Anyway. There are lots of things I could write about. Cash's ever expanding vocabulary and Bible song singing, Trey's increasingly "metrosexual" style (metro people, METRO) or, of course, world peace. For now, however, I'll leave you with this. I think you'll enjoy it. It's been on my parents 'fridge for about 20 years. I've read it several times...and it never gets old.
"Dear Ann Landers: The letter from "A Working Mom in Kentucky" made me see red. That woman is drowning in self-pity. I could see "poor little me" in every line. Whiners make me sick.
Who is pushing her out the door past her crying 3-year-old on her way downtown to work? She should sit in a quiet corner for an hour or two and get her priorities straight.
Her children grow a little every day and, before she knows it, they will be gone. When that happens, she can walk away from home and work all she wants.
Eating red beans and rice will seem like filet mignon when she cooks it for a family that loves her. The mended clothes will seem like robes of velvet and gold to her children, because their mother made them. The old car will shine like a limousine if their mother is taking them to the library or to the park.
I believe the reason so many children are in bad shape today is because they haven't had adequate parental care or felt valued and loved. What in the world could be as important as being at home for your kids? When I hear women say they want a higher standard of living for their children, I ask myself, what does that really mean? A better neighborhood? Private schools? Better clothes? How important are those things?
How about a prayer for "non-working" mothers? I am talking about the ones who are shunned in our society and called lazy. I mean the ones who can't get credit, because they don't have "a job." If the truth were told, it is the most important job in the world. Believe me, Ann, I know what I am talking about, because I have had both red beans and filet mignon, and let me tell you, I'll take the red beans any day of the year." - A Proud Mother in Mobile, Ala.
