Two year old Lucy was excited for Christmas to come soon. Her family was busy making Christmas treats, wrapping interesting looking packages, decorating the Christmas tree and getting ready for company to come spend the holiday with them. Lucy loved the tree with its shining lights and beautiful ornaments. As the children made their Christmas lists, Lucy could only think of one thing. “This Christmas, I want a little Christmas tree of my very own!” she said.
A few days before Christmas, Lucy wasn’t feeling very well. Her mother took her to the doctor who sent them off to the ER where Lucy was admitted to the hospital. It was scary at the hospital and she didn’t like the things they did to her there to help her feel better. They hoped she would only have to stay one night so she could go home to her family by Christmas Eve, but Lucy was still too sick to go home, so she and her mother prepared to spend another night in the hospital. Maybe, just maybe, she’d be able to go home on Christmas Day.
Lucy’s dad was left to entertain their company and make the final preparations for Christmas morning. Lucy’s brother and sisters were not even allowed to come to the hospital to visit her.
On Christmas Eve as Lucy and her mother cuddled together in her hospital room, an elderly lady from a nearby assisted living home came to the door. She had brought toys for the children in the hospital and had even remembered the mothers there with their children. She brought Lucy a little stuffed animal, but Lucy’s eyes opened wide when she saw what was in her other hand. The lady had intended the gift for Lucy’s mother, but Lucy just knew immediately that it was for her! It was a beautiful glass Christmas tree that lighted up and changed colors. Just what she wanted! Lucy didn’t let that tree go all night. She slept with it cradled in her arms.
As her mother said, “Christmas in the hospital is not ideal, of course. Mary and Joseph may have preferred it to a stable. So I won't fuss too much about it. Lucy only put one thing on her Christmas list this year- her own little Christmas tree. Last night a little old lady from a nearby assisted living center brought by some gifts. Lucy got her own little light up Christmas tree. I'm sure this lady had no idea, but did what she could and that was exactly what was needed.”
While Lucy slept that Christmas Eve, Santa even found all the sick children in the hospital and remembered them with gifts, but one of the best gifts of all was when her family was given permission to come see her on Christmas Day for a little while.
Happily, Lucy passed the test of being without extra oxygen the day after Christmas and was able to go home at last!
So many people made her Christmas better…her doctors, nurses and other care givers, her family, the elderly lady, and those who prayed for her recovery. As Pres. Uchtdorf said, “As we emulate His perfect example, our hands can become His hands; our eyes, His eyes; our heart, His heart.” It is not unusual for Heavenly Father to use us to bless the lives of our families and friends.
Tuesday, December 27, 2016
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
As Time Goes By - Grandma and Grandpa
In the summer of 1961 I got to spend a couple of months with my grandparents. I was 12 and they were OLD. They tried their best to keep me entertained and I really wasn't a high maintenance kid, so we got along just fine. Their lifestyle was a bit old-fashioned, but I enjoyed it for the most part. When I was at loose ends, I just found a book to read since I enjoyed that.
My grandparents never had a dishwasher, so after each meal we went to the sink where we washed and dried the dishes before putting them away. Paper plates were for picnics, not regular meals. In the morning after breakfast, Grandpa and I went out to feed the chickens he kept in his back yard. They did not live on a farm. Often Grandpa would go out and rototill his large garden and get his ditches ready for his irrigation turn. When Grandma did laundry, we went down the basement and washed the clothes. At that time she had a double dexter washer. After we got the clothes all washed and rinsed, I helped Grandma load them into a laundry basket and then carried them up the stairs and out to the clothesline for her because it was hard for her to do because she was old.
The clotheslines were in the back yard in the hot, dry, summer sun. We hung up everything with clothespins. The bedding was hard for Grandma to handle because it was heavy....and she was old, so I helped her with it.
Sometimes when I was working with Grandma she would grimace a bit and ask me to go get one of her dynamite pills. I thought it was funny that she called them dynamite pills. They were really nitroglycerin pills. Grandma almost always wore a dress, with a girdle and nylons. (She was really excited when pantyhose were invented!) Her shoes were those black, oxford 'old lady' shoes. I vowed I would never wear such shoes. They were for old people. (Many years later I couldn't believe that my daughters willingly wore similar shoes.)
