I was reading through my old posts again today, and came across this one. I cried as I read not just the post, but the comments from the family. I enjoyed reliving the memories again, and thought you all would too. Feel free to leave more comments if you remember anything else. I have to say, I think I laughed the hardest about the homemade underwear for birthday presents! Mom and dad, thanks for the richest childhood a kid could ever have... How many times have I said,
"I grew up poor"? Have you ever said it? I felt deprived eating homemade whole wheat bread...imagine! And straight out of the oven, to boot. Do you know many people who have done that in their lifetime? This post is
dedicated to
my parents, who did what they had to do to feed 10 children, and to
two other special familes who saw when we needed help, and helped while sparing our dignity at the same time. This will be written according to my memories as a child, having been thought out with an adult mind. I will try to be as accurate as possible, but you may all feel free to interject in your comments the memories that come to you through reading this.

My
mom made wholesome, homemade bread, and didn't just feed it to us, but
taught us to feed it to others... 
My
dad built a chicken coop, and filled it with chickens. We had plenty of eggs and meat, and a great alarm clock too...

We ate fried eggs, boiled eggs, scrambled eggs, omelets, and watched many an egg hatch into a new baby chick that would someday provide these 10 hungry children with more fried, boiled, and scrambled eggs...

This is where another special family comes into the picture.
Kirk and Larue Lynn, who could have provided us with a gallon of milk everyday if they had wanted to, instead loaned us
Daisy, their gourney cow, and let us learn to care for it, feed it, and milk it. 
We put Daisy in our pasture,
fed her,
milked her,
gave one of the days milking's to the Lynn's and
kept the other for our family. I have really thought a lot about their generosity in doing this, and the chance we had to
work for this blessing, dignity intact...

How can we forget the potato picking days? I remember
Maurice Kay's family plowing the potato field at harvest time, and all our family would go to the plowed field and
gather hundreds of pounds of potatoes. At the time, I thought we were just helping the Kay's, but it is interesting that we had
bags and
bags of big, beautiful potatoes to carry us throught till the next season. Another act of kindness from a family that could see our need. They allowed us to
help them while they
helped us. Dignity intact...

I remember getting sick of potatoes, and wishing I had
potato chips like all my friends. Oh, but how I now LOVE a
steaming baked Potato, and would take it over chips any day...

Once again, the thoughtfulness of the
Kay family, as they invited us each year when it was apple picking time. Weren't those the best apples ever! No apple has ever tasted so good. Somehow, after
picking and picking, and picking, we ended up with boxes and boxes of apples to feed all these hungry mouths. I wonder if we picked as many as we got to keep...

