Remembering Mothers
“Your mother was like a vine in your bloodline, Planted by the waters, Fruitful and
full of branches.” Ezekiel
19:10
No matter who or what your mother was, you would not be here
on this earth today had she not given you birth. We all have had different childhoods; some
good and some bad. Perhaps your mother had passed on or is alive and well
today, God has given us a stern command, “Honor your father and your mother.”
(Exodus 20:12) They have given you life. I was very blessed to have an amazing
mother and this story is what I want to share with you today.
“The Kitchen Table”
For the life of me I don’t know why that little yellow
kitchen drew me like a moth to a flame.
It wasn’t just the endless cups of tea or the large soft homemade sugar
cookies; it was far more. The kitchen was tiny and compact. It wasn’t at all convenient; the sink on one
wall and the stove on another. The
refrigerator was in the attached ‘back room’.
A very small round table sat in front of the one window which was framed
in yellow organdy. If you were sitting
at the table, the back of the chair would touch the sink on one side, while the
other chair barely had room to pull it out from the table.
Cozy was the word for this oasis in an otherwise darkened
house. Everything was yellow from the
solid wood door that led to the Michigan
cellar, to the yellow metal sink unit; even the electric range was harvest
gold. Day or night it seemed as though
the sun was shining through the window and splashing the room in sunlight. A little vase of flowers always adorned the plastic
covered table. If it was not filled with
flowers of the season, then tiny red or pink plastic rose buds were used. A fat green frog holding a lush African
violet hung suspended from over the kitchen window. It was amazing how year around the plant was
covered with bright purple blooms; a reminder of the beauty of life.
When people like me dropped in for a visit, no matter where
the conversation began, it would always end up in the kitchen. Around that little table some of the greatest
problems in life were solved; world crisis, social ills, marriage problems,
personal struggles, as well as deep spiritual truths brought to light. Presidents were put in the oval office and
some taken out. The government could
have improved if they would have listened in on some of the conversations. Children were among the most important issues
discussed; how they needed to be loved, disciplined, taught, and
understood. You could believe that it
was possible for anyone to be able to succeed at anything, if they had a mind
to do it. It was here that a quick cure
for depression was discovered; ‘just begin thinking about others and then do
something for them.' It worked every
time.
There were times when small things became important, such as
discussing a new recipe, what herbal tea was the best for arthritis and for
helping you sleep; what would get stains out; how to mend a rip in your
favorite jacket; how to bake sugar cookies so they would stay soft, how to
water your plants and which window was best for them.
Concern for others was a big topic at the little round
table. How important it became to drop a
card or note in the mail to comfort the ill, the lonely and the elderly. You could envision a little old lady sitting
in a rocker waiting eagerly for the mail; hoping desperately that someone
cared. You could suddenly see into a
hospital room where sadness invaded every corner and then see a face light up
when the card arrived. Then too, you
might see that unpainted house on the next street with the unkempt yard and a
bunch of dirty-looking, uncared for children playing there. You would realize that if someone dropped by
with a basket of cookies and some yard sale Golden Books (almost like new),
maybe a little used toy car, or an older doll in a new dress, it would bring a
bit of joy and hope in an otherwise hopeless situation. A bouquet of flowers from the garden standing
in a fruit jar transformed a dingy dark room into a cozy haven of a forgotten
nursing home resident.
Speaking of flowers, how many times flower books were spread
out on the table and gone over from cover to cover. I learned never-to-be-forgotten lessons on
growing flowers; the importance of where you planted them, which colors were
old-time favorites; how day lilies could be eaten, or that rose petals were
delicious when added to certain foods.
It made sense to have a friendship garden that held only those bulbs and
plants that were given to you from another’s garden. Flowers were not grown just for your own
enjoyment, but to decorate an old soldier’s grave on Memorial Day, to cheer up
the sick, for placing in the church sanctuary and for a birthday. The list went on and on.
If that little kitchen table could talk, it would tell of
family history that traced from the far country of Scotland to Nova Scotia; on
to Canada, New York and finally to Michigan.
It would tell about dark-eyed Indian maidens and French fur traders. It would tell about homesteads, hunger, harsh
winters, lost loves and family reunions.
Many slivers were removed from little fingers and band aids
applied at the little table. Of course
the real healing came from the hugs and kissed administered along with the
practice of medicine.
Countless widows sat there and shared their loneliness and
grief; their fear of the future, the sorrow of the neglect of their grown
children. They almost never failed to
leave there with spirits lifted and hope renewed with a cup of tea, a sugar
cookie and a sympathetic listener who gave words of hope.
The scriptures that were studied and read at the table were
endless. Never a day went by without a
least the reading of devotions. The
table was bathed in prayers. How many
children’s lives were spared, souls saved from destruction, lives changed,
disaster averted, due to the prayers sent heavenward from there. Perhaps someday we will know.
I have a small picture of that table in the little yellow
kitchen. The tears always come to my
eyes and a deep longing floods my soul to once again sit at that little table. How I long to hear again the soft, gentle
voice and see the sweet smile as I walk through the door. I look at the picture once more, knowing it
really isn’t the table that I miss; it’s the one sitting there. It’s my
Mother.
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