Family Dynamics – It is all Complicated

The time has come to write about this or I will not be able to move on.  So I will lay it all out here; all this baggage I’ve ruminating over the past few months.

It is a family thing, the past, the present, life and death… brought on by recent events involving my brothers.

I was the youngest of three, the only girl, with two full biological brothers. One brother 5 years older, William (who growing up was called Sonny) and the other Howard. 

Our mother left our father when I was just a baby and we grew up with our mother and step-father, Melvin. My oldest brother was 8 when Melvin came into our lives; I was only 3. 

Melvin was a good ol’ boy from east Texas. I wrote about him earlier and the other two step-fathers in my life. 

My life under Melvin was a little more sheltered as a girl but I did endure the pain of “whippings” as a child. Spanking is too kind of a word. These were harsh lashes with a leather belt that left strap marks and bruises across my legs and body. It was part of old southern child rearing method but it went beyond not sparing the rod.

My brothers on the other hand, encountered undue abuse from Melvin.  Under the rule of an authoritarian dominant man they suffered emotional and physical punishment well into their teens. One small step out of line was met with disproportionate severe corporal punishment. 

Maybe some sort of male rivalry was involved as well. Melvin was only 10 years older than Sonny.  I remember once when he was a senior in high school, Melvin came after him with a whip and swung at him with a chain.

I addition, before Melvin, Sonny witnessed alcoholic rages against our mother by our biological father. 

As soon as he graduated he left home and never returned. 

Howard, was just 16 months older than me. He was very intelligent.  He used to read the encyclopedia and memorize pages in the dictionary. He also played the trumpet and was a big fan of Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass. 

He was still living home when Melvin left our mother for another woman. Howard and I both had to make our way through the step-father who came next. 

In addition to all this physical abuse, over the years I harbored another family secret. I had endured sexual abuse by my brothers from a young age.

The stepfather that came next was far more interested in me than was proper. I could see the signs of coming abuse. I wanted out any way I could.

Thankfully, I met the son of a local restaurant owner, four years my senior. You could say, we fell in “love” or we both were both looking to escape. Either way we did escape and never looked back. 

We married and I left home at 14.

The reality of childhood for all of us in our home, behind closed doors, was that it was fraught with abuse, insecurity and trauma. There were good times but they were overshadowed by the fear that at any moment things could flip.

Within 2 years, 1968-70, my brothers and I had all move out of the abusive world and went our separate ways. 

We had only casual contact over the next 20 years. All of us were part of military families and lived miles apart. 

As I grew older effects from childhood sexual abuse became a stumbling block for me.   I had trust issues. I also had faith issues. I was looking for love in all the wrong places, as the country song goes.

In the wake of the major child abuse stories of the late 80’s, I was forced to come to terms with it. Thirty years old and I had never told a soul about the abuse.

I confronted both of my brothers with unsatisfactory results. It was written off as child’s play or something “I wanted,” by Howard. Sonny did not want to acknowledge it or discuss it. No resolution was coming. 

After the response I received from Sonny (the worst offender) we literally had very little to no contact for years. I did not see either brother again until 1999 at my grandfather’s funeral.  I never saw Howard again after that.

Both of my brothers were alcoholics.  Sonny quit drinking some 20 years ago but Howard, whose drinking started in his teens, was a life long alcoholic. He also had mental issues. 

Although I never saw Howard again after 1999, he would call me drunk in the middle of the night. He would tell me that the Italian mafia was after him and he was in the CIA. He would call my office and speak to whoever answered the phone and tell them all these same crazy stories. The final straw was when he called my house and spoke to my youngest son, Josh. 

He told Josh he had gun and was going harm himself. That time and once before, I called the local police to do a welfare check on him.  

After this, I blocked him from all my numbers… work, home, cell phones. My mother told me that he didn’t know why I wouldn’t speak to him anymore.  I told her, “Yes he does.”

I saw Sonny again in 2012. He was living in Las Vegas and I flew down to see my Auntie who was in a tournament there. She arranged to have dinner with him but didn’t tell him I was there. I was the surprise. It was a cordial meeting, nothing more.  

Over the past 15 years he had many health issues. As our mother aged and dealt with dementia, I became her financial and health decision-maker. He would call and discuss issues he was seeing in mother. He would extend some encouragement and offer to help in any way he could but I discovered he couldn’t do much. 

I blogged about what I was going through dealing with my mother’s dementia and lamented that my brothers were no help, but thankfully they were no hindrance either. 

When my mother died neither of them came to her funeral. Sonny sent flowers and had called to say goodbye before she passed. Over the years he had been very faithful and loving to Mother. Although he did not visit for many years, he called her several times a week. 

Howard and mother had a hard relationship. He could call sober and all was well but when he called drunk, he was abusive. The last few years of her life she stopped taking his calls.  

Just days before she passed, I asked the social worker at the nursing home if she would call and tell him she was dying. She did and he agreed to speak to mother. She was no longer conscious but for all the things Howard did that were horrible, that day he stepped up to the plate. He said what needed to be said so she could pass in peace.  

I did not speak to him that day or anytime since she passed. 

All of this background to get to what I came to say today so that I can close the door on the past. Close the door because:

Both my brothers died this year. Four months apart. 

Sonny died July 22. Complications from cancer surgery years ago and cirrhosis of the liver. Even though he quit drinking 20 years ago, the damage was done. 

Howard died on November 20 just before Thanksgiving. His neighbors had found him unconscious in his house.

