“Nothing is ever
really lost to us as long as we remember it.”
~ L.M. Montgomery, The Story Girl
~ L.M. Montgomery, The Story Girl
On
the back of my desk chair hangs my mama's unfinished quilt. I have always
called it Smiley. Each hand sewn stitch,
each faded color was touched by her fingers, arranged by her heart. At the end
of the day, she traded farm work for
therapy time, picking up the patchwork she kept in a basket that sat at her
feet. She would stitch until her eyes would tire, and then she would place it lovingly
in the basket and return to it the next evening. And when she finished one,
she'd begin another with the help of her prayer group who just happened to love
quilting as much as she did.
She
worked on it this one right up until the day she died. The squares were
arranged and bound, but the bunting assuring bulk and warmth was never
attached.
The
kaleidoscope of 2" x 2" squares paints pictures and whispers stories
of the dresses she and I wore. I remember this magnificently cool orange white polka-dotted dress, perfect for a shy
thirteen-year-old who was dying to be noticed. It wasn't so much the dress but
the smiley face J zipper pull that lay on my
chest. It went way past the ordinary and bordered on fashion, quite an
achievement for a girl with a closet full of homemade dresses. I rushed mama to
finish it for my youth choir concert at church that summer, and in my mind, I
was as lovely as I had ever been, me and my long straight hair and my
smiley-face pull. And, I was noticed
which made mama’s efforts even more grand.
It’s
hard to imagine that quilting today, although still quite primitive in concept,
is married to technology just as conversation, canning or bread making. There’s
a machine for a particular stitch, one to fashion big quilts, small quilts and
all those in-between. And I suspect that the thimble – which mama never quilted
without – is not necessary anymore. Now the machine does the tedious work where
one’s eyes and fingers once struggled each stitch of the way. And this rotary
cutter contraption – taking the place of scissors? This would have saved many fights between mama and me.
After
meeting many twenty-first century quilters, I realized that although the
process has evolved, the reasoning behind the craft has not. It’s about
memories, of stories, of conservation, of using every scrap, of not throwing
anything away, of passing down this tradition to future generations. Quilting
becomes a story of ingenuity, creativity and resourcefulness, one that must
live on.
Today,
in my very simple country home, I drape quilts of varied
designs over my sofa and chairs. I reach for them to chase the chill, but more
often, to revisit the past. I can trace the stitches that mama pulled and
tugged, wear those dresses again (although I dare question why) or snuggle and
get lost in a memory. I keep Smiley near me not because it keeps me
warmer but because it keeps mama closer. Some squares have pulled away from its
neighbor and snags have been the result of time. It's never seen the inside of
a washing machine or felt cool waters. It smells and feels the same way it did
the last time she worked on it. That comforts me.
I
suspect one day I’ll finish Smiley.
I’ll take out my needle and thimble and finish what my mama started. I'll give
it to my children in hopes that they will realize they hold in their hands the
story of two generations.
As
the days get cooler and they require more cover, reach for a memory, snuggle
and prepare the soul for a new year, a new beginning. Remember what the past
has taught and allow it to light the way.
The Editor's Pen, Winter 2012. Printed in the winter issue of Georgia Connector Magazine. Read the entire issue at www.georgiaconnector.com.
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