Archive for the "Family" Category

My Sister Edith

Posted by: Peggyin Family
24
Feb

God did as I  asked Him to do, for the past few days! He lovingly reached down and picked my precious sister up in His loving arms and carried her to Heaven to be with Him eternally! As her sons and her grandson and I surrounded her bedside, Jerry prayed a beautiful prayer, thanking God for her and what she had been to all of us, especially her sons and their families. He asked God to take her and he told Ede (as we called her) “Everything is alright, you can go, Mama”  and she took her last breath! We all had told her goodbye! I told her I loved her and I would see her again soon!

This song came to my mind. Kirk Talley wrote and sung it for a friends wife, who had died in her sleep unexpectedly one night!

She went to sleep one night. Never here to awake again,
But she knew it was alright, between her and Him,
Then she awoke in Heaven’s Courtyard, free from pain within,
The angels took her by the hand and said “Come on in”.

Chorus:

Serenaded by Angels, Up to the throne
Serenade by angels, Finally at home
Surrounded by praises, to the King,
Welcome to Paradise, the angels did sing!

This verse is my testimony:

When I close my eyes at night, I try to imagine
that city of crystal lights, waiting for me,
But my eyes cannot conceive,  So, I’ll continue to believe
‘Til I’m transported there,Where I will be

Chorus:

Today Edith has already met her Savior face to face. She has already been reunited with Joe and  all our family and friends waiting for her. All my sisters and brothers have their confidante again. She is listening to that Hallelujah Choir singing praises to our King, (I’ll bet you she has even joined them already). No more pain or suffering and Mama and Daddy have a wide grin on their faces as they hear her singing once again in that beautiful alto voice! Oh! How homesick it makes me to join them but I must stay a little longer until the Lord decides it’s my time!

Keep watching and waiting for me! I’ll be there in “JUST A LITTLE WHILE”.

Families

Posted by: Peggyin Family
16
Feb

Why is it that families never come together until deaths, weddings or some special event?  I know this is a fast paced world we are living in, but we should all keep in touch more than we do! It doesn’t take long to pick up a phone and tell someone that you love ”I  miss you” or “I  love you” or “Wish I could see you!”

I was thinking about it when my sister Sue and I were on our way home from visiting  Edith and some of her children at the nursing home, where it  looks like my precious sister has only a few days more to live.

She will leave that old worn out 92 year old body of clay and go home to be with her Lord and our family that has gone on ahead of her. There she will have a new body and will never have to suffer anymore.

I stood and looked at that precious face and fought to keep back the tears. That face that had such a beautiful smile for everyone she met. Those beautiful blue eyes that made you feel like she could look inside your soul. The love she had for her five boys and the boundless love they had for her, so like the love God has for all His children! She would leave all these things behind when she makes that final journey to Heaven  for Eternal life with Jesus.

I watched as two of her grandchildren and two of her sons stood looking at their Mom, so silent and still. Their love for her radiated from their sad faces and I remembered how I felt the morning our Mama died. You think you are prepared for it but when they draw that last breath, it hurts so much you feel like you are going to die yourself. My heart still hurts when I think of Mama and it has been forty three years.

I will miss my sister the rest of my life! The love I always felt when she looked at me, that sweetest of smiles, the “pick me up” kind of thing I felt when I needed someone to talk to and called her, her love for her brothers and sisters. No one (outside of God) could love like my sister Edith loved.

My son Kevin reminded me, when he told me about the fact, that she ALWAYS came back to the kitchen door to speak to him before she would leave the restaurant! He has always been a quiet sort of guy, but she wanted to let him know she loved him. After all, he was her nephew! She loved ALL of her family!

I don’t have time or enough space to tell all the good she has done all her life. She loved her God supremely and didn’t mind telling anyone. She sang and played that piano for Him with Joy and Praise and lifted Him up in any way she could. Her toe tapping music filled all of us with joy too!

It’s hard to imagine that I will never again hear her play the piano or hear that wonderful alto voice sing, but one day (not too much longer probably) I will join her and the rest of our family in Heaven! WE will have a choir of our own, as many as Chaneys as there is, and we will sing forever more, as we will be FINALLY HOME.

Pick up the telephone. Call someone in your family! Invite them over for coffee. Take  someone out for lunch. Send someone flowers or candy. Or just say – “I love you”. Stay in touch as a family! Don’t let time slip away and realize, as I did today as I saw Kellie, Edith’s granddaughter, and found out her daughter was about eight or nine years old, and I have not seen that  child but a couple times and they only live five miles away from me! Life is short and it slips away too quickly! STAY IN TOUCH!