I was contacted because I was thought to be the only surviving blood relative. I told the hospital he had a daughter but she did not know him growing up. I contacted my niece and told her I would act as decision maker if she wanted. She thought about it and called me back and said she felt it was her responsibility. 

He was in the hospital for a week and never regained consciousness. We found out that he also suffered from cirrhosis of the liver, as well as he had cancer in his lungs and brain. 

In the end I am thankful my niece made the decisions.   I would have found it difficult. 

They are all gone now. My father, mother, all the step-fathers and my brothers. 

It is all so complicated and confusing in my mind. I was sad, but never shed a tear for my brothers although it seemed I should have. 

Being the only one left from your childhood family is very sobering. I turned 70 just a few months ago.  I have struggled the past few weeks with the reality of my immortality.   I hope to live past the 71 and 74 years my brothers had. 

Mostly, I pray that I can move beyond all the memories of the past that have kept my mind captive for so long. They are all gone, and in many ways, I am free.  

Washing Dishes

Today I am thankful for dirty dishes.

When I was a little I washed many dirty dishes. After every evening meal it was my job to wash the dishes. Above the kitchen sink my mother had taped several rhyming verses she had clipped from the newspaper or a magazine. One was about being thankful for the dirty dishes. 

Years later I saw the verse still taped above her sink along with several others. It had moved with her to a different house but was reinstalled in its proper place in her kitchen. 

The paper was brown and tattered, just barely being held together by two pieces of dried cracked cellophane tape. There were water marks where she, Mother, no doubt had straightened it out to read it as she washed dishes over the years. 

The words are engraved in my memory. 

Thank God for Dirty Dishes.
They have a tale to tell.
While others may go hungry,
We are eating well.
With home and health and happiness,
I no cause to fuss,
For by this stack of evidence,
God’s been very good to us.
                       ~ Mary Arlis Stuber

I don’t wash as many dishes these days. I mostly load and unload a dish washing machine.  But when I do wash dishes too delicate for the dishwasher, I find it very relaxing and peaceful as I gently swish soap over each piece and then rinse it clean in warm water. It does not seem so much a dreary task as it is a comforting memory.

My mind goes back to those days when washing dishes was a chore. I can still see that verse taped to the window frame above the sink. I pause, take a deep breath and say a prayer of thanks.

Support your local food bank ❤️

Walking Home

“At times, our own light goes out and is rekindled by a spark from another person. Each of us has cause to think with deep gratitude of those who have lighted the flame within us.”

~ Albert Schweitzer

I am filled with gratitude for the people God placed on my path. Whether they were walking a journey with me or I was walking one with them; we were walking hand-in-hand and our match was divinely orchestrated.

Some people walked life’s path with me for only part of the journey. I believe we came together for a short period in time and then we moved on to walk separate paths. It seems they were sent into my life for that specific time and they contributed something I needed or I provided something they needed; neither of us knowing at the time what roles we played.

I have given it a lot of thought and it seems that even people whose walk in my life ended under harsh terms had a positive influence. I sometimes think of them, wonder where they are, wonder what I could have differently to change the outcome. I heard once, “When God closes a door there is no going back.” So there is no going back, but sometimes, I’ll remember the good times with them and it brings a moment of sadness.

In addition, there are those who have walked along beside me that are no longer physically near but have remained close in my heart. We don’t see each other often as we are scattered around the country or the world, but we somehow find time at least once or twice a year to share long telephone conversations and catch up on each others lives. Lifelong friends, an important part of each other’s past journey and we will never fully let go of each other. We wait and hope for the time when our paths may merge again.

Finally, there are those who have walked with me day-by-day and week-by-week for a very long time. They are the jewels in my life. We may be close or separated by distance but we never let much time pass without long conversations.

We may disagree, we may fuss with one another but they are with me until my journey ends. Many are family but some are part of the family of God gave me as I traveled.

We’ve shared our hopes, dreams, successes and failures. There have been many joyous times and memories. When I was struggling or feeling hopeless, they stood with me. They prayed with me, held my hand, and told me that I was going to get beyond the trials of the moment. They are the ones who have “lighted the flames within me” when my light had gone out.

One of those “jewels” sent me this little picture that says, “As believers, we are all just walking each other Home.” I know that to be true and the closer I get to my eternal home the more I am thankful that through journeys of joy, or pilgrimages of sorrow, the presence of these special people has always confirmed how blessed I am.

Reposted from 11/5/2021

Thanks for the Memories

Thankful today for my Grandfather’s home movies and the memories of happy days.

Just by chance yesterday, I ran across a one of those videos. Before my grandfather died in 1999, he had taken all the old silent 16mm home movies he had taken of all his grandchildren in the 50’s and 60’s and recorded them onto VHS. You can hear the click, click, click of his huge reel-to-reel projector. Although there was no sound to the original video itself, he narrated the scenes as he recorded.

It warms my heart to hear his voice. In one place he says… “Ain’t she a cute little girl? That’s a sweet little ol’ girl, Patty-Watty (his pet name for me). You ought to see Patty-Watty now”

This video was likely taken at my uncles house on Thanksgiving… Houston, Texas. A warm November day in the south. My brother Howard and I were “fishing” in Uncle William’s pond. The interaction between me and my brother made me smile.

Hidden behind this happy day there are some sad memories. Thankfully there are no recordings of those, only the ones I relive in my mind. Sadly, over the years due to past abuse, alcohol and mental decline, we had very little contact after we left home and virtually none the last 15+ years.

