Monday, January 19, 2015
My previous history posts
Monday, November 11, 2013
HELP! I'M LOST ON BLOGGER- and "Downtown" ain't what it used to be.
When I worked in downtown Birmingham during the 1950s, I would go out shopping or eating out someplace at lunchtime and quite often in order to find the way back to my office, I would walk a block to street marker then a block to an avenue marker to see which way I needed to walk, north, south, east or west to get back to my office in the Birmingham News Building. My entrance was through a revolving door of the main lobby at 2200, 4th Avenue North.
It's not that easy on the computer. I don't know which way to go right now to re-post my Published Works that I deleted a few days ago. I copied them from google+, but now can't find how to paste them where they belong.
And while I was on google+ I "violated" some rules I started trying to fix and knocked myself off someway. AND I need to be proof-reading my final proof for THE MISTAKEN HEIRESS, due back to my editor at Heartsong next week.
Can anyone tell me how to get back to my "office" on Blogger--which used to seem easier as DASHBOARD--where I can paste my PUBLISHED WORKS again? And I will see if I can fix what I violated on google+.
THANKS SO MUCH TOO ANY KIND SOUL WHO CAN AND WILL HELP ME OUT.
Shelba Shelton Nivens
Saturday, August 17, 2013
Romance,true love and debut novel
A seventy-six-year-old's debut romance novel?
Yes. who should know better about romance and true love than a woman who's been married to the same man for fifty-eight years, and is still in love with him?
It was a chicken wishbone at my grandma's house--we called it a "pulley bone" back then--that started it all, even before he gave me flowers (from a florist, no less) for my tenth birthday. That, too, was at my grandma's house next door to my family.
You can read the pulley bone story on a previous blog post.
The flowers came from his aunt's and uncles flower shop, Mable's Florist in Besseemer, Alabama. I think they were carnations. I remember they were in a ceramic vase that was a little girl who had a basket of flowers on her back. I don't know what became of the vase, but I still have the card that was with it.
Kenneth was really bashful around girls. A cousin had told me he didn't like girls. But he was with his daddy who, along with my grandma and some teenage cousins, wanted me to marry him someday. So I imagine his daddy prompted him to give me the flowers.
My grandmother, a cousin, three of my then-five siblings, and I, all had birthdays in July, so we would have an ice cream party together in Grandma's backyard. We had gathered there when Kenneth and his daddy--Mr. Murray, we kids called him--got to the party (Mr. Murray boarded with my grandparents). And Kenneth walked up to me, turned his head, and said, "here."
See how romantic he was, even back then at barely thirteen-years-old?
Saturday, July 30, 2011
COURTIN' IN THE GOOD, OLE DAYS: Frank and Ressie Vick Kendrick
Ressie’s family was from Joiner Town between Columbiana and old East Saginaw, which is now part of Chelsea. But her father George Vick moved the family around a lot, she said, following his work with a timber-cutting operation. That’s how they came to live at East Saginaw where she met Frank Kendrick.
They didn’t actually play together as children, Ressie said, because they were both very bashful. But Frank found ways to get her attention.
She recounted with a smile, while Frank just listened and grinned, “One day I was out in the yard washing clothes for Mama’s twin babies, when directly something shined in my face, and it was him out on the porch with a mirror.”
“Do you remember the first letter I ever wrote you?” he asked her.
She did, of course, but he told the story anyway for my benefit -- and because he was enjoying their remembrances as much as Ressie and I were.
“It was when I was a teenager and worked for Saginaw Lumber Company. I would walk right past her house going to the railroad track where I rode on a hand car to the lumber company. Well, on this particular morning, I walked up close to the open front door and tossed a letter to her inside the house.”
Ressie confided that his first talk of marriage was also in a letter. But they later made wedding plans in person, sitting in the parlor at the Vick home. She told him that night, “You’ll have to ask Daddy.”
“Well, you’ll have to go in there with me to ask him,” he told her.
So Ressie agreed and together they headed for the room where Mr. Vick sat. But just as they reached his open doorway, Ressie slipped on by it, leaving Frank to face her father alone.
