Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Happy Mother's Day 2012

Happy Mother’s Day! We are all either the son or the daughter of a mother. So in that capacity all of us fit into a Mother’s Day Celebration.

As a Mother myself, I have had a difficult time with some of the sermons I have heard on Mother's Day, They make us all …all mothers “angels.” One would get the idea that to become a mother is to become a saint.
We all know there are loving, hard working, good mothers and there are also selfish and neglectful and not so good mothers. Most of us as mothers find our place somewhere in between.

But there is something about motherhood that tends to bring out the best in us. In spite of the seemingly endless nausea and misery of pregnancy and pain of childbirth, the incredible love that we have for that helpless and amazingly beautiful baby when it is finally born is awesome. Our love for our children is amazing.

Erma Bombeck said, “The easiest part of being a mother is giving birth. The hardest part is showing up on the job every day." And I might add it is showing up 24/7.

Most of us as adults have an emotional attachment and love for our mother. In cases where the mother has such personal problems as to neglect, abuse or abandon the child there is always unbelievable sorrow.

Just the thought of "mother" brings about great emotion in many of us. I remember one Saturday before Mothers Day when I was sitting in the sanctuary with our church music director. We were discussing the music for the next day and got into conversation about some of the old Mother's Day hymns. She mentioned two old gospel songs, "That Silver Haired Mother of Mine" and "If I Could Hear My Mother Pray Again." We both choked up.

It seems to me that mother love is more nearly like God's love...unselfish love...agape love, than any other human love. Mother seems to see possibilities in us that other people seem not to notice. Just as God sees possibilities in us that we do not see in ourselves and others fail to see.

Charles Swindoll's book entitled, Living Beyond The Daily Grind has a chapter, The Grind of Motherhood. Is there any one of us who will not agree that in addition to the many joys of motherhood and the endless rewards, motherhood is a four letter word called "Work." Swindoll puts it this way; "the daily mounds of laundry, ironing, folding, cleaning , cooking, car pooling, being a referee, a coach, and encourager, a counselor, a cop, staying pretty, remaining tactful, loveable, compassionate, cheerful, responsible, balanced and sane..."


My daughter, Deborah Lewis wrote a book in 1990, later put out in paperback which I think is the best on the subject; "Motherhood Stress." On the cover of "Motherhood Stress" is a woman stretched out across two mountain peaks, with children walking across her, and the sub title is "Finding Encouragement in the Ultimate Helping Profession." Motherhood is the ultimate helping profession and parents are encouraged to realize the importance of the job.

I was in my early fifties when my mother died at age 88. Even though I had a husband and seven children, I will never forget the sense of loneliness and loss I felt to realize my mother was no longer in my world.

The above photo is of my mother with her youngest grandchildren and some of her great grandchildren made at her home in March of 1960 or 1961 at our annual homecoming which we celebrated every year near her March 6 birth date. Until the last few days of her life, she lived in her own home and took care of herself. I am old enough now to realize it was not an easy thing to do. (The three youngest Shaw children are seen in the photo above. The two girls standing behind the sofa are Deborah Ruth Shaw Lewis and Jane Ann Baird Lathem. Four of the children in the part of the photo seen are great gandchildren. Far right (the his arms crossed) is David Baird Shaw. Next is Charles "Chuck" Jerry Baird , son of Jerry and Pat Baird and grandson of Ruth and Charlie Baird. Don't write it in stone but I think next little boy is Danny Loyd, the son of Benny and Evelyn Loyd (the grandson of Pelham and Vera Loyd. Sharlyn Beth Shaw Roszel is sitting next to her grandmother and the little girl next to her is Diane Loyd Gage, daughter of Benny and Evelyn Loyd.)

My mother had a philosophy of life as a Christian, not to worry about things that “could not be helped” and to take each day as a new beginning. In honor of my mother, Eula Ann Dick Baird (3-6-1885- 12-7-1973) I wrote a ballad in 1985.


