My mother loved to have fun. She knew how to have fun and she made sure
others had fun with her. I guess I’ve
always know that, but it only recently solidified into an organized thought.
My family had so many good traditions and I can track
almost all of them to my mother. She
knew how to throw a Christmas decorating party that everyone wanted to be part
of. We made candy –tons of it. It would last throughout our Christmas
celebration. It would be given as gifts
and be set out in small bowls for a quick yummy treat. We decorated the tree and the house. We made popcorn ropes and tinfoil ropes and
even colored paper ropes for the less visible spots. And we ended it with singing and dancing and
children dropping off as the sugar left and the night wore on. It was a party noone wanted to end.
She hosted grand New Years Dinners with tables that
stretched the long length of our dining room and living room all set in glass
dishes and as close to matching silverware as she could produce. Eventually she outfitted her table with
finery that matched, but in the early days, noone used a paper or plastic
plate. Plentiful deserts and left-overs
followed football games and naps and games of horse or sledding depending on
the weather with board games or puzzles taking space in various parts of the
house. And yes the evening ended with
music and dancing.
By the time I was truly aware, my dad loved camping, but
it was my mother who taught him to love it.
He’d slept under the stars with cattle and horses, and found no great
joy in it. But my mom introduced him to
a different outdoor experience. We
didn’t have all the best and latest camp gear, but I must say I never missed
it. Mom made do. We preferred the undeveloped camp site,
probably for thrift in the early days, but eventually just because it was
closer to nature and God.
She always dug a hole and put some kind of barrier up, be
it sheets or tarps so that people could do their business in a less precarious
fashion. She would stretch rope from
tree to tree to hang out towels, dishrags and wet clothes. She organized and she managed delightfully
with very little, frequently two weeks at a time. We had an old wash tub for clothes and an
occasional bath. And frequently we left
behind little rock gardens with indigenous plants arranged creatively when we
pulled up stakes and headed for home.
I suppose it was because she was a dreamer of sorts. But she found hilarious fun in the best
spots. When I was a preteen to a young
teen she taught a girls’ Sunday school class.
But it wasn’t a run of the mill type experience for ‘her girls’. They had fashion shows and dress up parties
and hat making parties. They had sleep-overs
and barbeques and camping trips and excursions to the park. Even the trip to
serve the elderly in a convalescent home was done with great flare and a good
amount of fun. No month of the year
remained unadorned by some kind of special event. She supplied the idea and the opportunity and
the girls just had fun. Being her
daughter, I got to have fun for more than one year.
As the second tier of family increased, she instituted
“Happy Day” celebrations. She couldn’t
always spend the actual birthday with each grandchild, so she selected a day
and spent it creating a fairytale aura around that child for that happy day. It was based on the child’s want to –within
reason. The grand children knew mom was
good for a good time and maybe some pretty cool stuff in the offing.
I always wanted to create fantastic traditions for my
children and grandchildren, but sadly, it didn’t really go the way I
planned. I was not good at fun like my
mom was. I’ve had my share of ‘fun’, I
have some pretty cool memories with friends and family, but I was never the
awesome curator of fun that my mom was.
Her ‘fun’ days have moved into the realm of memory and family
history. Ah, but what memories to be
held.
Growing up, she was the best grandma I could ever imagine anyone having. Most times I didn't need to be entertained by her, just being around her and Grandpa was enough. I have been in your presence many times and been thoroughly loved and entertained. I love you AD
ReplyDelete