Sixty-plus years later, sitting under a shade tree with Frank and me, she still found amusement in the trick she’d played that day. “I went out and hid behind the house until the men folk finished their talking.” she laughed.
Frank Kendrick and Ressie Vick were married on July 26, 1908.
Saturday, May 14, 2011
More Rocking Grannies
ROCKING GRANNY REDEFINED
Guice was emcee for the recent pageant I attended -- and about which I wrote in this week’s Chelsea Community column in the Shelby County Reporter (Find it at Shelbanivens,shelbycountyreporter.)
According to their website, Ms. Senior Alabama, Inc is a “non-profit organization designed to enrich the lives of senior women while also allowing them to share their experiences, wisdom, and interests with others.” Winners at the state level go on to compete nationally.
Participants are women sixty years and older, who have “reached the Age of Elegance.” Winners serve as ambassadors, performing for nursing homes, parades, and civic organizations.
Ms. Senior Alabama, Inc. also provides opportunity for inter-generational activities through the presentation of a college scholarship.
“Women grow through the pageants,” Sally Beth Vick, Ms. Senior Alabama 2009, said. “They get to do things they have never done before.”
Monday, March 21, 2011
MY TURN TO CHOOSE
MY TURN TO CHOOSE (a love story)
He is lying very still under the covers, his eyes closed, the bedside light still burning. I slip out of my robe and lean across him to turn out the lamp. But his eyes fly open and his arms come up to pull me close to him.
“I love you,” he says with unexpected fervor.
I snuggle closer and tell him, “I love you, too.”
“Do you?” he asks quietly, holding me even tighter.
“Yes. More than anything on this earth,” I mumble against his chest.
Loosening his hold on me, he looks into my face. “I thought you… loved your writing,” he says, and I can feel his unspoken “more than anything on this earth,” hanging there between us.
I pull free of his embrace. He doesn’t try to hold me. With one arm across his broad, bare chest, I settle down beside him to consider his challenge.
Has my seemingly understanding, liberated guy suddenly become the male chauvinist, asking me to make a decision between him and this mania I have for the written word? Once, long ago, in another time and another place, I recall, I had faced a similar decision with him.
He had known from the beginning -- my charming, young suitor -- that I wanted to be a writer. On our first date, I’d told him of my plans to go to New York right after graduation (that’s where all the big publishing houses were located back then) to seek my fame and fortune in the publishing world.
As a matter of fact, I’d felt that this declaration was the very thing that kept him coming back to take me out every weekend. He was enjoying his freedom far too much to contemplate matrimony. His friend, Don, told me that Ken never dated one girl more than twice because he didn’t want to become involved in a serious relationship.
Growing up on a farm with only his elderly grandmother, Ken had started dating only after graduation from high school and going to live in town with his mother and stepfather. He’d found a job, bought a little second-hand car, and according to Don, discovered that girls really go for the strong, silent type. Much to Ken’s embarrassment, Don even kidded him in front of me about how the girls chased him.
And I’d silently renewed my vow of years before to never give him reason to think I was out to “catch him.”
We were just barefoot kids when Ken came to spend that first summer with his father, who was a boarder at my grandparent’s house. I was accustomed to playing next door in Grandma’s yard with my brothers and male cousins, and when one of the boys told me that Kenneth thought girls were silly, I tried to act like a boy so he would forget that I was a girl.
But when he suddenly showed up again in the neighborhood one evening at the beginning of my senior year in high school, I found myself wanting him to see me as a girl. I think when I told him, “I’m going to have a writing career,” it was more to remind myself than to inform him.
Usually, Ken kissed me goodnight after our dates, but there was no bickering about the heavy stuff as there too often was with other boys. I was truly enjoying our youthful and refreshing relationship. Then on Christmas Eve he’d put a bow from a package in my hair and called me his Christmas present. I found myself wishing that it might be so. But the look in his eyes recalled a challenge from a time in years gone by:
We were playing chase in Grandma’s yard, and I was It.
