stories


Smiles in the SnowI wrote the following several years ago, but decided to post it here because it explains a lot…

In our family photo album, on a page somewhere between Thanksgiving and Christmas of ’84, resides a series of three pictures. I see them from two different viewpoints just as Mama tells two different stories about the day she took them. She taught me that there are two ways to look at everything.From my early childhood, Mama recognized that, although I was a compliant child, I was also highly opinionated perfectionist. I was so meek that I rarely received a spanking, she or Daddy would only say, “Abby, I’m so disappointed with you!” and I would instantly burst into tears. Despite my tender heart, I had numerous opinions and voiced them without shyness. Mama and Daddy never understood where I got some of my ideas.

For example, I always wanted to wear dresses or skirts although every female I knew typically wore pants. I did not play with my toys, Mama says, but put them in straight lines by size, color, and function. The precocious nature Mama found adorable soon became the source of our first disagreement. Tucked in the midst of holiday memories, the photos hold memories of frustration and fun. They remind me that I can look at anything from more than one point of view.

Each photo features me, an adorable three year-old, in a different pose beside a snowman. At a glance, the photos seem dark. I wear a dark blue coat with the hood tied snugly over my blonde hair. My light blue pants disappear into my dark blue boots. Below my boots, blades of dead grass poke through the trampled snow. Next to me, the snowman’s firmly wrapped scarf matches my coat. A street, darkened by melting snow, lies behind us in the first snapshot while a dark red house provides a backdrop for the other two. Even the afternoon light appears grayish and somber.

That dreary day, my stubborn opinions and perfectionism caused Mama and I to have our first (and second) arguments. I have sketchy memories of that morning, but I remember how unreasonable she seemed to my three year-old mind. After all, I reasoned that I always wore skirts, so why should I have to wear pants to play in the snow? She just wanted to spoil my fun by refusing to let me play in the snow without pants.

First, I tried to persuade and argue with her to get my way. When that plan failed, I resorted to every child’s secret weapon – whining. My persistence was notable but useless. “The long escapade with the dress lasted all morning, but I wasn’t going to budge and the snow was still there,” Mama told me later. By the time my baby sister took her afternoon nap, I gave up and wriggled into my jeans.

While the baby slept, we ventured out to the front yard and started making a snowman. Although she won our first fight, Mama still felt stressed from the ordeal and from trying to make a quick snowman with a small child in tow. “We had the baby monitor on the porch and I was trying so we could finish during naptime.” I tried to help make snowballs, but now I know my efforts slowed Mama more than they aided her. Nevertheless, we laughed and played, giggled and chatted. I remember that I enjoyed having fun with Mama and having her attention to myself instead of sharing with my sister.

Decorating the snowman caused the second argument Mama and I ever had. I watched and gave advice while she placed the eyes, nose, mouth, and scarf. Next, she tried to attach sticks for the arms. Mama still talks about our conversation, “Mama, that one’s too high.”

“Is that better?”

“No… they’re not the same.”

“Honey, I think they’re okay.”

“They’re not level!” At this, Mama began to show her stress.

“They’re fine!” Even at three, I knew God meant for things to be straight.

“But, Mama…” She did not let me finish.

“Abby! They are fine!” By her tone of voice, I knew to drop the subject immediately. The arms stayed uneven and she took three pictures of me with the snowman before we hurried inside to warm ourselves over hot (lukewarm for me) chocolate.

In recent years, Mama and I talked about the day we first fought. Like mine, her memories have two viewpoints. Immediately, she responded, “All I remember is those blasted arms!” Then she reminisced about the wonderful time we had playing in the snow and building the snowman. Looking at the album page, she commented, “If you’ll notice you do have pants on of the color of your choice and we did have a wonderful time. Little children don’t fake adorable smiles very well and yours is one of the best.”

In each photo, the snowman and I stand side by side. We make a cheerful pair with touches of color and smiling faces. The snowman has red yarn hair while my blonde bangs fall below my hood. The rainbow-striped gloves that dangle on his crooked, mismatched stick-arms contrast with the light yellow mittens that peek out from my coat sleeves. He has two faces, one for us to see from the house and one for people to see from the street. He has orange carrot-noses much longer and brighter than my own pinkish, button-shaped nose. Items that I cannot identify form his eyes and mouth, but both of his faces wear grins that match the one on my face, but mine is real.

