Nora holds a basket that is a small picture of this old and familiar coupled with new experience. She is carrying her happily retrieved eggs in the Easter basket that was mine when I was her age! Something that was loved and passed down and kept. Our Easter traditions are a bigger picture of that for me, and of course so much more important. I am grateful for old stories and new ones, and most of all for the most powerful gift and story of all time, of Jesus' life and death and resurrection.
Sunday, March 27, 2016
Easter 2016
Nora holds a basket that is a small picture of this old and familiar coupled with new experience. She is carrying her happily retrieved eggs in the Easter basket that was mine when I was her age! Something that was loved and passed down and kept. Our Easter traditions are a bigger picture of that for me, and of course so much more important. I am grateful for old stories and new ones, and most of all for the most powerful gift and story of all time, of Jesus' life and death and resurrection.
Sunday, March 20, 2016
A Birthday Gift for Nora
We celebrated Nora's Birthday yesterday. She is now 2 years old. Grandparents from Tennessee and Texas (that would be us), aunts and uncles from both sides of her family plus her cousin Skye were all here to enjoy the balloons and bubbles that were floating everywhere. There was a chocolate cake, a candle to blow out, the birthday song, and of course, presents. Among our gifts to her was this apron with lots of polka dots and pockets.
I made it from 2 sizes of red and white polka dot fabric, so it was reversible. This apron is actually gift from 3 grandmothers. I, her paternal grandmother, found the valentine print in my own fabric stash to make tiny pockets. The other 2 pieces of fabric were cut from scraps of fabric from my own grandmother's quilting scraps. That means Mary Clyde Terrell, Nora's great great grandmother is part of the gift. Her daughter, my mother, Opal Terrell Teal, Nora's great grandmother (for whom she is named), contributed to my grandmother's quilting scraps from her own sewing although she did not quilt herself. Plus, she kept the box of fabric pieces for years before handing them down to me! She is the third grandmother represented in the gift.
I like thinking about the stories behind aprons and quilts and grandmothers. I am glad Nora's first apron has a story. She just likes wearing it!
Nora Opal Parker
Labels:
Birthdays,
family,
gifts,
granddaughters,
grandmothers,
Nora
Sunday, March 13, 2016
Moving a House
I watched as a 3 story Victorian house got moved yesterday. The relocation happened without the loss of a single fish scale shingle or Gingerbread railing, although some of those were already badly in need of repair. Nothing shifted except a little piece of my heart. The movers were two of my sons and the hauling mechanism was my red pickup truck. Although our family did live in a Victorian house just like this one, much smaller people and furniture have occupied this house, a large doll house made for me by a paraplegic craftsman in Jakarta, Indonesia. When I took a picture to him and asked if he could build a small one, he agreed and did a very good job of making a replica of our one- time home in Jacksonville, TX. Remarkable, since he had never seen a real house like that one.
Remarkable, since he and his wife delivered it to me in a taxi. Remarkable because I had no grandchildren at that time. Maybe I anticipated the sweet fact that I would eventually have 5 granddaughters.
This was never a house for grownups to have fun decorating. It was to play with, to imagine with, to wonder at. And the little girls growing up in our family plus a number of visiting children have done just that. I love that, and I was very fond of this doll house. I will remain so, since it was relocated to my oldest son and his wife's garage. Fitting, because many years after our family left the original house, it became a place for celebrations and they were married in the front parlor of the house we loved and lived in for a short time. In fact, the room where my son's bride dressed was his bedroom when he was 13! I hope that they will enjoy having it to help tell their story as someday they become grandparents themselves.
Another exercise in letting go and holding on! Another way to tell our story.
Remarkable, since he and his wife delivered it to me in a taxi. Remarkable because I had no grandchildren at that time. Maybe I anticipated the sweet fact that I would eventually have 5 granddaughters.
This was never a house for grownups to have fun decorating. It was to play with, to imagine with, to wonder at. And the little girls growing up in our family plus a number of visiting children have done just that. I love that, and I was very fond of this doll house. I will remain so, since it was relocated to my oldest son and his wife's garage. Fitting, because many years after our family left the original house, it became a place for celebrations and they were married in the front parlor of the house we loved and lived in for a short time. In fact, the room where my son's bride dressed was his bedroom when he was 13! I hope that they will enjoy having it to help tell their story as someday they become grandparents themselves.
Another exercise in letting go and holding on! Another way to tell our story.
Labels:
girls,
grandchildren,
granddaughters,
memories,
story
Friday, March 4, 2016
I know, everything now costs much more than it did then, and our income was less, too. Enjoy those ice cream treat special occasions!
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