Chasing a wad of the boys and running with my head down, I saw bare feet scatter in all directions. I continued behind one flying pair without looking up, running and laughing breathlessly. When I was within a few feet of making a tag, the feet in front of me halted. Startled, I stopped, almost colliding with Kenneth at the cow lot fence.
I reached out to tag him, then instinctively withdrew my hand, suddenly conscious of the fact that I was a girl and Kenneth Nivens didn’t like girls.
Laughing, he caught the top rail of the lot fence and sprang over. When I made no move to scamper over after him, the laughter left his eyes to be replaced by a deep, challenging look. “You’re not going to catch me?” he taunted.
So, on a Christmas Eve night around five years later, when he put the bow in my hair, I seemed to read the same challenge in the same dark eyes. But just as I’d done at the cow lot fence, I turned away from him.
After that Christmas Eve night, our goodnight kiss became just a little bit longer and Ken’s arm around my shoulders a little less casual. And I found myself looking forward to warm weather when he would wear short-sleeved shirts, and I could feel his bare arms around me.
At the first sign of spring we put back the top of his newly-acquired convertible and rode through the star-lit evenings laughing, singing and just being happy. I think it was along about the first of May when I decided that instead of going off to New York, it might be best for me to find a job with a smaller publishing establishment closer to home -- and to Ken.
I went to work for a local newspaper (The Birmingham News) as a payroll clerk, hoping to become a reporter. Shortly thereafter, Ken told me he loved me. Laughing and crying I told him I loved him, too.
There was no conflict between writing and being in love. Writing helped to express my love, and finally I could write from my own experiences of the heart instead of from those I heard about or imagined.
Then Ken asked me to marry him.
Expecting him to receive a draft notice at anytime, I agreed to marry him after his army hitch. (This would give me time to launch my writing career, I thought.)
“But I don’t believe in long engagements,” I told him. I asked that we not call ourselves engaged until closer to the time we would be married. Somehow, it seemed safer this way.
He agreed and convinced me to help him pick out rings, which he locked in the glove compartment of his car. And every now and then, sitting in my front yard in his convertible on a still, summer night, he would take out the little, blue box and slip the sparkling diamond onto my finger. “To be sure it still fits,” he would say. It was with reluctance that I let him slip the ring on and with reluctance that I had him take it off again.
Finally, one evening when he took it from the glove compartment, I refused to give him my hand. “No,” I said, “When it goes on again, I want it to stay.”
“Alright,” he quickly agreed, reaching for my hand. And as his eyes looked into mine, I found my mind returning again to a dusty summer afternoon in Grandma’s yard.
It was my turn to be first chooser for the ballgame that day. As I looked around at the boys, Kenneth’s dark, brooding eyes caught and held mine as though daring me to call out his name. He was the best player, and I wanted to win, so, throwing all caution to the wind, I called out bravely, “I choose Kenneth Nivens.”
My cousin Charles, giggled, his red hair and freckles shining in the sunlight.
Someone else taunted, “Get on over there beside her, Ken-neth. She chose you.”
I had thought that day that he surely hated me for singling him out, and embarrassing him.
But sitting in his car years later, I read a different meaning in that challenging look of his. It was with slow deliberation that I held out my hand to have the tiny, gold circle placed upon it.
We were married a few months later, two days after he finished army basic treating. Tony, our first child, was born during his two-year tour with the army.
For several years, I stayed busy with house and babies, office job and the P.T.A. And my writing career was slow to be launched. Our third child (we had four but lost the second one after two days) was in second grade before an editor decided that a manuscript on his slush pile from a little housewife in Alabama merited publication.
Ken had been proud of my accomplishment, and in intervening years, he had been very helpful and understanding when I left housework or typed way into the night, rushing to meet a deadline, while he went to bed alone.
Why, then, after all this time, I wondered, is he challenging me with this Love me or love your writing bit? And how am I to answer?
Actually, I have no decision to make tonight as I lay in my husband’s arms. I made my decision years ago, when I accepted his ring.
And, so, I tell him, “Yes, I love my writing. To me, writing is really living. But being able to spend all my days writing would not have near as much meaning for me if I did not know that you would be coming home to me at night. Writing is a part of me -- but not nearly as big a part as you are.”
