Grandmothers Then and Now
Grandmothers Then and Now
For years my grandmother cooked on a wood stove….year round
Now I complain it’s too hot too cook and pick up carry out pizza
My grandmother raised a garden, hoed it, fertilized it, picked the vegetables and dug the potatoes….then she canned for the winter months and stored the food in the cellar
I order grocery pick up from a local store once a week. When I think of it I go to the farmers market and buy produce someone else grew.
My grandmother worked on her Sunday School lesson all week. I can still see her in her blue bathrobe, sitting on her front porch with her Bible and workbook.
I go to church, pray and read my Bible but she spent hours at it every day.
My grandmother served others her whole life. She took care of anyone who was sick.
My life is too rushed and while I care for my husband (who is needing me less and less, thank you Jesus) I don’t play the caregiver role like she did.
My grandmother road in horse drawn carriages to church and walked to the country store down the road where she traded eggs.
I live 5 minutes from the church, have a car and I’m still late. If I had to walk to the grocery store I guess we would eat plants and wild berries on the farm.
My grandmother never knew her mother. She died from the flu epidemic in the early 1900s.
I was blessed to have my mom for 33 years but it was so hard to give her up.
Grandma never complained about loss or her circumstances.
It took years before I could give thanks for the years I had my mother instead of focusing on my loss. I know my sadness over losing my mother made her aching heart hurt worse and I’m sorry for that.
Grandma loved to cook for others and made home cooked meals every day.
I cook but not with the joy she did. I love carry out more and no clean up!
Grandma washed dishes three times a day.
I load and run my dishwasher once or twice a day.
Grandmothers Then and Now and Vanity.
Grandma’s go to clothes were house dresses (light house coats) and a few church dresses which she wore over and over.
I have to clean my closets a minimum of twice a year or there is no room.
Grandpa cut and stacked the wood (until he got sick) but grandma carried it in and kept the wood stove fed.
I walk through the hall and adjust the heat and air with the push of my finger.
My grandma didn’t have to go to a fitness center. She worked circles around anyone who knew her. She didn’t have an hour glass figure, never colored her hair and if getting old bothered her, she never said a word.
I’ve been to fitness centers (not for long but I went) I do color my hair and I hate wrinkles. And yes, I do complain. I let society tell me how I should look and she didn’t. She was always smarter about foolish things like vanity.
On Saturday mornings I would peep out the window and watch her wring a chicken’s neck or chop it off with a hatchet. Then pluck it, cut it up and fry it.
I can barely stand to touch a chicken and always buy them already cut up.
My grandma milked cows and churned butter. She’d take a butter knife and make little patterns on top of the butter.
I couldn’t milk a cow or churn butter with out extensive lessons and truthfully at this point in my life….why bother?
Grandma’s generation didn’t understand a lot of the things we take for-granted. She wanted nothing to do with my computer and asked once what a “dot com” was. She lived through the Great Depression and didn’t understand our “we want it now” mentality and when we were done with whatever it was….we threw it away.
Grandmothers then and now on waste.
Wrapping paper was taken off gifts, folded and kept in a drawer. Every speck of food left in a bowl (even a speck so tiny the Whos in Whoville couldn’t see it) was put in an empty butter container (she pinched pennies and wouldn’t dream of spending money on Tupperware) and placed in the fridge. “Waste not, want not,” was one of her favorite sayings.
The saddest thing about people from my grandmother’s generation is that my grandchildren won’t know the things we know….unless we tell them. They need to know about grandmothers then and now. Who knows how much things will change in the next 100 years?
Write on the back of photographs if you are lucky enough to have them. Write stories about your grandmother’s childhood and what you learned from her. Your children and grandchildren will value it one day.
One more thing about my grandmother….she loved all her children and grandchildren unconditionally and without showing favoritism.
She was one amazing grandma and I miss her.
Nettie Lee DeMumbrum 1913-2002
For more memories of my grandmother click here. And let me know in the comment section about your thoughts on grandmothers then and now!
And thank you for stopping by and leaving a comment!
This brought back so many wonderful memories of my grandma on my dad’s side. I loved her biscuits that was made from her wood stove and remember chickens being killed and I hated going and getting eggs for I was always scared to death of them and her making homemade soap. Times has changed so much. And a lot of young folks don’t want to hear about it. Thank you for these memories again.
Love you Gaye! Thanks for stopping by!
Amen!