I feel so very blessed to have had so many truly caring friends as the Kay's, the Lynn's, and many others I don't even know about, the kind that
don't just give you a fish, they teach you how to fish! I can say the same for my parents as well, they truly gave us the tools we needed to make it in this world. They taught us to work hard, and they taught us to love each other. In talking about how others helped us, I cannot neglect to say that I watched our parents help others any chance they could find. What a great example they were, and still are as they serve the Lord and the people of Alaska...
Shall we just relive a few memories of how "poor" we were? Who remembers fried eggs in butter?
How about roasted chicken, chicken soup, chicken and rice...
Apples, apple juice, dried apples, fruit leather, apple sauce, apple crisp, apple pie...
Milk, homemade butter, homemade yoghurt, homemade icecream...
Luscious baked potatoes filled with butter, sourcream, and salad. How about fried potatoes, potato pancakes, mashed potatoes, potato soup...
I only wish I had mom to make me a fresh salad every day, the way she used to. I loved to put it right inside my baked potato, loaded with homemade ranch dressing. MMM...
And last, but not least, how can we have this conversation without remeniscing about the homemade bread that we ate every day. My favorite was when we would make it in those big yeast cans so that we could have "round" bread. Remember fighting over the crusts when the bread came out of the oven? They were so warm, crunchy and unbelievably deliceous slathered in butter...
Now, thinking real hard with your grown up minds, can you or I really say, "I grew up poor"?
26 comments:
Oh, Shellie! You about made me cry. I can indeed say that we were some of the richest peole in town. When the Russians would see pictures of our family, they would always comment on how rich we are.
K- so I just have to add the canning. Man, I hated canning with a passion. I wanted to be out playing like every other kid in town. Now I see my sisters doing it and would give anything to have a garden with fresh vegies and the likes to can. It was so fun to be at Susies and Bonnies last fall during harvest time. Garden food and homemade bread. There's nothing better!!!
I also hated getting up early and weeding. Now I love it. I wish I had more time to do it.
Me too shellie, sniff, what a great tribute, what great memories, keep em coming, it helps me keep a good perspective when life gets mundane.
I kinda wished those chickens laid new socks and underpants--I never seemed to be able to find mine. JK :)
That was a great tribute and I'll be thinking a lot about it tonight. I hadn't even considered how others had "helped" us in that way before.
Ditto what Sharebear said. Susie couldn't believe that it took me 7 months to eat the pint of jam she gave me. I hoarded it like gold. Everytime I ate it, I thought of her.
I remember the beans very well. Picking them, trimming them, snapping them, canning them, counting the jars and then eating them all year long--2 quarts at a time.
You forgot the potato salad that we ate with Sunday dinner for 2 years straight. Filled our hollow legs. Same with bean dip sandwhiches spread thick with shortening and grilled to perfection. I'm hungry. Goodnight.
How bout tomatoe and mayo sandwiches, or bread and milk with sugar on it, or mayo and mustard sandwiches, or peanut butter and mayo sandwich, peanut butter and bananas? Remember the big cakes of bulk milk chocolate with big teeth marks in it from everytime I snuck into it?
I have had so many confessions lately that I can hardly keep up with them all. I was sure I raised perfect children. WoW
Your totally bewildered, overwhelmed mother.
PiP the chickens may not have laid unders but our mama sure did. She could whip those things out so fast (from the sewing machine) that anytime you needed something for a birthday party she had them cut,sewed and wrapped before you could even say HAPPY BIRTHDAY! I laugh every time I think about going to Misty K. birthday and wondering why there was unders in her birthday present.
Funny memories of food we got to eat. I love the bread and milk one! We thought we were eating cereal! The more sugar (or was it honey?) the better! Now when I eat wheat chex the taste is all too familiar!
I remember making our own butter. It was tiring but wonderful! I remember one time even tasting home made mayo. I can still taste the awful taste!
What fun! I am sure I'll be back to this post!
Priceless! Going to bed in a COLD bare-cement basement room could have gotten our parents on the 5-oclock news in todays insane world. I had to put hot water bottles at my feet just to get inside my frozen bed each night. And how about those mornings, sitting on the woodstove that was just tepid after a long winters night--sitting there trying to warm your butt while seeing your breath? Oh yea, PRICELESS! Wouldn't trade it for anything.
...and total reverence for the two families you mentioned. I've still never eaten an apple that can touch the flavor of the reds or goldens that Maurice grew.
Mike,
You forgot onion sandwhiches. Lots of mayo, onion slices, and salt and pepper. I loved em. You guys brought back memories of several other things, like homemade granola, paper bag apple pie, and anything that could be made into soup. And there was some kind of cornmeal mush that I loved with honey and butter- I have never been able to duplicate it.
I want you all to know, as I wrote my post, I really got hungry- not just for the food, but for the chance to go back in time and really savor the good things.
