Monthly Archives: May 2026

The Smells and Sounds of Childhood

I was always hungry as a little girl.

Not the kind of hungry a snack fixes. The kind that settles into your bones when you’re small and poor and there’s not much in the refrigerator.

So when I think back to the smells of my childhood, the first one that finds me isn’t café con leche or a pot of arroz con pollo bubbling on a Sunday afternoon. It’s a hot dog. Frying. In the middle of the night.

I couldn’t have been more than five or six years old. I was home alone, which wasn’t unusual back then, and I had fallen asleep, waiting. I heard the door open in the wee hours of the morning. Mama and my stepfather were home from a night out. Still tipsy. Loud in the way grown-ups get home late at night when they think the little ones are asleep.

Half asleep, I called out the only thing on my mind.

Mama. I’m hungry.

She grumbled, surprised that I was still awake. But she went straight to that hotplate and started frying me a hot dog. When my stepfather asked her to make him one too, she put him right in his place.

Hold your horses.

Me first.

In her own imperfect way, she chose me that night. Eyes barely open, I ate that hot dog in bed like it was a feast. Because it was.


But the smells and sounds that shaped me most came later, in a small two-bedroom apartment in sunny Miami, where I lived with my maternal grandparents for three precious years.

At the time, I thought that was just life. I didn’t realize until much later that those three years would become the safest years of my childhood.

I knew I was loved there before I even opened my eyes in the morning. I could hear: the soft clattering of dishes in the kitchen, my grandmother up and moving, already starting the day good before it began. And near the curtain window, the soothing sound of doves cooing somewhere near by. And always, always, the aroma of Spanish coffee.

On the radio, Paul Harvey’s warm, unhurried voice filled the room. And now… the rest of the story. Even the radio felt steady in that house.


My grandfather was a man of few words. Strong, quiet, and deeply loving toward my grandma. He didn’t cook; that was entirely Grandma’s domain, but he showed up in every other way a man can. Every morning, he walked me to school. Every afternoon, he walked me home. No big speeches. No lessons announced. He allowed me to speak, asking how my day went. Just his presence, steady as a heartbeat, beside me on the sidewalk while I chatter along.

He read the Bible every day and the newspaper front to back. And every Sunday on the city bus after church, without fail, he took us to a cafeteria for lunch and then to the Public Library in downtown Miami, where we’d spend hours just wandering among books. Looking back, I think that was his way of showing me the world.


And Grandma.

She cooked three warm meals a day, every single day. I didn’t know until I was older that she wasn’t the best cook. It didn’t matter. To a little girl who had gone to bed hungry more times than she could count, three warm meals a day felt like abundance. Like being rich.

If you didn’t finish your plate, there was no dessert. Simple as that.

But what I remember most about Grandma wasn’t the food. It was the sound of her. She hummed gospel songs through everything, while ironing on the aluminum table on laundry day, at the sewing machine, at her big black typewriter, or crocheting in her rocker. Worship wasn’t just for Sundays with Grandma. She hummed while doing everything … always moving, making something, doing for others, always grateful.


And on Sundays, we dressed in our best.

I didn’t have many dresses. But what I had was always cleaned and pressed. Grandma made sure of that. We walked into church looking like we belonged there, because she believed we did.

The church was our source of strength. Comforting and encouraging in a way that held us together through the week. And I would watch my grandmother in the pew, her eyes glistening with tears she didn’t bother to wipe away. She wasn’t performing. She was just… grateful. Deeply, quietly, overflowingly grateful to God.

I didn’t fully understand it then. But I was watching faith with skin on it. And it was leaving its mark on me.


I was sent back to live with Mama when I was twelve. That chapter is its own story, and not an easy one.

But I still carry the memories with me. The soft sheets between my toes. The cooing of the doves outside my window. The coffee aroma. Paul Harvey’s mellow voice. My grandfather’s footsteps beside mine. And my grandmother’s humming over daily household chores.

