Posts Tagged With: Family

Sister Sorrow

It has been a long, hard week. One, we will not soon forget.

Monday, runners ran and bombs exploded, atoms split, three died, and we cried.

Tuesday, more explosions, more people gone, up in flames, up in smoke.

Then there’s the doctor, a monster, a maniac, who ran a house of horrors, stitched and sketched from the lining of nightmares.

My husband, my God-fearing husband who is always bent, bent in prayer, on his knees, with his hands all over the word, asked me, “What next?”

And, I wonder…

I wonder will sister sorrow visit our house next?

Will she walk right through our front door?

Will her bare feet pound up and down our hardwood floors?

Will she sit at our supper table, break bread, and dine with us?

Will she crawl in our beds, sleep under our ćovers, and steal our dreams?

Will she?

We weep and we wonder.

Why do good men die and bad men thrive?

We turn to the book of Job, we sing Psalms, and write lines and lines of Lamentations.

We seek peace and comfort.

We find them both in the foundation of our faith.

We were taught and we believe, when sister sorrow enters in,

the Father and his Son will be there too.

The father who gave us life, formed us from the dirt of the earth, and the breath of his lungs.

The Son of Man who hung on tree, so that someday we can see

a day without tears,

a life without fears,

a place to rest at the end of life’s journey,

Heaven.

Oh, What a Day that will be!

Categories: Faith, Life | Tags: , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Blow Out Your Birthday Candle, Miss Kynlee!

In twelve months, your entire life can change. You can travel the world, swim in the crystal clear waters of Bora, Bora, indulge your taste buds on the streets of Paris with sweet tarts and macarons, and scale the Himalayan mountains to dance on the roof of the world. In twelve months, you can learn to speak a second language with fluency, or pen the 75,000 word novel that unfolded daily on a center stage in your mind. In twelve months, you can learn to fly the friendly skies on the wings of a mechanical bird, or obtain a license to dive down deep with the creatures of the sea. In twelve months, you can reinvent yourself, let yourself go, become someone new; and in twelve months you can meet and fall in love with a girl, who will change your whole world.

Twelve months ago, my baby sister’s life changed, for the better. My sister met her daughter for the very, first time. Twelve months ago, my baby sister became a mother. This past weekend we celebrated the birth of her baby girl, and rejoiced for all the love and joy she has brought to our family this past year.

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Happy Birthday, Miss Kynlee! Here’s to many, many more!

Categories: Life | Tags: , , , | 4 Comments

Making Moments into Memories

Time does not stop. It does not slow down.

It marches forward, minute by minute, hour by hour.

Each day brings a new gift, a second chance, a promise of hope.

And, each day passes with missed opportunities, failed intentions, and mournful regrets.

The calendar pages turn and fall.

The hands of a weathered clock, tired and frail, continue to tick, tocking, tick,

Singing us all a lullaby.

Reminding us to make, each and every minute count,

Breathe life into every moment,

Make it matter, make it mean something, make it a memory.

Here are a few moments from 2012 that are now stitched into the fabric of my family’s past.

In April, God sent me another niece.

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After a full school year of tears, trials and tribulations; Lauryn’s teachers and I, let out a collective sigh, as Lauryn received the highly esteemed, preschool diploma!

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We were so Proud! Heh! Heh!

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We took a little trip to Hilton Head Island for some fun in the Sun and Sand!

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We added a whole slew of baby chicks to our farm register and Skylyr became a Master Chicken Catcher! The Chicks lost a lot of feathers to prove it!

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Lauryn learned how to ride a bike without training wheels. Yeah!

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Skylyr logged more hours on his Daddy’s tractor than any other farmer in the tri-state area, and he didn’t even use a drop of fuel!

In September, I passed a pregnancy test with a big, fat, Positive! Baby number three will be here in May 2013!
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In October, we rode a real train to a real sincere Pumpkin Patch, but we didn’t catch a glimpse of The Great Pumpkin! Aww, Peanuts!

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Lauryn lost her two front teeth and Santa did not bring her new ones.

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We discovered that Lauryn is a Natural in the kitchen at Christmas! Santa thought her cookies were sooo Nice, they were Naughty!

2012, also, brought lots of love.

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I hope 2013 brings even more for you and yours! God Bless!

Categories: Life | Tags: , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Mommy in a bottle

This mommy isn’t much different from any other mommy. I am a little Florence Nightingale and a lot Genie in a bottle. I have a deep maternal urge to dry every tear, kiss every boo-boo, and make every wish, my children dare to dream, come true! Unfortunately, here lately, I have been saying “Yes, Master” or should I say “Yes, children”, more than I am cleaning cuts and applying sponge bob band-aids.

