Monday, April 15, 2013

Reminiscing



When I look at these beautiful mountains surrounding me and these old roads I've traveled down, I think of the many memories made everytime my feet hit the ground.
It may not mean much to some but it's worth more than money can buy. An old country girl having lived the good life and praising God until I die.
So many paths I've taken, my yearning heart has always brought me back, to this grand old place where the simple life is still intact.
Walking down a little trail to my grandparents house many a yesterday. Helping grandma with her canning, peeling peaches, apples and anything else I could get into made my day.
Slipping down below their house to the little plum tree. my goodness those plums were sweet as could be even when I had to shake the tree.
Even after I became a teenager I walked that little trail many a time. Just to sit, talk and listen awhile, brought so much joy to my heart and peace to my mind.
Sitting in that little porch swing listening to them talk about their yesterdays, really stuck with me and shaped me in so many ways.
Then after I went to work and had a little money to spend, I couldn't wait to take them a present every now and then.
One Christmas in particular I bought Pa a brand new pair of Hush Puppy Shoes. Christmas Eve was his birthday and it was even more special. He sure did love those shoes.
Of course I never did leave grandma out, she always thought of me. I sure did love those cathead biscuits she kept in the little cabinet, I ate one everytime I got the opportunity.
Me and my girlfriends flattened out many a trail, since we walked quite often to the store. We surely did enjoy it when we got a little money, we let the hammer down more.
A few pennies in our pockets, burning the most you ever seen. That RC and Moon pie sure did taste good when you save your money by working in between.
There wasn't many hills and trails we didn't manage to find, and plenty of trails that wasn't there until we made our own kind.
And the pleasure of walking down an old dirt road, picking wildflowers and the smell of honeysuckles and looking at my other Little Ma's roses that she planted and growed.
She planted those roses clear across the country side, a legacy that keeps on giving. Every spring when I see those roses I think of her and it feels like a part of her is still living.
And my other grandpa I never had the privilege to know. He died before I was born but there's a big part of him that I see everywhere I go.
I can hear his voice and see his face in that little gristmill he owned. Today I live on the very spot where all the gristmill commotion went on.
My grandpa's not gone, I've wrote about him before. He's still alive today in my heart and the echoes I hear everytime I walk out the door.
And his blood and grit will always run through my veins. His strength and determination became what I am today. I can still see him down every road, trail and lane.
There's so many places I've walked, especially to church with a whole gang tagging along. Made me feel quite big, brave and strong.
Oh how I loved those night time revivals, they made me happy as a lark. Even though I was scared to death of those haints that everyone told about lurking around after dark.
So many scary stories were told by so many older folks around. A headless woman, a crying baby, it's no wonder we thought the booger man was after us everytime our feet hit the ground.
One would think after coming straight from church after being renewed we wouldn't have been so scared of the booger man waiting to perch.
We were all scared of our shadow if the truth be told. But it didn't stop us one bit from being out after dark, we acted really grown up and bold.
Even on Halloween we'd walk a mile or two for one piece of candy. Now days kids doesn't think walking is much fun and to be honest it ain't to smart and dandy.
And playing outside was the only video games we knew. Sometimes our imagination got the best of us and we got into trouble a time or two.
Throwing rocks and accidently hitting one another in the head. Knowing fully well we could have killed someone, we paid the price when we hit the bed .
It's like the old saying, I threw a rock at my brother and I got there first and so did my mother.
And we rode an old bicycle without any brakes, flying through the air, briars, brambles and snakes.
It's a wonder we ain't all dead but it was not meant to be. Kids being kids, curious and free. But our daddy and mama didn't agree.
My mama bless her heart we just about drove her crazy sometimes. She once said, we wouldn't have made it if The Good Lord hadn't been watching over us all the time.
But now when I look back upon it all and remember when, I wish a thousand times I could do it all over again.
Well most of it anyway, some I'd rather forget. Like the time I almost died trying out my grandma's sweet snuff, I might as well have been dead.
And maybe all the times I hit my brothers over the head with a broom. Nay, They deserved it and so much more, that's certainly a presume.
But that was just our way of showing that we loved one another. It may sound odd to some but it was our way of looking out for one another. Of course we tried to convince our mother.
In all honesty, our daddy and mama taught us right from wrong. We may not have had many material things but in our house God and Love was mighty strong.
Our clothes may have looked ragged and worn but mama always said, rags are honorable as long as they're clean and she made sure of that every wash day morn.
I carried many buckets of water from that little spring, filling up those big wash tubs on wash day and taking baths to keep clean
Those big wash tubs had two handles, one on each side and we'd set them in the sun. It was a sure way of having warm water to take baths when the day was done.
We considered ourselves lucky since the spring was close by in the back yard. Some had to carry their water a lot farther and up hills, bound to been hard.
I'll never forget the little dipper that hung up above the spring on a limb. Nothing like a drink of cold, spring water on a hot, summer day from the little dipper, it sure was a gem.
Especially after hoeing in the garden since the break of dawn. Running for that dipper of water and going inside for dinner (lunch) eating them fresh veggies, fresh grown.
After a long day at school, a piece of cornbread and a little green onion tasted really good. All part of an old country girl's life and childhood.
Carrying milk home from the neighbors when we got without a cow. We could drink a gallon a day and buttermilk to, if mama would allow.
I remember churning that buttermilk all day in that churn jar. Thought to my soul my arms were gonna fall off. It took that butter a long time to come to the top of that jar.
Awe, there's so many things I could write about. I feel like a queen sitting on her throne, without a doubt.
And when the echoes start calling me back to my past, I listen and tell my stories , fresh as the morning dew on the green grass. It rekindles my heart to go back to that wonderful, old past.
And there's nothing that I'll ever forget or leave behind. An old country girl living in a country world where God hung the moon, stars, and sun out to shine. 

