TELL ME A STORY

TELL ME A STORY
"Tell your children of it, and let your children tell their children, and their children another generation." Joel 1:3
Showing posts with label A Cup of Comfort. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Cup of Comfort. Show all posts

Saturday, January 20, 2018

THE CRYING CHAIR

Mary Marcia
America's STORYTELLER
Telling Untold Stories in Photographs, Prose and Public Speaking





I wrote a story about my family called The Crying Chair. 



My story was published in 2001, by Adams Media Corporation in the flagship book of their series, A CUP OF COMFORT.  


 CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE the link in your browser:  
http://www.abebooks.com/CUP-COMFORT-Lady-Blue-Dress-Wish/4644404504/bd 


I maintain the copyright for the story, so I am able to share it with you today.  I made some minor corrections to the story that the editors didn't get quite right in the book.    It happens.  



Both my parents, Natalie and Jewell Bush, were alive when our story was published.  Mom carried the book, A CUP OF COMFORT,  with her to the hospital for her cancer treatments. She proudly showed the story to the doctors and nurses at the hospital and her wonderful hospice nurses who cared for her at home for over one year




Mom (Mema) went to Heaven in February 2003.  She left each of our family members Crying Towels that she hand embroidered.   After all - there was only one Crying Chair, and there were many more tears to come.   Dad went to Heaven in July 2003.  




Mema's Hand-Embroidered Crying Towel.  Copyright 2003 Marcia Norwood

Are you in the midst of a storm? 

Are you overwhelmed?

Are you grieving the loss of a loved one, family pet, job or house?

Please give yourself permission to cry.





Psalm 56:8
 You (God) keep track of all my sorrows.
You have collected all my tears in your bottle.
You have recorded each one in your book.



It's good to cry.
It's healthy to cry.


The Health Benefits of Tears
CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE the link in your browser: 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/judith-orloff-md/emotional-wellness_b_653754.html
 

 


Here's our story:  The Crying Chair.






 
The Crying Chair....page 16









The Crying Chair



By  Mary Marcia Lee Norwood



Copyright 1999





            Each  chair at Mom and Dad's  kitchen table was spoken for.   As the oldest of four -- I had first pick.  I picked the one directly across from Dad.  Everybody knew it was "Marcia's  chair."  My sister, Gloria, chose her chair next -- followed by my brothers Bret and Terry.  Selections were made in birth order:  first come . . . first served . . . you might say.  Mom didn't sit much.  She was usually up waiting on one of us. 



            Sometimes  I gave up my chair for guests,  and it was known by another name: "The Crying Chair."  Family, friends and neighbors sat in that chair when they needed a good cry, and someone to share their burdens.   To this day folks still come to sit in The Crying Chair at  my parents' house, in Liberty, Missouri.  Folks like Fran and Bob, who  once lived across the street , , , shared coffee, stories and tears at our kitchen table.  They moved from our old neighborhood, but when Bob died, Fran returned to The Crying Chair.



We're a family of natural-born weepers, from my parents, Natalie and Jewell Bush, right on down the line to all four of their children, now grown with little weepers of our own.  Not that our lives have been filled with extraordinary tragedy or that our hearts are filled with sorrow, it's just that crying is comfort for the soul.



Mom said that it was only natural for "Marcia's Chair" to become the official Crying Chair, since I was the most tenderhearted crier in the family.  I put The Crying Chair to good use throughout my life: when my dog, Midnight, died; when Dad was injured in a terrible car accident;  when Dad sang us a song about a little crippled girl; when I watched Superman take a crippled boy on a Super flight on our black-and-white TV; and when my two-year-old brother, Terry, tried to be Superman and jumped from the neighbor's tall slide - which required brain surgery.  Of course, I took to The Crying Chair when a boyfriend broke up with me.

Yet, I was not an unhappy child.  In fact, quite the opposite:  I was very happy. 
The Crying Chair gave me a place to park my emotional baggage, so I could get on with my life.  There were also times when I took to The Crying Chair with tears of joy:  each time my sister, Gloria and I were chosen for the cheerleading squads; when I was crowned Sweetheart Queen; when I left for college; when I came home from college; when I became engaged, and when I became pregnant with each child. 

The Crying Chair worked so well throughout the years -- I decided to borrow the idea for my Kindergarten classroom at a private Christian school where I taught for seven years.  The idea came to me when I was trying to find ways to console one of my Kindergarten students.  He cried uncontrollably each morning when he arrived at school, and several times throughout the day.  His parents were going through a divorce.  This little guy was shifted from one parent to the next, and he never knew who would bring him to school or pick him up. 



            With great pomp and circumstance I announced the arrival of The Crying Chair  in our Kindergarten classroom.  It was just a regular chair that I "named" and moved to an isolated part of our room.  I placed a box of tissues within arm's reach of  The Crying Chair.   The students listened with wide -eyed wonder as I proclaimed the rules for The Crying Chair.  They even added a few of their own.


