Sweet Memories

by Mary May Larmoyeux
We have this moment to hold in our hand, And to touch as it slips through our fingers like sand.
Yesterday's gone and tomorrow may never come, But we have this moment today!
                                                       —Gloria Gaither and Shirley Dobson, Let's Make a Memory



The Lord was so good when he gave Jim and me our boys. I had difficulty delivering both of
them, so we recognized from the beginning that their lives were truly God's gifts to us. (As Psalm 127:3
says, "Sons are a heritage from the Lord, children a reward from him.") We have enjoyed watching them
mature and have cherished countless memories over the years.

As a new mom, I vividly recall older mothers telling me how quickly the boys would grow up. I knew that
they were right, but somehow in the midst of changing diapers and rocking babies, that "someday"
seemed far, far away. Now, I am that older mother looking back in awe, wondering where the time went.
Friends of mine, Mike and Kaye Rutter, expressed this so well when Mike said that "The years do fly by
so quickly, it's just those days that seem to never end when you have little children."

As I share a few tangible ways that we have made lasting family memories, remember that I am a mom
with clay feet who has not done it all correctly. There are stacks and stacks of pictures that still need to
be placed neatly in scrapbooks. And if something needed to be sewn, the kids usually outgrew whatever
needed mending by the time I got to it. And believe me, I will never be given the House Beautiful Award
as long as there are children living in our home.

Ecclesiastes 3:1 tells us, "There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under heaven."
As a busy mom, I know that your plate is certainly full. But let me encourage you to take the time to make
family memories. Dust can wait, but our sons' and daughters' childhoods cannot be recaptured.

SPECIAL MEMORIES TODAY

Our boys always loved to make forts. Some were made by draping a sheet or blanket over chairs.
Others were constructed with boards and tree limbs. Forts were built in trees, under the house, and in
the backyard.

The kids and I have made many things in the kitchen besides cookies and cakes. A favorite recipe was
one for something similar to play dough:

    1 cup flour
    ½ cup salt
    1 cup water
    1 tablespoon cooking oil
    2 teaspoons cream of tartar
    Food coloring

Mix all dry ingredients. Add oil, water, and food coloring. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly. Cook
until dough becomes one large ball. Empty onto waxed paper, Knead until smooth and cool. Store in an
airtight immediately.


And the kids always liked rainbow toast:

    Put a teaspoon of milk into three cups.
    Add a drop of food color in each.
    Dip a small brush into each of the milk colors.
    Paint a rainbow on a piece of white bread.
    Toast the bread, then butter—you have rainbow toast!

Adapted from
Help for Busy Moms: Purposeful Living to Simplify Life by Mary May Larmoyeux.
www.marymaywrites.com
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Mary is the author of Help for Busy Moms: Purposeful Living to Simplify Life and the
co-author of The Resurrection Eggs® Activity Book. She and her  husband, Jim, live in
Little Rock, Arkansas, and have two married sons and five grandchildren. You can
contact her at mary@marymaywrites.com.