Those smells and sounds didn’t just shape my childhood.

They shaped my faith.

What smells and sounds take you back to your own childhood? I’d love to hear your stories in the comments below.

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Filed under Faith Journey, Personal

Honoring the Fallen: A Memorial Day Tribute

Memorial Day is a time to remember and honor the brave men and women who gave their lives in service to our nation. Today, we especially honor the memory of my husband’s uncle, who made the ultimate sacrifice while serving his country. He was only 27 years old. He died when his aircraft was shot down. His courage, devotion, and selflessness will never be forgotten.

Behind every gravestone is more than a hero; a beloved son, daughter, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, friend, or loved one whose life touched many others. Their memory lives on in the hearts of those who loved them, and we remember them with gratitude and honor. May we never forget the price paid for the freedoms we enjoy each day.

All gave some. Some gave all.

As Scripture reminds us:

“Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.” ~ John 15:13

Today, we also pray for the families who carry both pride and sorrow in their hearts. May God comfort those who mourn, bless the souls of the fallen, and remind us never to take their sacrifice for granted.

Freedom is never free.
Today, we remember, honor, and give thanks.
Gone, but never forgotten. 🇺🇸

Gravestone for Milton Keith McNulty, 1st Lieutenant US Marine Corps, Vietnam veteran with American flag and wreath
The gravestone of Milton Keith McNulty (my husband’s uncle), a US Marine Corps 1st Lieutenant from Montana who served in Vietnam

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Filed under patriotism

A Daughter’s Reflection

Mama:

She wasn’t the kind of woman people called strong.

She didn’t command a room or always make the wisest choices. She didn’t have the steady confidence I sometimes envied in other mothers.

My mama was flawed in ways that showed. Tender in places where life had been anything but gentle. And somehow, without either of us planning it, I became the strong one.

I stepped into that role way too young, long before I knew what it meant. A role never meant for a daughter, let alone a child. I became her steady ground. Her confidant. Her shield. And slowly, quietly, I started mothering my own mama.

I learned to read her eyes and knew when she was hurt or afraid. I carried feelings too heavy for a child to hold. I filled in gaps I didn’t even have words for yet. My childhood ended before it really got started.

And yet, it shaped me. It made me responsible. Watchful. Tougher than I wanted to be. But it also left me tired in ways I wouldn’t understand until years later.

Still … she was my mama. And I loved her. We all did.

Love doesn’t always grow where it’s supposed to. Sometimes it pushes through the hardest places and blooms anyway. Because God knows how to make something beautiful out of what’s been broken. Mama may not have modeled the kind of strength others admire. But she gave me something deeper without meaning to: space to find my own strength. I learned to recognize fragility up close. A kind of empathy I had to discover on my own. And grit, because someone had to hold the line. And when mine ran out, I learned to lean on God.

Loving a parent who couldn’t fully be there for you is a tender, kind of tangled ache. It isn’t resentment or blame. It’s a quiet knowing. I always knew she loved me, and she knew I loved her. And I believe she did the best she could with what she had. Even if what she had fell short. What she couldn’t give, God supplied. He filled the gaps with His grace, His presence, and the way He kept showing up for me.

Mama had six of us. She was ours—flawed, fragile, human, and deeply loved. She wasn’t perfect, and neither was I. But we were perfect for each other.

Missing her today reminds me that even fragile love can grow into something good in God’s hands. What she couldn’t give, God provided. It didn’t happen overnight. In the places that felt unfinished, God planted healing, resilience, and a deeper faith. I wouldn’t know this kind of faith without that journey.

It may not be everyone’s story. But it’s mine. And it shaped me.

If you’re missing someone complicated and imperfect today, I hope you feel seen. Love doesn’t have to be flawless to shape us.

I’m missing my mama today.

Happy Mother’s Day, Mama. I’m still here because of you—

carrying the grit you placed in me,

held by God’s grace,

with a heart full of memories.

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Filed under Mother's Day, motherhood, Parentification