Posts Tagged With: Grandparents

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

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

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