LIFE IS ALL ABOUT FAMILY!!!!!!!

My Sister Edith

Posted by: Peggyin Family
10
Feb

We have known for a week now that my sister is dying.  She has been in severe pain for the last few weeks and has prayed constantly for God to take her home to be with Him. It’s been terrible for her family and her sisters and brother to watch, feeling so helpless, watching this strong woman who has always been there for so many people, especially all of us who love her so much, and not being able to relieve her pain.

There has been so many times we all have, at one time or the other, run to her when we needed someone to just listen or to hug us, or better still to see that sweet, sweet smile of hers and know that every thing was going to be alright! Everyone who comes in her room remarks that she has the sweetest smile they have ever seen. Those big blue eyes smiled when she smiled.

There is so much to remember about this precious sister of mine.  I remember her telling me about taking me to visit one of her friends when I was about five years of age. Seems I jerked my hand out of hers and ran out in front of a car. He missed me and it scared her so bad she  popped me one and then cried louder than me because she felt so bad about popping me! I loved to tell that on her but we always laughed about that.

I always looked up to her. I loved to hear her play the piano and I used to slip off to her house and beg her to play for me. She always did and I don’t think I have ever heard anyone  play a piano quite like her! When our daddy was Pastor at Eastside Baptist Church she didn’t get to come as often as she liked but, when she walked in the front door and people saw her, instantly everyone brightened up because they knew they were in for a treat. She didn’t like to drag hymns and Boy! you really got a vocal exercise.  She also had such a beautiful alto voice. She used it too. Mama used to say that when she needed Edith for anything  as she was growing up, she would always be found sitting somewhere with a hymn book in her hands. She was born to sing and play that piano.  All for God’s glory !!!!

Now you have to pay just about everybody who has a job in church, but she sure didn’t feel that way. All those years she played that piano at different churches, she never took money for it! She was completely sold out to her God, always. God  looked out for her too!

She turned around one Sunday to me and said “It makes me feel so good, you sitting here beside me”. I was the honored one. She was one of the brightest lights in my life. I was the one who felt SO GOOD sitting beside her!

And cook!  Man, she could cook! I would go by occasionally after church and have lunch with her and Joe. Joe was her sidekick and sometimes he would do the cooking. It was such a treat. I’ll never forget it!

One Sunday night she and I sung “I want to stroll over Heaven with you”. I looked at Tommy and he was sobbing! Thats what I’ll always remember; her singing and her piano playing, but most of all her faith and commitment to her  Heavenly Father. Joe’s going to start running toward her when he sees her walk through those Pearly Gates, and take her to see her Jesus, Face to Face. Oh! What a sight that will be!

You talk about rejoicing! Lucille, ‘Sis, Loretta , Johnny, Robert, Grady, Mama, and Daddy, to name a few. It won’t be many more years until the rest of the family will be there. Can’t you just see us “Strolling Over Heaven” together! Thank’s to our loving Father and His Son!

Happy Birthday to My Son

Posted by: Peggyin Family
7
Sep

Today is your forty-fourth birthday and my mind has gone back to the day you were born. I was so cocky about having a baby. After all, my mama had birthed eleven babies. I would say “Shoot, my mama had eleven! I know I can have one!” But it seemed you were hesitant to come into this world on time. They admitted me to the hospital to try to help you along a little bit. As I lay there, with a needle in my arm, waiting, not so patiently, for you to decide to make your long awaited entrance. In the next room, a part of the labor room, a local Doctors wife was trying to coax her little one to be born. The difference was, she was getting her husband told! She was hollering “This is all your fault.” But after her baby got there, I have never heard anyone so proud. She was the proud mother of a little boy. She already had three girls.

As for you, you drug your heels all the way. They sent me home the next day, then three days later you gave up and decided to join us. We were so proud. But I remember telling the doctor that I didn’t want any more. I found out that I wasn’t the woman my mama was!

But when they brought you to me and I looked into those bright brown eyes, my heart nearly jumped out of my body. It was instant love and I knew at that moment I would forever more be willing to give my life for you!
You have always been a light to me, especially on the dark days of my life. God knew exactly what He was doing when He gave you to me. We have always been there for each other! No matter what or when!

