I Need Your Help!

If you have stories you'd like to share, please email me @ ruthgivens5@gmail.com, I'd love to hear them and possibly include them on the blog.

Wednesday, December 27, 2017

The Card



In the process of cleaning out and renovating, we have found quite a few treasures.  Let me tell you about one of my favorites.
Most people from Bullock County knew or at least had heard of my grandmother.  She was kind.  She was gentle.  She was godly and wise.  She cared for other people.  She was beautiful inside and out.  I heard all of these things over and over and loved it each time someone took the time to tell me about how they remember her.  A few months back I was working at the Grill and waited on some older folks I knew.  We talked and caught up on life, quickly and she paused, looked at me and smiled.  She had not seen me since I was little and she had the funniest expression.  She went on to tell me she just had to say how much I reminded her of my Gram.  She told me how she had first met her when my granddad was preaching a revival at her church.  She was about 6 or 7 and my grandmother was about 15.  My friend said when my grandmother walked in, all of her friends and she were awed by her beauty and grace.  She said they all wanted to be just like her and they were so excited that the pastor was dating her.  She said not long after that, my grandparents were married.  My friend said that my skin was just as beautiful as my Gram's and she just had to tell me her memories of her.  By the time she finished I was in tears. Complete tears.  Thank you, Mrs. Locklar!
My Gram died when I was 3, so I have very few memories of her.  Anything anyone tells me is like gold, and my friend had just given me a fortune in her story.  My few memories are things like how she always smelled so good.  She was always beautiful, not made-up beautiful, just naturally beautiful.  She always had sparkly or pearly jewelry on-I still have a lot of her pieces...mostly costume, but lovely.  She had wavy, short hair.  She talked with a drawl.  She wore the best satin house slippers and let me wear them.  My mom let me keep them for years.  She was good at entertaining.  We always had nice meals at her house.  Anytime I smell cloves, I think of her house at meal time.  She let me help with things.  She had lots of aprons and almost always had one on over her dresses.  Things like that.  And having only been three when she passed, I am so thankful I have as many memories as I do.
So when my friend shared with me, a real, moment by moment account of her, it was more than I could absorb.  I had to apologize and thank her all at the same time.
And now I get to the picture.  I had always seen my Gram's handwritten recipes.  I had always heard about her.  Had memories with her, but never any memory of her saying anything to me or telling me anything, although I knew she surely had done both.  In a box of odds and ends, I found a note from Gram to me.  It was a thank you note.  She was sick with cancer and I had drawn her a picture and taken it to her.  I do remember her sickness and suffering.  I remember making her things and seeing her in the hospital.  On this occasion, she had written to express her thanks.  Who knew that would be the only "conversation" I would ever remember between the two of us?  Not that I really remember it, but I had evidence.  Her sweet words at the end of the note were worth the million salutations from her I had forgotten.  All the times I am sure she kissed me goodbye and hugged me hello.  All the times she rocked me or held me.  All the times she brushed my hair or whispered a Bible verse or read me a book.  Those simple, simple words she chose to write are now worth more than I could ever have guessed.
"I am so proud of my lovely, sweet granddaughter!"
I hope she would still be proud of me, everyday.



Sunday, June 18, 2017

The Day My Parents Became Human

 
As you age and have kids of your own, you sometimes, unwillingly, become "the best parent there is."   You know best, you have the answers, everyone else is an idiot...you know what I mean.  
This attitude can creep into your relationship with your parents.  You start to second guess why they let you do this or that.  Why did they let me spend so much time with my grandparents, who smoked like chimneys, and exposed me to all that second hand smoke?  Why did they make me drive so far to go to school, where most of the time I didn't feel I fit in and that cost a lot of money on top of that?  Why didn't they know where to shop to get better clothes for less or know the fashion trends so I wasn't embarrassed of what I wore?  
And the list gets more serious.
Why didn't they have daily Bible studies with me as I was growing up?  Why didn't they let me choose what college to go to on my own?  Why did they have a huge chicken farm, that I had to work on and that worried them more than I thought was worth it?  Why did they always "adopt" people into the family to spend time with, when all I really wanted was to spend time alone, as a family?
Here's what I realized a few years ago...They did it for me.  
They made sure I spent time with my grandparents, so I'd know them.  They were very far from perfect, had a very rough life, but had so much to teach me.  And second hand smoke wasn't that big of a deal in the 80s-we knew so little.
They sent me to the best school they could find and broke their backs to pay for it, so I'd have a better chance at having a good future.  I also learned so much about being content and investing in people who were not like me.
They clothed me with love.  Fashion is such a unimportant thing.  I had what I needed.  They showed me what was important.
They taught me Biblical truths daily by walking with me through life.  They may not have pulled the Bible out everyday, but they pulled it into everyday situations.  They made sure I was at every church event I wanted to attend and every church camp and every opportunity to learn more about God.
They encouraged me to go to the college of my choice, based on a few criteria.  Price and majors available.  I wanted to go to some very expensive schools.  I am so glad they encouraged me to think reasonably and ended up where I did, learning what I did.
They had a huge chicken farm, because they dreamed it would give them a better life and help people along the way.  Farming is a noble profession.  It is a service.  It was so fitting for them.
They always adopted people because they know how to love them.  They can befriend the roughest, toughest folks and find the good in them and encourage it.  They can find the friendless and be there for them...the orphan and be family to them.  They really have an amazing gift.

These are just a few instances where I had the opportunity to be critical of my parents or to love them.  My groundbreaking realization:  MY PARENTS ARE HUMAN.  They are not perfect.  They have lessons to learn and lessons to teach.  The have and will mess up.  I will need their help and they will need my help.  But guess what?  Another large lesson I have learned lately is to love who God has placed you with...in all their imperfections. Don't go find a better fit, a more ideal mom or sister or brother.  Sure.  Surround yourselves with those who encourage you to grow, adopt a close friend who is more spiritually mature than you are.  Do all of that, but don't leave your family behind.  Love them fiercely, daily forgiving, and be full of grace, because God knows you want the same consideration one day...everyday.

I know this is kind of a weird post for Father's Day, but is so fitting in my mind.  In a world where we are bombarded with "idealistic" everything on social media, it is good to remember the humanity in us all.  The imperfections, the lack of control over the day to day, the goodness of redemption of the mess...it is good.  It is sobering and empowering.  Love your family.  God gave them to you and you to them.