But really, I needed to find this video yesterday. It healed my heart a little. Watching it reminded me that our relationship didn’t start out like things are today.

I got a call last week and this brother is in his last days…this comes just months after my oldest brother left this world.

It’s complicated, but seeing this video and some others has helped me sort out some of my feelings. For that I am very grateful.

We are the Women – We are One

“A woman is like a tea bag – you can’t tell how strong she is until you put her in hot water.” – Eleanor Roosevelt

Thankful today for the strong women in my family and for the bond and closeness we share.   We as a group have been like glue, we have held together when others were falling apart. 

We seldom argue. We are of one mind and spirit. We support each other, are available for each other, listen to each other without judgment. When crises come, we join in unison to make our way through. 

There is Paulette who overcame extreme childhood adversity but did not let it keep her from succeeding in life.  She was an anchor of support for my mother, her daughters and her grandchildren. She supported them emotionally, financially and lovingly.  She works hard and shares what she has without hesitation. 

There is my niece, who grew up without the protection and care of a father. She grew into a strong, confident, talented and independent young woman.  She extends undeserved compassion and mercy to those who have not earned it, showing the kindness and forgiveness in her heart. 

My sister-in-love, my niece’s mother showed extreme strength in looking for a more stable home for her daughter. After many years apart we reconnected and formed a bond of friendship and sisterhood. 

My Auntie TJ.  All of my childhood we lived across the country from each other.  We reconnected over 40 years ago to discover that we had many of the same characteristics.  Funny how nature is that way.  She cares for so many in her family, but most exceptional was the care she gave as a devoted daughter, caring for my grandmother until she passed at 98.

My cousin Patty who was widowed as a young mom and raised a fine handsome responsible young man. She also, like her mom, is now providing support her mother. 

My cousin Beth, she fought for justice for her father (my uncle) and for her children. She paid many visits to my mother in her final years extended her love by being near when needed. 

My cousin, Debbie who passed away in December. I will miss our marathon phone calls… never less than  an hour and a half, full of support for each other’s lives.  She also would travel to visit my mother and show her love. 

My sister-in-law, Karen, who joined my family circle in a crisis and has stayed through many highs and lows over the years.  Above and beyond any obligation or call of duty she had, she has supported both sides of the family. 

We have all seen the hot water and we have proven we are strong. Our bond is unbreakable and we together we can overcome. 

In His Time

When will I get there? When will I first look to “give thanks in all circumstances”?

It is a difficult task. However, I find when I count my blessings first, I realized they far outweigh my troubles.

We never have continuous sunshine and blue skies. Storms come and toss us around but the sun returns and we are blessed with rainbows.

We see there is hope for healing and beauty after every storm.

Give thanks and keep looking up. As I read once ~ “that is where God puts the rainbows. “

“He has made everything beautiful in its time. Also He has put eternity in their hearts, except that no one can find out the work that God does from beginning to end.” Ecclesiastes 3:11 NKJV

https://emyloomwordswovenwithinmyheart.com/2020/11/12/finding-my-grateful-heart/

~ Give thanks in all circumstances – 1 Thes 5:18

God’s Gifts

“The hardest arithmetic to master is that which enables us to count our blessings.” — Eric Hoffer

Giving thanks and counting my three sons among my many blessings today.

Every time I was expecting I did hope for a daughter but God knew better what I needed.

I am blessed to have a close relationship with all of them and they show me in many ways their love for me. I was an extremely meek quiet person but through them I found so much strength. ❤️

“Behold, children are a gift of the Lord..”
Psalm 127:3

https://emyloomwordswovenwithinmyheart.com/poems-and-prayers/mother-of-three-sons/

Photo: 1999

November: A Month for Thankfulness.

It seems like it should be automatic each day to be thankful for every blessing, even the next second in time and the next breath I take. So often I fall short. May gratitude always be on my heart.

“God gave you a gift of 86,400 seconds today. Have you used one to say thank you ” ― William Arthur Ward

Poetry and Poets

Can any poetry be dismissed if it is inspired in one’s heart? ~trish

I sometimes express myself through poetry, so did my mother. She wrote many poems in her 87 years. Most of hers were about her faith and God’s love for her. Mine tend to be about life, my crazy thoughts and experiences.

For more than twenty years I wrote a Christmas poem as part of the holiday tradition with friends. It was right in there with, and as expected as, the turkey and plum pudding. At the urging of my Auntie in 2017, I created a small illustrated book with them all.

When I was little, I would memorize long poems and bible verses. Once I remember reciting all of Luke 2:1-20, the nativity story of Jesus, at a church Christmas event.

I still remember “The Duel” by Eugene Field that I memorized in 2nd grade. “The gingham dog and the calico cat, side by side on the table sat.” Also “My Shadow” by Robert Louis Stevenson. “I have a little shadow that goes in and out with me, and what can be the use of him is more than I can see.”

I have collected many poems since then. I gathered them from clippings and hand wrote copies of ones I found in books. More recently, I search the internet to find poems that helped me through a particular joyous or trying time. Here are just a few.

As far as the great poets, I have to admit I have not dug deeply into a lot of their work. I have a book of Walt Whitman poems. I connect with Emily Dickerson’s poem, ‘Hope is the Thing with Feathers.” We must always have hope even in the harshest of times.

I have a verse taped above my desk from a poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. It was printed on a set of stationary I bought in the 70’s. “Friendship like the flight of birds cannot be put in written words, Never yet has poet penned, all it means to have a friend.”