My wish granting spree all began with my sweet baby boy. He’s two and loves anything that moves. He gets all excited at the sight of a plane, train, tractor, and automobile. Since our trip last weekend that involved a pseudo train his fascination grew worse by the minute. So, when this mommy stumbled across this fall festivity, I got an idea! A Wonderful, beautiful idea! We would go! We would ride a real train, to a real sincere pumpkin patch!

I packed our bags and most my family ( we are a little Beverly Hillbillish), and headed South to TN then east to North Carolina! We drove across The Great Smoky Mountains, thirty plus miles of nature’s splendor and smoking brakes. We drove thru the little town of Cherokee, NC, past dancing Indians in full headdress and roadside stands selling moccasins and arrowheads, past rushing rivers and over rolling hills, to get to this quant little town.

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Bryson City felt a lot like home, but different, trapped in time, a little 1917-ish maybe. Old brick stores lined the streets and The Great Smoky Mountains Railroad Depot stole the spotlight as a little blue building among a sea of red bricks. A host of craft selling and candy making vendors surrounded The Depot under large white tents. A live band blasted country music thru the paved streets and the smell of funnel cakes and fudge followed you as far as your nose could smell. We made our way to the train and climbed aboard!

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Our seats were in the open air Gondola’s, so we got the oppurtunity to take it all in, everything. The perfectly stacked rock walls, the leaves wild with color, the rivers ripe for kayaking or rafting, and the peaks of the smoky mountains standing tall and looming in the background.

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I didn’t want the train to stop, but it did, Peanuts style. Charlie Brown, Lucy, and Snoopy where all there to greet us at The Great Pumpkin Patch. The kids were beyond excited!

They bobbed for apples.

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They trick or treated

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They went on a hunt for The Great Pumpkin

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They rode a wagon pulled by a tractor driving scarecrow

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Lauryn meet her cousin Lucy

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And, they took lots of pictures for mommy

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Like all good things, they must eventually come to an end. Our time at the pumpkin patch was over. Carrying pumpkins under one arm, and bags of candy in the other, we boarded the train once again as the whistle blew for departure.

On the ride home the kids fell asleep and I was exhausted, but most of all I was grateful. Grateful for a wonderful day. Grateful for the perfect weather. Grateful for all God’s beauty and his many blessings, for the two sitting beside me, and the loving family that surrounds me.

No, it wasn’t the most sincere pumpkin patch, and no, we didn’t catch a glimpse of The Great Pumpkin, but I was especially grateful that I got to make one wish come true, for one very special little boy. Here’s to many more!

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Categories: Mommy Tales | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Grandparent’s Day!

Nobody can do for little children what grandparents do. Grandparents sort of sprinkle stardust over the lives of little children. ~Alex Haley

I am certain there is nothing on Earth that makes my parent’s as happy as their grandchildren do. I knew the moment my mother held my daughter for the first time I had been replaced. The look on my Mother’s face, a reflection of my own, pure, unconditional love, minus all the weight and responsibility that comes with parenting. My parents were smitten without limits and still are.

They spoil, baby, dote and pamper their grandchildren to the point it is almost shameless but enduring. The word NO holds no meaning. Yes, is repeated often. Discipline does not exist. They fulfill their grandchildren’s every wish. No mountain is too high enough, no river is too wide enough to keep them apart. The grandchildren call and they go running.

I am sure my parents would deny these accusations, but they are guilty as charged. Okay, maybe I am a tad bit jealous or even envious. Growing up, my parent’s had lots of boundaries for us. We heard no often, and they did not hesitate to correct, when we veered onto the wrong path. Those burdens do not seem to exist, when you go from parent to grandparent. The fears, the worries, and endless duties are all washed away. A blessing I am so grateful my parent’s have received.

I am, also, certain that nothing makes my children happier than their Nana, Mamaw, and Papaw’s. They know they are loved and loved some more. If there is a need that I can not meet, they know who can and then some. My parent’s are blessed but my children are blessed by them even more, and I am so very thankful!

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Happy Grandparent’s Day!!

Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , | 4 Comments

What lays hidden in a bible

In all of us there is a hunger, marrow deep, to know our heritage-to know who we are and where we came from. Without this enriching knowledge, there is a hollow yearning. No matter what our attainments in life, there is still a vacuum, an emptiness, and the most disquieting loneliness.  
-Alex Haley

A bible, bound in black leather, and trimmed in gold, sat on my grandmother’s sofa table for years.  I assumed it was like any other bible; plain text in black, Christ’s words in red, nothing remarkable. For a multitude of years I ignored its presence.  Then one day out of boredom, I picked the bible up.  I leafed thru the pages with expectancy for the norm and I found something extraordinary instead.

