Milking Joy, a Lesson from a Little Oklahoma Farm

Sleeping in on a Farm can be a Big Mistake

The house was built during the Dust Bowl era and was little more than very thin boards in the shape of a house on an unsealed sandstone foundation.

All winter long, the wind would whistle through the walls and freeze us, many a morning my sister and I woke to find our pajamas or blankets had frozen to the ice on the window glass overnight.

We had a variety of animals, which included everything from chickens, ducks, geese, turkeys, about 30 cats, pigs, horses, goats, sheep, a milking cow or two, and so forth on our tiny five-acre Oklahoma farm.

At the time of this story, we had only one dairy cow. She was a very large Jersey with the biggest, most soulful eyes you can imagine. My mother named her “Joy”.

We were all able to milk our small herd of Nubian dairy goats, but my mother was the only one with the hand strength to milk Joy.

On a farm, everyone has to pull their fair share of the load. Chores must be done, it just is not possible to tell the chickens to wait to be fed until the next day or explain to the horses that they will just have to wait until you feel like filling their water trough. The problem with this was that my mother was not exactly cut out for hard work. She loved to sleep.

One Saturday morning, as usual, we were all struggling to get her up. She was absolutely refusing. Aunt Sue was getting more and more aggravated with her as Joy was in the field bellowing her dismay over being two hours overdue for milking. Poor Joy’s udder was stretched way past the point of maximum capacity. The bedlam building in the farmyard was getting unbearable as Joy’s bellowing got the other animals to join in the mayhem.

We made every attempt we could think of to get my mother out of bed. We even tried lifting her head to look out her window, where she could see Joy looking absolutely miserable out in the field.

Everyone for miles around knew that poor cow was in pain.

Finally, my mother, in rebellion over wanting to sleep and in disgust at us insisting she get up, said the famous words that not one of us ever forgot: “Well, Sue, if you want me to milk Joy, then bring her to me.”

Sue looked at my mother still sprawled in bed, said, “Okay”, and quickly walked away.

My sister and I looked at each other and ran back into my mother’s room. “What is Sue going to do?” we asked. My mother, who was still sprawled in bed, said, “Oh, did she leave? She’s probably going to bring Joy to the window to be funny.”

There was an odd silence across the farmyard. Then we heard the commanding voice of my aunt, “C’mon Joy, c’mon, it’s okay. Don’t be scared, c’mon. Huuup!” And my sister and I shrieked…as Sue walked into the house with a rope…and at the other end of that rope was a COW!!!!!! Coming right into the house, scrapping her large sides on the doorframe as she entered calmly chewing her cud and enjoying being part of a spectacle!

Well, my mother heard the screaming and the very odd sounds that sounded remarkably like a large animal coming into the house and I heard her say, “NO! She didn’t!!!!” She came bounding out of her room just in time to see a grinning Sue and a HUGE cow standing in our tiny rectangular-shaped kitchen. Sue calmly (although chuckling) said, “Well, you said to bring her to you!”

Chaos erupted. My mother is yelling to get the cow out of the house, my sister and I are still shrieking, and the cow is starting to get that look on her face…you know the I’m-about-to-make-a-large-deposit look? And Sue just can’t stop laughing as she tells my mother she’d better hurry up and milk the cow before something bad happens!

Well, Mother finally gets Sue to agree to get the cow out of the house. But, there was a problem. We learned that day that cows don’t back up! And Sue, so tickled over her joke, had not thought about how to get the cow OUT OF THE HOUSE!!

We had a backdoor, but it was so narrow and there was an extremely sharp turn to navigate before getting to it. No one thought Joy could possibly do it, including Joy who shook her head “no” when they made their first try to get her around the bend and through the door.

So there we were with a cow stuck in the house! They didn’t want to call friends for help because we were already known for getting into weird jams (wonder why!) and they didn’t want the entire town of 1,500 (counting chickens, too) to enjoy our predicament. They certainly had no intention of calling Betty, our dairy farmer friend, and explaining why we had a cow in the house. Poor Betty was known for laughing so hard at our antics that she’d start crying helplessly with laughter and be unable to talk anyway!

