| Contributed by: Ann Strike
From the Sky
New Era, May 1999, 47
by Helen Glissmeyer
In one sizzling moment, the world changed for D. J. Would he ever be the same again?
D. J. Holland doesnt have a zigzag haircut anymore. Nor does he have any scars
from the lightning that struck him a few summers ago in Daniel, Wyoming. But he still has
a testimony of the power of prayer and of the priesthood.
He remembers the dark sky and the distant lightning flashes as he worked on his
grandfathers ranch that August afternoon when he was 17. He had just brought in his
last truckload of baled hay from the wide, open fields.
"I knew it was going to rain," recalls D. J., "but it never crossed my
mind that the storm would threaten my life. I just wanted to get as much work done as I
could before the rain came."
D. J. parked his semi behind another hay-filled truck, driven there by his younger
cousin Ross Varner. Then he hurried into the barn. There he helped Ross and their
grandfather Ron Wagstaff hoist the bales into place with a huge hay fork on a backhoe
tractor.
"After a few minutes Grandpa asked me to go out to the cattle feeder, which was
about 100 feet away, and clean out the strings," says D. J. "These are plastic
ties which are taken off the bales and left in the feeder. They need to be cleaned out
before spring so the animals can use the feeder before the grass grows high enough to
graze.
"The bars on the feeder were metal, a perfect target for lightning," says D.
J. "But I didnt think about that until it was too late."
While D. J. cleaned up the strings, Ross and his grandfather worked fast to get the hay
unloaded before the rain came and the lightning grew worse.
"Storms come up quick there," recalls Ross. "And after what had happened
in the past, we usually headed for cover any time we saw lightning. Lightning killed a
white horse that Grandpa had given to me about two years before," he continues.
"It also hit a big barn that was full of hay and expensive tools. It burned to the
ground.
"That day as we unloaded the hay, we heard a few faraway rumbles of thunder. Then
suddenly we heard a big one that was really close," remembers Ross. "It kind of
spooked us, and we said wed better go in. We looked around for D. J. and
couldnt see him. We decided hed probably gone back to the house."
Ross and his grandpa jumped into the small Honda and started for the ranch house about
a city block away. As they pulled out, they saw something startlingtwo boots
sticking up from a pile of dirt. D. J.! Quickly they drove there, fearing the worst. There
lay D. J., unconscious. Most of his shirt was gone. A zigzag mark on his bare chest looked
as though it had been drawn with a black marker. His baseball cap lay several feet away.
Ross and Grandpa lifted his limp six-foot-four frame into the little Honda as quickly
as they could.
"It was pretty scary," recalls Ross. "Grandpa dropped me off at the
house, and I called the doctor in Pinedale to tell him Grandpa was bringing D. J. in. Then
I called Salt Lake City to tell his mom and dad and also my mom and grandma. I was really
nervous."
On the way to the clinic, D. J. gained consciousness.
"When I woke up in the back of the car," says D. J., "I was confused and
didnt know what was happening. I was numb. I couldnt move. I asked, What
happened? Where are we going? My grandpa kept patting me and saying that I was going
to be all right."
At the clinic, medical personnel put D. J. on a gurney, they cut his shredded shirt
from his body, and they stuffed cotton into his bleeding ear.
"They put me in a restraint that clamped around my forehead and down my body in
case I had neck and back injuries," says D. J. "Apparently the lightning had
knocked me a few feet."
The Pinedale doctor suggested that an ambulance transport D. J. to a larger clinic in
Rock Springs for further treatment. By the time he arrived in the nearby Wyoming city,
D.Js parents, Douglas and Jennifer Holland, were there to meet him.
When the emergency room physician examined D. J., he found a severely burned right ear,
much of his sandy-colored hair above the ear melted off, and a face scarred with burns.
Finger-like projections all down his body resembled burst capillaries. The physician,
amazed that D. J. had survived, arranged to have him taken to the University of Utah
Medical Center burn unit in Salt Lake City.
During the 90-minute ride to the Salt Lake hospital, D. J. was awake and aware of the
trip. In his room a few hours laterin the middle of the nighta crowd of
worried family members gathered around his hospital bed.
"The room was full," D. J. fondly remembers. "My parents and four
sisters and my grandparents were there. Ross and other cousins and aunts and uncles were
there. My grandpa gave me a priesthood blessing. Grandpa blessed me that I would
completely recover from the accident, and that I would have no scars or ill effects. After
the blessing I had no doubt that I would be okay."
During his 24-hour hospital stay, D. J. learned that besides the extensive burns on his
body, he had a seriously damaged eardrum. He later learned that sometimes the eardrum will
rupture because of the loud percussion of thunder.
But that didnt worry D. J. He did know he needed to do something about his
burned-off hair. The barber had an appropriate idea. He shaved D. J.s head, except
for a zigzag, lightning-bolt strip down the center.
During the next few weeks D. J. returned to the hospital several times to have his
burns checked. They were healing. Then he went to an ear specialist. This doctor told the
family that the burned-out eardrum probably wouldnt mend and that he might have to
graft in a new one. Only time would tell.
Just two weeks after the first visit with the specialist, D. J. went back.
"This time the doctor was really surprised," D. J. says. "He found that
my eardrum was actually growing back. It wasnt completely healed yet, but it was
growing back. It was a miracle."
Today, D. J.s burns have completely healed. He has no scars on his face or body,
and he has no hearing loss. He even has to stop to think which is his damaged ear. His
hair also has grown out. But most of all, he has a very strong testimony of the power of
prayer and of the priesthood.
"I said a lot of prayers back then, and so did my family," says D. J.
"But mostly I knew that Grandpa had given me an inspired priesthood blessing."
Editors Note: D. J. is now married and living in Salt Lake City. Ross recently
finished his freshman year at Pepperdine University in Malibu, California. He is preparing
for a mission.
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