Watermelon Seeds

Annie threading a needle 

While threading the needle to sew Sacha's worn jeans I asked Annie if she had any tender memories of living during World War II? If there was any light in that dark passage. Anything that reminded her of beauty when life around them was so unfair and off-balance.

Focusing on sewing 

Annie kept her eye on the thread and needle, "Of course, there were tender moments, we had each other. Our family moved from Marseilles (which was heavily bombed) to our country house. We were lucky to have a garden, my mother planted lentils. We had plenty to eat. We exchanged food from our garden for other things we needed.

labor of love 

 

Annie went on to say that during that time she was barely twenty and pregnant with her first child.

"One of my activities was to walk down to the village and exchange some of our produce

for whatever my family might have needed.

 

old hands 

 

On the other side of the village, there was a man who grew watermelons. Whenever he saw me in the village he would race back to his garden to give me one. Can you imagine how wonderful it was to have a watermelon? It was such a rare treat. They were not very big, but they were sweet, and you know I have a thing for fruit. Mon Dieu, I prefer fruit over bonbons. 

 

the gift of Annie 

 

Whenever, he would give me a watermelon he would say, "This is for your baby. Your baby needs to taste sweetness." I was surrounded by such generosity. I think being pregnant brought out the best in the people around me. Seeing my big belly gave them hope, made them reflect on the wonders of life… or something like that… instead of the hardships of war."

 

Annie sewing

 

I would lug that watermelon, the supplies I had exchanged from our produce, and my big belly to the river. The river is on the outskirt of the village, Annie's home was on the other side and up a steep hill. Then, I would sit by the plantain tree, you know the one at the end of your street, and I would crack that watermelon open, grab the heart and eat it. Funny, after all these years, I can recall the watermelon juice running down my face. It didn't bother me in the least. It was a luxury, sweet juice running down my face between my breast to my pregnant belly.

Note: This is one of my favorite stories of Annie's. When Annie she told this story I felt transported to another time when her memory was living, and her body was young and ripe. It showed me Annie and how she was full, ripe, sweet, and with many seeds of hope.

 

 



Comments

54 responses to “Watermelon Seeds”

  1. I love these stories and her pictures.
    They remind me of the stories of my precious Grandmother.
    You learn so much through the wisdom of those that have walked many steps in life.

  2. …reading this this morning…way across the sea…i think that annie is like the man who gave her the watermelon…her sweet story and her wisdom are precious gifts at a time when our country…and our world…are feeling rather frantic and depressed…to think on gentle gifts giving with a generous heart toward the future is exactly what we should all be doing…thank you for sharing the “seeds”…if we are willing to look…the past always has something to give to today.. and to tomorrow…

  3. Would we be able to endure like that? And be able to recall such sweetness? I am from the seeds of people like Annie (my grandmothers name, too) but I have such doubts of being able to be as good. I remember threading my grandmothers needles before school. She could barely see to thread a needle and still did beautiful crewel work. I was usually in a hurry (too big a hurry to slow down much) and she’d wait patiently in our room for me to stop and help her out. And then we’d talk.

  4. Old people have so much to tell us, if we only would listen. What is strange to me with the elderly people, is that with age even the saddest moments are covered with a dust of sweetness……

  5. Jeanette McCabe

    I think today I will eat my fruit more slowly, more gratefully. If there is juice, I might let it run down my face. Thank You for sharing Annie with us. I adore her.

  6. Jend’isère

    Thank you for enforcing my feeling how with age we become so in touch with our relation with Earth. I will make my daughter read this. Her grandmother has told her how she marveled over an orange she saw for the first time after WWII as a girl in Sweden.

  7. Gratitude and Appreciation for the true treasures of the earth!
    Joanny

  8. This is so precious.
    Colette

  9. Ah, dear Corey, this is so precious, so golden.

  10. What an amazing woman. You are lucky to have her as a friend. Her story is so humbling. Not just a watermelon but a sweet life when everthing around her was sour. Can’t wait to hear more. Have a sweet day!