Tonight was the last ESL class of this session, so I was busy administering post-tests for reading for some students, continuing lessons and reviewing with others, and giving class surveys (in Spanish) to all.  Ester was passing around Mexican candy to share as I was fielding questions about the survey.  I was in the middle of an explanation when Carlos turned to me and offered me a piece, “You want some candy?”

I normally prefer not to eat candy but I do attempt to live by certain values: Loyalty, integrity, worship, flexibility… and eating whatever I am offered when befriending people of other cultures.  I accepted the candy and thanked Carlos, noticing his mischievous grin as I finished my explanation holding the sweet.  I had just enough time to glance down and see the word “mango” on the wrapper before I was asked another question.

As I moved toward the dry erase board for a detailed differentiation between “housekeeper,” “housewife,” and “stay-at-home mom,” I opened the candy and noticed another word just below “mango”.  I quickly popped the round confection into my mouth, determined not to react negatively, and turned to write on the board.  My tastebuds were instantly assailed by a wave of intense, spicy flavor.  I bit into the chewy center and it was indeed mango-flavored.   The outside, however, was coated with enchilada spices!

This was not the worst thing I have ever eaten (century eggs, anyone?), it was not even the worst in the candy category, but I will not be buying them for myself anytime soon!

Oh, and I did manage to keep a pleasant expression and to complete the lesson while eating the candy.

Mango Enchilado Candy

“I loved learning ASL, but found interpreting to be quite daunting!”

How I did it:
I started learning American Sign Language when I was five. We started with the usual kid vocabulary, “I’m hungry. I’m thirsty. I’m bored. Are we done yet?” And we learned “mom” words, too, “Later. Pay attention. No. Obey now. Sit still. Where’s your brother?” My mom, sister, and I signed together quite a bit and it amused us that males always assumed we were talking about them, even when we were simply trying to carry on a conversation without interrupting.

At seventeen, I was still signing but my ASL grammar was terrible, so I took a beginning ASL class at the local college and it helped. When I was nineteen, the college finally offered an advanced class and I jumped at the chance to practice and improve. Surprisingly, my most difficult ASL test that semester was not in class.

They needed an ASL interpreter for a funeral at my church and the normal interpreter was going to be out of town! Terrified as I was, I agreed to sign but made the minister provide all his notes so that I could brush up on the necessary vocabulary. I practiced constantly, talking to myself in ASL non-stop. (Have you ever seen someone walking down the sidewalk, signing to themselves? That was me and don’t worry, I wasn’t having a seizure.)

During the service, everything went smoothly until the deaf man and his girlfriend looked confused and asked what a certain sign meant. I spelled c-o-m-f-o-r-t and they demonstrated a different sign than I had learned. A little later, the man signed something that I didn’t understand and I looked at him quizzically. He looked at me quizzically and repeated the sign, then I realized that he was scratching his head, not signing!

I accompanied the family to the graveside and realized that I had no notes for the few words and prayer, so I had to wing it. I have never been more grateful for all of the “church” vocabulary that Mom taught us!

Everything went smoothly, but I was exhausted by the time I went to the advanced ASL class that night. We were taking the mid-term and I knew, but didn’t study. I passed anyway.

Lessons & tips:
Find a class or tutor! You need to see the signs and receive feedback in person and not merely from a book.

Resources:
Night classes at the local college.

It took me 14 years.

It made me More brave

Have you ever had a time when everything turned out exactly the way you wanted and it was as good as you had hoped?  If I have, I do not remember it now.  My lack of memory means either it has never happened to me or it has happened and was not memorable.  I am inclined to believe the former.  Most of my life has not turned out the way I thought it would.

On December 26, I went to a ten-year reunion, of sorts.  When I was growing up, our home school group met at the public library every week for educational programs, story time, research, etc.  In December 1998, I was in high school and we put together a ten-year time capsule.  Along with several library-related items and a video, we each included a short survey that we completed.  The last question on the survey was: Where do you think you will be and what do you think you will be doing ten years from now?  I answered that I would be out of high school and college with a career in the home economics field (at the time, I think I was interested in cooking and interior decorating).  Until I looked down at my handwriting on that red sheet of paper, I had completely forgotten that I ever wanted those things.

Now I use my degree in English to run payroll for a local factory during the day.  At night, I teach English language classes to Spanish-speaking adults (my Spanish minor frequently comes in handy).  I will not bore you with all the details of my current life, but I love it and I know that I am in the place where God wants me now.

