Wednesday, December 12, 2018

No Vacancy at the Inn

Luke 2:7 says, "And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in swaddling cloths and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn." What sad words, "there was no place for them in the inn."

Many years ago we took a road trip with our two young sons, without hotel reservations. It was not the wisest decision we ever made. This was before cell phones and, unknown to us, it was Parents Weekend with a home football game in Lynchburg, Virginia. All hotels in towns anywhere near Liberty University had "No Vacancy" signs. If they displayed no sign, my husband went inside to check and quickly returned dejected. 

Our youngest son who was not yet reading learned to read two words that night. With each stop we made, he kept repeating over and over from the back seat, "no vacancy..no vacancy..no vacancy". 

We drove hours past our intended destination. Exhausted and after midnight, our little family finally found a motel with an available  room. Our journey that day and night gave me a small glimpse of what Joseph and Mary must have experienced that long ago night. 

Joseph was required to travel to Bethlehem to register for taxes to Caesar with his promised bride-to-be. Mary was young and very pregnant with the Christ child. Their mode of travel wasn't a car, it was walking and a donkey.

When they reached their destination, they were met with the same words as us, "No vacancy!"  Unlike us, they had no option to keep traveling until a suitable place was found. The time for the birth of the Christ-child was upon them. 

In contrast, we finally found a room with comfortable beds, clean sheets and pillows. All that was available to Joseph and Mary was a stable, feed troughs, hay, and smelly animals as roommates. This was the place the Creator of all, and the Savior of all who believe, was to be born? How strange, yet how perfectly it represents Jesus' humility here on earth. 

This Christmas, please make room for Jesus. He should be, after all, why we celebrate. He offers a place of peace and rest, forgiveness and freedom from the bondage of our sins. It' a free gift to all who believe in Him. It is the great exchange. He takes our sin and guilt before a Holy God, bears the penalty in our place with His death on the cross. We are declared blameless and will have eternal life in heaven with Him when our time on earth is done. 

If you don't know Jesus or haven't accepted His free gift..please make room in your heart for Him today! "Jesus said, "For the Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost." - Luke 19:10

Copyright 2022
Laney's Musings 


Friday, November 9, 2018

Have you ever been truly hungry?


I have a memory box that I have kept notes and cards in over the years. Things were stuffed in there and forgotten. This week, my husband was looking for something in the box. He found a story my dad had written on his computer and printed on two sheets of notebook paper. (Always frugal). I don't know how many years ago he wrote it, but he passed away in the summer of 2006. When I read it, I admit I shed a few tears; but mostly my heart was filled with love and pride, not only for the man my father was, but also for the boy he was. 

My dad was born in 1918 in Cherokee County, North Carolina. During his childhood, his family literally moved dozens of times, just trying to survive. Dad's formal education was seven, maybe eight years, but he was a life-long learner..mostly self-taught. Full grown, my dad was about five feet, eight inches..but he was tough as nails. The memoir he recounts below would have been around 1930, when he was twelve years old. Dad had an older sister, who may have already been married, and his younger brothers would have been around 10, 8, and 5. 

Here is Daddy's story in his own words:

"During the presidential term of President Herbert Hoover, the United States suffered a severe depression when banks failed and people lost their savings and jobs. Factories had to close down. People were hungry. Soup kitchens were set up. President Hoover was blamed for the hard times, but I don't think the depression could have been avoided in any way except by having a sound economy.

At the height of the depression, when I was 12 years old, our family moved to Lincoln County to help a farmer harvest his cotton crop. We were paid about seventy-five cents per hundred pounds for picking it. Cotton weighs light on the weighing scale, but weighs very heavy when stooping all day long, dragging a sack loaded with cotton. Sharp burrs holding the lint cotton cause pain to the fingers, and as the weather got cold, the frost on the cotton bolls intensified the pain.

After helping Mr. Mott Sain pick his cotton crop, we went to the farm of John P. Beam and picked the scrap cotton left in his fields. Scrap cotton is exactly what the name implies. Frost and cold has prevented the bolls from maturing and they had barely cracked open enough to see the lint cotton inside. The bolls had to be pried open to get the scrap cotton out of the boll. This was a slow process, and the time it consumed cut down the total weight of the cotton picked that day. That made our earnings too meager to buy enough food for our basic needs.