When you were five months old, I was very sick and in the hospital. I lay in that bed and prayed so hard for God to allow me to get well, so that I could go home to my baby. In turn, I told God that I would give my baby back to him to be of service to him. I have never forgotten that promise and I have the peace and reassurance that God is still keeping His eyes on you! He brought you and Victoria together so you would have someone, when He decides to take me home to be with Him. You can’t imagine how I have worried about having to leave you someday. But now i have such a inner peace to know that Victoria loves you as much as I do. But God loves you even more. I hope that someday we will all be in Heaven together. With all her family and all our family. It doesn’t end here, Thanks to a loving God and His only Son.

Thank you for 44 years of happiness. You have always been such a pleasure to me. Watching you grow up to be such a loving, talented, kind-hearted and just all around wonderful son! Happy Birthday Baby! May you have 44 more wonderful years.

All My Love, Mama

My Comedian Brother Jack

Posted by: Peggyin Family
5
Jul

In every family, I think, there is one person who stands out in one way or another. In my family it is Jack, who is two years older than myself. In other words, he is the one word we do not like to think about!  He is OLD! (Sorry about that Jack, but it’s true). I wish that I could remember just half of the things he used to pull on us when we were growing up, because  it’s pay back time. I’m going to tell everyone in cyber-space some of his crazy antics.

The first thing that comes to mind is the time, when he was just a boy, Mama looked out and saw him sitting on a limb in the apple tree outside. He was puffing on a cigar.  She knew what was going to happen, so she just let him puff away. It wasn’t long until he came in the back door, sick as a dog.  Mama said he cried and asked “Mama, am I gonna die? Am I gonna die?”  I’ll bet it was a long time before he smoked another cigar!

The next thing I recall is that back when we were all kids, we went barefoot from the time we got out of school in the summer until we started back to school in the fall. Mama noticed that Jack’s feet didn’t look like they had been washed in awhile and decided that she was going to wait and see just how long it would take him to wash them.  Then one day, sure enough, Jack came to her and said “Mama, look at my feet.  How am I ever going to get them clean?”  Mama said “Looks like it will take steel wool”  trying not to laugh, not dreaming Jack would take her serious.  But that’s exactly what he did! He scrubbed his feet with  steel wool.  Nearly ruined his feet!  We still laugh at him about that. He gets a little bit angry at you when you tell that on him.

Then there was the time when we were about ten and twelve years old. Jack always had several boys following behind him, everywhere he went. He was always a tall boy and I think they looked up to him. There was a path in our back yard that sort of went across a field and up a little  hill to the road. I looked out the window and saw Jack and his entourage going down the path. I decided I wanted to follow them, so I ran out the back door and fell in behind the last boy. Jack turned around and saw me, gave me a good scolding and made me go back home. I was crying and as I was walking back home, I noticed a broken peanut jar lying next to the path. I remember that back then (1943) peanut butter came in glass mugs with a handle on them. I picked up that jar and threw it as hard as a ten year old girl could. I still, to this day, don’t know how I did it, but it popped Jack in the head.  He fell over and I went screaming in the back door “Mama, I’ve killed Jack! I’ve killed Jack!” Mama came tearing out the back door but Jack had already got up. Boy, did I get my bottom torn up that day!

We had two beds in each room, two of us to each bed.  When we were barely in our teens, my brother-in law’s niece came to spend the weekend with us . Loretta, my younger sister,  and Betty (the niece) and I were in one bed and Jack  in the other. We were giggling half the night and I guess Jack got tired of listening to us, so he tossed one of his brogans (his shoes in other words) over there and wouldn’t you know, it landed square on Betty’s head.  I forgot to mention it was pitch dark in the room though. He got his hide torn up for that too but Betty went home and wouldn’t stay the week-end. I don’t think she ever came to spend the night with us anymore.

He went into the army , came home and married Helen, had three girls, but they decided they wanted to try for a boy and wound up with twin girls instead (that, incidentally, were born in their driveway, but that’s another story). He and Helen  have worked hard, raised their family, and are still together. But he has never lost his sense of humor! If you are around him, you will be laughing the whole time.

For instance, before we had our last Chaney Reunion, he came over to see Sherry and me for awhile. The theme of the reunion was to have a  Western theme. We were sitting and talking and he said “Do you want to know what Vickie (his daughter) is going to do for the reunion?”   We answered “NO!’  and he said ”Vickie has hired a guy to bring some horses over to the church and she wanted all who would, to ride those horses down the street to our homeplace.” You talk about big eyes, we just sat there staring at him in disbelief. Can you imagine all the senior citizens trying to climb up on horses? Then I noticed that gleam in his eye and I asked him ”Are you lying to us ?”  He said “Yep!”   I told him I was going to kill him one of these days.