Another poet I like is a newcomer. He began writing around 2015 during a faith crisis while suffering from depression. His work is real and raw about the human condition and his questions and doubts about life. These are questions that touch us all. He has written a series of books called, “Hey God.” In these books, he poses his questions to God. He then writes what he perceives God’s answer would be. His name is John Roedel.

I have a few that I have connected with in different phases of life. I love the poem, “The Song of the River” by William Randolph Hearst that gives an analogy of life and death.

I adopted the poem, “May Our Friendship Last Forever,” by New York Poet Nicholas Gordon, as a poem for me and Chrissie. I send it to him every year on our anniversary.

A short verse I read everyday, because I have a worn handwritten version of it that I made over 30 years ago in my closet, is by G. Sterling Leiby. I keep it there as a daily reminder to not dwell on the past. I tried researching more about Leiby. I didn’t find much except that he wrote short verses that appeared in the Wall Street Journal and other magazines.

As for a favorite, which is not really “the favorite” but one I have favored for a while is transcribed below. It provoked a lot of thought and inspired me to dig deep for inner strength, to look to myself for happiness first and it made me realize no one can make you happy unless you are happy with and like yourself. It is, “Comes the Dawn.”

The poem itself is surrounded by controversy because several people claim to be the author. In 1973 a woman named Veronica Shoffstall claimed she wrote it when she was 19. Several other women have also claimed to be the authentic author. Others (those who are in-the-know about poetry and literature) say the poem is one half of a longer poem “Aprendiendo”, which was written in Spanish by Jorge Luis Borges (24 August 1899 – 14 June 1986), an Argentinian poet, writer and essayist.

I first read it in the early 70’s. My memory says it was in the book, “Our Bodies, Ourselves,” that came out in 1973. However, I can’t find any information that the poem was included in its pages. That book started a firestorm itself, but we’ll save that for another time.

Comes The Dawn

After a while you learn the subtle difference,
Between holding a hand and chaining a soul.

And you learn that love doesn’t mean leaning,
And company doesn’t mean security.

And you begin to learn that kisses aren’t contracts,
And presents aren’t promises.

And you begin to accept your defeats,
With your head up and your eyes open,
With the grace of a woman, not the grief of a child.

And you learn to build all your roads on today,
Because tomorrow’s ground is too uncertain for plans,
And futures have a way of falling down in mid-flight.

After a while you learn,
That even sunshine burns if you get too much.

So you plant your garden and decorate your own soul,
Instead of waiting for someone to bring you flowers.

And you learn that you really can endure…

That you really are strong,
And you really do have worth.

It’s Over Now

My oldest brother died last Tuesday, July 22. Since then I have been tossing thoughts around in my head. I knew I had to write something. I just didn’t know how or what I wanted to say. It is complicated.

As adults, we had very little to no relationship. I would say polite contact, the past few years it revolved around our aging mother. She passed away four years ago and since then pretty much nothing. I would send him a message on his birthday. Sometimes he would respond, but usually not.

I often questioned myself why I even attempted to stay in touch, because as a child I was abused by him and the other one too. I guess mostly I wanted some kind of resolution to the past, but I feel he wanted to forget it, sweep it under the rug, hide it in the closet. That’s where a lot of family secrets go.

There were a lot of family secrets and dead bones in our family. I’ve written about them before. This post – https://emyloomwordswovenwithinmyheart.com/2020/09/10/sexual-abuse-teen-moms-and-family-curses/ – questions whether these acts were a curse on our family line. If so why is the girls who suffer the lifelong side effects?

When I was little, I looked up to him. He was five years my senior, handsome and smart. The abuse started when I was maybe 10 years old. It continued until he left for the marines at age 18. He went on to “make” something of his life, I guess. He had a long career in the Marines; started as a private and moved up to warrant officer and then a commissioned officer. After the Marines he went back to school and got a teaching degree. He taught handicap children and from what I heard from my mother, he was highly loved and respected.

Good for him but he never wanted to put the past to rest. He never addressed what happened. I know he did not have an easy childhood. He was 5, 6 maybe even 7 when he witnessed verbal and extreme physical abuse by our alcoholic father on our mother. Were we all just damaged goods and we damaged each other?

The last time I was in the city where he lived I texted him to see if he wanted to meet. It was four years ago actually, just after our mother passed. He didn’t attend her funeral, but my mother had told me he was sick and she would understand. She had been telling me he was sick for years, and she understood why he never came to Texas to see her. Anyway, he didn’t want to see me then either, not even for coffee. He told me he wasn’t “public ready” and declined to meet.

So why did I make all these attempts? Maybe I wanted some closure, some explanation, some sign of remorse, hoping for some request for forgiveness? Anyway it is not coming now.

The Friday before he passed his wife called to tell me that his days were short. She said he requested very little but asked her to call and let me know. OK, she let me know. Was it an effort on his part to reach out before he died, to settle the past? Evidently not. I wrote back and asked if he wanted me to come see him, but recalled that he did not want to see me in 2021. I told her if she thought it was appropriate she could tell him that,

“I always loved him and I release him from any harm or hurt from he past. I only want this journey to be peaceful and full of joy on the other side when he is reunited with mother…”

Not forgiveness but letting go.

I did not hear back from her until Tuesday. She sent a text that said, “Andy passed away this morning.”

