
Gabrielsen was one of 106 students who wrote essays on the 2008
Founder, Rex E. Lee, founding dean of the J. Reuben Clark Law School
and former BYU president.
Landmarks and Legal Pads
Near the end of
his life, Rex Lee was preparing to argue his 60th case before the U.S.
Supreme Court. In my mind's eye, I can picture a yellow legal pad,
covered with scribbled notes, carefully laid on a table in a now-silent
hospital room. Other books and folders make up an improvised law
library among the IV tubes and monitors. The stilled medical equipment
is a reminder of the vicious cancer that took President Lee's life. But
as I imagine this scene, I don't focus on the tubes and wires as much
as on his books and his legal pad. I don't see the way he died; I see
the way he lived.
Both his death and his life are
commemorated in the annual Rex Lee Run, a race I ran in 2007. As I
started my determined jog around BYU campus, I picked a landmark ahead
of me and decided that once I reached it, I could slow down and walk
for a few minutes. At the first landmark I had enough energy to keep
going. So I set a new landmark. And then another. Soon I was in a
steady rhythm. My measured breaths kept time. Landmarks came and went,
and somehow I always had just enough in me to make it one more block,
one more corner. It was the farthest I'd ever run without tiring out. I
found the energy I needed to go the distance.
Rex
Lee found that energy, too. As a marathon runner, President Lee "went
the distance" every time he crossed the finish line. But going the
distance against cancer meant that the finish line was chasing him, and
he would have to run as hard as he could before it caught up.
Maybe
President Lee's first experience with cancer turned his thoughts toward
working for a world that would go on without him. After his initial
diagnosis in 1987, he immediately started planning for his family's
long-term financial survival. Five years later, as BYU president, he
pled with students to streamline their graduations and allow more
people a BYU experience. He started a fundraising program that raised
$400 million for the university, though he knew he might never see its
completion. Years before, as founding dean of the J. Reuben Clark Law
School, he worked to recruit top law students, knowing that the law
school's long-term reputation would be built on that first class. He
may never have run a relay, but he certainly knew these efforts would
affect future generations to which he would pass the baton. Others were
depending on him to go the distance.
As his illness
recurred, though, it reduced his physical capacity. Going the distance
now meant fighting against his limitations with optimism and
determination. He stayed at the office through days of tremendous pain.
As his legs weakened, he knew that he might never run, jog, or even
walk again. But even that would not stop him. "If Jason Hall [a wheelchair-bound BYUSA president] can do his work from a wheelchair,
why can't I?"
Despite everything cancer tried to
take away from him, President Lee knew that it was not yet time to
rest. During his first treatments he continued legal work from his
hospital bed. Retired Justice Sandra Day O'Connor remembered him
appearing before the Supreme Court during this time "looking very pale
and weak . . . but nonetheless, [he was] effective."
Even
in his last months Rex Lee knew he could not slow down in the final lap
of the race. His yellow legal pad shows that up until the very end he
was still setting landmarks and running for them as if nothing was
holding him back. Had he lived to argue his 60th Supreme Court case, I
imagine he would have started work on his 61st. With the finish line
approaching, he kept up the pace he had maintained his whole life.
The
finish line was my last landmark of the Rex Lee Run. I was tired, but
the end was in sight. Just as before, I found the strength I needed to
turn the final lap into a sprint. With all I had, I tumbled past the
finish line, dizzily staggered toward my wife in the stands, and knew I
had gone the distance.
The time finally came for President
Lee to set down his legal pad and cross the finish line. In spite of
physical weaknesses, he managed to sprint to the very end, leaving
behind much more than a legal pad. Rex Lee's life is an inspiration to
all of us still running. We can make it.
We can go the distance.