Here’s just a few more things he pulled on some in the family.   Sis was working at the B & B  Restaurant up town. He called her one day, changed his voice and told her he was from the IRS and she owed them a considerable amount of money. He let her stew on that until the next day before he told her. Another time, he called Sue (who was eight months pregnant ) and had some kind of little motor purring, begging her to come to work, told her he was short on workers and  desperately needed her to work. This was a cotton mill. Oh!  and of course he changed his voice for the time too!

He hasn’t changed one bit . He is still one of the funniest men I have ever known.  He  and Helen both are on blood thinners. As a result of that, they have a lot of blue-ish marks on their arms and hands.  His grandson brought his girlfriend from Western Carolina College to meet them. Jack invited them to come sit on the deck with them but warned them that every mosquito that bit him would burst.

One day Jack called me and asked me if I had ever been to the eye doctor.  I said Yes!  He told me he had just returned from the eye doctor. He said “He asked me if I had ever had cataracts and I told him No! I had always driven Chevrolets.” My cousin Barbara Ross was here and I repeated what Jack said. We were both laughing so hard tears were running down our face. I had to hang up because I was laughing so hard I couldn’t talk to him.

When he was operated on for prostate cancer, the nurses told him he owed them big time. Jack told them “Oh No!  They owed him big time because they took every bit of zip out of his zipper.” The head nurse thanked him for making them laugh because in their line of work ,they needed a laugh every now and then.

Jack has brought a lot of  joy to all of us through the years. He is a very kind man who, along with Helen, would do anything for anybody. I always heard that you could tell what kind of husband a man would make by watching how he treated his mother. My brother loved mama so very much, worried about her almost more than any of us. They also love their God with all their hearts.

Yes, We are getting on in years!  There is one boy, and four girls still left behind. The oldest is 91 years   and the youngest is 71.  One day we will all be together again.  No one knows what God has planned for us in the future but we are all trusting Him with OUR future.  In the meantime, we will continue on our journey until the day we are all together again. Still looking out for each other ! Still laughing at Jack because God gave him the gift of making people laugh!

Thinkin’ About My Mama

Posted by: Peggyin Family
29
Jun

I don’t know why, but for the last few weeks I have had Mama on my mind. I’ve been remembering so many things.  My mama was just fifteen when her mother died from complications from Asthma. Back then nothing much could be done for asthmatics. They didn’t have inhalers and steroids that one can just spray into their mouth and instantly feel better.

My mom was sent to stay with distant relatives in Kings Mountain, N.C.  She met my dad when they were both nineteen. They were both working in a cotton mill (where most everyone in the South worked). They were pretty smitten with each other. One girl had her eye on Daddy too!  From what I understand , Mama walked over to her one day and told her that Daddy belonged to her.  She apologized to Mama and told her she didn’t know that! We laughed about that for years.

They got married  in March, 1914 and my sister Lucille was born 9 months and three days later. In three years my sister Edith was born.  They would be blessed with nine more children, one every two years! After only having one of my own, I cannot, to this day, figure out how my mama did it.

We were poor , as most everyone was back in those days. My daddy was called into the Ministry when Sue, the seventh child was born. She had asthma and was having such a struggle. It was then Daddy told God that he would quit running from the ministry, if he would heal his little girl .  Well she is eighty years old now. Still singing in the choir at church and doesn’t miss church unless she is sick. I think that tells the story of God’s goodness and mercy.

Can you imagine what a hard life my mama had? All those children, all that work but with God’s help she made it. I can’t  remember, ever, hearing her complain, or say things like, “I’m sick” or “I have a headache and must lay down”. She did wear a white cloth tied around her forehead a lot. She also had heart problems, but she would never let us call the doctor. We would have to slip and call him. He would always say “Your mama would do better if she would let you children call me when she first starts having trouble with her heart.”

Once when she was in the hospital, the day she was to leave, most of the nurses who hadn’t met her, came down to her room to meet her!

I can remember her gathering all of us around her and we would sit for hours listening to her stories. She had so many children, she had to miss church quite a bit. We lived beside the church and some of the children would try to slip out of church so they could come to see Mama.   I can still remember some of the songs she sang to us when we were  little. She played a guitar,  or maybe strummed a guitar, would be a better word.

