The Greatest Great-Grandmother
Arlene "Nanny" Kressler
“Pfft, I don’t need it,” Nanny said, swatting the air as she did so, rejecting my mother’s offer to get her a hat, “I won’t be up here long.”
Another thirty or so minutes went by of Nanny and my mother
talking. My mother occasionally offered to get her sun hat from the house and
Nanny refused each time. My mother then asked if Nanny would want to come up and sit on the
deck with her under the umbrella. Since
she was 89 years old at the time, it was difficult for Nanny to do stairs, and
since there was no railing, she would have needed help getting up.
“No, I’m fine standing,” Nanny replied. It was
excruciatingly hot outside, so hot that there was the indescribable smell of
skin beginning to burn, only slightly masked by the smell of chlorine and
sunscreen. The heat made my mom ask if Nanny was sure and offer to help her get up
the stairs. “Yes, I’m sure,” she spouted back, “I’m fine standing.”
My mom and Nanny continued talking while my sister and I got
out of the pool and began putting the toys we had been playing with away. As I
was standing on the opposite side of the pool from the deck, attempting to use
a net to get a pool noodle from the middle of the pool, Nanny began to sway.
She was standing at the bottom of the steps to the deck, facing my mom who was
sitting on the deck, diagonal from Nanny across the stairs.
Suddenly, everything felt like it was moving in slow motion.
Nanny fell backwards, luckily parallel with the pool rather than into it, and
hit her head on the sidewalk. My mother immediately leapt up and grabbed a
towel to hold over Nanny’s head to try to cool her down and give her shade.
As Nanny was laying there, I could see a small amount of blood pooling around
her head.
“Are you okay? Do you know where you are?” My mother frantically
asked.
“Oh, I’m fine,” Nanny stated calmly, “I just got tired and
decided to lay down and take a nap.”
I rushed down to the house to call 911, and an ambulance
came soon after. Once my mother convinced Nanny to get into the ambulance, she
was taken to the hospital where she ended up needing four staples in her head
and they determined that she had a heat stroke. This was one of the many heat
strokes that she had, and each time she denied anything being wrong and
attempted to not go to the hospital for afterwards. There was always an
explanation given as to why she was on the ground and how it was nothing to
worry about, even when she had cracked her head open.
We would share this story, and the many similar stories,
every year for Christmas and Easter when my extended family would gather at Nanny’s
house. Nanny had two children, eight grandchildren, and twenty great-grandchildren,
but she always made each one feel cared for and loved during the
holidays. There was never a year where Christmas gifts felt rushed or generic,
and there were always sweet messages written in the cards. Every Easter she
would have candy, and sometimes money, in eggs that she would hide around the
basement for the kids to find. She was always the main person to cook
everything, and because of that she would hover over shoulders, watching people
get and eat their food, saying, “Eat up. It’s good, I made it,” and, "gotta get it eat."
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| Nanny's 89th Birthday Dinner |
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| Nanny's 95th Birthday |
At least once a week when living with her, she would make Pennsylvania Dutch chicken pot pie and hand make the noodles, because she knew that it was my favorite meal. She rolled out the dough on the kitchen counter, needing to get on her tiptoes as she did so, with strength an 87-year-old woman with arthritis should not have. Once it was finished, she would fill our plates as high as possible while saying, “Eat up. It’s good, I made it,” as she did for Christmas and Easter. She would always get ecstatic when I would ask for seconds. She loved to feed people, and it was a running joke in our family that you can't go to Nanny's house and come back the same weight.
Once my family had found a house in Bloomsburg, we didn't see Nanny quite as often. However, we still went to church with her every Sunday. We would wait in the parking lot for my grandma and Nanny to get there, then I would help walk her in. She hated admitting she needed help and would always say "I can do it!" when I would grab her arm for the stairs. I would then tell her that I knew she could do it, I just wanted to make sure that I could. This would make her laugh and she wouldn't have an issue with getting help if I offered it this way. Even though she knew that I was doing it to help her, she would grab my arm as if she was the one helping me.
Nanny was loved by everyone who met her, and while at most times she had a "my way or the highway" attitude, it was impossible to choose "the highway."



I like what you're doing here with all of the dialogue, it really paints a clear picture and helps the reader understand what specifically happened to make you feel like you're there. Especially with all of the good descriptive writing at the beginning of the blog. I also liked how you included things like "Nanny said swatting the air" this really pains a clear picture of how her reaction really was. At the beginning of the blog I felt like it was so clear the way you described the pool and the wooden deck and the heat of that day. Overall I thought this was a great blog with great anecdotes.
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