tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2766259787611337956.post5959150560325950723..comments2024-03-19T15:21:48.084-05:00Comments on Woman to Woman: Gently LeadJenifer Metzgerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01347866547000559113noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2766259787611337956.post-3880675789842420562015-07-02T22:58:07.100-05:002015-07-02T22:58:07.100-05:00Thank you for sharing your memory of your mother w...Thank you for sharing your memory of your mother with me. It gives me great hope that I am doing something right with my time in this world. I can only hope my daughters will feel the same way as you do when I am no longer here on this earth to help them. Be blessed. AngieAngela Ketchamhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15225665817203083088noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2766259787611337956.post-45718760526817718322015-07-01T09:22:32.509-05:002015-07-01T09:22:32.509-05:00This is so REAL to me!! When I was 12, (really), ...This is so REAL to me!! When I was 12, (really), I was taking Home Ec in jr. high and sewing was one semester. My mother was an expert seamstress. She could look at something someone was wearing and, without a pattern, figure it all out and make it, but with her own special touches. Well, it was my turn and she would "help" me with the jr. high skirt I was trying to make. She made me rip out more seams than it had to rip! But she wanted me to learn the right way to sew. I did, but the patience on her part must have run mighty deep! This is great to be reminded for my Mama has been gone from this earth for almost 2 1/2 years now, but the sewing memories are dear. I would even ask her "how tos" as I needed help with something while she was aging in her 90s in a nursing homes. She loved to help me even then. Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com