A BALLAD FOR MY MOTHER
1. My mother grew old. . . had lines etched in her face
Worked hard all her life. . . with uncommon grace
She lived by the Bible. . . Each day and each mile.
She taught me her secret. . . of life with a smile.

Refrain: She said. . . Today is the first day. Of the rest of your life.
Don't borrow trouble, With yesterday’s strife.
Take time. . . Smell the flowers.
It makes life worth while
Then pick up each new day.
With love and a smile!

2. Widowed while young. . . Mama worked in a mill.
Washed on a scrub-board. . . Brought wood up a hill.
She sang as she labored… to stay out of debt ,
She taught me a lesson. . . I'll never forget.

Refrain: She said. . . Today is the first day. Of the rest of your life.
Don't borrow trouble, With yesterday’s strife.
Take time. . . smell the flowers.
It makes life worth while .
Pick up each new day With love and a smile!

3. One day I said, Mama,. . . Your life has been hard .
You've buried two babies. . . Out in the church yard.
You've known all the heartache of struggling for bread,
She smiled through her tears and these words she said:

Refrain: She said. . . Today is the first day, Of the rest of your life.
Don't borrow trouble, With yesterday’s strife.
Take time. . . smell the flowers.
It makes life worth while.
Pick up each new day. With love and a smile!

Her old fashioned teacakes? We ate the last crumb!
Her old fashioned flowers? She had a green thumb!
She lived by the Bible. . . Each day and each mile.
She taught me her secret. . . of life with a smile.

Ruth Baird Shaw

Sunday, May 08, 2011

Happy Birthday Dear David on May 9!

Happy Birthday to David Baird Shaw, a good and talented man! My husband and I brought David home from the hospital to 333 South Ninth Street in Griffin Georgia on Mother's Day in 1958.

David's may 9th birthday falls on Wednesday before Mother's Day this year 2012! (The picture to the left is David happily holding his day old grandson, Alexander James Rogers. Alex was born April 6, 2010.)

David was born on a Friday afternoon at 3:00 p.m. the seventh child and the of a Methodist Pastor and his wife. This was at a time when pastors salaries were low even though ordination required 3 years of Post Graduate Seminary education.

David was welcomed as enthusiastically as if he was an only child. We brought him home from the hospital on Mother's Day over 50 years ago and I am still proud to be his mother.
David was a bright and happy boy who took seriously the fact that in the Bible "seven" is the number of perfection as well as completion.

As a boy, David preferred peanut butter sandwiches to vegetables and tried to live on them. This fact caused his Daddy to consult with a doctor friend. The doctor said he had heard of children who tried to survive on worse and David would grow out of it.

So he continued to push his veggies around on his plate and drop as many as possible on the floor thinking his mother would not notice.
His sisters like to tease him at all family gatherings to this day that David never made his own peanut butter sandwich. They report he enlisted one or another of his indulgent siblings to do it for him. Even my granddaughter Lyn tells me she was enlisted to made him sandwiches. As Carol said, "He was just so cute."

So David never needed "self esteem" lessons nor "diversity" training. He played the guitar and drum in the RSV (Revised Standard Version) Youth Group at church, so he was popular with his classmates and especially the girls as a teenager.
David is now a hard working business man and and lay leader in his church.
David is married to his lovely childhood sweetheart and the proud father of three beautiful daughters and now a son-in'law (in small picture below) and Grandfather to almost two year old Alex.

Monday, April 18, 2011

The World Wide Web.

The World Wide Web! It has been suggested to me that when one maintains a Weblog, they are writing for the whole World. After checking the Ruthlace sitemeter for just a few weeks, it indicates readers from most (if not every) states in the United States and many places in the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, India as well as all the countries listed below.

