Before I get started, please let me make a disclaimer: This is my  blog, my thoughts, the things that are important to me.  I know that not  everyone will agree with what I write, nor do I really care about my  use of proper grammar, spelling or punctuation.  I am not writing a  book-I'm just telling a few stories...so criticism, while taken and duly  noted, really doesn't matter in this forum.  I'm not out to win any  awards, nor am I out to make people feel all "warm and fuzzy"...you may  be bored out of your skull.  I'd apologize, but it wouldn't really be  genuine since everyone is free to navigate away and no one is obligated  to be here. So, now that I have that out of the way, on to the blog...
My Dad sent me a couple pictures of the cabin this week...he  hauled off about 15 or more bags of junk we sacked up last week when we  went for the inaugural clean up visit.  He took a picture of the clean  porch and then today sent me a picture of the land where he had gone  down and mowed it all...it looks wonderful! Family...what would we do  without them?
I come from a very eclectic family on both sides of  my tree...my Mom's family tends to be more artistic and has more  entrepreneurs...my Pop's family has more farmers and musicians...all  some of the hardest workers I have ever seen in my life, although all  worked in different arenas.  I talked about the love without surrender  that I inherited from David Henderson...I guess technically I got it  from him first...but I sure do know that my Dad has it, too, and his  mother, my Granny, before him.  Dad's a little different, though,  because he has sense to sever ties when they hurt him.  I don't.  I love  every single member of my family, no matter what their faults or issues  or drama. They could stab me in the eye and I would still want them over for lunch on Sunday.  My heart overflows with love that I can't explain--even  knowing when I am going to be burned or regret it, I dive in anyway.  To  me, it's worth it.  I believe that we are called to extend grace, over  and over and over, regardless of the outcome.  To love without  expectation...and if we get hurt in the process, that's okay, because we  did what we were supposed to do. 
David and Elizabeth married and  had 10 children.  Five lived.  I walked around in the cabin and I  thought, some of those babies were born here-in this very room.  The  five children who lived appeared to be successful people...I don't know  many of the other branches of the first five...most all of the ones I  know are from Sandy's line, which is my line, but here's something that  intrigued me...Sandy's sister, Eady, married the brother of Sandy's  wife, Nancy.  According to family tale, Eady was a few fries short of a  happy meal, and William, her husband, kept her locked up.  Now, this may  or may not be true...I know of plenty of families with a "touched"  relative who probably needed locking up but wasn't...or those creepy  houses where they kept "Uncle Bob" in the back room...but whatever the  reason, Eady was locked up.  David Henderson did not like that idea at  all, and went to tell William to stop mistreating his daughter.  William  beat the dog tar out of David.  I guess maybe he wasn't the kind of  fellow who liked being told what to do...but seriously, if you were  going to lock your wife up and you had someone there who was telling you  not to do it, wouldn't you just have said "Well fine, then. You take  her crazy butt to your house?"  I don't know what could have happened  that was so bad that William felt the need to kick a handicapped senior  citizen's rear, but he did it.  And it must have been a pretty rough  beating, because two of David's sons decided that Mr. Land needed to  pick on someone his own size.  They went and found him and beat him so  bad that he died two days later.  Eady snapped out of her "spell" after  his death and went on to remarry...the brothers had to flee the state  and settled down in Mississippi...and David got his daughter back.  Now  how's that for family loyalty?  And think about Sandy, being married to  William Land's sister---can you imagine how much strain that would have  put on Sunday dinner conversation? But despite it all, I keep asking the  question "Why not just let her go? Why fight with a man over his own  child?" We'll never know, but we see what happens when you spit in the  wind, now don't we? 
So I walk thru the cabin--it's in such disrepair and full of  garbage right now that it's hard to tell how much we'll have to do  before it is ready for restoration-and I think on this family and all  the generations that came from here.  And I wonder why some families  feel they are better than others---it really doesn't matter in the grand  scheme of things how hard you worked, how many books you read,  how many countries you traveled to...how much money you have...the real question is "How much did  you love?"  When you die, whether beat to death or in your sleep, what  will people say about you?  Will they pity you?  Will they praise you?   Will your story be told?  When I die, all I want is for people to know  that I loved them---and to me that is all that matters.  I'm not the  best wife, mother, or daughter.  I'm not even a very nice person, for  all intents and purposes...I'm grouchy and unreasonable at  times...especially since I have been sick. I do have faith and won't  apologize for my beliefs, nor do I feel it is necessary to justify them to anyone else.  I am honest, to a fault, usually, and above  all else, I open my heart to love all those that I know. And for those  whose blood runs the same as in my veins, it's quadrupled.  I feel my  heart exploding out of my chest when a new baby is born to our family--even when I  will never get to see it.  I have cousins I have never met, but still, there's love there for them. My chest is full of song when someone gets a  raise or a new job...and I physically hurt when there are tears.  So  family is everything to me--and whether you agree or not is irrelevant.   You are only given one shot on this sphere...and if you show up to your  grave with only your accomplishments to show for it, I hope you enjoyed  them.  Because where you store your treasure, that's where you get to  enjoy it-be it here or Heaven.  Love, and you'll have the best of both  worlds.
*Correction* Six of the Henderson children lived: Sandy, William, Eady, Daniel, Henry and James...
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