At about 10:00 EST the world became a little less sunny. I lost my beloved grandmother Nellie Reynolds. She was 84 & was lost due to complications from Alzheimer's. She was a true Southern Grandmother, born & raised in Georgia. She married my grandfather after his return from WWII & was the only man she ever dated. They're together now after his passing in 1989 on their 45th wedding anniversary.
She was a person who never had a cross word with anybody or bad thing to say of anybody. If you came to her house for any reason at any time of the day, the first words from her mouth "Hey how are you? Are you hungry?". Her house was open to all people, no colors were allowed in her house since everybody there was somebody. She never met anybody she didn't like never had anybody meet her who didn't like her. She affected many lives in her time. At 5'2" she was larger than life. Nobody ever went for wanting under her roof and nobody's call was ever unanswered, for help, need or to say hello.
If you have a chance, please hug your grandmother a little tighter & closer the next time you're able. If not, please add a warm thought to that of your grandmother because they should be cherished for what they helped us become in their time given to us.
She was a person who never had a cross word with anybody or bad thing to say of anybody. If you came to her house for any reason at any time of the day, the first words from her mouth "Hey how are you? Are you hungry?". Her house was open to all people, no colors were allowed in her house since everybody there was somebody. She never met anybody she didn't like never had anybody meet her who didn't like her. She affected many lives in her time. At 5'2" she was larger than life. Nobody ever went for wanting under her roof and nobody's call was ever unanswered, for help, need or to say hello.
If you have a chance, please hug your grandmother a little tighter & closer the next time you're able. If not, please add a warm thought to that of your grandmother because they should be cherished for what they helped us become in their time given to us.