Just a blog about my daily life. Loving Jesus through feast and famine, learning ways to be more frugal, coping through pregnancy loss and infertility, surviving bankruptcy and foreclosure, operating a barely-profitable pizza franchise, homeschooling an attention-deficient first-grader, being the loving wife of a man from a WAY different culture, and other little dibs and dabs that may or may not interest anyone but me.
Monday, May 17, 2010
My Unhealthy Fascination
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6 comments:
Jessica is buried in a cemetary that has been in use since before the Civil War. Over the last 24 yrs, I have often walked through the old part, reading the names/dates on the old stones. MANY of those stones show that BOTH mother & infant share the same death dates. The practice of medicine has come a long way.
Jessica is actually in an older section of the cemetary, we buried her in a vacant family plot next to Ty's gr-parents. There is a very old, 3"x5" stone next to her that simply says, "Infant Parsons."
On a side note...old cemetaries can be fascinating. Once we took butcher paper out to one of our visits to Jessica's grave & I had the girls go to the old part, pick a stone, do a rubbing of it & come back home & write a fictional story about that person.
Blessings, Kim<><
Have you been to the old Knoop Farm that is now the main office of the Miami County Parks? They have a beautiful old family cemetary. I believe the Knoops were one of the first, if not the first family settled in the county. You should check it out.
The cemetery where Carleigh is buried has some old stones. One day Kyndra and I walked around and just looked at them all. I counted at least 24 stones of children 2 and under (both new and old). I kinda wonder too how it was back then.
beautiful pictures! I can't imagine that those women would have delt with their pain in any other way.
Hope your day is going well.
baby loss was beyond taboo back then. You were almost told not to have another child if you lost a child back then. What times we live in now.
old cemeteries are both beautiful and tragic. they way they mix history and family and faith and grief is absolutely breathtaking.
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