Rules For The Crying Chair

1.  Teacher:  The Crying Chair is NOT a punishment or time out.
Student:  We won't get in trouble.

2.  Teacher:  Raise your hand and state your need for  The Crying Chair.
 Permission will be granted.
Student:  Ask the teacher first.

3.  Teacher:  All outbursts made while in The Crying Chair 
shall be uttered at a moderate level,
so as not to bother the other students, and
NOT to draw attention to oneself. 
Student:  No screaming.

4.  Teacher:  Length of stay in The Crying Chair is up to the individual; 
however, five-minute intervals are suggested,
which may be extended if necessary.
Student:  Hurry up.  Get it over with.

5.  Teacher:  The Crying Chair is available to both students and teachers.
Student:  Teachers cry, too?

6.  Teacher:  Other students will not be permitted
to harass or make-fun-of anyone in The Crying Chair
Student:  Don't start a fight.

7.  Teacher:  Other students are encouraged to pray for and
show special kindness to the person in The Crying Chair .
Student:  Be nice. Be kind.  Pray.


            The Crying Chair was a special chair.  The students almost had a reverence for it.  The precious  student  who  cried uncontrollably would raise his little hand for permission to sit in The Crying Chair.  Then he would bury his head in his hands, and sob.  My heart ached for him, but  I rejoiced as I watched  other students (of their own choice)  bow their heads in prayer for their classmate.  Some asked for permission to walk over to  The Crying Chair and give him a pat on the back -- or a hug.  Other times a classmate would quietly place a piece of candy for him  on the table beside The Crying Chair. 


After a brief time in the chair  he would dry his eyes, ask for permission to get a drink of water and go to the bathroom before returning  to his regular seat in class.  Not one student teased him about sitting in The Crying Chair.  As his life took on some semblance of order, his trips to the chair became less frequent.  


           The Crying Chair worked so well the two years it was in my classroom, that I wished I had thought to use it the previous five years of my teaching career.  Many students sat in The Crying Chair for different reasons.  It provided a safe place to cry.  It was never used for everyday trials and tribulations of being a child.  It was never used for skinned knees and playground scrapes, or embarrassment over spilled milk or juice, or frustration of a lost field-trip slip...not even for hurt feelings from name-calling.  




       The source of tears was always traumatic when a child came to The Crying Chair:  like the loss of a pet or a grandparent.  For three children who had been abandoned by their mothers, and were being raised by other family members, it provided a soft place to fall, and cry.  One student  strived so hard for perfection in printing letters his entire body shook.  He discovered a little cry in The Crying Chair relaxed him enough to try again.  After being molested by a neighbor, one child sat and sobbed until I thought all our hearts would break.

 

            One particular day,  I felt overwhelmed with the duties of teaching and motherhood and marriage.   I announced to the class that I needed to spend some time in The Crying Chair.  I laid my  head in my hands and cried.  As the tears flowed down my cheeks I felt the touch of many tiny hands as my students walked by and  gently patted me on the back. 
 

            The teacher learned compassion from her students.
           
            The students learned a teacher hurts just like they hurt, and cries just like they cry.



            Both learned  to love each other.

           
 

The Crying Chair



By  Mary Marcia Lee Norwood



Copyright 1999



SIBLINGS!  From Left:  Gloria, Terry, Marcia and Bret.  Copyright 1976 Marcia Norwood












Marcia's Dad, Jewell; Nephew Jeramy, Brothers Terry and Bret.  Copyright 1991 Marcia Norwood








Marcia's Parents:  Jewell and Natalie with their grandchildren and great-grandchildren:  Megan, Lacey, Taylor, Conner, Sarah ZK and Joshua.  Copyright 1999 Marcia Norwood.



 

 Thanks for stopping by!

Come back often, and invite a friend!

 
 






Mary Marcia
America's STORYTELLER
Telling Untold Stories in Photographs, Prose and Public Speaking








 

 

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

W I T T Y

Mary Marcia
America's STORYTELLER
Telling Untold Stories in Photographs, Prose and Public Speaking



W I T T Y
I'm a girl with 65 years experience - who loves stories and happy endings.  I've been digging in the dirt, and telling stories since I was a little girl. 
Sister Gloria and Marcia.  Copyright   1954 Marcia Norwood

I was voted "Wittiest" by my LHS Senior classmates in the spring of 1967.   

Witty?  I may have been the silliest!  1967 Liberty High School Cheerleaders:  Ann, Sally, Joan,Judy, and Marcia. 

Often people say, "You are so creative.  Where do you get all your ideas?"

God made me this way.  My mother and grandmother  were both creative, out-of-the-box thinkers.  

