My great
grandma taught me how to crochet when I
was nine years old. She was 90 at the
time, still living on her own in a little
cottage on a lake, with a basement full of
mysterious old things just waiting to be
explored and the lake full of fish and
frogs just waiting to be caught. When we
visited, there were always mashed potatoes
for dinner (my favorite) and vanilla ice
cream for dessert, served in a little red
and white patterned china dish. Her
gnarled hands were deft with a crochet
hook, her bright eyes sparkled while she
talked and worked, and the house was full
to bursting of the brightly colored
doilies and afghans she whipped up at the
drop of a hat. Friends and relatives would
bring her odds and ends of yarn
– leftover
bits from this or that project
– which
she’d find a way to pair up in color
combinations and creative stitches to make
something new. From my great grandma, I
learned resilience. I learned creativity,
to make something of beauty out of
whatever leftover odds and ends I can
find. I learned to crochet. I still have
an old toothbrush case full of her crochet
hooks that she gave me.
My grandma taught me how to make a bed
when I was twelve years old. She showed me
how to tuck in the corners just so, to
turn the top sheet back over the edge of
the quilt, and when all else was perfect,
to turn down the front corner invitingly,
ready to welcome whoever was going to
sleep there. She said when she got done
making a bed it looked so nice she wanted
to crawl right in and take a nap. My
grandma is renowned for her hospitality.
She lives in what was once a tiny square
house, until a huge great room was built
off the back, complete with the best
fireplace in the world as the centerpiece.
More people have stayed as guests, more
parties have been hosted in that house
than anyone could count. Those who enter
as strangers leave as friends and family,
met by the warm, cheerful, easy-going
hospitality and laughter that emanates
from my grandma’s house. From my grandma,
I learned cheerful generosity. I learned
to laugh at life, to not take myself too
seriously. I learned how to make everyday
life a thing of open hospitality, not
perfect, but always ready to welcome
others in. I learned how to make a bed so
well that it makes you want to climb right
in and take a nap.
I
learned to laugh at life, to not take
myself too seriously. I learned how to
make everyday life a thing of open
hospitality.
My own mother taught me more than I can
recount. And while I’m still pretty new at
motherhood, every day it seems I do more
things like her
– even
those things I didn’t like as a child and
thought I’d never do. Our home wasn’t
always well organized. Our birthday
parties were not decadent affairs. And she
never did learn how to do my hair
perfectly for ballet recitals. But my
childhood glows with the warmth of her
love, her care, her laughter, her cooking,
her daily ongoing, never ceasing, never
ending, strong self-sacrifice and pouring
out for her family. And it didn’t end with
childhood, as all of her children, and now
grandchildren, still rely on her regularly
for care, support, love, and those
practical questions of life, like how do I
get stains out of this load of laundry
that ran with a red crayon in it?? From my
mother, I learned what good family life is
like. I learned that it’s worth doing
good, even if it doesn’t look perfect. I
learned what sacrificial life looks like
– and
that it is incredibly beautiful and
worthwhile. I learned more than I can
recount.
And maybe more than anything, these women
were faithful
– faithful
to God, faithful to their families,
faithful to doing the job God had given
them to do, no matter how insignificant it
may have seemed. I don’t know why I was
blessed with such an amazing legacy of
mothers in my life. I certainly didn’t do
anything to deserve it. All I know is that
those to whom much has been given, much
will be required; I want to do all that I
can to continue their story of faith. For
the moments when being a mom seems hard or
not worth it or an underappreciated role,
I am inspired to think of the mothers who
have gone before me, of the immense beauty
and worth they have brought to my own
life, and of the deep, deep appreciation I
feel for them, and I am encouraged.
Encouraged to know that I am building much
more than just what I see every day
– laundry,
cooking, cleaning, another diaper, another
snotty nose to wipe
– but
a legacy of faith that, Lord willing,
could continue on for generations.
I
am inspired to think of the mothers
who have gone before me... encouraged
to know that I am building much more
than just what I see every day.
“I am reminded of your sincere
faith, which first lived in your
grandmother Lois and in your mother
Eunice and, I am persuaded, now lives
in you also” (2 Timothy 1:5)