  11. Thank you Corey, for sharing Annie’s stories with us. Your descriptions are so beautifully phrased.

  12. She is such a cool lady, and you’ve rendered her story beautifully. By juxtaposing it with the stills of her mending the jeans, and your telling us she didn’t look up as she spoke, it’s almost as if she is *right here* and I”m listening to her myself.
    What a writing gift you have (as well as an appreciation for beauty and the important things in life). In fact, as we all tell you here all the time, you are an immensely gifted lady! Thank you for sharing those gifts with us day in and day out.

  13. We all need to be aware of recording these oral histories before they are lost to time. Annie is a treasure.
    – Suzanne, the Farmer’s Wife

  14. Oh she reminds me of my neighbor friend who I wrote about this week. We are lucky to find these gems here in France aren’t we?

  15. What beautiful images your story has conjured up in my mind…..thank you for this sweet start to my day!

  16. Oh Corey such a beautiful touching post!
    Pinkie

  17. Her stories should be in a litte book.
    Very lovely.
    Rosemary

  18. Linda Hanselman

    I loved this story. My mother was from the area around Limoges and during the war had to travel to occupied Paris for a job to support her family. I loved her stories about France and the war. She met my father as an American soldier and even worked for him in the restaurants the Americans ran to feed both the military and the public. My mother had stories of traveling from unoccupied to occupied France, being picked up by the SS, air raids and having to go underground to the metro, and most of all the sweet love affair that began a 56 year marriage to a handsome American soldier. This is why I love France and the French. Her strength that got her through all the turmoil of the war and then to leave her family and come to the US and start a new life is what give me the strength to deal with my lifes minor problems. She was a tour de force in my life. You should get as many stories from WWII surviors as we are losing them rapidly. My mother died in ’02 and I still miss her everyday. Les embraces tres forte a Madam Annie!

  19. Toni Mason

    As I said before, you are soooo lucky to have Annie!!

  20. Can you bring Annie with you when you do the bike tour of the U.S.? Isn’t that a picture? Two women in a sidecar! I love your stories about her and the pictures of her angelic face and beautiful hands. Hands that have served her family for a long time and are still being useful. Thanks for sharing her with us.

  21. I love hearing your stories of Annie. They are full of hope and love. So much to be learned at the feet of those who have lived longer than we have.
    How’s Daisy doing?

  22. I too felt transported in your telling of it. (Movie script in the mixer Corey? It would be a lovely one.) I was deeply touched by Annie’s recollection that her unborn baby gave the war torn village hope, and that juice running down her face was luxurious, luxury being a rare commodity during that time. We are so spoiled with luxury every day that we don’t oft take notice. Beautiful post. It will stick in my heart today.

  23. What a sweet story…she is a precious jewel.

  24. Carol Kitchell

    Beautiful! I have friends from Spain and Germany. My grandmother was from Poland. What evocative stories these women, including your Annie, tell.

  25. Reading about Annie gives me HOPE. Thank you for sharing her with me, especially at this time in my life.

  26. Will Annie please adopt me? She reminds me of my late Grandmothers and her stories and knowledge are incredible. Thank you for sharing your friendship with this special lady, Corey.

  27. What a great looking poster child for NINETY YEARS YOUNG. You see her heart in her smile. My Gram lived to 103. An amazing woman, who would share stories from another age. There’s much to be learned from these gifts they share. You are blessed to have Annie in your life and I’m blessed that you are sharing a bit of her this day. Please give her one of those European kisses on the cheek for me.

  28. What a lovely story. You have a real treasure in Annie.

  29. What a wonderful gift you have in your friend, treasure her and continue to tell us her stories, Margaret

  30. Thank you Corey and Annie.
    I’m glad her stories are being recorded.

  31. Living history! What a treasure Annie is!

  32. What a lovely story. I, too, feel transported hearing it. I don’t have any older women in my life to tell me these stories. You are very lucky to know Annie!