My mother, Natalie Bush, brought hands-on activities to our Sunday School class at the Liberty Methodist Church, when she was our  teacher in the 1950's...long before the term "hands-on" was ever used.  

Mom painted Flintstone characters on our family's go-cart helmets in the 60's, and on murals in our bedroom.  (Yes!  I raced go-carts as a teenager.  So did my dad.)  We watched The Flintstones as a family every Friday night. 



"Yabba-dabba-doo!"  
The Flintstones became the first cartoon 
made for grown-ups 
when it premiered in prime-time 
on September 30, 1960 on ABC. 

The Flintstones, Season 1 - Episode 1
CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE the link in your browser:
https://search.yahoo.com/search?fr=mcafee&type=A111US0&p=the+flinstones 


Edith Dale said she and Mom wanted to crochet collars for baby dresses.  Edith bought the pattern, but Mom looked at the photo on the pattern, and made the crochet collar before Edith finished reading the pattern.  
 
From Left:  Marcia's Mom (Natalie Bush) holds Marcia and Edith Dale (in polka dots) hold Debbie.  Copyright 1949 Marcia Norwood

Marcia's Mom and Granny Lucille.  Copyright 1960 Marcia Norwood

My Granny Lucille was an excellent cook, seamstress, tailor, and housekeeper.  In a throw-down with Martha Stewart:  my money would be on Granny Lucille. 

Granny also owned and operated a dance hall, restaurant, and apartments  on her own.  

She was a divorced, single mom who supported two daughters.  

When she remarried, Granny Lucille still provided most of the income for the family.  
   
My mother and grandmother could do just about anything, and do it well...with one exception:  my mother was not a very good cook. Everything she made tasted bland with a strong cigarette-flavor.  (Mom smoked three packs of Camel cigarettes a day.)  I think Mom's mashed potatoes had more smoke in them that any other ingredient.

Granny Lucille.  Copyright 1960 Marcia Norwood
 
Mother & Daughter:  Natalie and Marcia.  Copyright 1970  Marcia Norwood
 
FOUR GENERATIONS:  Natalie (in ruffles), Marcia (center back), Granny Lucille (with pink rose), Kristin (Marcia's daughter - in front).  Copyright 1976 Marcia Norwood
I wanted to be an artist.  Art was my favorite class at Liberty High School, in Liberty, Missouri.  One of my favorite projects was helping other students create a large, mosaic mural for the Liberty Education Building in the 60's.    I wonder if it's still there?
It's no surprise that my favorite class at the University of Missouri, in Columbia, Missouri, was art.  I received the best although bittersweet advise from my art professor at Mizzou.   Freshman students  were assigned to paint a still life set up in class.  Mine was the worst, and I knew it.  
I tucked my completed painting under my arm and walked out of class. 
My professor must have noticed my disappointment.  She walked out with me and said:  "Talk to me."

"My painting is terrible." I said.  
My entire dream of being an artist vanished in my first art class at Mizzou.

It was as if she could read my mind:  "Marcia, most of the people in this class will make their living being artists.  Their art will become their income.  You may not become an artist.  You will make a living in another way, but you are witty and creative.  Your love of art will remain just that - something you love - not your taskmaster.  That is a gift.  Always be creative and have fun with it."
She gave me wisdom and encouragement.
Over the years I've  given myself permission to play with paints, colored pencils, pastels, water color, crayons, and markers, paper, wood and metal.  I've played in dirt as a creative gardener; played with words as an author and speaker; played with cameras as a photographer; and played in the kitchen.  I still would rather decorate the table than prepare the meal.  
I will try just about anything.  
My life has been filled with creative adventures.
I took an "Art Therapy" class from Dr. Madeline Rugh (University of Oklahoma) in the 90's, which made it possible for me to teach  art therapy classes to  adults and children.  Art can bring hope and healing when it ceases to be a competition, and you just simply play with the mediums.
My mom was confined to her home for most of one year of hospice care before she went to Heaven.  She filled her days reading voraciously.   Each week, she called in book requests to the Liberty Public Library.  Mom was a lifelong learner.  She never stopped being witty and creative.  
Mom set up an art table in her bedroom by her corner windows, and  invited her grandchildren to use her crayons, markers, and gel pens right along with her.   My children and grandchildren don't remember a dying room filled with Mema's pills,  oxygen tanks and lines.  They remember coloring with their Mema at an art table by a bright window.  They have her pens as a reminder.

I created a coloring page for Mom (Mema)'s memorial service.   I asked family to write or draw something on it.  We gently laid them in Mema's casket.  We all knew her spirit left that mortal body, but it's absolutely possible that Mom saw it all from her balcony in Heaven.
God is our creator.
He gives creativity, and wisdom, and knowledge and witty inventions to anyone who asks!

