Sunday, 12 October 2025

Margaret And Grace

Do you ever find yourself doing something ordinary, and out of the blue, a memory comes flooding back from years ago An incident long forgotten flashes into your mind as fresh as if it were yesterday..
.Storm Amy brought down fruit from our two trees. I collected the windfall, and then picked all the remaining fruit. I had two large bowls full of apples and pears, some a little bruised, and many of the apples with insect holes. And my peeling machine was still in use at my friends house...

Without my gadget it would take forever, especially with all the cutting away the damaged portions. Was it really worth it? So many imperfect fruits -why not just tip the lot in the compost bin?
And I remembered a day in 1982. Bob was a student, Liz was 6 months old - and in the flat upstairs lived another student family. They had just had a second child, and were on the point of moving to a larger flat. I went upstairs to offer help. The weary young Mum said "Can you deal with these apples? An old lady at church sent them to us a couple of days ago. I don't want them, I haven't got enough time to look after the children, get ready to move and peel a load of rotten apples!" She handed me a heavy plastic carrier full of fruit. I carried them back to my kitchen. I was grateful - we were living on the breadline, and free food was wonderful.
I put Liz down for a sleep, then went back to the bag. I tipped it into the washing up bowl. 80% of those apples were bruised, or worm eaten...I wept with frustration. Why would somebody think that was a suitable gift for anyone ? Especially  for a busy mother moving house. It was insulting, and thoughtless...I was about to bag them up again and put them in the bin when somebody knocked at the door. It was Margaret, the wife of one of Bob's college tutors. "I've just been upstairs visiting the new baby, and thought I'd call and see how you were. Are things going OK?" 
I told her I was annoyed about the rubbish apples - and she gently suggested I made a cup of tea, whilst she had a look at them. Maybe the old lady didn't realise how bad they were, she said, and wanted to give a gift to young people training for ministry. If they had been in the bag since Sunday they would have deteriorated, some were imperfect, but not all. Perhaps we could salvage enough for a pie or a crumble. 
While I made tea, then pacified the baby and changed her nappy, Margaret worked cheerfully. She. peeled and trimmed, and soon my biggest saucepan was full of chunks of good apples. She swept the cores and peelings into the bag, and tied it up to go in the bin.
I felt very humbled. I'd seen a bag of imperfect apples, and felt annoyed and ungrateful. She had seen someone's thought and generosity, and found the good and useful fruit.
She had taught me a lesson in grace, that I have never forgotten. 

16 comments:

  1. Years ago I heard a sermon on "Grace is heavenly strength for earthly living". There was a lot of that grace in the situation.

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  2. Too often it is too easy to go off the deep end when someone forces a situation upon one. I do it myself, every time. It takes grace, and a willingness to accept it to turn the situation around, and time to sit and rhi k it through. But worth it, for the blessings and the lessons to carry forward in life. Thank you Ang, and thank you too, 'Frugally Challenged' for your -Trundling through life' post today.

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    1. Yes, i agree, thank you FC for your blessings post.

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  3. The thing is, there's often enough good enough flesh, even on bad apples, to provide food. I have woken up thinking of all the negative things I was saying yesterday even if I was saying some on a humorous way and feeling ashamed. Did anyone need to know I am not fond of Christmas pudding or fruit cake? No? Rather than saying, "Yuck, I hate fruit ycake and Christmas pudding, I could have said nothing or said I prefer savoury. Me and my big moany mouth.

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  4. Sometimes, we have to peel and cut off a lot of rotten apple to find and salvage the good parts, don't we?

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    1. Let us be determined to find the good parts though

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  5. What a lovely story. Thank you for sharing it.

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  6. Margaret taught you about Grace that day because you were a willing learner. You have never forgotten the lesson and it came at a time in your life when you must have been under great joy and stress that a new baby brings. Grace is a quality which seems to be forgotten now in our fast moving competitive world and I will now accept with grace a disappointment which stung me yesterday. Thanks to you and Mary for your wise words today. Catriona

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  7. Somehow this story "got me" and I have tears in my eyes. JanF

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  8. I sometimes feel like that when I look at my windfall apples, bruised and nibbled. But when I start to cut them it's lovely to see just how much good there is in them. Enough for a very nice crumble today!

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    1. Enjoy it! I hope your food is good in these coming days too

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