This all left me with so many mixed emotions. There is nothing left to resolve on this side. I want to move on. I am sad and angry at the same time. Tears may have welled up for a moment but I did not even cry. I wondered was his passing even worth my tears? It sounds harsh, mean and cold. However, he lived his life and I lived mine and his is over now.

One side note about my brother. He was born the same day as Princess Anne, Queen Elizabeth’s only daughter. He died the same morning as Ozzy Osbourne. What a contrast.

Summer 1968

Famous or Remembered

Never, ever, ever have I ever wanted fame.  As an introvert I prefer the shadows to the limelight.  Furthermore, if I am put in an even mildly public situation, I turn to jello.  Please do not point me out. Do not ask me to stand in front of a crowd. By all means, do not expect me to speak. I feel uneasy, I stumble over my words and I cannot form one coherent thought.  All of this leaves me looking like a socially awkward simpleton.

Other than being an introvert and wanting no attention directed at me, one of my mother’s mantras that was drilled into my head was, “Fool’s names and fool’s faces are always seen in public places.”  The message here was, “Do not do anything to draw attention to yourself.”  Especially anything embarrassing.

That mantra of my mother’s often comes to mind these days when I see politicians. They all must be equipped with extraordinary large egos. It seems their desire for power, fame and celebrity leads them to making claims which are undampened by reality. Maybe being a fool these days doesn’t carry the same stigma as it did in the past.

On the flip side I do hope to be remembered. Remembered by those who I have extended a helping hand. People that I have listened to or sat with in times of need, people I have given a place to rest, or people that needed help in a time of crisis whether financial or spiritual.

Yes, please remember me. I pray most will remember me fondly however sadly I am sure there are those who remember me disdainfully. In my heart I know I never did anything with malicious intent but sometimes spirits do not align.

A saying I have adopted as a motto was this one my grandmother, Alease Andrews, wrote in my autograph book when I was 12…”In the garden of your heart, let me be a forget-me-not.”

Remember what you will, just remember.

Every Anniversary is A Step to Healing

Four years, four years ago today my mom passed from this world to her forever home. I think of her often.

I analyze and reanalyze every significant event from my childhood until the day she passed.

As the years pass, I see more clearly that our relationship was like many other mother/daughter relationships… always evolving, with ups and downs, give and take, frustrations and acceptance.

In the end, I was by her side. I held her hand, I sang hymns to her and I prayed for God to take her home and end her suffering. God answered that prayer on Pentecostal Sunday. The day God sent his Holy Spirit as a comfort to us, he took her home.

I knew her passing was inevitable and I thought was prepared. I thought I had already grieved over the prior few weeks but the moment she passed, I was overwhelmed with unexpected emotions. Our journey was over.

Below is a blog post from several months before she past. I had visited her but because of Covid we had limited visits. In that time, however, we made our peace.

January 2021

No Fight Left … Only Love

I saw my mother yesterday. She was a little confused and in quarantine because of her latest hospital visit. 

Over the years my mother and I have had our shared joy and trials, times when we saw eye-to-eye and many times that we clashed. There were times I felt suffocated and pulled away and times she clung tighter.

The last few years because of her decline into dementia it seemed the clashes were more frequent and heated. I was not-so-affectionately called the “bossyone” In reality, I was trying to enable the very thing she wanted, to remain independent in her home, by making sound decisions and managing her finances. 

An unfortunate fall in 2018 lead her to rehab where she could no longer hide her advancing dementia.

We have been through a process the past three years. Just as infant grows and advances at a rapid pace between birth and four years. It seems dementia takes a turn and in three short years my mothers abilities have declined at a rapid pace.

She had surgery in October and the decline has been even more sharp since then. When I saw her this week she was so frail and helpless, she stared off into space as a newborn does when it is seeing the strange new world for the first time. She found comfort in being held, holding my hand and was soothed by the sound of music – the old hymns she would play for hours. The words to those she has not forgotten.

We have gone from my birth and total dependence, to growing, changing, challenging, disagreements, coming together, growing apart, to facing the honest truth of our relationship. Then it reversed: growing apart, coming together, disagreements, challenging, changing (especially in my views about her illness and motives), to her growing old and total dependence on others.

Now she just wants to be loved, be safe and protected. We have come full circle from the newborn daughter a mother held in her arms 65 years ago to yesterday as a daughter held her innocent elderly mother in her arms.

I braided her hair and put the pearl necklace on her that my auntie sent. Girls should always wear their pearls.

There is no fight left, what is left is only pure love.

The Way to Isandlwana

One year ago today I was in South Africa traveling to the Isandlwana Battlefield. In January 1879 it was the site of the first major encounter of the Anglo-Zulu War.

This trip was part of a group tour with the graduates of the 1973 Nottingham University Mining Dept. It was a 50 year anniversary/reunion for them. Ten guys and their wives including my husband Chris and me.

To be honest when I read the itinerary included this stop, I thought it was really a guy thing. I was not interested, but it was their celebration and after all they were all guys, therefore it was a stop of interest.

We started the journey on the seaside in Durban and travelled 5+ hours by coach to Isandlwana. The countryside was beautiful and I took many pictures of the villages and locals along the way.

We stayed at the Isandlwana Lodge. The lodge is cut into the rockface of Nyoni Rock with an expansive view of the mountain and battlefield below. The entire lodge is shaped like a shield, and built with rock and thatch to resemble the native huts. Per the Lodge’s website, the lodge was opened in 1999 and was formally opened by Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, a direct descendant of King Shaka.

Just the beauty of the lodge and the serenity of the surrounding area made this a magical place. Hard to believe this magical serene space witnessed a brutal horrific battle.

