my paternal great-grandmother and namesake, Hannah Irene Dennis |
I welcome you to join me, if you like! I've divided the prompts by month, and the plan is to respond to 3 (or so) a week. For some of these I may write poems, for others prose. The important thing is to mine my memory. Who knows where this exploration will lead?
In January I wrote about: apron, bar, basketball, bed, bicycle, birthday, boat, broom, button, cake, car.
In February: chair, chlorine, church, concert, cookbook, couch, dancing, desk, dessert, dining room table, diploma.
In February: chair, chlorine, church, concert, cookbook, couch, dancing, desk, dessert, dining room table, diploma.
March: divorce, door, dream, emergency room, envelope, eyebrows, first apartment, first job, food, game, garden.
April: I took a break to focus on ARTSPEAK: Happy!
Here are the prompts for May: gloves, great-grandparent, guidebook, gun, gym class, hair, hands, hat, high heels, honeymoon, hood.
April: I took a break to focus on ARTSPEAK: Happy!
Here are the prompts for May: gloves, great-grandparent, guidebook, gun, gym class, hair, hands, hat, high heels, honeymoon, hood.
GREAT-GRANDPARENTS
I
didn't meet any of my great-grandparents in person. But I was named
after one of them – my paternal great-grandmother Hannah Irene
Dennis-- and I have blogged about my name and shared a "Namesake" poem here. The most impactful thing I know about my namesake is that "she never said a bad word about anyone." Those are some big words to live up to, and I have never felt I quite get there... though I am much more chill and nonjudgmental than I once was. It's something to aspire to, isn't it?
I have always felt great love for this woman, and I do love her name. Once someone asked me if I wasn't named Irene, what name would I choose? I immediately said "Hannah." The other thing I know about my namesake is that my father dubbed her "Bigmama." I love that, too. She had a big heart. She was incredibly loving. And she, along with my other paternal great-grandparents, was a salty pioneer of the pinewoods and swampy rivers of north Florida. That's a pretty amazing legacy, if you ask me.
The only other one I know
anything about is my maternal great-grandmother Ralston -- Cora Belle Bargar. She lived with my
mom and her family when my mom was a teenager, so she had a big
impact on my mom's life. She was, apparently, a feisty, little woman
– not even 5 ft. tall. She was also an expert seamstress, and my
mom learned a lot of craft-y skills from her -- including the classic-to-me "As you sew so shall you rip." From what I can recall,
she was able to give my mom love in ways that her mother couldn't...
and isn't that often the way it is with grandmothers?
Expert seamstresses and salty pioneers with hearts of gold! Very cool. xo
ReplyDeleteOh, how happy she would be to read this...just lovely, Irene. You are like her. x
ReplyDelete