In the very front  of the bible, my grandmother’s family tree had took root.  It’s limbs and branches were sprayed across the pages in a flurry of handwritten names under the headings; birth, marriage, and death. Within those pages our lives had been stripped of all the details, traits, and accomplishments that make each and every one of us different and unique.  Our lives were naked and bared to those three life changing transformations, reminding me of how much I had in common with every person recorded in my grandmother’s bible.  Someday, like the rest, my life will only be remembered in a series of dates.

I became enchanted by the bible.  It cast a deep spell on me, as if I had been pricked by it’s pages, binding my blood to its fibers.  It had stirred a thirst for knowledge deep inside me that I had never experienced before.  I longed to know more about the branches of grandmother’s family tree.  I needed faces to go with names.  I needed wedding gowns and vows to go with marriage dates.  I needed how’s  and why’s to go with dates of death, but most of all, I needed to know, that their live’s really did consist of more than a bunch of dates, scribbled in ink.

Over the next couple of years, my grandmother began to weave bits and pieces of life stories together for me, a small offering to a beloved granddaughter.  She spoke of her son Bobby, who felt the sharp knife of a short life; with tears in her eyes, a pain to great to revisit often. She told me about babies born without breath, with no birth recorded, just date of death. She set the stage for many wedding ceremonies, from the mediocre to the elaborate, to those that lasted and those that did not.  We spoke of my grandfather who died in October, forever leaving Autumn with a particular sadness that can not be described, only felt.

We bonded over the pages of her family bible, as she gave life with words, to those who have long been gone.  My grandmother will be 91 years old this September.  She’s been on top of the mountain and down in the valley.  She’s loved, she’s lost, and she’s still hanging on, but her memory now fails her.  She no longer has the family bible, my mother does, and I imagine it will continue to pass thru our lineage.  I pray that someday one of my great-great-grandchildren will trace their fingers along the dates of my birth, my marriage, and my death. I pray that the life I am living right now, will speak so much louder, than the way and the day that I died. I pray that I leave a legacy that can be remembered with more than a date in time, and out lives my death by far.

Categories: Life | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

God’s Gift

I once thought my life danced on the toes of perfection.

It skimmed the surface of pure splendor.

It traced the lines of divine bliss.

Until my eyes saw the glory of God’s Gracious design,

Until my ears heard the gasp of a baby’s first breath,

And, my hands brushed the flesh of an earthly angel,

Then the life I once knew ended,

But I gained so much more.

A sweet baby girl!

On this day, five years ago, Miss Lauryn Aleigha, made her entrance, with force, of course, and life has never been the same. She wrapped me around her tiny little fingers, and ran away with my heart. She filled my cup to overflowing with love, and she changed my name from Tammy to Mommy. I love her more than she will ever know…

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Happy 5th Birthday, Lauryn!

Categories: Life, Love, Mommy Tales | Tags: , , , , , , , , , | 9 Comments

All Play, No Work

Growing up, Summer meant everything wonderful and magical.  No teachers with god-awful red pens.  No sticking to a structured 9pm bedtime or else.  No more being holed up in your room because the sky dumped buckets of snow on your front lawn.  No, Summers were for having adventures, playing tag and hide and go seek, building forts, and making mud pies.  Summer was about all fun and it belonged to us, the children.

Looking back now, I remember all those things, but my memories are lined with a hint of guilt.  Guilt over things I didn’t do, or should have done more of, like helping my grandparents, when they obviously needed an extra hand or two, maybe three.

Every Summer for as long as I can remember, my grandparents worked a garden.  A massive garden 3-4 fields wide.  They grew everything from potatoes to sweet peas.  There wasn’t much they didn’t grow actually.

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Any given day of the week, as long as it was not raining, you could find them in the garden.  The hot sun would be beating down, the air hot and humid.  Granny would be bent down pulling weeds, her long cotton skirt teasing the ground, and her hair, the color of cotton, would be pinned away from her face and neck.  My paw, dressed in white cotton t-shirt and a pair of blue work pants, would be grasping the handles of Ole tiller plow, as it turned the earth from hard and packed to soft and supple.  Ever so often, my grandpa would pull a white handkerchief from his shirt pocket, and wipe the sweat beads from his forehead.  My granny would use the end of her apron to do the same.

As my grandparents worked, we played.  The only time, my cousins and I, would go into the garden would be to swipe a ripe cucumber or tomato.  One time we ate our way through a whole row of sweet peas, before grandpa found us, and shewed us out.