Many of the countries also added the name of one of the locations (or cities) listed. I added the names of some of the cities listed. Some of the countries who check out the Ruthlace blog never list a city or location beyond the name of the country. This has been a learning experience for me, as some countries have been listed on my site meter I am only now learning about. I put them in alphabetical order.
1. Algeria
2. Argentina-Santa Fe)
3. Aruba-(Oranjestad)
4. Asia/Pacific Region

5. Australia-(Sydney, New South Wales)
6. Austria-(Kremsmnster, Oberosterreich)
7. Azerbaijan- (Baku, Baki)
8. Bahamas- Nassau, New Providence
9. Bahrain-(Manama, Al Manamah)
10. Bangledash-(Dhaka)
11. Barbados-( Bridgetown, Saint Michael)

12.Belarus-(Minsk)
13.Belgium-(Koningshooikt, Antwerpen)
14.Bermuda-(Hamilton )
15.Bosnia and Herzegovina Visoko-(Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina)
16.
Botswana- (Gaborone, South-East)
17.Brazil-(Braslia, Distrito Federal)
18. Brunei Darussalam-(Brunei)
19. Bulgaria-(Gran Sofiya, Plovdiv)
20. Canada-(Edmonton, Alberta)
21. China-( Beijing )
22.Chile (Santiago, Region Metropolitana)
23. Cote D'Ivoire

24. Columbia-(Medelln, Antioquia)
25. Costa Rico-(Alajuela)
26. Croatia-(Dubrovnik, Dubrovacko-Neretvanska)
27.Cyprus-(Nicosia)
28.Czech Republic- (Prague, Hlavni, Mesto Praha)
29. Damascus
30. Denmark-(Copenhagen, Staden Kobenhavn, Nrum)
31. Dominican Republic- (Santo Domingo, Distrito Nacional)
32. Estonia-(Tallinn, Harjumaa)
33.Egypt-(Cairo, Al Qahirah)

34.Ethiopia
35. El Salvador- (San Salvador)
36. Eucador- (Guayaquil, Guayas)
37. Europe- (Europe listed a "country". btw... 17 minutes blog time)
38. Faroe Islands- (Trshavn)
37. Finland-(Mikkeli, Eastern Finland, Western Finland)
39. France- (Paris, Ile-de-France)
40.Germany-(Stade, Niedersachsen)
41.Georgia-(Tbilisi, Dushet'is Raioni)
42. Ghana
43. Greece-(Athens, Attiki)
44.Guadeloupe- (Baie-Mahault
45.Guam-(Barrigada)
46. Guatemala-( Guatemala City)
47. Guyana-( Georgetown, Demerara-Mahaica
48.Honduras-(San Pedro, Sula, Cortes)
49. Hong Kong-(Central District)
50. Hungary-(Budapest, Pcs, Pecs)
51. Iceland- (Yeykjavk, Gullbringusysla)
52. India-(Ludhiana, Punjab)
53. Indonesia-(Jakarta, Jawa Barat)
54. Iraq
55. Ireland-(Cork, Dublin)
56. Israel-(Jerusalem, Yerushalaym)
57. Italy-(Rome, Lazio, Milan, Lombardia)
58. Jamaica- (Kingston, Saint Andrew)
59. Japan-(Narashino, Chiba)
60 Jordon-(Amman)
61. Kenya -(Mombasa, Coast )
62. Korea, Republic of (Seoul, Seoul-t'ukpyolsi)
63. Kuwait-(Khaitan, Al Kuwayt)
64. Latvia-(Riga, Liepaja, Liepja) \
65. Lebanon-(Beirut,Beyrouth)
66. Libyan Arab Jamahiriya-
67. Lithuania-(Vilnius, Vilniaus Apskritis)
68. Macedonia-(Skopje, Karpos)
69. Madagascar-(Antananarivo)
70. Malaysia- (Kuala Lumpur, Wilayah Persekutuan)
71. Malta - (Birkirkara )
72. Mexico-(Tlaxcala, Cuernavaca, Morelos)
73. Mauritius-( Baie Du Tombeau, Pamplemousses)
74. Maldives-(Male)
75. Morocco-(Casablanca, Rabat, Rabot-Sale)
76. Myanmar -(Yangon)
77. Nepal-(Kathmandu
78. Netherlands-(Amsterdam, Noord-Holland)
79. New Zealand-(Christchurch, Hamilton, Gisborne)
80. Northern Mariana Islands-(Saipan)