The cow won’t go backward. The cow won’t go forward. But the cow is DEFINITELY looking like it’s going to “go”!

They decided that we all had to be quiet to calm the cow (which confused me because the cow was the ONLY one who did look calm!) and get her out. With Sue pulling the lead, my mother pushing poor Joy’s butt, and her and Sue both trying to push in the cow’s sides to get her through the door, it was quite a sight! They finally succeeded in getting Joy through the first doorway, managed to BEND the poor cow around the corner (remember, this is a FULL size Jersey cow and she is a BIG girl), and finally out the back door…to where there was a tiny cement porch that measured approximately 2 feet by 1 foot. Cows are much bigger than 2 feet by 1 foot.

Poor Joy, she got to that point, tried to navigate the tiny steps, gave up and jumped/scrambled/fell to the ground, where she returned to calmly chewing her cud. Sue looked at my mother and said with ever so slight a smile, “Well, are you going to milk her here or do I need to bring her back in?”

Through gritted teeth, my mother responded, “I’ll milk her here.” So she sat on a back step, in her pajamas, and milked the cow while Sue held the lead. The whole time my mother milked Joy, Sue told Joy what a wonderful cow she was and that she was sorry Joy had to go through so much.

It was about a week before my mother’s jaw unclenched and a year before she forgave everyone. But she never insisted on staying in bed again! From then on, to get her up, we would just say, “moooooooo!”

(For a mental picture of the cow in our kitchen: The kitchen was rectangular with our eating table on one side and cupboards on the other, leaving an open area that was only one cow wide and about three cows long. Yeah, after that, we kind of started measuring everything in cows, not feet and inches!)

To share this or to leave a comment, please click on the title at the top of this post. Thank you!

Copyright 2017 A. Barnes | All Rights Reserved.

The Way Back Game

If someone in your life is suffering from Alzheimer’s or dementia, you don’t have to struggle to make them live in the present day. Use this game instead, and discover the joy that will rise above your sorrow.

When my aunt was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, she was several states away. It wasn’t until she was well into it that she was moved to the state I was living in and I once again got to see her on a regular basis. It was quickly apparent, though, that it was too late for us to have anything close to the already less-than-perfect relationship we once had.

I grieved and did what a lot of people do, on every visit I tried to get her to recognize me, to bring her back to the present, to get her to comprehend where and when she was. It caused us both to grieve even more, her in deep confusion and me over the last chance to connect with her.

There was a lot of stress for both of us and shouting (on her part). She fought everything around her in every way she could.

For me, the pain was unbearable. It was a lot like seeing a once-great race horse struggle to stand in the quicksand of age and fail to even get off its knees. The confusion in her eyes and her attempts to cover it up were heart wrenching.

Then one day I accidentally discovered that there still was a way for us to connect and to share a whole new world.

When I would arrive for a visit with her, I could easily tell when she didn’t recognize me. Those were the hardest visits, but the game I created helped me swallow my pain as I watched her fade.

We ended up naming it the Way Back Game.

It started with me asking how she was, then I would tell her that we were going to play the Way Back Game and go waaaay back, to as far back as she could remember.

“Oh, boy, “ she would say every time, and, after a slight pause, “How far are we going?” I’d smile because she sounded like a timid child boarding a train. “Well, how far back can we go? Can we go back to when you used to train horses?” And she would happily go on the trip with me and we would go back in time to a place she could easily remember.

What was amazing was how it would lead to all kinds of wonderful stops along the way, as well as the discovery of some very old, hidden secrets that should have been shared long ago.

Our game helped her feel at ease because I wasn’t making her be “now”, she didn’t have to struggle to remember the present or even who I was. She could go to any time she wanted and live there for a little while, usually we traveled to when she was young and strong.

While it helped her, it helped me, too. I knew only small scraps of her history. I had to guess and try to use a scrap of what I knew as her ticket for the Way Back train. I learned so much about her, her history. So many things I didn’t know. Her story would come to life in the air around us, as her body was slowly giving up.

One morning the phone rang and it was a nurse at the nursing home telling me that my aunt had “expired.” I remember not understanding because all I could think of was that she was not a library book that was overdue.

