Today is my mom’s 79th birthday.  Yesterday I got to thinking about her
and all the ways the Lord has blessed me through her and I decided to write a
few down. Once I got going, I realized it would be pretty simple to come up with
a lot of things I am thankful for! So, I decided to try for 79. It was easy!
Without further ado, in no particular order, I present you
with 79 things I am thankful to God for in my mom:
- Taking me to church when I was a boy
 - Letting me be friends with her adult friends
 - Buying me a lot of Legos before they were cool
 - Taking me to the cottage when the rest of the family had to work in the summer
 - Letting me spend endless days at the cottage in a swimsuit – and only having to wear a shirt at meals!
 - For spilling that plate of spaghetti on my lap so I could learn how hot food feels on the legs
 - Making our home a place where all my friends liked to be
 - Taking me to hockey practices at early hours
 - Taking me to hockey games
 - Cheering like crazy at hockey games
 - Never complaining at my routinely poor grades on report cards
 - Coming home for lunch every day from the flower shop
 - Taking me to thousands of visits to the doctor to get those awful, twice-per-week allergy shots. Shudder.
 - Sitting by my bed every day when I was in the hospital for two weeks as a scared 11 year old.
 - Challenging me to corn on the cob eating contests when it was just the two of us at the cottage
 - Doing my laundry for 19 years
 - Coming to all my school plays, concerts and other stuff
 - Making me stay at school during kindergarten while I cried like a firehose
 - Asking my principal to help me when my entire class was out to beat me up – it was a pretty miserable existence for a few days before that!
 - Years of routine. Routine meals, routine conversations, routine weeks – blessed routine!
 - Letting me eat popcorn in the family room while we watched Love Boat.
 - Playing softball at the cottage in front of my friends and knocking one out of the park!
 - Allowing me to have three cookies a day. A rule I never broke. (Until I was married!)
 - Letting me come into her room on Sunday mornings and jumping into bed with her and Dad.
 - Not killing me after I vomited apple juice all over her and some important afghan that got “retired” after that moment in time
 - Smiling a lot
 - Listening to what had to be remarkably boring stories of what happened that day at school
 - Paying for four years of The Master’s College while the Canadian dollar tanked
 - Telling me it probably was a good idea for me to move out and go to California
 - Being excited when I wanted to get baptized even though that was different for us Presbyterians
 - Not getting angry at me for barely writing one letter per year home while I lived in LA
 - Coming to my graduation from The Master’s College
 - Accepting Susan without hesitation from the very start
 - Letting us live in her home for a few months while we got set up back in Canada and headed off to Chesley Baptist Church
 - Letting us live in her home for 13 months while we got Grace Fellowship Church started.
 - Regularly visiting us in Chesley
 - Being there when Allie and Sophie and Will were born – and sending beautiful flowers when Chloe came into he world in LA
 - For listening when I emotionally explained I would need to resign the first church I pastored in the city
 - For telling me that boys who spat on sidewalks were really quite rude
 - For teaching me to open the door for ladies
 - For teaching me that men should walk on the side of the street exposed to danger or splashing and keep the lady with them protected
 - For making me chop wood and keep the pile by the stove in the cottage filled
 - For getting up early every cold morning to silently start a fire – how does a person crinkle newspaper silently? Still in awe of that!
 - For never complaining at all the band practises my Dad held so that I could enjoy that little bit of fun
 - For letting me get out of doing dishes so I could play the drums while Dad played the organ for what seemed like every night after dinner
 - For keeping a clean house
 - For always respecting my dad. Never a word of criticism do I think I heard
 - For coming to my graduation from The Master’s Seminary
 - For loving my kids
 - For coming with Dad to countless birthday parties and seeming really excited about the presents
 - For loving Susan and me back in the early days and taking our kids so we could get away
 - For coming to Grace Fellowship Church in the evenings when we first got started and being so supportive
 - For asking me to baptize her and getting immersed in a public pool in front of a crowd in her seventies – with joy
 - Having relationships with folks in the church that are independent of me as the pastor
 - Modelling loyalty in friendship
 - Caring for friends who have gotten older and need help
 - Caring for a special couple of ladies who need love
 - For talking on the phone to everybody. I’ve always loved that about my mom. She’s good on the phone!
 - For not being afraid to ask for help when Dad got sick
 - For sticking tight with Dad through his cancer – right to the end
 - For sticking tight to her mom and dad when both of them came to the end of their lives
 - For loving her brothers and sister and in-laws and the rest of the extended family
 - For loving my Dad’s mom through her trials and illnesses and not flipping her lid when grandma got the cat food instead of tuna in the sandwiches one day
 - For telling me to stop whining when I worked at the flower shop
 - For telling everybody in her orbit to stop whining!
 - For praying for people every day
 - Letting me drive a boat at 14 years old without a life jacket on.
 - Making me be a cub, then a scout and letting me quit when it got bad
 - Not throwing our television out the window when I insisted on watching Emergency every day after school and turning up the volume when the sirens “sang”
 - Not harping on the little things
 - Always stopping at Grandpa and Grandmas on the way to the cottage or back and for all the other visits there. I loved those times
 - Never making me feel I had to do something intangible or otherwise in order to be accepted by her
 - Not being a gossip
 - Being quick to laugh
 - All those years of family gatherings at the house and the cottage
 - Still cheering like crazy at hockey games
 - Never complaining about chronic physical ailments
 - Writing well over 29,000 birthday cards annually. At least that is what it looks like!
 - For loving me.
 
Not everyone is blessed with a mom like mine. I thank God
for her! 

An awesome list for an awesome lady!
ReplyDeleteLet me add:
- Always supporting her grandkids
- Graciously tolerating her grandkids
- Modelling Godly womanhood in all the quiet, practical and REAL ways that matter
- Absolutely adoring her great-grandkids
- Still geeking out when she sees Johnny Bower
- Being a faithful Leafs fan (I thought I had it bad after enduring only 35 years!)
Perhaps best of all: Carrying the life-long dream of driving a Zamboni!
Nice ad's, RKF!!
ReplyDelete