81. Norway-(Trondheim, Sor-Trondelag)
82. Nigeria
83. Oman-(Muscat, Masqsat)
84. Pakistan-(Islamabad)
85. Palestinian Territory-(Gaza, Jenin)
86 Panama-(Coln, Colon)

87. Paraguay- (Asuncin, Central)
88. Peru-(Lima)
89. Poland-(Krakw, Malopolski)
90. Portugal-(Pao De Arcos, Lisboa)
91. Philippines-(Cavite, Cavite City)
92. Qatar-(Doho, Ad Dawhah)

93. Romania- (Pitesti, Arges, Bucharest, Bucuresti)
94. Russian Federation-(Arkhangelsk, Arkhangel'sk)
95 Saint Kitts and Nevis- (Charlestown, Saint John Figtree)
96.
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Kingstown, Saint George
97. Satellite Providence Saint Vincent and the GrenadinesKingstown, Saint George
98 Singapore- (Singspore)
99. Saudi Arabia-(Riyaah, Ar Riyad)
100. Slovakia-(Bratislava, Cfer, Trnava,Nitra)
101. Slovenia-(Maribor, Brezovica)
102. South Africa-(Pretoria, Gauteng)
103. Spain -(Barcelona, Cataluna)
104. Sri Lanka- (Galle)
105. Suriname-(Paramaribo)
106 Sweden-(Stockholm, Stockholms Lan)
107.Switzerland-(Zrich, Zurich)
108. Syrian Arab Republic-(Damascus, Dimashq)
109. Taiwan-(Taipei, T'ai-pei)
110. Tanzania-( United Republic of Dar Es Salaam, Dar es Salaam)

111. Thailand -(Bangkok, Krung thep)
112. Trinidad and Tobago
113.Tunisia
114.Turkey-(Trk, Burdur, Erzurum)
115. Uganda- (Kampala)
116. Ukraine -(Poltava, Kharkivs'ka Oblast'
)\
117. United Arab Emirates-(Sharjah, Ash Shariqah)
118. United Kingdom-(Kings Langley, Hertford)
119. United States of America-(Ketchikan, Alaska)
120. Uzbelistan-(Tashkent, Toshkent)
121. Venezuela-(Caracas, Distrito Federal)
122. Vietnam-(Ho Chi Minh City, Ho Chi Minh Municipality)
123. Virgin Islands, U.S. -(St Thomas)
124. Yemen- (Sana, Hadramawt)
125. Zambia
126.Zimbabwe












Tuesday, March 15, 2011

School in the Southland in the 1890's.

My mother was only 18 months old when her father, Charles Irvin Dick, died - leaving a pregnant wife and seven little children.

As a child, Ieula Ann Dick never knew her paternal relatives, but she was told her Grandfather Dick had been the "first sheriff of Clay County, Alabama." I am told her Grandfather Dick's picture is still on the wall of the Clay County Courthouse.

Mama's young father had gone hunting late on a cold Christmas Day. He became very ill with a cold that turned into pneumonia and proved fatal for Charles Dick and for many others in that year. (1887)

Soon after her father's untimely death, her maternal grandfather, Bogan Mask, moved his daughter, Elizabeth, and her children from Clay County Alabama to a small house on his large farm in Inman, Georgia. Inman was a farming community in Fayette County, Georgia, where the grieving widow, Elizabeth, gave birth to her eight child, a son. I do not know how Charles Dick in Clay County Alabama met Elizabeth Mask in Inman Georgia? But apparently Bogan Mask thought Charles Dick worthy to marry his oldest daughter?

Mama loved her Grandfather Mask who apparently tried to be a father to his oldest daughter's fatherless children. He was hard working and prosperous for the times - a farmer and a Methodist preacher. Bogan Mask also is credited with beginning Ebenezer Methodist Church in Fayette County and Friendship Methodist Church in Clayton County.

