Friday, February 29, 2008

Old Things - Clay Harrison


I found this on the web while searching for poetry for a scrapbook of memories of my mother who passed away recently. While things are just that, "things"; I find that those "things" seem to mean more once the one who had them is no longer there. I have found it to be especially true in my case where my relationship with her was estranged for the last years of her life. I had just recently begun to rebuild our relationship and it ended all to soon before what I wanted to say had been said. It makes me sad, that I never made the first move to rekindle a love I had known for so many years and lost due to misunderstood facts. So now, the things she left behind will become a memory book to share with all of her children, grandchildren, great grandchildren and on and on for as long as the pages last or world keeps on turning.

I just had to share this with all of those who love vintage "things". Everything we touch leaves an emotional mark on someone and tho they are just "things", they are not just "things" to those who lived the memories.

Old Things are More Beautiful
(Clay Harrison)

Old things are more beautiful
than many things brand new
Because they bring fond memories
of things we used to do.

Old photographs in albums,
love letters tied with lace
Recapture those old feelings
that new ones can't replace.

Baby shoes, a Teddy bear,
a ring that grandma wore,
Are treasures waiting there behind
a door marked "Nevermore".

Old things are more beautiful,
more precious day-by-day.
Because they are the flowers
we planted yesterday.

Thanks for stopping by.

Jean @ Ruby Door Designs

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

What a morning !

Well, this has been a crazy morning. My husband bought me a new computer desk for my laptop computer. It's more modern than I like but the price was right. I'm so pleased to finally have a desk but I tried to put it together by myself. Aaaaahhhhhhhh. Should not have done that. I've been hit on the head a dozen times by pieces that don't want to stay standing. Guess it takes someone with more hands than I've got.....;-) I've given up on finishing for awhile. I think I'll wait for help. I can hardly wait to put it to use.

I will be updating my website with new items in the next week. Please stop by and check it out when you can. Have a great day everyone !

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Moving on

Just wanted to drop in an say "Good Morning". So much to do and the time goes so fast when you get older. Working on a scrapbook of old pictures found at my mothers and scanning things I can use for new projects I have in mind. Building a family tree of my mother's side of the family........etc etc. I could write a list a mile long but it wouldn't get anything done any faster so guess I'd better get at it.

Hugs to all and have a great day.

Jean

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Home At Last - Tribute To Mom

I have finally returned to my home following the death of my mother. She had lived a long full life and I think she was ready to pass the torch to the next generation. She was 92 years old and for the majority of her life she had been extraordinarily healthy for her age with the exception of severe arthritis in her hips, which made walking impossible. I think that being confined to her home and an electric scooter was a bit depressing for her in her later years and she had lost her sense of purpose. She couldn't go anywhere or do anything and she had always been a very active person. She enjoyed gardening and every year her flowers and food flourished it seemed even better than the year before. She had the "greenest" thumb I've ever seen. I certainly did not inherit it. I just look at a plant and it withers up and dies. In her younger years she was an avid hunter and fisherman. We located pictures of her with two shotguns and two large deer hanging beside her and others where strings of Northern Pike had been pulled from the Minnesota Lakes near where she grew up.
I learned so much from this woman who had been my mother by choice not by chance. I was abandoned on the steps of an Iowa orphanage in 1959 at the age of 8, along with 3 of my siblings, by my biological parents. One year later we all had a new farm home and new parents. It was a completely new experience but one full of everyday surprises. Hard work in the garden and collecting the turkey eggs at 5 am before school were just a couple of my duties. Those turkeys were bigger than I was. Scared is not even the right word to describe my fear of them. But she taught me how to get the egg out from under a big scary turkey without letting it bite me. Living on a farm in the '60's and 70's was not like it is today. We butchered chickens, turkeys, and hogs as well as cattle. We milked cows, and fed orphaned lambs with a pop bottle. Packaging meat for the freezer was one of my jobs. We canned bushel baskets full of tomatoes, apples, beans, peaches,...you get the idea. One day of the week was bread baking day and that was what we did the entire day. Loaf after loaf of white and wheat bread and dinner rolls too. Most of it was frozen for use at a later time. Sometimes she did it herself and we had the best oven baked hot rolls with butter when we got home from school. We looked forward to that day. She was a very hard worker and taught us the value of a hard days work. If you weren't tired at night you hadn't worked hard enough. In the evenings it was story time. Sometimes she would tell us silly stories from her own childhood or read to us from a huge stack of children's story books. While we had a TV it wasn't the center of our lives. Singing silly songs, telling stories, making up stories, playing cards, dominoes or scrabble were evening entertainment.
It seemed to me that she knew everything. Along with the things already mentioned she was a great carpenter and taught me how to finish and refinish wood furniture. When we built the new house, I finished all of the woodwork, under her watchful eye - no small task. She was the most versatile and intelligent woman I've ever known and she never stopped learning. In her later years she read constantly and was always up to date on current events. She didn't read novels, she read Science Digest, The Smithsonian Magazine, Newsweek, Time, National Geographic, and Discover Magazine. Things that would teach her more. You would think that at her age she would want to just read novels and relax but that wasn't her style. She kept herself so well informed on matters of importance that if we had a question about anything we went to mom and she always had an answer. Now the torch passes to us and I don't think any of us can fill her shoes.
When we started going through her things we found a complete folder of stories and poetry she had written when she was young. It is very good thought provoking writing in this day when life is so complicated. She lived in a simpler time when a beautiful pink and purple sunset made you smile and you went to bed at dark so that you could be up to meet the sunrise. We were thrilled beyond words to find it and the lot of us-her children and grandchildren sat on the floor in the living room of her home and passed the pages from one to the other. Tears were shed, smiles and laughter were evoked and a sense of "WOW I never knew this side of her", were echoed all around. She had never told us of her attempts at writing.
I could go on and on about her atributes but I think I will end this here and write more in the journal I am writing for my children to have when I am gone.
We will miss her but her memory lives on in we her children who will pass the information and stories to our children and grandchildren. Thank you mom for taking me as your own and giving me a lifetime of happy memories.