  33. I don’t know why, but this made me cry. Happy tears, I think, for a lived well lived and bold beauty in the face of terror. Also with sadness and missing. I was very pregnant a year ago and witnessing the kindness of strangers. On March 21 it will be one year since we lost our son, so…oh, it’s coming and I can feel it and I’m sitting here crying because of it all. Aaaahh. This life.
    _______________________
    Tamara
    My prayers are with you. I am sorry for your tender heart, and lost of your baby. If I could i would hug you…know that I am spiritually.
    Corey

  34. Christine Allen

    Another great piece. You ROCK !

  35. Lovely storytelling Annie and Corey.

  36. oh God. What a told, told so well. So rich and meaningful. Thank you.

  37. Looking at the photos of Annie remind me of all the mental “photos” I have of my Grandmother threading her needle ready to mend something. The stories she told of her youth – I too could see her young and strong and full of life. Please give Annie a big hug for me and thank her for reminding me of the memories I have that keep my Grandma close.

  38. Annie….one of life’s treasures for sure.

  39. I really love your Annie. Thank you for sharing her and her stories.

  40. Barbara Sydney Australia

    Oh Corey, I look at Annie’s wonderful hands and I see my darling (late) Mother’s hands. Hands that seem able do it all. Strong, capable but most of all gentle. When Mum would knead dough or sew a button the result was always fabulous. When she soothed a babe or caressed your cheek you new you were safe and loved.
    Thank you for sharing your Annie, God bless her.

  41. In troubled times we all need to taste sweetness, but especially the little ones whose future we hold the key to.

  42. Annie’s stories are magical and real at the same time…
    Thank you.

  43. Ed in Willows

    Just a note……..Daisey is home from the hospital…WOOHOO !!!

  44. Bonnie Buckingham

    Beautiful Corey…as I’m reading a book
    called Lest Innocent Blood Be Shed …about Le Chambon in France during WWII.
    Bonnie

  45. I suppose this is how people felt when Charles Dickens was writing his stories in magazines…to be continued.
    Thank you for sharing more of Annie.
    Garden & Be Well, XO Tara

  46. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if everybody had an Annie in their life. Lucky Sacha to have his worn jeans repaired by such loving hands……and I love the seeing her hankie tucked into her sleeve.

  47. Thank you for sharing Annie with us.
    I love her hands.I can picture her under that tree as though I were standing across the street from her.
    You have a good partnership there.
    hugs to you both
    xx

  48. What a wonderful story. I enjoyed the story about Annie and the roses too! She seems like quite the character. Aren’t you lucky to have her as your neighbor!

  49. I could listen for hours…..

  50. Elaine L.

    This is such a wonderful story. Wouldn’t it be wonderful to interview other survivors of the war, like Annie and compile a photo journal with their stories?!
    These rare gems won’t be here for much longer and their stories will be lost to but a few.
    ~elaine~

  51. I was so sorry to have the story end. I could listen for days. Love to Annie – and to you.
    xo Isa

  52. Corey, wonderful story, wonderfully told. There is a wonderful message in that story about giving and receiving. After all of these years Annie continues to be touched by someone’s kindnesss and a simple gift that means as much to her today as it did then. One should never forget that we have the ability to give to another, out of our abundance or precious few, something that could mean the world to someone else. Now, Annie is sharing her stories with some of us from all around the world and giving us the precious gift of hope and continuity in what could become very perilous times.

  53. What a beautiful memory–it brought tears to my eyes! Tell her thank you from the bottom of my heart for sharing her story. Slice of life stories like this are so precious to me and I will think of her next time I eat watermelon!

  54. How lucky are you both to have such a good friendship. It’s interesting, isn’t it, how as we get older, age seems to disappear when it comes to friendships? Annie is a good storyteller and I can also envision the watermelon man and Annie lugging that watermelon up a hill.

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