Clay Times FREE PREVIEW Issue Vol. 21 No. 100 | Page 49

BY KELLY SAVINO J ust short of 100 years ago in a small Michigan town, while the snow swirled outside the hospital window, a newborn baby girl opened her eyes and took her first breath. Her parents counted her fingers and toes, and named her Helen. She was bundled into a handmade quilt next to a large soapstone which had been warmed on a hearth, to keep her comfortable for the long cold buggy ride back to the farm. A baby’s hands are elusive things, floating mysteries that the small brain slowly learns to use, piloting thumb to mouth, gripping a rattle, grasping a mother’s finger. But once they begin to reach, they become our tools for exploring — and changing — the world. My own mom grew up tended by those hands, diapers changed, hair brushed, dresses washed and wrung and hung out to dry, ironed, and buttoned. And still there were cherries and apricots to pick and pit and can, pies to bake, seeds to plant, weeds to hoe, pickles to preserve. And a farm woman’s hands weren’t always doing the pretty chores. Helen’s mother had taught her how to swing a chicken by the head, pluck When I remember being a child on her farm, it is her hands I remember the most. Wrinkled and freck