After she died, the Way Back Game is what I ended up missing most, not the present-day her who could no longer walk, who had strong flashes of anger and rage, who cried because she wanted to go home or to have a pet dog.

She died several years ago and to this day, I miss our Way Back Game. It was a way to connect and learn and to find a treasure in the middle of all of the pain and loss. In those moments, she found her greatness again and her eyes would come alive with the snap of defiance that she once had carried so proudly.

Even though she would often not know me when we played the game, I could recognize her and that meant the world to me and eased the heartbreak of being lost to her.

I share this with the hope that there is someone else who would like to play the Way Back Game and learn that there can still be joy and lessons to be shared. The train is waiting, all you have to do is climb aboard.

To share this or to leave a comment, please click on the title at the top of this post. Thank you!

Copyright 2017 A. Barnes | All Rights Reserved.

A Hamster, a Gravesite, and a Secret

It all started solemly enough.

Cinders, a wonderful, large black hamster was much beloved by the children of the house. He had a long hammy life and had one day passed quietly, much as he had lived, except for the times his wheel banged on the side of his cage all night long.

It was DECIDED by the youngest children, as only they can DECIDE such things, that there would be a burial, and the funeral procession was planned.

A hole was dug at the base of a tree so his body would provide food for the tree.

Lovingly wrapped in a tissue and placed gently in his grave, Cinders was sprinkled with flowers and words, and dirt was replaced in the hole. A rock was placed on top to further mark his grave.

It was about three days later that the kids’ dad arrived to pick them up. They decided to tell daddy all about the passing of dear Cinders and to take him out to the grave so he also could pay his respects.

For some reason, I was walking far ahead of them and got to the gravesite first. To my great dismay, what was there was no longer the tidy grave we had left.

The grave had been dug up and Cinders was absolutely, completely missing. If I had not been so sure he was dead when we buried him, I would have sworn he had dug his way out and walked off to find a home where people wouldn’t put dirt and rocks on him.

Since the grave was behind the garage, no one else had yet seen, and I knew the youngest children would be devastated to find out Cinders had been removed from his grave by the ever-enterprising outdoor cats.

By then the oldest kids had arrived at the grave, they had trouble comprehending at first what had happened. Then they, too, realized we had to do SOMETHING before the youngest ones arrived.

I sprinted to their dad, who was making rather quick progress to the gravesite, and I whispered, “Delay!” It took several attempts before he finally understood that he was to plant his feet and not move. Luckily, he and the youngest children were by a flower garden so a discussion about flowers began as I tried to casually sprint back to the gravesite.

With the help of the older kids, we kept lookout for any wayward kids who might leave the ever-so-fascinating discussion of flowers, scootched dirt wildly back into the grave and re-located the rock (at this point I’m thinking that cat must have been very determined to get that hamster), and tried to locate whatever remained of the body.

We finished fixing the grave just as the others approached, apparently forgetting the “don’t move” request.

“See, Daddy? We buried Cinders right here, didn’t we, Mommy?”

I started to sweat, the kids knew that I didn’t lie to them, but they were too young to understand or forgive the edibleness of Cinders to the cats.

“Uh, yes, yes we did, we buried Cinders right there.”

“See, Daddy? See how we fixed it for him? That’s where Cinders is, right, Mommy?”

I attributed the drip of sweat running down my spine to the hot summmer day as the older kids casually walked the area, still looking for the body or any parts that might remain.

“That is right where we put him,” I said, watching the older kids out of the corner of my eye. “That’s absolutely where we left him.”

The youngest children nodded their heads sagely. I was off the hook, and the older kids were sworn to secrecy.

It was years later when we finally told the youngest ones the whole story of how Cinders had fed a cat instead of a tree.

After the initial surprise wore off, they agreed with the way it was handled and understood they were protected from further heartbreak, but they were amazed so much had happened behind the scenes that day.

We never did find any part of Cinders, and I am forever grateful for that!

To share this or to leave a comment, please click on the title at the top of this post. Thank you!

Copyright 2017 A. Barnes | All Rights Reserved.