I think Victoria is the one who got me thinking about my own Mom. She was writing about her mom on her birthday. She was an extremely gifted lady. I started thinking of my Mama as a woman, not just my Mom. She had no family in Kings Mountain.  When she was sad, when she was lonely, when her heart was hurting and she needed someone to talk to, when she was happy… who did she have that she turned to? Was there anyone there to listen? I ‘m sure my daddy was there but sometimes when I need to talk, I just need another friend to listen to me  and let me cry when I need to. I’m sure God was there, always for her.

When Sue was born, from what one of the older children said,  Mama didn’t even have clothes to put on her. Mama was sitting there washing her feet getting ready for the birth of her baby girl, with tears streaming down her face. My heart aches when I think about that!

Thinking back on my life, and my siblings, we saw Mama as just mama. She was a strong, wonderful woman, wonderful cook, wonderful story teller. We adored her. But, I wish I had taken the time to find out more about her as a young girl, how she felt about her mom dying and her having to leave the only home she had ever known and go and live with practically strangers, How she felt when she saw my daddy for the first time.

When I get to Heaven, we are going to have a long, long talk and I will ask her to forgive me for so many things I didn’t do for her while she was living.

I remember her walking over to my daddy’s casket. Leaning over and so tenderly touching his face and running her fingers through his hair! Everyone could see the love on her face!

I have a feeling she will look at me and smile and say “My child, I wouldn’t have changed a thing!”

Libbys Journey

Posted by: Peggyin Family
23
Nov

This is so hard!  Having to watch your best friend die!  She was supposed to go on a trip to the Outer Banks with her son but couldn’t make it. The Hospice nurse tells us to let her do exactly what she feels like doing because she is dying and it wouldn’t matter where it happened.

Yesterday a youth group from a local church gave the residents of K.M. manor  a Thanksgiving dinner. I took Libby and everyone was so glad to see her there, but by the time we finished eating, she was exhausted and I thought it best to walk her back to our apartments. When we got here, I put her pajamas on her and got her into bed. That was at 2 p.m. yesterday afternoon and she slept until 9 a.m. this morning.  She looks so weak and vulnerable.

After I gave her a bath,washed her hair and got her dressed I came to my apartment. A little later she and Warren knocked on my door and Libby said “Peggy, I want you to go out to eat with us!”  I told her I was sorry but I wasn’t dressed to go out, no makeup or anything. She gave me the saddest look and started just pleading with me to go. She had never done that before and something told me to go. I told her to give me a few minutes and I hurriedly got dressed and off to Gaffney to “Clock’s Restaurant” we went. She couldn’t seem to decide what she wanted to eat and and seemed disoriented again. Then after we ordered she said “I wanted the pork chops but I couldn’t find them on the menu”. Warren called the waitress back and we finally got her order in. She didn’t take but a few bites so we brought it home in a box.

While we were eating, right in the middle of our meal, She leaned over toward Warren and said “Do ya’ll want me to die at home or at the Hospice House?” We nearly fell over because it was so sudden. We assured her it would be her decision.

She is crying a lot now.  I told her she had tried to be so strong for everyone else, so it was time she was leaning more on her family, who loved her so much and wanted to be there for her. After I bathed her she started crying and I called Warren to come in and he put his arms around her and just let her cry. She looked up into his eyes and said “I don’t want to leave you, son.”  He told her it wouldn’t be long until he would be with her. Then he talked to her about his love for the mountains and what beautiful mountains they would see when they got there.

Then he started talking about her love for animals, the two squirrels she rescued as babies, bottle fed them and named them. Even when they grew up and she let them go outside on their own, every time she went outside and called them they would come running to her. She had pictures of them. One was sitting on her shoulder eating out of a container she was holding and the other was sitting right next to her on the birdfeeder. It didn’t surprise me because she has so much love to give away. It is like being in sunshine, when you are  around her.

After I bathed her today, I was putting body lotion on her and grabbed the shampoo bottle by mistake and just happened to notice that it was clear jel, as I was about to slather it all over her back. We laughed like crazy over that and then as I squirted out the lotion into my hand it went over my hand and across her arm. Again we just laughed and laughed. SILLY!  SO IT SEEMS!, but it was just two best friends, trying to forget that soon one of them would be gone and the other one would be left with a broken heart that only God could heal.