Smiling, he pulls me close to him again.
I think of the night he placed his ring on my finger to stay.
“Remember the day you chose me to be on your ball team?” he asks.
“Yes,” I say, “I thought you really hated me for that because you disliked girls.”
But he protestes, “No. I was afraid of girls, and especially of you. You tried to act like a boy, but I could never forget that you were a girl. And after you chose me first for your ball team, I knew that when we grew up you were going to be my girl.”
And just as I won a lot more than the game that day I chose Kenneth Nivens for my ball team, I’m still winning because I continue to choose him first -- for now and always.
End
P.S. Today after fifty-five years of marriage, I still choose him first, and I’m still winning.
Monday, August 30, 2010
My Greatest Joy
I wanted to share about this weekend. A great Southern Gospel Singing Saturday evening by the Brasher family, also a great service Sunday morning, then two of our three "kids" here for Sunday lunch, a long nap afterwards and some time working on my column and the Rosalie of Rosebud story.
Most of the family is out-of-state right now: some living in Arkansas, Missouri and Los Angeles; some visiting in California and Denver; some on working vacation in Denver and Canada. They all used to come for Sunday dinner, but now they're too scattered. Oh, well, that's what we raise them for -- to be happy, responsible, productive (especially for the Lord) adults, living their own lives in their own way (or rather, in God's way).
A verse I have framed and sitting on a shelf above snapshots of the family on the livingroom wall says: "I have no greater joy than to hear that my children are walking in the truth." (3 John: 4 NIV).
That's my main prayer for them, that they will walk in God's truth. Knowing they are physically safe and seeing them often comes after that.
Saturday, June 26, 2010
California, Kids and Rosebud
It’s been a month since I’ve posted, and a lot has been going on around here. I’ve written some on the Rosebud story, but had a lot of church and family things going on, and other writing projects pushing. And my house is still piled up.
My grandchildren here on the hill by us, just up our driveway, moved to California -- clear across the country from Alabama!!. My granddaughter Val and husband Nate (Some of you may have read her blog californiabarberstyle.blogspot.com or their posts on face book) have lived here by us since they married, and the kids, Cori 11 and Joel 9, have lived here all their lives. I’m glad they like it out there, but sure do miss them!
We are so fortunate to have had them close by where we could see the kids growing up, though. I really miss seeing the smaller ones in Arkansas, too, miss seeing their “everyday“ learning experiences like we did Cori‘s and Joel‘s. But they and the one in west Alabama are so much closer that we‘ll get to see them a little more often.
All five of the great-grands were here for the big “Going Away” party before Val’s family left for California. Some of the grandchildren didn’t make it, but we had 17 kids from ages 7 months to 12 years, scattered across the hillside above the lake between their house and ours. It was a hot late May Saturday and they had a ball taking turns on the water slid “Aunt Jon” got for them. Alex, about to turn 2, was the star of the show. He just couldn’t get enough of flying down the slide and splashing in the water. The other kids had to watch out or he would be saying “My turn, my turn,” and running in line ahead of them.
Lots of other busy, fun things have been going on, but guess I’d better hush and get on back to Rosebud.
I’m anxious to see how Rosalie has been making out with her patient since I’ve been gone.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
RESEARCHING OLD RECORDS
My newspaper column this week is about the history of an early family (the Blackerbys) to our area, and a book about them. Yesterday, I visited the home of a Blackerby couple whom I had not seen to talk to in years.
That's one of the great things about writing this weekly community column for the paper. I get to not only meet a lot of new people who have moved into the area, but see a lot of people I have known for years, but not seen for a long time. Since my children are all out of school, Little League, music lessons, etc. I don't get out to the places where I used to to see a lot of these old friends and acquaintances. But writing about people and events in the community gives me opportunity to.
Sometimes Ken goes with me to do interviews and make pictures, especially when I'm seeing people he once knew. But yesterday, he was exhausted, stiff and sore from crawling around under the house the prior evening working on a plumbing problem. The couple I'm writing about urged me to come back to visit and bring Ken, so hopefully, I can do that when I return books they loaned me.