Aunt Cora, Eula's (my mother was called "Eula") older sister thought Elizabeth and her eight little children were overlooked often by their more prosperous relatives. But Mama said her mother was aware of her dependance and was timid about making her father aware of their needs.I do not know all of what was going on during the "Reconstruction of the South". But certainly Rev. Bogan Mask had his heart and hands full with farming and family as well as pastoring several churches.

The South was still in reconstruction in the late 1880's. My mother said she remembered the first pair of shoes she ever had. She told me how one time when her mother mentioned her feet were cold, she got down at the foot of the bed to rub her mother's feet until they were warm. Apparently the younger children were sleeping with their mother. My mother, whose IQ was at least as high as mine, had to stop her schooling after about ninth grade.

Mama had grown up to marry Wilson Baird when she was 18. Wilson was, according to Eula , "a young 40. " Wilson was the youngest son of William and Mary Baird. William had served as an officer in the Confederate Army and was wounded in the Battle of the Wilderness. William Baird was said to be a Methodist Exorter. In the history of the Methodist Church at Oak Hill, He was known as Colonel William Baird. He was listed as the Sunday School Superintendent and was one of their literate members before the devastation of the schools during the War Between the States.


My father, Benjamin Wilson Baird's father had been wounded and his older sister's husband had been killed while serving in the Confederate Army, leaving his wife with a child to raise.

My understanding it that Wilson Baird, my Papa stayed on to work the farm (he was said to be a good and talented farmer) and help his mother and widowed sister in the care of his niece, and so waited until his 40's to marry. I am the youngest of Wilson and Ieula's 11 children, nine of whom survived into adulthood.

I grew up realizing the personal cost of the Civil War to my family as well as others, both Black and White families in the devastated Southland. My father, who died when I was nine, was a devote Christian man and church lay leader. He was a good farmer and although with little formal education read widely.

Mama told me a little about the school she attended. As was typical in the South, this bright little girl went to school only too briefly in the war-torn South where many of the schools and houses had been torched as General Sherman and his Army moved through the Southland "all the way to the Sea."
We need to see how we did overcome many of these problems and not continue down the road to bitterness and political division of class and ethnicity and also not continue the destruction of our hard won life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. (1)

Mama told me about Professor Culpepper who taught her though all the arithmetic books and into much of algebra in the little one room schoolhouse near Inman before, all too soon, she had to leave school to work in the fields and on the farm. School was a luxury few in the South could afford. When I asked Mama what grade she completed, she told me they did not have grade levels then (1890's) as we then had when i was in school (early 1930's). However, her formal education was probably somewhat equal to a ninth grade education. Strangely, this was more education than many of the women in our neighborhood had at the time my family moved there in 1922, a year before my birth.

Mama revered Professor Culpepper and told me how he took time to teach algebra to her in that one room schoolhouse. Mama was also glad to tell me, in a world divided by class as well as race and gender, her father and her mother's family "came from good stock." They valued education for the girls as well as the boys.

My Cousin, S.J.Overstreet sent me this 1904 picture of the one room Inman Schoolhouse in Fayette County Georgia. Dr. Culpepper is shown on the back row. My mother was 19 in 1904 and had long since had to drop out of school and had married. When I think of how valuable family history is to me, I know the need for all of America's children to hear the unique history of America at a time of world wide slavery and later illiteracy, class divisions and racial segregation.

Notes
1.Recently,(7-8-10) I heard a member of the New Black Panthers say he hated "all white people. " (If so, as reported in another post, this young African American man hates the Caucasian descendents of Abolitionists. From the beginning of Africans being sold into slavery to some White slave owners and some also sold to African American and Native American's, at the same time there were many White people who were working tirelessly and some giving their life to abolish what John Wesley and other white Christian men and women called "the vile institution of Slavery.)


G.K Chesterson said, "When Jesus died, Slavery was defeated but it took the church many years to become powerful enough to defeat the powerful slave trade."