My dad’s physical condition prevented him from doing jobs that most men were able to do. Dad had osteomyelitis when I was about 5 years old and had to have his right leg amputated four inches below the right knee. He also had a double inguinal hernia. Without money or insurance, he could not have his hernia repaired. My dad worked as much as he could, but his condition prevented employers from hiring him. Even if work had been available, no one would hire a one legged man when thousands of able-bodied men were looking for the same job.

My mother’s brother, Fred Davis, who was employed by Cannon Mills Company in Kannapolis, North Carolina, wanted to help our predicament, and told us if we could move to Kannapolis, he would be planting a garden and he could furnish us with milk since he had a cow. We took him up on his offer and moved in early spring.

I could not enroll in school that year because I was needed to assist my mother and dad in earning money to feed the family. We obtained weekly commitments with the Harmon family, the Robinette family, and the Perry family to do their weekly laundry. For me, that meant keeping the fire going under the wash pot, drawing water from a deep well to fill the pot and the tubs, and to help my mother scrub the clothes on a washboard and rinsing them through three tubs of water. We then had to hand-wring them, and hang them on a clothesline to dry. We got our lunch free and fifty cents a day for our work. This amounted to twenty-five cents for each of us, which was all used for the benefit of the family.

Mr. Perry was a truck farmer who raised vegetables for the market. When my mother and I were not doing washing, we shelled green peas for him to sell wholesale at curb markets. The going rate for pea shelling was two cents a quart. Pea shelling made your fingers sore, but at lunch time the Perry's always fed us from a table full of delicious farm-raised food.

Dad found a pair of buggy wheels somewhere and made a two-wheeled cart that was pretty easily pushed or pulled, because it’s body was well-balanced over the axle. We used it to haul rustic tables and chairs that Dad made from green branch willow saplings. We found the willows on the banks of Buffalo Creek between Pethel Town and Enochville. Dad made beautiful rustic furniture from the willow saplings that my brothers and I hauled home to him. On Saturdays we peddled them door-to-door. We received fifty cents for each flower stand and seventy-five cents each for a child's rustic chair, but it helped keep body and soul together
."

You know, I don't ever remember being truly hungry. I have been fortunate, as I know this is not true of many throughout our world..past and present. I understand better, knowing my father's past, why he almost panicked when the cabinets or refrigerator were near empty. He wanted to know there was always food in the house for another day. 

His story also helps me understand why our recently adopted granddaughter from China (who has experienced hunger) has some issues with food, and likes to hold crackers in her little fingers. I pray she never has to experience hunger again!

Daddy, you would have loved to meet Grace! She is a survivor, just like you.

"Though she be but little; she is fierce". ~ William Shakespeare

Charlotte Laney
Copyright 2018




Wednesday, August 8, 2018

Loving Vintage In a Throw-Away World

Let's face it; we live in a throw-away world. It's simpler to use paper plates instead of china. Aluminum cans and plastic cups can be tossed when the drink is finished. Unless you shop at Trader Joe's or Sam's Club, groceries come home in scores of plastic bags. We buy our paper towels in twelve packs, yet always seem to run out. Cloth napkins have been replaced by paper, tissues catch tears instead of handkerchiefs.

Don't get me wrong. I love modern conveniences. But..I also have a love of all things vintage. My motto in life is "I've never met a dish I didn't love." I could probably add a long list of other things that I love to that motto. My home is a testament to that statement.

Our church is having a Roadshow Luncheon in about a week. Attendees have been asked to bring antiques, collectibles, hobby items or crafts to display. Looking around my house, I think I could have a one-woman show.

I have given plenty of thought to the addiction I have for vintage dishes, linens, handkerchiefs, cameras and typewriters. Tangible things I love are generally attached to memories of a happy childhood. Time was spent visiting grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins. We ate at other people's homes, and others were welcome around our table.

I have great memories of Sunday lunches at my Aunt Bell's house. She used two tablecloths. The one on the bottom was covered with plates of fried chicken (not KFC), cathead biscuits and vegetables. Even if she had deviled eggs or potato salad, it was all left on the table. Leftovers were covered with a second tablecloth if hungry visitors dropped by later in the day.  Can you believe it? No one ever died from food poisoning. 😄

I was blessed that my Grandma Laura lived ninety-eight years with a sound mind and relatively good health. On the day she died, she got up and made her bed. She was cherished mother to nine children and too many grandchildren and great-grandchildren to count.

