My Nana wore a flapper style wedding dress and carried
an enormous bouquet when she got married. She loved parties and people, tennis
and matching hats. Perfect for a vicars wife.
My Nana read interesting snippets out of the paper and
took up dressmaking. She scrimped on material so there was always a patch over
a seam in a poignant place like centre front.
My Nana was widowed young so she took up traveling. She
collected crystal hand bells and souvenir match boxes from the cities she
visited around the world. She’d appear like an over adorned Christmas tree at
the end of each trip, beaming as she sauntered off the plane.
My Nana wore orangey-red lipstick and grew a bristly
kiss. She bought a white Mini Clubman and rode the clutch like a fury to
morning teas around the village. On the days the tar melted, she’d collect us for
a swim in her toweling housecoat; you could hear her roar streets away.
My Nana loved a good suntan. Her lower legs
came to look like her crocodile handbag. ‘Just doing the fronts today dear,’ she’d smile
from her sun lounger, while wasps nibbled at plums on the grass beside her in
the Hawkes Bay heat.
My Nana had terrible bunions; it was surprising her
feet could get into those rows of going-out shoes. Her bedroom was a treasure
trove of handbags and water colours and clip-on earrings. Her glass topped
dresser held a black and white museum of memories.
My Nana kept her hair dye in the bathroom cupboard.
She used, ‘Cha Cha Gray’ and mostly left it in too long so her hair turned a
flattering mauve.
My Nana tried to discourage my love of ponies. She
said girls that rode horses ended up looking like them. She had a friend who
looked like her poodle. I could see her point. She also told me I was kind and could
be a nurse when I grew up.
My Nana liked sherry. When I got my licence I’d drive
up from Onga Onga to visit, she’d pour me a couple in her blood red crystal
glasses, as we chatted in the drawing room. I’d be shickered by the time I
left.
My Nana was never a great cook. But when she started
making toad in the hole from sausages peeled off the bottom of her fridge, she
went into a home. She complained Mr Witherton-Jones had terrible manners when he
slurped his soup beside her, and she wasn’t staying long.
My Nana used to hold parties in her room and invite her
favourite nurses. She always had a cask of Blenheimer under her sink. ‘It’s so
refreshing,’ she’d say.
My Nana sometimes went missing. But she always wore a
hat!
Thats a lovely and very thoughtful poem of your Nana Jane-Nanas are soooo precious-sadly my Nana isn't well at the moment-she has a bit of Alzhiermers(or Dementia)and heart problems. I have wonderful and special memories with my Nana-they are one in a million:)
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