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Moirologist





What is a moirologist? In the "Word A Day" email that has been coming my way for several years, I learned that a moirologist (moy-ROL-uh-jist) is a hired mourner. From Greek moira (fate, death) + logos (word).

As I read the email this morning, my mind traveled to Ellijay, the beautiful Georgia mountain town where my husband served as pastor immediately after graduating from Candler School of Theology, ( Emory University in Atlanta) in 1958.

The Methodist parsonage where we lived was next door to one of the two Funeral Homes in the community. My husband was asked to participate in many of the funerals in Ellijay and Gilmer County.

Ellijay, a delightful home and community to us for nearly four years, had more than it's share of accomplished and highly educated citizens. It also, as in every community had it's "town characters",

This included an older woman who was said to be a "Professional mourner." She was not a member of our church nor a resident of the town but lived "out in the countryside."

I never met the lady and do not remember her name but it was told she was one of those "town character" who attended and mourned at every funeral in Gilmer County.






My husband had seen her at funerals many times and somehow I got the picture of her as an older women dressed in black. I doubt she was ever paid for her efforts. Perhaps she was just a tender hearted woman who mourned with anyone who faced the parting and trauma of death?






Perhaps she was a lonely woman who needed the attention of being one of the mourners? Perhaps she was going through one of the five stages of grief herself? I do not know!

Back to our word "moirologist"? Has our society become so isolated from friends and church that many now need to buy a "Mother's Eulogy pack" or a Father’s Eulogy pack" for a "do it yourself " Funeral service?.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

IRAQ

Interesting Facts recently reported about Iraq.

1. The Garden of Eden was in Iraq.

2. Mesopotamia, which is now Iraq , was the cradle of civilization!

3. Noah built the ark in Iraq.

4. The Tower of Babel was in Iraq

5. Abraham was from Ur, which is in Southern Iraq!

6. Isaac's wife Reb ekah is from Nahor, which is in Iraq!

7. Jacob met Rachel in Iraq.

8. Jonah preached in Nineveh - which is in Iraq.

9. Assyria, which is in Iraq, conquered the ten tribes of Israel.

10. Amos cried out in Iraq!

11. Babylon, which is in Iraq, destroyed Jerusalem.

12. Daniel was! in the lion's den in Iraq!

13. The three Hebrew children were in the fire in Iraq.


14. Belshazzar, the King of Babylon saw the "writing on the wall" in Iraq.

15. Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, carried the Jews captive into Iraq.

16. Ezekiel preached in Iraq.

17. The wise men were from Iraq

18. Peter preached in Iraq.

19. The "Empire of Man" described in Revelation is called Babylon, which was a city in Iraq!

And you have probably seen this one. Israel is the nation most often mentioned in the Bible. But do you know which nation is second? It is Iraq! However, that is not the name that is used in the Bible The names used in the Bible are Babylon, Land of Shinar, and Mesopotamia The word Mesopotamia means between the two rivers, more exactly between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. The name Iraq, means country with deep roots.

Indeed Iraq is a country with deep roots and is a very significant country in the Bible.

No other nation, except Israel, has more history and prophecy associated it than Iraq.

The following verse is from the Koran, (the Islamic Bible)
Koran (9:11 ) - For it is written that a son of Arabia would awaken a fearsome Eagle. The wrath of the Eagle would be felt throughout the lands of Allah and lo, while some of the people trembled in despair still more rejoiced; for the wrath of the Eagle cleansed the lands of Allah; and there was peace .

(Note the verse number!) Hmmmmmmm?!

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Happy New Year 2012

HAPPY NEW YEAR 2012! What will 2012 bring? It lies before us as an unexplored continent...full of uncertainty but also full of possibilities.



I love to quote the eight lines of poetry below to illustrate the fact that the difficulties of life are often used by God to teach us important life lessons. This has been true in my own life. It began at the age of nine, when I stood at the bedside of my dying father and witnessed the Christian peace and love that, not only sustained him, but gave him joy in the midst of death. I remembered; "when I grow up, I want to be that kind of Christian."

