This past May our mother passed on to heaven. We said our final earthly goodbyes to her on
May 8, and thus began our year of those firsts.
Many of you know them…….those first special days that you spend without
that special person. Our first “first”
came quickly. Mother’s Day occurred just
two days after Mom’s funeral. Isn’t that
just like life? Life doesn’t wait on us
to get ready for the things that are hard.
They happen whether we’re ready or not.
Our next first is tomorrow.
Tomorrow is Mom’s birthday. She
would be 89 if she had lived to see this day.
I know, though, that none of us wish her back. We had been saying goodbye to her for a long
time as the symptoms of Alzheimer’s overtook her brain and body. What a sad disease it is! Alzheimer’s takes a person slowly, robbing
them of their essence and their personality and their memories. I’ll never forget going to see Mom last year,
in June of 2014. When Gary and I entered
her assisted living apartment with Jan, Mom not only didn’t know us at all, but
she didn’t even show any joy that we were there. She would usually at least act happy to have
visitors, but on this visit she was completely devoid of even that. For the first time, I did indeed feel like a
visitor…..and an ignored one, at that.
Our visit that June was also the one where we gathered
around Mom in the kitchen at Jan’s house as we sang hymns. Mom sang with us,
surprising us all. That time was deeply
precious to each of us, including Mom.
Her eyes lit up as she sang. She
smiled and she tried to express what she was thinking about each song. She remembered words very well, and we knew
that each song resonated with her deep in her heart and mind.
Before we left that evening to go on our separate ways once
again, Mary Beth wanted us to all put our hands on the table together, and take
a picture. I’m so glad we did that. Something about that picture is so
personal…..so tender. There is our
mother’s hand, nestled among her children’s.
Her hand shows the effects of age….of hard work….of arthritis. But her hand is beautiful. And us….our hands also show the signs of age
that are creeping upon us. You can see
some spots…..some lumps on our joints…..and several of us have that funny
little finger that Mom had.
I look at that picture and I think of how Mom’s hand was
always in our lives. From an early age
her hands were ever busy with caring for us five children, and for Dad. I remember her hands cooking and baking,
sewing and cleaning, caring for sick children and looking after busy
children. She used her hands to show us
how to make little troll doll clothes out of felt while she sewed real clothes
for us to wear. She used her hands to let
us turn the handle on the food chopper as she made Cranberry Salad for Thanksgiving. She used her hands to fill our table with
huge baking sheets of homemade rolls while she pinched off little pieces of
dough for us to happily eat. She used
her hands to teach us how to set a table and how to wash dirty dishes after
loading the sink just right.
Her hands wiped our tears…..and sometimes caused our tears
as she spanked us for disobedience. Her
hands worked to grow beautiful flowers and delicious vegetables, which she
froze and canned and cooked and shared with others. Her hands taught us how to do the laundry and
to fold the clothes correctly. Her hands
taught us to iron whatever she had placed in our four baskets, each basket
bearing the name of one of us girls.
Where was John’s? J Her hands taught us how to clean a house, how
to hem a dress, how to play some of her favorite card games, how to make a bed
the RIGHT way, how to take care of our varied pets, and how to plan the many
practical jokes for which she was famous.
Perhaps the most important use of her hands was when she
would open her Bible in the early mornings as we all sat around the breakfast
table. Dad would have already gone to
work, so before we left for school, Mom would be sure that we all opened our
Bibles as she did. She would read from
the Our Daily Bread devotional book, reading the selected Bible passage first
and then reading the devotion before we prayed.
Her commitment to God and to us was never more evident than during that
precious time together every morning.
Her hands made each of our wedding dresses and bridesmaids
dresses. Her hands cared for us after
each of our children was born. Her hands
loved and doted on her grandchildren and great-grands. Her hands knit literally countless numbers of
Christmas stockings for family, friends, friends of friends, friends of family,
pets……you get the idea. Her hands
quilted each of us a totally handmade quilt after she retired. Then those always busy hands made, again, an
untold number of quilts for others to enjoy.
Her hands took meals to shut-ins.
Her hands stuffed envelopes for the Crisis Pregnancy Center, for
missionaries, and for church.
Her hands cared for Dad for eight years as he fought
cancer. And it was her hands that he
wanted to scramble his eggs that he loved during the final few weeks of his
life. Only her hands would do, and I
understood that totally as I stepped aside and let her do this thing that she
loved so much. It was in their little
kitchen that I noticed her hands doing things differently than she had ever
done…..and I knew that the Alzheimer’s was lurking, waiting to overcome her in
the following years.
Her hands worked hard to care for Dad during that final
month that he lived. He preferred her
hands above all others, but he knew that she was struggling, and so he allowed
Jan and I to help as well. But it was
Mom’s hand that he reached for as they sat on the couch. It was Mom’s touch that comforted him when he
was so sick. It was Mom’s hand that he
held as he lay in his hospital bed…..her hand reaching through the bed rails as
she lay alone in their bed beside his hospital bed.
Jan took one last picture of Mom’s hands as she lay dying
this past May. There they were, crossed
on her lap, still and unmoving. She was
nearing the end of her time on earth.
Her hands, though, spoke volumes to all of us. I’m again so thankful for the picture that
Jan took. Her hands showed the evidence
of years of love and work. Now her
hand’s work was done. It was time for
her to rest.
But the work of her hands will never be done. Her work in our lives does indeed live
on. So much of who we are and what we
are is because of her beautiful hands in our lives. None of us King children would be who we are
today without the influence of her godly, kind hands. Then our children, and their children, show
the impact of Mom’s hands. What a
treasure is to be seen in those soft, wrinkled hands!
I’m pretty sure that her hand is now holding Dad’s hand in
heaven. I doubt that they’ve let each
other go since she’s joined him there.
Unless there’s work for her to do, and then I can totally see her using
those hands to make something or to keep things straight. I wonder how many quilts she’s made by
now?
The Proverbs 31 woman was described as one who works with
willing hands. Our mother did just that,
and for the rest of our lives we will benefit from her wonderful, willing hands
in our lives.
Happy Birthday, Mom.
Thank you for your beautiful hands in our lives. You will always be loved.
Patty, your mom was a truly servant of Christ ....with her hands and her whole being!!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Janet! And your mother was the same. Aren't we thankful for our many happy memories?
ReplyDelete