Sometimes it seemed like we barely finished breakfast when it was time to start cooking dinner, because Grandpa and Grandma ate dinner in the middle of the day. Sometimes Grandma would send me to the basement to get food out of the 'fruit room' because going up and down the stairs took her too long because she was old. I went much faster.
Grandma came from a large family. Her father had 8 children with his first wife. When that wife died, he remarried and had 9 more children, so all the children had to help. As the second oldest of the second family, Grandma was assigned to do all the sewing for the family, so she became a really good seamstress. She liked to help me do sewing projects. We walked downtown to get fabric. We didn't get patterns because Grandma always made her own patterns. We didn't drive. Grandma didn't ever learn to drive...because she was so old that cars were hardly invented when she was young.
Grandma liked me to help her put curlers in her hair. She was so old that it hurt her arms to hold them above her head and put her own curlers in.
When Grandma's cherry tree got ripe, she liked me to climb up the ladder to pick the cherries while she handed me buckets from below....because she was too old to climb trees and ladders.
Sometimes in the evening, Grandpa drove us out to visit Uncle Herman's farm. Herman was Grandma's younger brother. We always took large, glass gallon jars with us. Herman filled them with fresh milk from his cows. Grandma always wanted to stay at the house and visit with Aunt Thelma while I ran out to the barn to watch Uncle Herman milk...and sometimes squirt milk into the mouths of the barn cats. I think Grandma was just too old to run anymore.
Yesterday I was thinking about Grandma and wondered just how old she really was that summer. I was startled to realize that she was 66...just a year younger than I am now!
My grandparents never had a dishwasher, so after each meal we went to the sink where we washed and dried the dishes before putting them away. Paper plates were for picnics, not regular meals. In the morning after breakfast, Grandpa and I went out to feed the chickens he kept in his back yard. They did not live on a farm. Often Grandpa would go out and rototill his large garden and get his ditches ready for his irrigation turn. When Grandma did laundry, we went down the basement and washed the clothes. At that time she had a double dexter washer. After we got the clothes all washed and rinsed, I helped Grandma load them into a laundry basket and then carried them up the stairs and out to the clothesline for her because it was hard for her to do because she was old.
The clotheslines were in the back yard in the hot, dry, summer sun. We hung up everything with clothespins. The bedding was hard for Grandma to handle because it was heavy....and she was old, so I helped her with it.
Sometimes when I was working with Grandma she would grimace a bit and ask me to go get one of her dynamite pills. I thought it was funny that she called them dynamite pills. They were really nitroglycerin pills. Grandma almost always wore a dress, with a girdle and nylons. (She was really excited when pantyhose were invented!) Her shoes were those black, oxford 'old lady' shoes. I vowed I would never wear such shoes. They were for old people. (Many years later I couldn't believe that my daughters willingly wore similar shoes.)
Sometimes it seemed like we barely finished breakfast when it was time to start cooking dinner, because Grandpa and Grandma ate dinner in the middle of the day. Sometimes Grandma would send me to the basement to get food out of the 'fruit room' because going up and down the stairs took her too long because she was old. I went much faster.
Grandma came from a large family. Her father had 8 children with his first wife. When that wife died, he remarried and had 9 more children, so all the children had to help. As the second oldest of the second family, Grandma was assigned to do all the sewing for the family, so she became a really good seamstress. She liked to help me do sewing projects. We walked downtown to get fabric. We didn't get patterns because Grandma always made her own patterns. We didn't drive. Grandma didn't ever learn to drive...because she was so old that cars were hardly invented when she was young.
Grandma liked me to help her put curlers in her hair. She was so old that it hurt her arms to hold them above her head and put her own curlers in.
When Grandma's cherry tree got ripe, she liked me to climb up the ladder to pick the cherries while she handed me buckets from below....because she was too old to climb trees and ladders.
Sometimes in the evening, Grandpa drove us out to visit Uncle Herman's farm. Herman was Grandma's younger brother. We always took large, glass gallon jars with us. Herman filled them with fresh milk from his cows. Grandma always wanted to stay at the house and visit with Aunt Thelma while I ran out to the barn to watch Uncle Herman milk...and sometimes squirt milk into the mouths of the barn cats. I think Grandma was just too old to run anymore.
Yesterday I was thinking about Grandma and wondered just how old she really was that summer. I was startled to realize that she was 66...just a year younger than I am now!