Remember my college still life painting?  I took it home in the autumn of 1967. Mom agreed it wasn't that great.  She put it in the big trash can in the back yard to be burned.   My Nanny, Aunt Ann, (caring, witty and creative) retrieved it from the trash can, and hung in in her bedroom above her bed.

I was elated.

Sometimes it just takes one person to believe it you - to encourage you.

Let me be that person for you.
When was the last time you gave yourself permission to color with crayons or pastels or markers?  
I encourage you!
Buy a color book or watercolor paper.
Color a picture. 

Hallmark has a fantastic coloring book for adults!
CLICK on the link or COPY & PASTE the link in your browser:  
http://shop.hallmark.com/gifts/books/coloring-books/the-art-of-hallmark-coloring-book-for-adults-1SHO3001.html
Plant a garden.
Write a song!
Sing a song!
Write a poem or short story. 
Read a poem or story!
Write the book that is in your heart.  
Read a book aloud to someone else!
Take a photograph or take one hundred photographs, or take one thousand photographs.
Paint on the sidewalk.  
Write with shaving cream or pudding.
Create a new recipe.

God has never wasted any of my experiences...especially my failures. He has given me jobs and opportunities beyond my talents and beyond my education. He supernaturally transforms my MESS into a MESSAGE to a hurting world...and He will do the same for you.

I am a life long learner.

Before I begin anything I pray:  "God teach me...."
Ask God to give you wisdom and witty inventions.

Have FUN!
 
Proverbs 8:12 
 
I wisdom dwell with prudence
and find out knowledge of witty inventions.
The Holy Bible
King James Version 

What is prudence?

  • Good judgment
  • The practical application of wisdom

CLICK on the image to ENLARGE. Copyright 2011 Marcia Norwood

CLICK on the image to ENLARGE. Marcia served as Editor & Graphic Artist.  Copyright 2011 Marcia Norwood

CLICK on the image to ENLARGE.  Marcia's songs.  Copyright 2011 Marcia Norwood

Marcia's MAGAZINE & NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
Marcia's writing and photographs have been published in CLUBHOUSE (Focus on the Family), Chosen Child, Adoption Today, and The Red Thread magazines. Marcia's photographs and articles have been published in The Kansas City Star; The Examiner, (Independence, Missouri) and a series in Mother & Child Reunion.

To view samples of Marcia’s articles online…click on the links:

"Under My Umbrella" (Adoption Today) April 2013: http://www.bluetoad.com/publication/?i=152974
“Are You Looking At Me?” (Adoption Today) http://library.adoption.com/reunions/are-you-looking-at-me/article/2795/1.html

BOOKS CONTAINING Marcia 's SHORT STORIES & PHOTOGRAPHS:
FLY AWAY
FINDING HOPE IN THE MIDST OF GRIEF
A STORYTELLER Gift Booklet
CLICK on the image to ENLARGE.  Copyright 2003 Marcia Norwood
 
Chicken Soup To Inspire The Body and Soul 
Edited by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Dan Millman, Diana von Welanetz Wentworth
ISBN # 0-7573-0141-X
Marcia's Story: The Beautiful Girl in the Mirror - Page 233





A Cup of Comfort
Adams Media Corporation
Edited by Colleen Sell
ISBN # 1-58062-524-X
Marcia's Story: The Crying Chair - Page 16 

  



 
What I Learned From God While Cooking
Barbour Publishing, Inc.
Edited by Cristine Bolley
ISBN # 1-59310-346-8
Marcia's Story: Love Never Fails - Page 209

   


Stories for the Spirit-Filled Believer: Remarkable Encounters with the Holy Spirit 


 Stories for the Spirit-Filled Believer
Starburst Publisher
Edited by Cristine Bolley
ISBN # 0-7394-2160-3 ISBN # 1-892016-54-0
Marcia's Story: Miracle on Peck Road - Page 225



The Ultimate Bird Lover
HCI Books
ISBN-13:978-0-7573-1438-4
ISBN-10:0-7573-1438-4
Two of Marcia's photographs are published in this book.
     



Proverbs 8:12 
 
I wisdom dwell with prudence
and find out knowledge of witty inventions.
The Holy Bible
King James Version 

What is prudence?

  • Good judgment
  • The practical application of wisdom
 http://tellmeastory-marcia.blogspot.com/2013/09/where-are-we-going.html
Tell Me A Story: WHERE ARE WE GOING?
Sep 15, 2013
My "A-ha! Moment" happened in 1999, when I was the Missouri and Kansas Regional Coordinator for *Camp Invention, the HANDS-ON educational outreach program of the National Inventor's Hall of Fame sponsored in part ...
http://tellmeastory-marcia.blogspot.com/

 Thanks for stopping by!

Come back often, and invite a friend!

Mary Marcia
America's STORYTELLER
Telling Untold Stories in Photographs, Prose and Public Speaking