This was my first story sending to friends 3/3/3 which started a friendship of sending a story once every two weeks approximately.
Grandma's Cookstove
It is a crisp and cold day outside, but as you walk from the barn to the house, you catch the scent of what soon will greet you with warmth and love. You enter the house and you not only feel the warmth, but your nose picks up the source of the warmth. If you ever have had the pleasure of walking into a home, or your house, and smell wood burning (and hopefully not your house the cause
Many a romantic scene occurs in front of a fireplace. It seems the warmth of the fire lights our internal fires. The smell and glow heightens all of our senses. The crackling of the embers whispers melodies to our hearts.
So what was so special about grandma's cookstove?
Ahhh, grandma's cookstove brings back many memories to me. I probably did not enjoy it so much for the smell of its burning, but in the morning I could count on waking up to what grandma would always be cooking upon it. There would always be sunny-side up eggs with bacon or sausage that seemed so wonderfully different having been cooked on top of her cookstove. Or maybe it was the love they were prepared with?
Grandma would always have a grapefruit cut in half and the rind cut away from the juicy portions it held. For us kids it was very good ... very good if smothered with a layer of sugar first
After breakfast was play time in the living room where the woodstove was. As we got a little older, there were chores added. Actually only one chore really. But it also meant we got to play in the large straw stack near the barn and when Otto or grandma was not looking, chase chickens
Even as I got older, and helped with all the work a farm has to do, I would help fill the wood box after breakfast in the morning. I spent a summer there when I was between middle school grades. I got up early with grandma and Otto and we milked the cows by hand. I can remember Otto using horses for farming when I was a kid but by the summer I was there it was all tractor, no horses at all. Otto was just set in his ways and kept doing things the same way as long as they worked. I was an adult before he finally bought a milking machine. But all this is another story some day
Speaking of "modernization", someone had convinced grandma to have an electric stove before I stayed during the summer. It could be a very hot and steamy summer day, the windows would all be open, but the cookstove was always in use to cook all the meals. She had the electric stove and it was a functional stove and oven, but the only use I ever seen it get was that she would store her bread within the oven, and the cookie tin where she kept her home-made cookies was always setting on top.
The breakfast was always the same in nature, and somehow I did not ever think of it as boring. I think it might have been the atmosphere of love and the smell only wood burning can bring. It was always a relaxing time from the busy and hard work a farm like Otto had. Grandma provided good solid farm cooking on that cookstove of hers.
I also spent a lot of time during my early adult years there. Sometimes I would arrive and they were out playing cards or doing something somewhere. They seldom locked the back door of the house and grandma had taught me long ago how to "properly" start her cookstove. By the time they arrived home I had the kitchen light on and the stove all warmed up, the kitchen/dining room inviting them back home (it was one big room for the kitchen and dining area, with the kitchen cabinets on one side and the cookstove on the other with the big area between for the dining table).
Otto passed away and grandma finally moved to the city nearby a couple years later. She is alive and well and I visit there about four times a year with the "new" grandkids. My parents have moved far south but I am still in the same city as they were, and gather the kids to make the four hour plus trip. Although great-grandma is in an apartment and now using an electric stove, the meals are all cooked with love, and the grandkids get to enjoy meals as I have always enjoyed, and they all begin with breakfast :)
I have many fond memories that my kids may not all remember or be able to experience. But this is what makes life so much fun. As much as Ecclesiastes might have us think there is nothing new under the sun, being individuals we all live unique and individual lives. Things change which makes each of our lives different. Through words and love and communication, we are able to share our individual selves with others. Since we all have not experienced the same lives or settings, we all have a unique story and interesting life to share with others. We each have a set of wonders within ourselves to fascinate others with. We all add to the joy of life if we will simply love ourselves so we can share love with others.
It is my hope this day that your life be filled with love, peace and a LOT of JOY (look the word up sometime and find out what joy really means
yours in friendship and in life as you allow me,
WayneKarl