretty sure this picture is self-explanatory as to the nature of my relationship with my brother.

Ten Reasons Why Ryan Kasparian is the Source of Awesomeness
1. He's 13 years old and can grow a scary good mexi-stache.
2. He's pro at pwning all the newb-lets at Star Craft.
3. He can never take a picture without pulling an abnormal facial expression.  (At least, not that I know of.) 
4. He has a shirt that reads, "What? I can't hear you over the sound of my AWESOMENESS!"
5. We dominate at team Mario Kart. 
6. He's already way talented at composing some sick-rad original songs on the piano.
7. Whenever I come home from college, he walks in and states with a straight face, "Sister."  Then he proceeds to do whatever else he was doing previously.
8. You will hear the word "Sp-gowsh" (or something of that sort) at least once a day.
9. He has a legitimate afro.
10. He's one of the nicest kids you will ever meet.

Here's to you, brosef :)