I also have thought a lot about all the help we got from grandma and grandpa Platt. Remember the orchard? We picked and canned cherries, apricots, peaches, pears, apples, grapes, etc. Then from grandpa's garden, all those tomatoes, zucchini, peppers... Maralee and Kathy were always right on hand. I remember cooking and canning with them, we came up with some amazing recipes. So many people were so good to us- I hope they all knew how much they blessed our lives.
Oh man, what a post again. You guys are hard to keep up with memories.
The bread, remember when it was our week to make the bread, we would put a dough ball on it and then pick it off as a reward when it was done baking?
The laundry hanging on the clothes line, clean or smokey smelling from the burn barrel...mmmmm
Bottle cherries...even if there were a few worms in them....Gplatt still made me eat them.
Toasted Bean dip sandwiches.
Dinner time.....Bye
This was fun to read, along with everyone's comments. I almost feel like I was there. It makes me want to be better about doing those things and teaching my kids how to do them. My mom made homemade bread, too, and there is nothing like fresh bread right out of the oven! We also had oranges, apples, apricots, plums, boysenberries, blackberries, raspberries, and tangerines, as well as an occasional garden of other stuff--tomatoes, strawberries, etc. Anyway, my mom would make a wonderful berry cobbler! :-P (licking lips!) She would also make homemade applesauce, and then when it was warm we'd put vanilla ice cream on it and it would be like eating apple pie. She'd make homemade pie sometimes too. Wow, this post has gotten me remembering back, as well! Thanks, Shell! :-)
How I miss the "good ol day!" I remember the toasted beandip sandwiches....mmmm that sounds really good. For the most part, even though it seemed as though we were poor, mom and dad always had a way of making sure we got the nutrition we needed.
I now see why you all think I was so spoiled.....I never really realized just how rough it was for you all back then. I am so greatful for parents that love us so much that they did whatever they needed too to make ends meet.
This was an emotional post for me, in a good way...thanks Shellbell! Made me realize that no matter how poor you are, the attitude you have towards your circumstances is the most important thing of all.
I never knew that about the Lynns or the Kays....what kind and thoughtful people! Love yall!!
Your dad learned to love onion sandwiches out of self defense early in our relationship because I grew up with a grandfather who always smelled like onions and I wanted to be just like him. I can't figure out for the life of me why any of you ever felt like we were "poor", as I always felt richly blessed. We really had the best of everything - fresh air, opportunities to work, places to run free, the beauties of nature all around us, a dad who worked hard to support us, and my desire to raise healthy children. Love WoW
Making me hungry. This is a nice site.
10 points to anyone who can remember what my nickname was when I was little...
who could forget that one, Birtha
WRONG! It was not Birtha, but Bertha. Yes I was Bertha. A name that made me cry all the time. I will give you 3 points for trying. Let's keep score. You are it. What is your question for us and how much is it worth?
Is that really the way you saw my sacred nickname in your head growing up? As you said The Name you saw Birtha in your head? That is wrong. No wonder I always cried when I heard it.
I'll never forget the year we had so many hurricanes. Two of them held a special place in my heart. One was hurricane Bonnie, and the other was hurricane Bertha. I'm not kidding. Well, maybe about them holding a special place in my heart. Hurricanes aren't exactly endearing things! But Bonnie Bertha was definitely in my thoughts as I rode out the @#$%* things.
I just love the name Birtha (Bertha) because it reminds me of my wonderful sister that I love so much. Birtha, Birtha, Birtha.
Birth, Birtha, Birtha....in my best Marsha, Marsha, Marsha voice.
Neener neener neener.
TEE HEE HEEE
Isn't it good to remember at times like these, when so many are struggling finacially, that riches come in many ways. Poor is a state of mind, and a time of humbling that many seem to be going through right now can be a source of discovery of the riches that truly are important. Love your families, work hard TOGETHER, enjoy things made from scratch, learn to garden and produce the things that sustain life. The memories made just may be as good as gold, and last a lifetime!
Above comment is from Jan. 09, this new year.
It is still as funny and tear jerking and wonderful as the first time you posted it and becoming more meaningful now as times get harder.
I think it a blessing to have already experienced tough times so that we KNOW we can do it again and also KNOW that our children will have great memories of the love and not just the lean.
Thanks again Mom and Dad and the Lynns and the Kays and Gma and Gpa Platt. And Shellbell for reposting.
Shellbell, You always have such a way of lifting my spirits. I wept again as I relived the memories. Love WoW
P.S. those underwear were special tricot panties with lace. You forgot the boys underwear, the t-shirts, the easter outfits, etc.
ppss - It is simply amazing how much all of our children, as adults, are into gardening - even Shauna in her tiny backyard.
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