Elk County Forum

General Category => Miscellaneous => Topic started by: Judy Harder on July 27, 2011, 03:05:00 PM

Title: Magnolias
Post by: Judy Harder on July 27, 2011, 03:05:00 PM

>>>
>>>> *MAGNOLIAS*
>>>> *
>>>> I spent the week before my daughter's June wedding running last-minute
>>>> trips to the caterer, florist, tuxedo shop, and the church about forty
>>>> miles away.
>>>>
>>>> As happy as I was that Patsy was marrying a good Christian young man, I
>>>> felt laden with responsibilities as I watched my budget dwindle.
>>>>
>>>> So many details, so many bills, and so little time.  My son Jack was
>>>> away at college, but he said he would be there to walk his younger
>>>> sister down the aisle, taking the place of his dad who had died a few
>>>> years before. He teased Patsy, saying he'd wanted to give her away since
>>>> she was about three years old!
>>>>
>>>> To save money, I gathered blossoms from several friends who had large
>>>> magnolia trees. Their luscious, creamy-white blooms and slick green
>>>> leaves would make beautiful arrangements against the rich
>>>> dark wood inside the church.
>>>> *
>>>> *After the rehearsal dinner the night before the wedding, we banked the
>>>> podium area and choir loft with magnolias. As we left just before
>>>> **midnight**, I felt tired but satisfied this would be the best wedding
>>>> any bride had ever had! The music, the ceremony, the reception - and
>>>> especially the flowers - would be remembered for years.
>>>>
>>>> The big day arrived - the busiest day of my life - and while her
>>>> bridesmaids helped Patsy to dress, her fiance Tim walked with me to the
>>>> sanctuary to do a final check. When we opened the door and felt a rush
>>>> of hot air, I almost fainted; and then I saw them - all the beautiful
>>>> white flowers were black.*
>>>>
>>>> *Funeral black. An electrical storm during the night had knocked out the
>>>> air conditioning system, and on that hot summer day, the flowers had
>>>> wilted and died.
>>>> *
>>>> *I panicked, knowing I didn't have time to drive back to our hometown,
>>>> gather more flowers, and return in time for the wedding.
>>>>
>>>> Tim turned to me. 'Edna, can you get more flowers? I'll throw away these
>>>> dead ones and put fresh flowers in these arrangements.'
>>>>
>>>> I mumbled, 'Sure,' as he be-bopped down the hall to put on his cuff links.
>>>>
>>>> Alone in the large sanctuary, I looked up at the dark wooden beams in
>>>> the arched ceiling. 'Lord,' I prayed, 'please help me. I don't know
>>>> anyone in this town. Help me find someone willing to give me flowers -
>>>> in a hurry!' I scurried out praying for four things: the blessing of
>>>> white magnolias, courage to find them in an unfamiliar yard, safety from
>>>> any dog that may bite my leg, and a nice person who would not get out a
>>>> shotgun when I asked to cut his tree to shreds.*
>>>>
>>>> *As I left the church, I saw magnolia trees in the distance. I
>>>> approached a house....No dog in sight.. knocked on the door and an older
>>>> man answered.  So far so good. No shotgun. When I stated my plea the man
>>>> beamed, 'I'd be happy to!'
>>>>
>>>> He climbed a stepladder and cut large boughs and handed them down to
>>>> me.  Minutes later, as I lifted the last armload into my car trunk, I
>>>> said, 'Sir, you've made the mother of a bride happy today.'
>>>>
>>>> No, Ma'am,' he said. 'You don't understand what's happening here.'
>>>>
>>>> 'What?' I asked.*
>>>> *
>>>> 'You see, my wife of sixty-seven years died on Monday.  On Tuesday I
>>>> received friends at the funeral home, and on Wednesday . .. .. He
>>>> paused.  I saw tears welling up in his eyes. 'On Wednesday I buried
>>>> her.' He looked away. 'On Thursday most of my out-of-town relatives went
>>>> back home, and on Friday - yesterday - my children left.'
>>>>
>>>> I nodded.
>>>>
>>>> 'This morning,' he continued, 'I was sitting in my den crying out loud.
>>>> I miss her so much.  For the last sixteen years, as her health got
>>>> worse, she needed me.  But now nobody needs me. This morning I cried,
>>>> 'Who needs an eighty-six-year-old wore-out man? Nobody!' I began to cry
>>>> louder. 'Nobody needs me!'  About that time, you knocked, and said,
>>>> 'Sir, I need you.'
>>>>
>>>> I stood with my mouth open.*
>>>> *
>>>> He asked, 'Are you an angel? The way the light shone around your head
>>>> into my dark living room...'
>>>>
>>>> I assured him I was no angel.
>>>>
>>>> He smiled. 'Do you know what I was thinking when I handed you those
>>>> magnolias?'
>>>>
>>>> 'No.'
>>>>
>>>> 'I decided I'm needed.  My flowers are needed.  Why, I might have a
>>>> flower ministry!  I could give them to everyone! Some caskets at the
>>>> funeral home have no flowers.  People need flowers at times like that
>>>> and I have lots of them.  They're all over the backyard! I can give them
>>>> to hospitals, churches - all sorts of places.  You know what I'm going
>>>> to do?  I'm going to serve the Lord until the day He calls me home!'
>>>>
>>>> I drove back to the church, filled with wonder.  On Patsy's wedding day,
>>>> if anyone had asked me to encourage someone who was hurting, I would
>>>> have said, 'Forget it! It's my only daughter's wedding,
>>>> for goodness' sake! There is no way I can minister to anyone today.'
>>>>
>>>> But God found a way.  Through dead flowers. *
>>>>
>>>> *'Life is not the way it's supposed to be. It's the way it is. The way
>>>> you cope with it is what makes the difference.'**
>>>> *
>>>>
>>>> *If you have missed knowing me, you have missed nothing.  If you have
>>>> missed some of my emails, you may have missed a laugh.
>>>>
>>>> But, if you have missed knowing my LORD and SAVIOR, JESUS CHRIST  you
>>>> have missed everything in the world. !!!!
>>>>
>>>> May God's blessings be upon you.
>>>>
>>>> THIS IS SO TRUE, BEING NEEDED IS SO UPLIFTING TO EACH OF US.
>>>>
>>>> This story is too beautiful not to send...*
>>>
:angel:
Title: Re: Magnolias
Post by: Ms Bear on July 27, 2011, 03:16:15 PM
Judy, that is so touching.  Thank you.
Title: Re: Magnolias
Post by: Catwoman on July 27, 2011, 04:27:29 PM
I loved this, Judy.  Words to live by, especially when it becomes easier to be impatient with others than it is to remember that each life has a story...Better to be a force for good in that story than it is to shut the book too early on that individual.
Title: Re: Magnolias
Post by: Diane Amberg on July 29, 2011, 09:48:47 AM
With the black cloud people posting so much, we really need these rays of sunshine.Thanks and a big hug Judy.