                                                 @Susie Swanson, 2013








16 comments:

  1. A beautiful post Susie. Precious memories!

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  2. So beautiful. I have similar memories of being raised in the country. So often I long to leave concrete behind and head for dusty roads.

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    1. Thank you Susie.. There's no place like it.. Come and join me..

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  3. So much of what you write about is my life too. I think we surely have a lot in common. Thank you for bringing pictures to my mind of this little girl (me)on the hillside.

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    1. Thank you Charlotte.. I'm so glad we share the same memories.. Love to you my sweet friend.

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  4. Wow, Susie! That took a lot of work. That was great! You have really captured a lot of sweet memories here.

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  5. Susie,
    It was so nice hearing about all your sweet memories growing up. I smiled when I came to shaking the plum tree because my uncle had a plum tree in the front of his house, and us kids would hide and then come out and quickly shake the tree and gather the juicy sweet plums that fell to the ground. I will always remember that good ole' tree. The picture of all of you is just priceless.

    Thank you for your comment on my 'cousin' post. I appreciate it so much, and I'm so glad that I have you here as my blog friend during this time of sorrow.

    Love,
    ~Sheri

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    1. Thank you Sheri.. Those plums are so sweet and good. And I'm so sorry for your loss.

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  6. Susie,
    This is a fantastic posting. It brings back many memories growing up here in our beautiful mountains. You've done such a great job telling about your childhood, and Appalachian heritage. This is a tresure and I loved it very much.

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    1. Thank you so much Brenda.. I knew you could relate and I'm sure we sharee the same memories.

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  7. So beautiful Susie! I'm sure your family will treasure this for generations to come:)

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  8. This was SO WONDERFUL, Susie... it reminded me of my grandparents too. I especially loved the part about the scary tales... my grandmother told some good ones too and *boy* could she tell them in a way that would make you cut eyes around every nook and cranny looking for a haint! :)

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    1. Thank you Paula.. My dad could tell them to. They'd make you have dreams or nightmares..I loved hearing them though.lol.

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