"I walked a mile with pleasure,
She chatted all the way.
But left me none the wiser,
For all she had to say.
I walked a mile with sorrow
And n'er a word said she.
But Oh the things I learned from her,
When sorrow walked with me."

~Robert Browning Hamilton~

A few years ago a piece with a similiar theme passed through the internet. It was tiltled "I wish you Enough."

This is something to think about as we began a New Year, "I wish you Enough". Recently I overheard a mother and daughter in their last moments together at the airport. They had announced the departure. Standing near the security gate, they hugged and the mother said "I love you and I wish you enough." The daughter replied, "Mom, our life together has been more than enough. Your love is all I ever needed. I wish you enough, too, Mom."

They kissed and the daughter left. The mother walked over to the window where I was seated. Standing there I could see she wanted and needed to cry.

I tried not to intrude on her privacy but she welcomed me in by asking "Did you ever say good-bye to someone knowing it would be forever?"




"Yes, I have, "I replied. "Forgive me for asking but why is this a forever good-bye?"

"I am old and she lives so far away. I have challenges ahead and the reality is - the next trip back will be for my funeral," she said.

"When you were saying good-bye, I heard you say 'I wish you enough'. May I ask what that means?" She began to smile. "That's a wish that has been handed down from other generations.
My parents used to say it to everyone." She paused a moment and looked up as if trying to remember it in detail and she smiled even more. "When we said 'I wish you enough' we were wanting the other person to have a life filled with just enough good things to sustain them." Then turning toward me she shared the following as if she were reciting it from memory --

"I wish you enough sun to keep your attitude bright. I wish you enough rain to appreciate the sun more.

I wish you enough happiness to keep your spirit alive. I wish you enough pain so that the smallest joys in life appear much bigger.

I wish you enough gain to satisfy your wanting. I wish you enough loss to appreciate all that you possess.

I wish you enough faith in God to get you through the final good-bye."
To all my friends and loved ones,
I WISH YOU ENOUGH...A HAPPY NEW YEAR OF GRACE AND PEACE.
Ruth<><

Happy New Year's Resolutions.

Happy New Year. New Year’s resolutions, is said to be something that goes in one year and out the other.

Below are what others have said about New Years and resolutions:





1.Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and dine with him, and he with Me....“He who has an ear, let him hear..." (Jesus ) Revelation 3:20-22







2.Youth is when you're allowed to stay up late on New Year's Eve. Middle age is when you're forced to. (Bill Vaughan)



3.Now there are more overweight people in America than average-weight people. So overweight people are now average … which means, you have met your New Year's resolution. (Jay Leno)

4.New Year's Resolution: To tolerate fools more gladly, provided this does not encourage them to take up more of my time. (James Agate)

5.An optimist stays up until midnight to see the New Year in. A pessimist stays up to make sure the old year leaves. (Bill Vaughn)

6.Cheers to a New Year and another chance for us to get it right. (Oprah Winfrey)

7.New Year's Day … now is the accepted time to make your regular annual good resolutions. Next week you can begin paving hell with them as usual. (Mark Twain)

8.May all your troubles last as long as your New Year's resolutions! (Joey Adams)Good resolutions are simply checks that men draw on a bank where they have no account. (Oscar Wilde)

9.We spend January 1 walking through our lives, room by room, drawing up a list of work to be done, cracks to be patched. Maybe this year, to balance the list, we ought to walk through the rooms of our lives ... not looking for flaws, but for potential. (Ellen Goodman)

10. One resolution I have made, and try always to keep is this: To rise above the little things. (John Burroughs)

11. The object of a New Year is not that we should have a new year. It is that we should have a new soul ... Unless a man starts afresh about things, he will certainly do nothing effective ... Unless a man be born again, he shall by no means enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. (G.K. Chesterton)

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

You Don't Have to Shovel Sunshine

SNOW EXCITMENT IN GEORGIA! Pictured is the snow covered grave of Ellen Axson Wilson, wife of President Woodrow Wilson in Myrtle Hill Cemetery Rome Georgia.

