Sentences with phrase «grandmother too»

Thank you for brightening my day and making me think of my grandmother too who is so much like Henrietta - patient, kind with a great big heart who seeks out the lost, prays for them, speaks light into their life and was the only friend many of her neighbors had.
If I had one it would make me think fondly of my grandmother too (because Lola means Grandma in the filipino language).
I have a few things that belonged to my grandmother too.
My grandmother too had the same problem and I have been helping her in doing head exercises before and now she is brave enough to do them on her own.
Every time a make a pie crust I think of my own grandmother too!
I remember grinding up the vegetables with my grandmother too.
You look so much like your Mon and you take after her and your grandmother and most likely you great grandmother too.
rhubarbara is going to be one lucky kid if she has a pie makin» mom and grandmother too!
Her grandfather and others (and her grandmother too probably) had silent blame against the grandmother.
I miss my grandmothers too and look forward to seeing them again one day.

Not exact matches

But there are other connections that matter, too, connections that are more fundamental and more personal — ties to a family and a history, to memories of a father or dreams for a son, to a husband or a wife across a desk, or to a grandmother whose lessons lie in the distant past.
I don't know what challenges you face, but if your challenge is less than a marathon and you're physically more able than a 66 - year - old grandmother, you can probably get that value too.
One time not too long ago when talking to my grandmother about church, she told me that some blacks had visited her white mega church in Tuscaloosa.
Since Uran.us and Ga.ia both are real too, when I look around I see Gaia, Zeus's grandmother, I don't know about this god you speak of, I mean I get to TOUCH god whenever I feel the ground, you just touch his «creation», you poor soul, not knowing what god actually feels like.
This one moment at the Farmers Market, when your hands are full of garden flowers, and there is homemade jam in the stroller basket, and your son is dragging a canvas bag full of tomatoes and spinach and cucumbers bumpity - bump down the street, and your daughter is telling someone's great - grandmother that her sister's name is Evelynn, too, and there is a piano on the corner of the parking lot thumping, and someone is singing loud, and you can smell the goodness of honest bread.
As a Grandmother whose first grandchild was born premature not too long ago with some challenges.
I know now, in retrospect, that the houses of my childhood — the duplex down by the Capitol in which we first lived, the place we moved to on Elizabeth Street, my grandmother's home on Grand, all the houses of my parents» friends — were simultaneously too hot and too cold.
So funny Jodee, I had an aunt Rose too who was my grandmother's sister.
My other grandmother was wonderful, too, but I don't think anyone would've called her sweet!
My grandmother had a tiny kitchen too, minimal gadgets, and put out meals and baked goods like nobody's business.
My grandmother made wonderful stuffed artichokes too!
My grandmother would love this too!
this is my grandmother's recipe and she always tells the story of when she had a bite too early and ripped a crown right off her tooth!
My Grandmother had one of those hand grinders too.
When I first saw the recipe I wanted to cry because there was so much sugar and processed ingredients, but this is hopefully still delicious, tasty, indulgent, and not too depressing for my grandmother, even though it's totally different:p Continue reading →
My grandmother had a hand grinder's too.
My grandmother loved lemon desserts, and they are truly my favorite, too.
I love ribbon candy, too... it reminds me of my grandmothers!
It seems like every mother's child, grandmother, pappy, poppy and shirt - tail cousin remembers their favorite «best ever» quick bread, and the person who made it for them too.
I remember my grandmother telling me my hands were too hot (have always had very warm hands) and that I killed the yeast.
I've never really eaten the gingerbread though (so sorry now), I would nibble a bit on them, but basically I would just keep them for months and showed them to anybody who cared to look at them, until they would get rock - hard and my other grandmother would throw them away eventually... They were just too pretty and fancy decorated to eat...
My grandmother would make this in the fall too, but she added zucchini to it.
My Grandmother made these all the time, and then I found out out that my mother in law made them too.
It's is amazing as always when I try your recipes, the chicory reminded me of my old grandmother who also cooked her chicory grinds too.
What great memories of your grandmother and her sauce too.
I too remember molasses cookies from my childhood - my grandmother's store bought though.
That recipe is pretty similar to my Great - Grandmother's too.
I have a few cookbooks from my grandmother actually, everyday meals I would not make and don't find inspiring too.
But family and personal history are important too, as Penny Spooner explained, «My key inspiration came from my Grandmother who always served up a traditional English tea from a small trolley laden with cake stand, china cups and saucers, beautiful spoons and tea plates... I love to make things that can go on the table at a meal time and just make a meal that little bit more special».
That your grandmother's cooking was too rich for good health.
For the grandmother who desperately wants the world to believe she's too young to have a grandchild.
As a great - grandmother now, maybe my suggestions can help the younger generations I come in contact with make wise decisions, too.
Mother's Day is fast approaching and you can use these services to create fun gifts for the grandmothers, too!
«My grandmother was a burlesque dancer in the»30s, and she took her crochet wherever she went,» said Whaley, a bartender at Mother's Too.
She can also watch grandmothers, aunts, cousins or even other siblings too to see them go to the bathroom as well.
I like what you said about having more time to spend as a family, I'm hoping that I'll get to be a great grandmother one day too!
When my mother's youngest sister was a year or two old, my grandmother would give her RC Cola in a baby bottle (this was in the early 60s, so not too long after the 7Up ad above).
: a Critical History Of Maternity Care by Marjorie Tew Easy Exercises For Pregnancy by Janet Balaskas Home Birth: Comprehensive Guide to Planning Childbirth at Home by Nicky Wesson Morning Sickness: a Comprehensive Guide to the Causes and Treatments by Nicky Wesson Every Woman's Birthrights by Pat Thomas Giving Birth by Sheila Kitzinger Spiritual Midwifery by Ina May Gaskin Our Babies, Ourselves: How Biology and Culture Shape the Way We Parent by Meredith Small Becoming a Grandmother by Sheila Kitzinger Not Too Late: Having a Baby After 35 by Gill Thorn Natural Baby by Janet Balaskas Child Birth Doesn't Have to Hurt by Nikki Bradford and Geoffrey Chamberlain Birth Your Way by Sheila Kitzinger The Birth Book by Carol Barbar and Jane Palmer The Complete Baby and Toddler Meal Planner by Annabel Karmel Breastfeeding by Sheila Kitzinger
We don't have the intergenerational culture of the good ole days when you introduced solid foods to your baby or got him to sleep the way that your mother and grandmother and aunts told you too.
I'd serve them to my grandmother and my sister... the older sister I was supposed to have, who was taken to heaven too soon, I'd serve them to my babies I never got to hold.
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