You ever meet someone and love them immediately? That’s how it was with my mother-in-law. We even enjoyed sharing the same birthday—somehow it was more fun to share it with someone else. Mama Lucy died ten years ago, and, now, with the passing of my mother, I am assuming the matriarchal role. I pray that I will bless my family as they blessed me.

This is a poem I read to my mother-in-law at her birthday lunch just two years before she died. We all clapped, and she turned red. She didn’t like being the center of attention.
If movies were true
and TV shows,
what we should do,
as everyone knows,
is to avoid your mother-in-law.
But for me, I’ve found
I like having her around.
She has a good sense of humor
and likes to play games;
though she usually wins,
I don’t call her names
except Mom and Grandma Lucy.
She loves to give presents:
Come to my house
and there you will see
in every room
something of Lucy.
Delft dishes in the kitchen,
a table and chairs,
clothes in my closet,
a rocking chair downstairs.
She gives me pictures
cross stitched just so
and for my last birthday
a gift card to Smokey Row.
She’s given me love,
acceptance,
encouragement
and joy.
But the best gift she’s given
is the man we adore,
the son she raised to love Jesus
and, yet, there’s still more.
We share the same birthday,
so your Happy Birthday to You,
is not just for Lucy
and others with birthdays this spring.
You sing it for me, too.

Well done. Love this poem!
Sent from my iPhone
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Thanks. She’s been on my mind lately. I miss her.
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