The whole sordid story is too long and complicated to recount here but for three days we had the most magnificent guide, Thulani, who told the story in such captivating detail that I wish I could have recorded the entire visit.

In a nutshell it goes like this: 1) British Empire decides they want Zululand; 2) the Zulu King doesn’t agree; 3) war ensues; 4) over confident British commander camps at Isandlwana; 5) Zulu King and his forces overpowered the armed British with only spears and shields; 6) a majority of the 1700 British troops were killed; 7) after a series of battles over the next several months the British gain control of Zululand; 8) in 1887, Zululand was declared British territory.

In walking the battlefield, I was surprised to see most all of the monuments were to British officers and troops. Well, makes sense as most of them were erected by the British after they took control. However one would have thought in recent years there would be monuments to honor the Zulu warriors who fought for their land.

I asked Thulani and he told me that a monument had been dedicated to the Zulu’s in 1999. It was commissioned by the KwaZulu Monuments Council to commemorate the Zulu army involved in the battle and it was unveiled on its 120th anniversary.

It was a large replica of a necklace of valour worn by deserving Zulu warriors. Just two months before our visit the monument was cut into pieces and stolen. A small section that was left had been moved to the porch area of the small museum.

Istock photo of Zulu Monument

So that’s the story. One year ago I surprised myself by a visit to a place I thought I had no interest in seeing. Not only was I in awe of the beauty of the lodge and surrounding landscape, I also learned about the sad history of the land.

Jacque: A Modern Woman of the 60’s Generation

My first job was at Pixie Preschool in Tampa, Florida. I was 16 years old. It was about 2 miles from where I lived. I rode my bike to work with my son Adam in a child seat on the handlebars. My boss was Jacque. She was a single mom with two children, the youngest Andi, a girl, had a disability. She suffered a lack of oxygen during birth, and although her speech was slow, she was very clever.

Jacque started her own daycare partially because it would enable her to spend more time with Andi and guide her development. It would also give her interaction with other children. She did not want Andi isolated, unable to attend school, the way children with disabilities were in the early 70’s. It was only in 1975 that a federal law was passed that provided every child with a disability to a free, appropriate public education.

Jacque was a very modern women for the time. The Helen Reddy song, “I Am Woman” was popular at that time, and it was the epitome of Jacque. She was independent, a business owner, smart, confident, liberated, empowered and funny.

Jacque was probably in her early to mid-30’s. She was part of the 60’s generation women’s rights movement that effected so many changes for women in the west. In 1960, women were given the right to use the pill as a contraceptive, obtain credit in their own name without having their husband co-sign, until 1969 women could not attend Yale or Princeton and could not attend Harvard until 1977, and it wasn’t until 1973 that women could serve on juries in all 50 states.

Growing up in the south Texas, the women of that age who were in my life weren’t quite as liberated as Jacque appeared to be. I was excited to be around her and learn from her.

I have a few pictures of my days there and the children. Strangely enough while clearing out some things recently, I found a Christmas card picture of Jacque’s kids, Greg and Andi. Greg would be in his 60’s now as I was 16 and he was 9.

Looking at the picture, I wonder where they might be today, and how life evolved for them.

Today is International Woman’s Day and although it has some controversial origins, it is a day to celebrate women. Jacque was one woman who helped shape my life and help me see the possibilities for the future. Today I honor her. She would be in her 80’s now. I would google her but I can remember everything about her, except her last name.

Released – Eema is There

I am watching the release of three young women from captivity. The first of the hostages released in the ceasefire deal between Israel and Gaza.

The newscaster comes on and says…the mothers of the three women will be there at the point of release. Suddenly I am overcome with emotion. I try to repeat what he said and I am so choked up I am unable to speak.

Who do they want the most when they are delivered from the hell after 471 days?

Only their mother, their mom, their mum, their Eema. If only for a moment, only she can bring them to a place of peace. Only she can reassure them, hold them so close that they can hear her heart beat. The first heart they heard while still in the womb. Her heart.

I am praying that at the sound of their Eema’s heart they will be overwhelmed with a sense of tranquility that takes them back to the place of security and protection. A time where they knew no horrors, terror or fear.

In their Eema’s heart they knew only love.

Hebrew media reports that the IDF has asked the mothers of the three hostages to come to a meeting point at a base next to the Gaza border. From there they are to accompany their daughters as they are taken to the hospital.”
The Times of Israel, January 19, 2025

Eema (pronounced EE-muh)Mother; mom; Website: My Jewish Learning

And So it Ends

The Lord’s acts of mercy indeed do not end, For His compassions do not fail. They are new every morning; Great is Your faithfulness. Lamentations 3:22-23 NAS

This year, as in many others, I have spent the past few days reflecting on the past twelve months… its joys and sorrows.  

The highlight of my year was in May when Chris and I went to South Africa on a trip with his college buddies and their wives.  I was a little apprehensive about the trip, not knowing anyone, but in the end I formed some awesome friendships.

The country of South Africa was so beautiful, the wildlife, the scenery, the people, the history, it was all an awe inspiring experience. So amazing I can’t believe I didn’t write about it. I did upload photos and some narratives as we travelled on my photo blog.

Part of the reason I didn’t write about my trip as soon as I returned, was because I was instantly plunged into a healthcare issue. I required surgery within only a few weeks that consumed all my time, concentration and energy.  Thankfully everything was sorted out with surgery and a few months of recovery time.

