I put the picture of the Church on here because I know it will make
her smile. She was devoutly religious but she was also private in
her beliefs. She never tried to force them on anyone. "You need to
read the word and make your own mind from it" she would tell me. She
would tithe and I know the sacrifice she made by doing that but
Church meant that much to her...I spent every waking minute at
Grandma's house and ate every meal there. After Grandaddy died we
would play checkers at night... but only after I had done my
homework..or at least said I had done it. I always did some of it...
so I wouldn't be lying when I asked her to play checkers and she
asked "you finished your school work"...my reasoning being this
ain't school work, it's homework so yes I did finish my school work.
My homework I usually did on the bus ride in every morning anyway.
The main reason being it usually kept me from being messed with. I
got a few wise cracks at first, but they usually quit and moved on
to someone else... and I had the best of both worlds. She was a
master of checkers and I don't remember anyone ever beating her. You
could talk about anything and everything while playing...it was fine
with her.... because she only responded with "yep" or "naw" all the
while jumping about a hundred and seven of your checkers at once it
seemed. Heaven forbid once she got a King...she would jump so many
backwards and forwards I couldn't keep track of em and would often
ask her to replace the checkers and show me what she had done, which
she could with ease....smiling broadly every time. I never
knew....and never thought to ask why she was so relentless at
checkers but she seemed to take a lot of pride in her prowess and to
tell you the truth I got enjoyment from constantly being beaten like
a drum...and whining about it. I think now looking back it was
because of her smile...most every minute of every day was hard back
breaking work for her and I liked making her smile. In fact making
people smile is, and has always been my secret enjoyment in life. I
spent most of my classroom time not listening to the lesson but
trying to think of funny comments I could spin off of what the
teacher had just said and make the class laugh. It was better at
home though.....especially with her. Somehow her smile was so
genuine, so sincere. I guess because the times were so tough, the
days long and hard...maybe that was what made it special...but when
she smiled it lit the room....and somehow it made my life all the
better.
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very nice,very loving ,thank you for keeping your beloved grandma alife inside your heart(i hope my grandkids will remember me at least for soem time!)Thank you for sharing this Light.May Her Soul be happy and may she smile ...
ReplyDeleteI love the way they "teach" without teachin...and preach with out preachin" reading this yesterday made me think about my grannie and all the things she and grandaddy taught me...from the names of about 50 different varieties of daffodils to how to shuck oysters. My mom and dad both worked and I appreciate the sacrifices they made for us...but I don't think they will ever know just how very precious time...chores...and checkers really are. As always...thank you for sharin' you slice of life...and inspiring those of us who read it.
ReplyDeleteAlways, always you revive memories for me. My mom was a heck of a checker player. I think it must be an inherited trait because my little sister is darn good. I've never beaten her!
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