Sheri Dew: Living the unexpected life
'Unmarried' leader is almost a celebrity among LDS
"Oh, you're the unmarried one," perfect strangers will blurt out upon meeting her.
The unmarried general officer of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Dew might be better known more for what she doesn't have a husband than by what she does have a dual career, brains, surpassing talent as a pianist, writer and speaker (and, umm, Game Boy player). This is a woman who has accomplished great things while waiting for love to come along, but she is still famous for her marital status, largely because she helps lead a church that is centered on marriage and family.
Dew is everywhere confronted with her singleness, whether in the family-lined pews of the chapel on Sunday and the constant emphasis on the family unit, or with questions from the curious.
"How come you're not married?" she is often asked.
"Because no one asked," she likes to say, using her deft humor, as she often does, to deflect painful or awkward moments.
The questions have even turned ignorant and mean:
She always wanted and expected to be married, to raise children, to stay at home; she never meant to become a career woman, no apologies to feminists (who must be cringing). As she says, "There isn't anyone who wants to see me married more than I do."
But here she is, at 48, the newly named CEO of Deseret Book, the second counselor in the LDS Church's Relief Society presidency the first unmarried woman ever to become a general officer in the church (there's that unmarried thing again) and the author of four books. Never did she imagine such a career, nor that she would live her life alone. Dew's best friend, Wendy Watson, a professor at Brigham Young University who is also single, calls it "living the unexpected life."
It has become part of her appeal.
Sheri Dew, the Kansas farm girl, stands out in the LDS Church, and not just because she is 5-foot-10. She receives thousands of letters from church members and is approached on the street by her, well, fans. The LDS Church understandably shies from celebrity Mormonism, but there is no denying Dew's popularity.
"There is no question about it," says Sharon Larson, second counselor in the LDS Church's Young Women general presidency and another of Dew's close friends. "I have traveled with her to Africa, Southeast Asia, Japan and Korea, and truly everywhere we've gone people just come up to her. They tell her, 'You speak to my soul. You are so real.' And she is. She has her own following, independent of her calling."
Recent comments
I am a Y.S.A living in New Zealand and I heard Sister Dew speak at...
Good Work Sister Dew! Keep it up | May 9, 2008 at 12:36 a.m.
This article is still getting attention. She is a fantastic person...
Debbie | May 2, 2008 at 11:21 p.m.
I just finished one of her books (just wonderful words) and I realized...
Hellen | April 15, 2008 at 2:38 p.m.



