Sybil Remembers Easter Traditions
Starting is always the hardest part of an activity and writing is no different.
It is the day of our first writing group at J. M. Morrow Memorial Nursing Home. I walk around inviting residents to come to the dining room where we have a table set up with pads and pencils. Several decline the invitation outright. Two gentlemen come to take a peek but soon depart with one excuse or another. Only three brave ladies join me and so, we begin.
The topic we will write about is Easter. This holiday is approaching and I wonder about Easter memories. Bernice remembers her family attending Easter Mass. Heda picks up her pen and in no time she is writing furiously! Heda journals daily and her Easter story will be published soon.
It is Sybil who answers the question “Why write memoirs?”
“Momma did not sew but the girls in my family had new dresses to wear on Easter Sunday. Ms. Angelle, a neighbor, sewed for us. Mom paid her a dozen eggs.”
Can you imagine? Present day children will be amazed to learn this! I will read this to my own grandchildren who are 7 and 4. They will have many questions, I am certain.
“Momma dyed Easter eggs for us too,” Sybil continues. She put coffee grounds in the pot with water to boil the eggs. The eggs boiled in the mixture which created different colored eggs. We could pock with these eggs on Easter morning. My naughtiest brother always had a guinea egg for pocking. The shell of the guinea egg was harder than the chicken eggs. He broke our eggs no matter how we tried to protect them. After pocking, we peeled the eggs for Momma to make the potato salad for our big Easter dinner which we shared with many members of our family.”
I can hear my grandchildren now: “What is pocking?” We have lost that fun tradition. With these two paragraphs of Sybil’s words, you quickly realize how important it is to capture the stories of our senior citizens. Most of our children and grandchildren have no idea what life was like just a few short years ago.
Some of the residents would like to write stories but have not written in years. And, some have never attended school. With your help as a scribe, more memoirs could be captured. We share them here on the nursing home website and we give a copy to the contributor. If you want to join me, just give me a call. You will enjoy these wonderful people! 337-523-5832.
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