Recently my grandmother gave me a tablecloth that she made
some years ago. It is lovely with
patches of lace and delicate hand-stitched flowers - glimpses of her talent
that I will always treasure. Pinned to
the corner of the tablecloth written in her heavy, curling cursive was the “recipe”
for her famous “Soak”. She explained
that there were a few stains on the tablecloth; the soak would “remove any
stains and yellowing that you don’t want but will be kind to the color”. That same soak has permeated so many
significant memories of my adult life . . . she mixed it to remove the
yellowing from my mother’s wedding dress before we cut the lace to fashion the
pillow that would carry our rings at my wedding; years later it delicately
whitened my grandfather’s fragile gown as I prepared to bring my new babies
home from the hospital wearing it; Cooper’s raw silk Easter jon-jon would soak
in it following a particularly horrendous carseat “blow out”, and, thanks to
the soak, Grace’s flower girl dress from
K.K.’s wedding would let go of the stains that were evidence of the big time
she had at the reception. I hung the tablecloth
in my linen closet with the recipe still attached. In the days that followed the idea of “soaking”
would dance repeatedly at the edge of my consciousness, whispering the thoughts
that I would ultimately share with you here in this little space of mine.
. . . “will remove any stains and yellowing that you don’t
want but will be kind to the color” . . . Growing up soaking was often my
mother’s answer to cure what ailed us.
Cramps – soak in a hot bath.
Itchy mosquito bites or rashes – soak in a warm baking soda bath. Irritable teenage girl drama – soak until
your fingers prune so that I don’t have to be around you for a little
while. Reflecting, I spent a good
portion of my teenage years in the bathtub – thinking and reading and reaching
up with my toe to turn the hot water on again when I started to catch a
chill. I soaked – removing the stains
and yellowing that I didn’t want but being kind to the color. It worked – things always seemed a little
better after a nice, long soak.
I have no doubt that Grandmother intended no hidden meaning
or grand revelation when she pinned that recipe to the tablecloth, but despite
her lack of intention, I managed to find meaning there. In the days since that tablecloth came to
live in our home I’ve made a concerted effort to “soak”. Spring, I find, is a wonderful opportunity
for soaking – to sit back and quietly take it all in as the gray of winter
fades into the Crayola box that is spring – my favorite season.
I’ve soaked in all the changes that our
family has experienced in the months since Christmas – removing the stains and
yellowing that were the fears and hurts that came with the move and being kind
to the color that has found us crazy blessed each step of the way.
I’ve soaked in the fact that Grace will start
middle school in the fall and that she grows more gorgeous and independent with
each passing day – removing the stains and yellowing that is my hurt at
watching my baby grow up so quickly and being kind to the color of all the possibilities
that her amazing future holds.
I’ve
soaked in Cooper’s big, beautiful heart as he prepared and received his 1st
Communion – removing the stains and yellowing that were our heartbreak at
leaving Sacred Heart and being kind to the color that is our new parish family
here at St. Brigid.
I’ve soaked in the
family and friends who have traveled to visit us in our new home.
I’ve soaked in the beauty of our first
Atlanta spring and the fact that it is becoming more and more natural to refer
to this place we live as “home”.
I’ve
soaked in the sore muscles and sometimes utter exhaustion as projects were
started and completed because those were signs that I am healthy and able to
work on this house that God blessed us with.
I’ve soaked in my husband who provides for us so completely.
Soak after soak the stains and yellowing of the
past few months faded as I was kind to the color of every beautiful thread of
this crazy blessed life of mine.
It’s so important, soaking.
Just taking some time to take it all in – to quietly reflect – to reconcile
heart with mind - to remove the stains and yellowing that you don’t want while
being kind to the color. Cooper’s 1st
Communion Mass was beautiful – we sang “This Little Light of Mine” & “This is
the Day” . . . Let it shine, my people!
Rejoice and be glad! Soak, sweet
friends of mine, soak!
being kind to the color,
amy

Beautiful, Amy! I am so happy for y'all. I wish I could have been there this weekend for this special occasion. Sending lots of love.
ReplyDeleteThis weekend was beautiful! Thank you for sharing your heart and reminding us all to take a moment, to slow down in our busy lives and soak!! Love you so much!
ReplyDeleteLove this entry. It is a great reminder for us all to soak things in. Congratulations to Cooper on his 1st Communion. We missed you all at Sacred Heart's 1st Communion, but we know you all were there in spirit!
ReplyDelete