My Baby sister Sherry’s Birthday

Posted by: Peggyin Family
10
Aug

I just can’t believe that the youngest of the “Chaney Bunch” is 71 years old today. I’ve been thinking a lot, the last few days, of Sherry and all the mischief the three of us got into growing up (Loretta, Sherry and myself). Can you imagine dragging your little sister along everywhere we went, just because Mama made us? Lo and I thought we were so much more grown-up than Sherry. Actually she was only a few years younger than the two of us but she was always so small, like Daddy’s folks and we were much taller than she, like our mama’s folks.

When we started dating, we would ditch Sherry every chance we got. Mama would have a fit, when she learned of it, and Lo and I would be in trouble again. I remember one night, especially. Sherry and her date drove up beside us at the Silver Villa, the local drive-in restaurant where the  young folks hung out. They told us they were going to follow us and it wasn’t long before we lost them.

When we got home and walked into the house, there stood Mama with her arms crossed in front of her, and she asked us where Sherry was. Loretta and I stared at each other, with big eyes I might add, because we knew we were in trouble again. Mama asked “who were you with?”  WE both said Henry Galloway, a name we KNEW that she KNEW.   She said “OH, No you weren’t.  Get back up that road and don’t come back until you have Sherry with you!” Boy, We took off up that road, murmuring to ourselves and I said “Hey, Wait a minute! How did she know we were not with Henry, if she hasn’t seen Sherry?”.  We turned around and when we walked in the door, there was mama and Sherry just bending double laughing. WE didn’t think it was so FUNNY but it was better than being in trouble with Mama.

Sherry was petite and built like a “brick outhouse”. I don’t know exactly why we say that phrase in the South, but it is supposed to mean that she really had a beautiful figure. I can still see that tiny waist. She had a lot of boyfriends but met the love of her life when was in her early twenties. They had two little boys and were happy for quite awhile until Loyd fell into alcoholism. Through all the years of living with an alcoholic, she never wavered from her faith in God. Loretta had the restaurant then and Sherry would walk into work everyday, with a smile on her face, never once bringing her problems to work with her. Everyone loved her. At supper time, when the restaurant would fill to the brim, the customers would get up from their seats and help clean tables. The State Senator of North Carolina (Ollie Harris) would walk around refilling customers tea glasses and you would see our Pastor rolling silverware. Peggy’s was indeed a family Restaurant, in every sense of the word.

Even now, when I am grocery shopping or running errands, someone will say hello, they miss the cafe, but always “How is Sherry doing? Tell her hello for us. O.K.”

She lost Loyd a few years ago and I must say that Loyd overcame his addiction years ago and they had some very happy times. He spoiled her rotten and he also spoiled Loretta and myself. We never had to ask twice if we needed him to do anything for us. The two of us (Lo and Me) lived together and Loyd had a hard time looking after the three youngest Chaney girls. He was always good to us and we miss him.

Sherry and I wound up in Kings Mountain Manor, a Senior complex for older folks from 62 upward. We live in the same building, side by side.  No. 5 and No. 6. We almost lost her in May. She fell very ill and had to have a Colostomy. I have been privileged to care for her because after all, she’s my sister and the youngest of twelve siblings. She will always be my baby sister and I love her with all my heart. She has a lot of health problems, such as a bad back, bad hip, and also Glaucoma but God still loves her and knows all about her AND her health problems. She’s still trusting Him and He is still leading her.

One day before to many years we both, along with our other two sisters, Edith and Sue, plus our last brother Jack, will soar homeward to Heaven where we will be reunited with the rest of our family.

Until then HAPPY BIRTHDAY,  LITTLE SISTER!!!    I LOVE YOU!.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO OUR FRIEND

We’ll always think of you as one,

Who will always be a friend,

As friendship is a loving bond,

to which there is no end,

And as the years go by we hope,

that you will always be,

As warm and friendly as you’ve been,

to people such as we.

Your matchless sense of humor

filled our days with lots of cheer

Your kindness to us all has

made you someone sweet and dear.

May this coming year be such

that bring you lots of love,

and fills your life with blessings,

From the FATHER’S house above!

Dorothy “Sis” Chaney

His Presence

I may never live to see

My life completely trouble free,

Or walk a straight and narrow road,

and carry not a heavy load,

I’ll never see around a bend,

or riches at the rainbows end,

But I can walk with head held high,

and notice soft clouds drifting by,

feel the sunshines warm embrace,

the gentle breeze upon my face.

I can hear a birds sweet song,

Beside each road I walk along.

These things I feel,and hear,and see,

More clearly when God walks with me.

For just His sweet presence,seems to bring,

All the BEST in EVERYTHING.

Written By Dorothy “Sis” Chaney