Years, have past now since the last time I saw my grandparent’s working together in a garden.  My grandfather passed away eight years ago, although their our days I would swear it just happened yesterday.  My grandmother is still living, but she is just a shell of the woman she once was.  She has Dementia.  There are days she knows that I am her granddaughter, Tammy. The one who would help her water her flowers and feed her cats. Then there are days my face belongs to stranger; just someone she once knew.  Her arms are now too weak to lift, and her legs are too shaky to walk.  She is confined to her bed, and has not stepped foot in a garden in years.

I am the one, now, that spends hours under a hot sun, in the middle of a garden, every summer.  You can find me wiping sweat from face with the back of my old t-shirt and silently asking myself, “Why do you do this?”  It’s not out of necessity.  It’s not out of love for the veggies.  I give most of them away.  No, it’s more than that.  I do it to remember, to hold onto my grandparent’s.  When I am slinging my hoe, pulling weeds, or following behind a plow.  I see them.  I feel them.  They are there with me.  There words,  “Read your almanac.  Follow the Signs.  Fertilize.  Fertilize.  Stick your green beans.  Stick your tomatoes.  Give your melons and squash room to run,”  I hear them.  I listen, now.  I miss them.  I miss them everyday.

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My Grandmother holding my baby boy

Categories: Life | Tags: , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Will My Kids be Okay?

“Will my kids be okay? Will they get through this?”

A friend of mine asked me this question recently and I lied. I looked her dead in the eyes and said, “Yes, they will be fine. They will get through this. You worry too much, “ I told her.

The truth is I have no clue. None of us do, do we? Things that leave some of us battered and bruised, leave others without a single scratch. No visible scars. No signs of injury. It’s a guessing game really, or a good round of Russian roulette, trying to predict what may, make or break, someone.

My friend is going through a nasty, messy, complicated, divorce. She is at odds with her soon to be ex-husband, and her children are struggling to make sense of it all. What went wrong? Whose fault is it? Did I do something? Can it be fixed?

I remember those questions all too well. They are the same questions I needed answers to when my parent’s divorced. I can not even begin to tell you the amount of time I wasted trying to make the pieces of the puzzle of my parent’s demise fit. What happened? What piece went missing, was it love? Did they even have all the pieces to begin with?

All those questions kept me up at night, but what really bothered me was the fact that I could not pinpoint a specific moment or turn of an event when everything started to go sour. One day, they were over the moon and through the sun happy, and the next day M-I-S-E-R-A-B-L-E. It happened so silently and so gradual none of us even noticed until sour turned to bitter. Those life events that catch you off guard are the ones that leave you constantly looking at your life through a lens of a microscope, hoping to catch that one bad cell, before it turns into a full blown flesh eating virus.

The older I got, the more I realized, I didn’t need to know all the answers. I had hoped to find some tragic flaw or missing ingredient in my parent’s marriage. If they had been doomed from the very beginning, then they were an anomaly, and there would still be hope for me, hope to succeed in love. If I could only just find it, put my finger on it, and then all my faith in love would be restored. I never found a tragic flaw or missing ingredient, it didn’t exist.

Basically, my parent’s were no different than any other couple. They fell in love, took a risk, and lost. Who knows when you say, “I do”, how long forever will last. For some love endures to the grave and beyond, for others it’s over before the ink dries on the marriage certificate. Love is nothing more than a Wild Gamble. You play the hands you’ve been dealt and pray for a Royal Flush, but more times than not, you end up folding, losing it all, including your heart.

So, how did I deal? How did I survive the “Divorce”? My parents. They loved me through it, not together, but separately. They loved me through the rebellion, the mad teenage angst, the frustration, the back talking, and the disrespect. They loved me through it all. They may have given up on love, but they didn’t give up on me. I survived and I hope her kids do too.

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Categories: Life | Tags: , , , , , , , | 16 Comments

I fell in love in South Carolina!

Eight days ago, I packed our bags, and headed toward the sound of the rhythmic melody of waves cresting and falling, and the brash smell of salt-laden air. I left a disheveled pile of worries at my door step; a job with mounting expectations almost impossible to meet, a blood sucking mortgage, and a vehicle on its last two wheels. I left them all behind and headed toward an Island on the east coast.

Eight hours later, I am light and spirited. I am coasting down bicycle trails under a canopy of trees heavy with Spanish Moss. I am watching two blonde-haired and blue-eyed children run across a hard-packed sandy beach toward the rush of lapping waves. I am gazing at my two-year-old son in awe and amusement as he reels in his first blue gill from the murky waters of our backyard lagoon, and I know a week is long enough. Long enough for me to fall in love with the heart wrenching and breathtakingly beautiful, Hilton Head Island.

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Thank you, South Carolina, for showing, my family and I, a good time in the low country and for sending me home to Kentucky with a suitcase full of lovely, memories!

Categories: Life | Tags: , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments
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