Sunday, May 10, 2009

Sunday Afternoon Tea


Happy Mother's Day!

I love Mother's Day. It is the only day I don't feel guilty not doing the laundry. That.... is a good feeling. What am I doing today? Well, the budget doesn't allow for eating out this year. Getting the flowers for the deck and a garden planted is more important.

So, I found thin chicken breast cutlets half price at the grocery store (one doesn't have to pound them flat!) and they will be sauteed in butter, lemon juice, and capers from the pantry (hey, it's a Holiday). I'm trying the asparagus casserole recipe from my Georgia Cooking in an Oklahoma Kitchen cookbook. Then there is the Key Lime Pie. Yum...

I love being a Mom more than anything else in the whole wide world. Well, I like being a Grammie, too, but truth be told... I don't get to see those cuties very often. (Soon... very soon.) So, my maternal memories are pretty much as a Mom.

I still smile when I think of the day Stephanie was born, over nine pounds of cuddly baby. She was truly one of the most beautiful babies I'd ever seen. No... really... even the nurses all talked about how cute she was. She was born with a full head of dark-ish red hair (which eventually turned as black as mine used to be) and the first time I saw her, she was four hours old and had a ribbon in her hair. As I was still groggy from the C-section, she and her father had already bonded before she met her mom. He was never the same and she was Daddy's girl from the get-go.

I loved placing her in the stroller and introducing her to my favorite places... the park near Mamaw's house, feeding the duckies, the china displays at the department store.... those important places one should learn about early.

She was still in the crib when she held her first book. She cut her teeth on books... literally. There's a reason those cardboard books don't last long. I remember her favorite literature at the time... I Am A Bunny.

I always told her that raising a daughter is also raising your own best friend. How lovely it was to see her grow and become a wife and mom. It has been a grand journey.

As for her brother... well, he was a surprise. A big surprise. Albeit a welcome surprise... twelve years later. He was born cranky. He didn't sleep through the night for eighteen months. He was hyperactive and drove his mom crazy those first few years.

We tried school... that didn't work. We homeschooled... that did. Without my boy I wouldn't have known the fun (and hard work) that came with educating a child at home... and in the car... and at the co-op... and at the library... and at the park... and at the beach on Lake Michigan... and at the museums... and at church... well, you get the idea.

If I hadn't had my boy, I wouldn't have known what it was like to spend hours and hours walking on trails in the woods and stopping to look at science projects like dead bugs. I wouldn't have spent two years teaching about World War II and having to go on... hardly even touching on the war in the Pacific. Or, his fascination with swords after studying the Middle Ages for what seemed like years and waiting a few nights a week in the hallway of an ancient school, on a hard bench with a book, watching his fencing class through the glass window. What has surprised me about having a boy? I didn't know I was "growing up" a different kind of best friend.

I have often wondered what Hannah thought as she left little her little boy with Eli, knowing she would only see him once a year. My imagination is filled with images of a Mom hand sewing little outfits, the size growing a little each year. I just know she talked to Jehovah about her boy as she made each stitch. I am also certain a lot of prayer went into each piece of clothing. As Samuel dressed each morning, how he must have thought of the mother who prayed for him.

Did you ever wonder what she taught him those few years he was under her roof? Whatever she said... "took". Just as Daniel's mother, and Joseph's mother, and thousands upon thousands of godly moms after them... mother's whispers into little ears. Faith, hope, trust, obedience, courage, love... introducing small minds to an infinite Father who would be present when they were not.

So, I'm doing a little cooking and some reading... but no dishes... and no laundry. That is a good day by any standards.

7 comments:

Anita said...

I loved reading about your kids. How different they were, but how you loved each with so much love. Thanks for sharing that with us. It's a beautiful post.

Packrat said...

I haven't read your post yet, as I have to hurry right now. BUT, Happy Mother's Day!

Scrappy quilter said...

Brenda, beautiful post. Have a wonderful Mother's Day.

Manuela@A Cultivated Nest said...

Happy Mother's Day Brenda! Sounds like you're having a good day. I did absolutely nothing today! No cooking, cleaning, nothing except watched a few things I've been wanting to see, reading a book and I went to Goodwill.

Manuela

Vee said...

Oh my dh is busily doing dishes so I can blog hop. God bless'im.

Glad that you don't have dishes or laundry to do. I have done laundry, but that's just an ongoing thing.

Your dinner sounds delish...your memories are sweet...thank you for sharing them with us. (Well, wish that you could've shared dinner with us! ;> )

Lynn said...

Hi Brenda,
What a sweet post, sharing those precious memories of when the kids were little. There's nothing quite like the joys of watching those young ones grow into people you are proud to know :)

I appreciate so much that you were willing to review my book back when I was still trying to figure out what a blog was ;) And I'm so glad you found my recipe blog! It has been more fun, sharing recipes and trying out everyone else's favorites. So many recipes, so little time. Sigh. Anyway, thanks for the wonderful blogging you do. It is such fun to read all your book recommendations, and to see what's going on in your kitchen.

Deanna Rabe - Creekside Cottage Blog said...

Happy Mother's Day!

I loved reading about your children and what you learned from mothering a daughter and a son....as my Dad would say you had a "well rounded education."