In September, I made a whirl wind trip to Texas starting in Austin. I visited my cousin Debbie in a nursing facility. I saw her daughter my 1st cousin once removed and her new baby (1st cousin twice removed). I had lunch with my friend Debbie just south of Austin. Then, I drove 170 miles to an area just outside of Houston.

That evening I had a lovely dinner on the shores of Lake Conroe with a lady who worked with me 26 years ago. It was warm night and so relaxing listening to the water lapping against the rocks. We laughed and shared stories together as if no time at all had passed.

The next morning I got up and met my niece for breakfast along with her mom and my three grand nieces. After breakfast, I drove north and stopped in Centerville for quick visit with a childhood friend. Finally, made my way to Corsicana to see my sister.

Paulette and I spent several days catching up and visiting friends and family. Together we completed a long overdue task at mother’s grave. After having driven over 600 miles in a week, I drove to Dallas and flew home. It was a full busy trip. I got home tired but with a heart full of love.

Sadly the review of every year ends with memories of those we lost. The most tragic loss for us was in November when 17-year-old son of a dear friend drowned. Hard to accept and understand why someone dies so young. 

Additionally, in the past month, two friends and my sweet cousin, Debbie, passed away.  I am so thankful I had that visit with her in September.

For the past several years, at the new year, I read the poem God Knows. A poem written by Minnie Louise Haskins in 1908. More about the poem and my thoughts in this blog post from 2020.

This is the end, and tomorrow I begin again looking ahead to 2025. I do so heeding the guidance given by Ms. Haskins.

And I said to the man who stood at the gate of the year: “Give me a light that I may tread safely into the unknown.” 

And he replied: “Go out into the darkness and put your hand into the Hand of God.
That shall be to you better than light and safer than a known way.”

So I went forth, and finding the Hand of God, trod gladly into the night.

And He led me towards the hills and the breaking of day in the lone East.

So heart be still:
What need our little life
Our human life to know,
If God hath comprehension?
In all the dizzy strife
Of things both high and low,
God hideth His intention.

God knows. His will
Is best. The stretch of years
Which wind ahead, so dim
To our imperfect vision,
Are clear to God. Our fears
Are premature; In Him,
All time hath full provision.

Then rest: until
God moves to lift the veil
From our impatient eyes,
When, as the sweeter features
Of Life’s stern face we hail,
Fair beyond all surmise
God’s thought around His creatures
Our mind shall fill.

Sometimes Life Gets You Down

I am down tonight, it has been building for weeks but tonight I feel it intensely. It is a combination of many things. 

The first week in November, the 17 year old son of a close friend died in a drowning accident. 

He was a bright, kind, and joyful child.  In his obituary his parents wrote;

“He will be remembered for his unmitigated joyfulness, his natural curiosity, and his wholehearted enthusiasm. He lived fully. In his seventeen years of life, he traveled extensively and visited many places including Belize, the Galapagos Islands, Fiji, New Zealand, and Samoa. He enjoyed exploring and experiencing the world… He loved camping and felt at home sleeping under the stars. He could be found cooking homemade meals for his family, teaching himself to play the piano, or gaming with friends. He did not squander his life. He stepped into it with a big smile and his wonderful curly hair, awake and wholehearted.”

No doubt many have heard, “No parent should ever have to bury their child.” It is true.

Secondly, my son who has been battling IBD and autoimmune pancreatitis for 14 years has been in the hospital for a month. He came home today, but he is not well. 

He was equally a charming child. He had a magical childhood as well. He traveled the world with us. He raised chickens (they were his pets), then he became interested in aquaculture. He formed a website for the reef community at 14, he started a computer cloud company at 20. He had a bright and promising future when IBD reared its ugly head. At 22, his colon perforated while he was in the hospital. He was bleeding internally. After 3 surgeries and 8 weeks in hospital he came home. A year later he nearly bled to death after a scope procedure and biopsy.  Then year after year it seems the problems just piled on. 

Today he is on a lot of medication, he’s in a lot of pain, and it seems the medical community has given up on helping him. It’s incredibly sad when you have to fight a disease and you have to fight the medical community too. 

I have prayed so many prayers for my son. The other day I pleaded with God, I asked, what is the answer? Is there anybody that can help him? So far the answers have not come. 

Added to this, I got a call this morning that my cousin died. I just saw her in September. She was five years older than me in the last 15 or so years we reconnected and became closer.  She was beautiful, she was intelligent, loving and kind.  

She was a RN and with continuing education, got her masters degree. She worked for years at the VA hospital in Albuquerque as a counselor.

Sadly, several years ago, she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s and declined very quickly. 

When I saw her in September, she was unable to carry on a conversation. When I arrived, she looked up at me and smiled. I said to her, “Hi Debbie, it’s your cousin, Trish”  She looks straight at me and replied, “I know.”  That was the most comprehendible conversation we had that day. 

I asked her to take a picture before I left. I held up the phone and smiled to take a selfie.  She leaned her head over to touch mine and shut her eyes.

I am forever grateful for the visit that day. When I got home in Washington, I reflected on my visit with her. I felt she would grieve if she understood, she would not want to live that way.  I told my husband I never want to live that way.  Just existing with all dignity and autonomy lost. 

Finally, it is winter. It is dark, dreary and cold outside. I feel dark, dreary and cold inside.  

A slowly brewing state of grief, downheartedness, and sorrow in my soul. 

Praying this season in my soul passes quickly. When winter is over I pray I will see and feel the new hope of spring. 

