Tag: IT life

  •  MIT-8: “The Brass Serpent”

    Not everything that heals you is complicated. Sometimes, you just have to look.

    Excerpt
    Sometimes the hardest problems in life are answered with the simplest solutions. The challenge is not the solution—it is whether we are willing to accept it.


    Intro
    As I reflected this past month, I realized how often I complicate things that are meant to be simple. In the scriptures, the story of the brass serpent is one of the clearest reminders that healing, both physical and spiritual, often comes through simple acts of faith.


    Notes from the Scriptures
    As the children of Israel journeyed near the land of Edom, they complained along the way. Because of their murmuring, “the Lord sent fiery serpents among the people, and they bit the people; and much people of Israel died” (Numbers 21:6).

    Moses sought the Lord on behalf of the people, and the answer he received was unexpected. “Make thee a fiery serpent,” the Lord commanded, “and set it upon a pole: and it shall come to pass, that every one that is bitten, when he looketh upon it, shall live.” Moses obeyed, “and it came to pass, that if a serpent had bitten any man, when he beheld the serpent of brass, he lived” (Numbers 21:8-9).

    At first glance, the solution seems straightforward. Yet Nephi later revealed an important truth: “The labor which they had to perform was to look; and because of the simpleness of the way, or the easiness of it, there were many who perished” (1 Nephi 17:41). The difficulty was not in the act itself, but in accepting something so simple.

    Alma later taught that the brass serpent was a symbol of the Son of God. However, “few understood the meaning of those things, and this because of the hardness of their hearts.” Many “would not look,” not because they couldn’t, but because “they did not believe that it would heal them” (Alma 33:20).

    This pattern mirrors the mindset of Laman and Lemuel. When asked if they had prayed, they replied, “We have not; for the Lord maketh no such thing known unto us” (1 Nephi 15:9). Doubt prevented action.

    Alma then invited the people with a simple but powerful question: “If ye could be healed by merely casting about your eyes that ye might be healed, would ye not behold quickly?” He urged them to “cast about your eyes and begin to believe in the Son of God” (Alma 33:21-22).

    He later reinforced the same principle: “The way is prepared, and if we will look we may live forever” (Alma 37:46).

    Nephi, generations later, made the connection even clearer: “As Moses lifted up the brazen serpent in the wilderness, even so shall he be lifted up who should come… even so as many as should look upon the Son of God with faith… might live, even unto that life which is eternal” (Helaman 8:14-15).

    The Savior Himself confirmed this truth: “And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up: that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life” (John 3:14-15).


    Perspective (direct quotes)
    “The labor which they had to perform was to look.”
    “And because of the simpleness of the way… there were many who perished.”
    “They did not believe that it would heal them.”
    “Cast about your eyes and begin to believe.”


    Practice (today, not someday)
    Today, I will not overcomplicate what God has made simple.
    I will act, even when I do not fully understand.
    I will choose faith over doubt, even when the solution seems too easy.
    I will look up—toward Christ—rather than around for alternatives.


    Final Reflection
    The brass serpent reminds me that the issue is rarely the solution. The issue is whether I am willing to trust it. Healing is available, but it requires humility. It requires action. And sometimes, it requires doing something so simple that pride resists it.


    Pocket I’m Keeping
    “Don’t ignore simple solutions.”


    What I Hear Now (direct quotes)
    “If ye could be healed… would ye not behold quickly?”
    “The way is prepared, and if we will look we may live forever.”


    Link to the talk/scriptures
    Numbers 21:6–9
    1 Nephi 17:41
    Alma 33:20–22
    Alma 37:46
    Helaman 8:14–15
    John 3:14–15


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  • MIT8 – Bad breaks and trusting the Lord

    Super Harvest Moon rising through thin clouds over the Draper Utah Temple. Double exposure, short telephoto (70–100 mm f/2.8) on tripod.

    Excerpt
    Setbacks aren’t a verdict; they’re the venue. What feels like a bad break can become a disguised doorway when we trust the Lord’s larger view.

    Intro
    Elder Neal A. Maxwell taught that “bad breaks need not ruin a good man or a good woman… so often in life opportunity comes disguised as tragedy,” and, “trust the Lord, for He sees your possibilities even when you do not.” Those lines met me this week. Sleep was thin, appetite gone, heart stretched—but even the stretch nudged me heavenward.

    Perspective
    There are no super heroes in IT—no capes, no instant rescues. Systems fail, humans tire, plans bend. The real test is not whether I dodge hard things but whether I meet them with faith, honesty, and steady work. Joseph didn’t waste Egypt, and Job didn’t waste ash and silence. I don’t want to waste my own classroom of adversity.

    Practice (today, not someday)

    • Whisper a prayer of trust: “Lord, I choose to keep trying.”
    • Do one quiet act of goodness for someone who can’t repay you.
    • Write a single line of gratitude for help you didn’t expect.
    • Sit in a patch of light—outside or by a window—and breathe until your shoulders lower.

    Final Reflection
    Worry took sleep and appetite, yet the Lord met me in the stretch. He didn’t remove the weight; He strengthened my will and widened my view. A bad break does not define me; how I walk through it, with Him, refines me.

    Pocket I’m Keeping
    “Proving is strengthening.” When the wind rises, roots go deeper.

    What I Hear Now
    Be steadfast. Keep moving toward Me. I know how to carry you.

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    For usage terms, please see the Legal Disclaimer.

  • Marked in Time — Learn to Love the Storm (Provo City Center Temple)

    Provo City Center Temple under lightning—shot from the walkway with leading lights. A reminder I first learned in 2018 after that T-bone crash: storms can shake you, but they don’t decide the ending.

    Excerpt
    Learn to love the storm.


    Intro
    Storms touch every life—loss, illness, missed chances, worry. In IT they hit at 2 a.m., at airports, on freeways, even overseas. Like weather carves a canyon, adversity shapes a soul. Preparation helps—docs, reps, calm breath—until we learn not just to endure but to embrace the rhythm.


    Backstory
    Second week of January 2018, on my way to photograph Provo City Center Temple, a driver T-boned my car. He was arrested on the spot. I blacked out for a few seconds—came back, shaken but okay—and still made it to the temple. That night taught me: storms hit hard, but they don’t have to end the story. Funny enough, as I write this, American Pie wanders through a verse about endings. I’m grateful mine wasn’t.


    Notes from the Journey
    Urgency doesn’t wait; readiness is mercy. Pressure reveals what practice built. Quiet faith plus steady habits turns chaos into clarity.


    Practice (today, not someday)
    Prep what future-you will need (one checklist, one page of notes). When the alert hits: breathe, bless, begin. Re-anchor: Grounded • Rooted • Established • Settled.


    Final Reflection
    Loving the storm doesn’t mean pretending it doesn’t hurt. Some trials mark the body and the heart. Yet the covenant echo remains: “Thine adversity and thine afflictions shall be but a small moment… and shall be for thy good.” (D&C 121:7; 122:7) In tech and in life, Murphy visits often; I’ll meet him ready, resilient, and willing—trusting that beyond the thunder, I keep moving.


    Pocket I’m Keeping
    Prepared, prayerful, unafraid of weather.


    What I Hear Now
    Hold fast. Keep going between flashes.

    © 2012–2025 Jet Mariano. All rights reserved.
    For usage terms, please see the Legal Disclaimer.

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