Woodrow Wilson described "Miss Ellie Lou" as having, "what splendid laughing eyes!" when they first met in downtown Rome.

The historical information was given and the picture was taken by my son, Terrell Shaw during his three hour walk through downtown Rome's rare five inch snowfall on the early morning January 10, 2011.


I have been a widow for 24 years. A few years ago I was friends with a man who had retired and with his wife had moved from Michigan to Georgia. His wife had been dead a couple of years when I met him at a church conference. He told me they moved to Georgia because in Georgia he "did not have to shovel sunshine."

At this point in my life, I am glad to not have to shovel snow or try to walk on ice or snow. But so many of our best family memories when our children were young are tied up with the few snow storms here in the “land of sunshine and cotton.”

My husband and I were always as excited as the children when we had a rare snow storm. He would gather up the children and some hastily makeshift sleds and hurry to Shorter Hill or some other special place. Even if there was only a little snow, we all pitched in to make a snow man.

My job was often to stay home, prepare a pot of nourishing soup, put out a clean sheet to catch fresh snow for snow ice cream, dry out wet gloves, serve hot soup and keep the home fires burning.


Today, as someone too old to shovel snow, I am enjoying the snow covered landscape on this second " snowed in day" and looking for someone to shovel my driveway and remembering " you do not have to shovel sunshine!"



Monday, December 20, 2010

Live Nativity at Trinity

At Trinity Church in Georgia's Rome, a live Nativity Scene has been a Christmas tradition since 1957 when Mary Craven, a Children's Sunday School Teacher, suggested the project to make Christmas a more Christian event for children. Paul Carven, a Trinity member and Rome contractor built the first set.


After two successful years, in 1959 Mr. Craven added 4’ by 20’ wings to the set.When Paul and Mary Craven retired, Frank Craven and Allen Storey took the responsibility for building the set and Eulaine Camp directed the production. The Live Nativity has continued as a church wide cooperative project with more people than we can name.

For Christmas 2011 Karen Candler Tucker will be directing. Last year and for 10 Years, Judy and Lamar Allen directed the event each Christmas. Frank Craven and family build the set each year!

The live nativity scene is presented each December for the five nights preceeding Christmas Day. Each scene is continuous and 13 people are in the scene at any one time. All characters are live with the exception of the babe and the camel. However, Trinity was blessed with a live camel for the 2000 and 2001 event. New angel wings were added in 1999 and 2000 while Eulaine Camp was Director.

Inside activity includes helping to arrange turbans and halos on heads; heating bricks upon which cold wise men and shepherds stand; and making hot chocolate or coffee for tired workers.Kathy, deaf from birth, was a child when my family moved to Trinity in 1962. Kathy loved to play the angel. And she was, in spite of the clever way she had of seeming not to see her parents when they were about to “sign” a reprimand to her.

As I wrote the poem below, I could envision the face of Kathy and the other young people in Trinity church, those in our household and the community who loved to stand in the Nativity Scene and the adults who participate with great enthusiasm in this annual event each Christmas, December 20 through Christmas Eve on December 24.


CHRISTMAS AT TRINITY


Our Nativity scene is live
In living color too!
With teen-aged Mary dressed
Of course, in blue!

She sits beside the manger
Carol, Beth or Anne,


With Joseph standing by


There's Terry, Bill or Dan.



The shepherds stand alert


A turban on each head.


There’s John and Sam or


Allen, Cleve and Fred.



The wise men are bedecked


In jeweled crowns alike -


That hide - the tousled hair


Of Robert, Karl and Mike.



The angels, Kathy, Fran,


Deborah... truly dear
But they can only qualify
As angels - once a year!



I watch the twisted halos
And am amazed to feel
In spite of pomp and pageantry


They somehow make Him real!