Deborah Ruth – Rest in Peace

Gratitude

GRATITUDE: “If you concentrate on finding whatever is good in every situation, you will discover that your life will suddenly be filled with gratitude, a feeling that nurtures the soul.” — Rabbi Harold Kushner
Looking back through the history of just my life, I am wondering if I can find good in every situation? This is a tall order. It cannot be done with my own power but only by endeavoring to see it through the lens of God’s eyes.
Yes, there were hardships and obstacles that dominated my youth but they helped form who I am today. In many ways I think those experiences help me look at others who struggle with a compassionate heart and less of a judging mindset.
In the bigger picture of things I AM SO BLESSED. I really have nothing to complain about, yet I do complain. Praying my grumbles are be at a minimum today.

Rants and Raves

Sadly, I try not to rant, but this is where I am…

My little town again… On Facebook there is a page called North Bend Rants and Raves. For weeks now people have been posting about the elections, calling each other names, making accusations about each other because of their political choices and generally spreading vitriol and hate.

I made a post where I said I was shattered because it seems civility and respect are dead. I linked a message from my blog with a verse that I wrote about hate and how it spreads. In the blog post, I mention my belief in God and how I believe ultimately God is in control. Two bible verses about hate were also quoted.

The post was up for a couple of days when one of the “moderators,” Jake, said it seemed like my post should been my personal page because it just about “god.” So I comment back that it was a rant about Hate in our community.

Within hours, my post was removed. So I made a new post that said something like this; Rant: You’re free to post here and spread any vitriol you want about anything and anyone, including your neighbors unless you mention God. I don’t have the exact wording because that post was blocked.

So the only rules on the page are: “This is a forum where you are welcome to post complaints and compliments about life in North Bend. Post freely, but don’t be an a-hole.”

I don’t think I was being an “a-hole.”

All I wanted to say was that after this election, we are all neighbors in the same community and we should respect each other’s views. Everyone’s views are formed by their life experiences and their perception of the world we live in. Our views do not make any of us more right than the others. In the end, I hope we can all come together and live as a community whatever the outcome.

I’ve thought about this for the past few days and I sadly have come to believe that my post, with the mere mention of God, was not something this moderator could accept. Even sadder, the only thing worse that saying something positive about Trump is supporting the belief in God.

I’d like to think that in seven days it will all be over, but I fear not because this divisiveness has been building for years and it may be too late to turn it around.

I still believe God is in control and I am thankful I can still say it here without fear of censorship.

How British Charm Won My Heart: A Love Story

Today is officially mine and Chris’s 41st anniversary. Honestly, I cannot comprehend how time has flown by so quickly. When we were first married there were people making bets that it wouldn’t last a year. Well, we just had to prove them wrong! Tovah Feldshuh, American actress, singer and playwright gave this advice on marriage, “You know how to have a successful marriage? Shut one eye, and don’t leave. Some of it’s fun and some of it isn’t. It can be challenging, but you do not leave the field of play.” We are still on the field and here is the rest of the story.

I met Chris at work in August 1982. I was going through a divorce and started a new job at International Ground Support Systems in Denver. They did underground engineering consulting. It was a small company with three engineers, a welder, and two laborers. Chris was one of the engineers and when I started, he was working on a job in Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. He would check into the office daily, so we really met over the phone first. He, as anyone that knows him appreciates, is very out going and friendly and he has a great British accent. So naturally, I was instantly curious about this guy.

I had worked there about a month when Chris returned from Canada. The business was in a large metal warehouse and the front part was in a sectioned off into offices. I was in a small cubicle near the door with big windows to the outside and a small reception window inside. The first time I saw him, he came bounding through the front doors. He stopped at the reception window and poked his head through to introduce himself. He looked like he had been on an all night binge. He was disheveled, his clothes were wrinkled and when he smiled it revealed two missing teeth. NOT A ALL HOW I IMAGINED HIM! After he left I thought …hmm, maybe we could be good friends.

I don’t know exactly when my perception changed, but his charm did win me over. I know we were a couple by Thanksgiving because we had a big dinner at his house. There was a small issue though, and it was that technically, Chris was still married.

His English wife had left and gone back to England three years prior when he moved from Virginia to Denver. They had not been in contact for quite a while. Chris wanted to get married but had to locate her and somehow negotiate a long-distance divorce.

I still tease him because at one point he suggested we just get married because no one would know or care. Obviously this was before the internet and everyone’s personal life can be researched worldwide. I politely declined. I told him I did not want someone coming twenty years later and claiming everything and besides that was just wrong and downright illegal!

It did take a while but we were married a year later. I have to say that British charm and accent has opened many doors for Chris. When Josh was little he’d go to the store with Chris and come back to tell me that the lady at the store was flirting with daddy. He’d relate that the lady would say, “Ohhh… I do love your accent.” Seriously, it still happens all the time!

Yeah, the accent and charm may have drawn me in to start with but it is his intelligence, later his faith, his love and the care he gave to me and my kids, his generosity and his passion for helping others that has kept me in love with him. All those physical things I judged him by at first where just temporary surface distractions. Chris has been a loving and devoted husband and we have stayed faithful through the good times and the bad.

My most treasured Valentine card from him wasn’t a card at all but a letter that ends this way…

The link below is from 15 years ago about on my thoughts on marriage.
https://emyloomwordswovenwithinmyheart.com/2009/10/08/marriage/

[1] Lyrics from Bruce Springsteen song . “If I Should Fall Behind”