On special occasions, what kind of gifts did she receive? Bedroom slippers and boxes of pretty handkerchiefs seemed to be high on the list. She would smile sweetly and say "thank you." But, when the giver left, the boxes were neatly stacked on top of all the others in her closet. She would have much preferred a bag of Hershey's Kisses. When she shuffled off to bed at night, you could hear her rustling foil from her secret stash. If you were highly favored, she might occasionally share.

I took several years of typing (now called keyboarding) in middle and high school. When a term paper was due, my dad rented a manual typewriter for me. Later, he bought a portable electric one. I don't know where he gained the art, but my dad was the fastest two-fingered typist I ever knew. My vintage Royal manual typewriter reminds me him, as do all of the vintage cameras I own. Daddy loved gadgets and cameras. Several of the ones I have were his. How do I know this? He put his name and address on everything he ever owned. LOL! It ruined any monetary value..but its value is in the joy it brings me.

Can I enjoy living in a throw-away world, but still love things of the past that make me happy? I think I can. So, what makes you happy?


Copyright 2018
Laney's Musings











Thursday, March 1, 2018

Childhood Dreams & Fears

For the most part, I had a carefree childhood. I was the youngest of three, and the only girl in our family. I was outgoing and courageous, a leader in elementary school, albeit not always a good influence on my fellow classmates. Between morning school bus drop off and the starting bell, I once led a band of first graders in exploring an abandoned house off campus in the woods behind the playground. Broken windows, an open door, and a seven-year old's over-active imagination was just too strong a temptation. Later, a visit to our classroom, and a stern interrogation by our principal, Mr. Bess, scared me straight. Can seven-year-olds really be arrested for breaking and entering?

I think my mother and father stunted my adventurous spirit. I discerned early on that they did not agree in parenting me. On more than one occasion, I definitely took advantage of this fact. Oddly, Daddy wanted to curb my tree-climbing pursuits while Mama said, "Okay, but don't tell your Daddy." Who do you think was the first person I had to run and tell about my climb? My Daddy. So, I wasn't the sharpest pencil in the box when I was five. I didn't heed Daddy's warnings. For years my inner arms bore scars from a slide down the trunk of the mimosa tree in our Plymouth Avenue backyard. Battle scars, yeah. But, it was so worth it!

Daddy was an excellent swimmer. Before he kicked the habit, he could smoke unfiltered Camels while floating on his back. I had heard and internalized the story of how Daddy learned to swim. His uncle threw him in the river..water over his head. You got it. Sink (and drown) or learn to swim.

My courageous spirit was tested. I didn't trust my Daddy to not try the "sink or swim" method with me. As he carried me out to deeper water, I saw my non-swimming Mama's worried expression, wringing her hands while firmly planted on shore. Daddy's verbal assurances would not overcome the transferred fear.

Sadly, I never overcame my fear of water. There were childhood nightmares of tidal waves, and collapsing bridges. But, a fall off a raft as a teen, then floundering after being overtaken by a wave, solidified the fear. It took a patient friend who gained my trust to finally teach me to float. I was twenty-four years old. I finally learned to swim a little, but still won't go in water over my head. Trust is such a fragile thing. Once broken, it is difficult to regain.

One thing I learned in childhood, you don't always get what you want. But when you daydream, save, and wait for something, it means so much more. I wish more parents applied this principal. Instead, many children experience nothing but overindulgence and instant gratification.

My brothers both had bikes. I did not. Somehow I got my hands on a brochure for Schwinn bicycles. It's pages became worn from me gazing at all the beautiful bikes with headlights, baskets with flowers on the handlebars, and streamers hanging from the handgrips. Some even had carriers on the back for toting books, or your best friend.  I fixated on a bike, having given up on getting  a pony and cart like my neighbor friend, Lou Miller. And Daddy said I couldn't have a rabbit unless we got rid of our dogs and cats. Like that was ever going to happen.

Well, I never got that Schwinn bike; but I did get a pretty blue one from Sears and Roebuck when I was ten or eleven.  My poor brother had to ride that girls' bike from downtown Charlotte to our house about two miles away. I think that was only fair since I fell into the rose bushes learning to ride on his boys' bike. Ouch! Hmmm..I wonder why Daddy didn't just put my bike in the trunk of the car?

You know, some of my childhood dreams might have been fulfilled had I asked for them. But, we didn't have a lot of money; and even as a child, I realized that. I believe I am a better person today because I learned over the years to hold relationships tightly, but possessions loosely. Overcoming childhood (and adult) fears...well that is a bit more difficult.

Copyright 2018
Laney's Musings


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