Sometimes, when I pray about the future, I can almost hear God laugh and say, “Oh, honey, you don’t know what you want, but it’s okay.”  At those times, I am asking Him for what I want instead of asking what He wants or simply saying, “Lord, I want whatever You want.”  Psalm 37:4 explains, “Delight yourself also in the Lord, and He will give you the desires and secret petitions of your heart” (Amplified Bible).  When I am truly and utterly delighted in Christ, my hopes and dreams will match His.

In the movie 27 Dresses, Kevin asks Jane, “So is this moment everything you hoped for?”

She responds, “No.  It’s more.  It’s much more.”

Sometimes I stop and look back at the story of my life and I am glad that God did not write it the way I thought He should ten years ago, five years ago, or even one year ago. If He had, I would not be where I am now… and it really is much more.

10. You put your cell phone on silent during dinner.
9. You know the meaning of “ricochet” and “purple.”
8. You do not notice closed captioning anymore.
7. You do not say the “C word” around Mom.
6. You try not to walk on carpet.
5. You push the front door open hard when you enter the house.
4. You know what the Women’s Network is and have utilized it.
3. You have ever met someone you recognized from Robinsons’ refrigerator.
2. You refer to someone as a pookie.
1. The Robinsons make perfect sense to you.

My scientifically-minded mother loves to learn new things. She often starts by pondering on a new topic and then progresses to asking people about their experiences with it, “What worked? What didn’t work? What would you have done differently? What should I be asking?” During the polling process, she also researches the subject at the library and online. Eventually, she decides to try it out for herself.

A good example is the time that she wanted to do something to help the sensitive skin issues that several family members have. She asked numerous moms what they had tried until finding one who suggested lye soap with no added fragrances or dyes. Mom, of course, decided that she wanted to make soap and I – her only daughter in the country that summer – was enlisted to help.

After a great deal of research, we spent several hours shopping online and driving about town to collect the necessary ingredients. Mom decided that the best molds would be foot-long sections of PVC pipe with a tightly-fitting cap on one end, so we stopped at a local farm-and-home store. Entering the store, Mom grabbed a cart and wove her way past the bored clerk and the displays of deck chairs, patio tables, and umbrellas. She decided to try a two-inch-diameter pipe and a four-inch one because she wanted to know which would work better as a soap mold. The store did not offer pipe-cutting, so she tried putting one end of each ten-foot pipe in the cart. I was a little dubious and wondered if she had thought this through. Due to their length and weight, the pipes would not stay in the cart, and I had to hold them steady while she steered the cart toward the front of the store. When we reached the lawn furniture and bumped the first umbrella with the top of the pipes, I knew she had not thought it through. Nevertheless, she continued on, trying to avoid as many umbrellas as possible. The clerk just leaned on the counter and laughed as we slowly made our way to the front. I was starting to feel like a pinball ricocheting from side-to-side when Mom said, “You know, a lot of things I do with you turn into ‘Lucy and Ethel’ moments!”

“If we’re Lucy and Ethel, you must be Lucy,” I shot back with a smile.

“What?” She gasped with mock indignation and bumping into another umbrella, “I don’t know about that.”

“Wasn’t she the one who always had the crazy ideas and got them into all those situations?”

“I still don’t think I’m Lucy,” she mumbled with a little pout as we finally reached the counter. We paid the laughing clerk for the pipe and made it home without further incident. The soap also turned out well.

 One of my favorite childhood books was Sam Who Never Forgets by Eve Rice.  The elephant watches Sam, the zookeeper, feed all the other animals and the elephant keeps asking, “Sam, did you forget?”  What do you remember?  Here are some of my random memories:

  • Sally, the doll that I received for my second birthday/sister’s birth
  • The combination to the lock on my first diary
  • The year Sara and I received photos of our new puppy, Bandit, for our birthdays
  • Playing pioneers, Boxcar Children, pirates, and adventurers in the backyard
  • Turning Luke’s hair – temporarily – green
  • Watching Gilmore Girls with sister-fans
  • The first day of college algebra when my professor thought that I was good at math 
  • Feeling at loose ends when my parents left me at college the first time
  • Graduating from ESU – lunch with family, celebrating with friends, accidentally showing up in an outfit that matched Mom and Sara’s
  • Trying to figure out what to do when half my town is flooded

« Previous Page

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.