Month: September 2018

Transition Time

Sitting on my back porch early this morning, so quiet, so peaceful.

Noticed a few leaves already falling, squirrels hurrying about, one season ending, and a beautiful one about to begin.

Tomorrow is officially the first day of fall!

Breezy, storms predicted this afternoon.

I hate that summer is over, although this year was just so very hot.

The heat and humidity seem to be harder on me as I grow older.

Time to transition!

Time to dig out all my fall decorations, and maybe add something new.

Put away time for my summer porch pom pom pillows, need to find some that are more the color of the fall season.

Mums will be replacing geraniums.

The birdbath I made out of a painted clay pot saucer will stay for now.

Time to put away my lemon pillows in the living room.

Replacing with the pumpkin ones I made a year ago from placemats.

I still love them!

At the beginning of September I made a “Dick and Jane” banner for my blackboard, I suppose one for the fall season will go up in it’s place.

Have I ever mentioned how much I love “Dick and Jane” things!  I do, so much!

I know there is just a part of me that will forever be a child.

Always wanted to be an art teacher for small children, it wasn’t to be!

I think that is why I keep a blackboard in my family room and decorate it for all seasons and occasions.

Just something fun for me!

My current front door wreath will stay for now, it has so many colors, the beautiful colors of mums.

Maybe I will just add a small sign, “Hello Fall”.

Love the fall time of the year.  I plan to make the most of it, enjoying it’s simple things.

It is God’s gift to us, isn’t it?  A gift, as are many, that we sometimes just take for granted.

Hope you all have lovely, colorful fall plans.

Enjoy this day!

Enjoy your weekend!

Blessings to all.

 

 

 

 

Grandparents Day

Today is Grandparents Day!

I could not let this day go by without sharing my memories.

Oh my goodness, I loved my grandma.

Just so special to me when I was growing up.

Spending a week with her several times during the summer was heaven to me.  Just me and my grandma!

As a child, and in many ways still as an adult, I was a loner, not many friends.

Grandma was my friend in the early years of my childhood.

I watched her sew, making a pink dress for me by hand, simple, with only a lovely piece of old lace for the collar.

Loved the porch times we spent together, many times snapping green beans for dinner.

No one made green beans like my grandma.

Coffee in the mornings, with lots of milk, in my own adult cup.  Grandma is the reason I love coffee so much to this day!

Love this photo of her because it shows her hands.We would sit side by side and she would hold my hand, I remember her aging hands, hands that I now have.

Thoughts that bring tears to my eyes!

To my surprise, grandma came to a bridal shower my sister had for me, her gift to me, a tablecloth she crocheted.  I cherish that tablecloth to this day.

Grandma loved to crochet, memories of many crocheted doilies in her home as in the photo above.

Grandma came from such humble beginnings, the hills of Kentucky, Wallins Creek.

Love this photo that I recently received.  No shoes!  Me too grandma, I never like to wear my shoes, they come off as soon as I enter my house.

Seven children, losing a beautiful boy, pictured below, at five years old from a horrible accident, and a baby girl at 9 months old from pneumonia.

Heartbreaks I never heard my grandma talk about.

She loved her family, she loved children.

I am sure her best days were those when her home was full of family, cooking, table filled with country food, gathering together, her daughters singing gospel songs while doing the dishes.

Granny came to my home only once that I can remember. She climbed the steps up to my son’s room when he was very small.

Sitting on the bottom bunk of his bunk beds, grandma patiently listened to him talk and show her everything in his sweet room.

He played records for her on his little record player, his favorite, “There Was an Old Lady Who Swallowed a Fly”, by Jimmie Rodgers, she loved every minute of their time together and often spoke of that day.

I never heard my grandma raise her voice in anger, never.

She was just good, kind, and loving, as I feel most folks from country living are.

Memories of grandpa are few, sitting on his lap and the smell of his pipe are the only ones I have.

He was a hard worker, a coal miner, a laborer.

He died young, in his fifties.  He appears much older in this photo, a coal miner’s life was hard.

I could go on and on, the more I turn my thoughts to grandma, the more I remember.

If you are fortunate enough to still have grandparents, give them a gift today of your time, talk to them, learn from them, love them.  You will not regret it!

Wish I would have done more of this with my grandma!

Love you granny, always.