One book was written by a lady in Texas who is descended from the same family as these Central Alabama Blackerbys. When she was researching for it some twenty years ago, she came out and spent a week with them while they helped her with information.
Hearing about the research brought back a lot of memories from years ago when I was doing research for my local history book. We didn't have the internet or the tidy records at our county's historical society office to use in our search. I, like the Blackerbys, tramped through old cemeteries, copying inscriptions on tombstones; searched early census records in books and on microfilm; dug through boxes of old, dusty, unorganized records in the attic and cubbyholes of our county courthouse.
It was an exhausting and sometimes hot--or cold--and dirty job. But it was interesting--and exciting when discovering a new piece to the puzzle we were working on.
As was the story I just finished writing about an early family to our community. Trying to fit together pieces of the story from notes I made at yesterday's visit and info scattered throughout the borrowed tome, it was interesting and fun to see the whole story emerge.
I hope it pleases the story's subjects and the readers of the newspaper.
Saturday, May 17, 2008
New Life, New Pastor, New Writing Possiblities
I'm also working on a couple of articles with my new pastor, and trying to place an article on the work of our local pregnancy resource center and a young woman who works there.
These little problems with lupus, or things related to the disease, keep popping up to slow me down. But evidently God is not through with me yet, or He would not keep giving me all these writing assignments, or all these people in my life to love. I say God because I feel that it is He who called me into this work and this ministry and who gives me the ability to do them. And it is He who gives me my wonderful family. A new great-grandson is due next week.
Saturday, June 30, 2007
PREGNANCY RESOURCE CENTER INSPIRES AND EQUIPS
They provide not only pregnancy testing, but consultation with a medical professional. The center where my daughter Joni and I conducted interviews and make pictures for a magazine article, has two registered nurses on staff.
(Photo: Rachel shows items in the Center's "Baby Boutique.")
(Photo by VJon Nivens, rebelchase@juno.com)
Classes are offered at the Center on pregnancy, parenting, healthy relationships, lifestyle issues and related concerns, and are oftentimes attended by the fathers as well as the mothers. This particular center also offers a Bible study class, which some of the parents attend even after the baby is born -- bringing the baby with them. And in which, participants have accepted Christ as Savior.
The centers also offer mentoring and emotional support and resources and referrals for medical care, housing and other social services. And, although they do not provide abortions or make referrals for them, they do offer post-abortion counseling to women who have already chosen to have an abortion.
The local center we visited, also provides free ultrasound services. But, as Rachel, the Bible Study teacher, told us, one of their most popular features is their "Baby Botique." This is a room where the parents "shop" for new or used baby items with "Mommy Bucks" (tickets they receive when attending classes at the Center).
And the parents and babies are not deserted after the babies are born. They can continue to attend classes and can shop for baby items in the Botique until their babies are a year old.
Funds for these centers come from donations -- both monetary and material -- baby showers and banquets hosted by churches and other groups, an annual "Walk" and other fund raisers.
One young mother said that the "Mommy Buck" program helped her get a crib for her baby, while she received a lot of valuable information about pregnancy and childcare.
"Everyone is wonderful," said another. "And I look forward to being here."
All the workers my daughter and I met -- teachers, counselors, office workers, nurses -- appear to be as excited as the young mothers about all the things that take place at the Center. As were Joni and I.
And I agree with the young woman who said, "It has inspired me to keep the faith." For now, when I hear about all the bad stuff going on in our society, I can think about Save-A-Life's Pregnancy Resource Centers and know that there is also a lot of good going on out there.
Tuesday, June 5, 2007
GIFTS AND BLOGS
I’m afraid that a gift for doing technical things is not one of the gifts He gave me.
My older son, Tony, told me several months ago that he would create a website for me if I would give him the information I wanted on it. But I never could seem to figure out what that should be. Then I heard two men on television talking about creating a blog. They gave a web address where you could go for easy directions to set one up for free in about five minutes.
“That’s what I need,” I said. “A blog should be much easier to deal with than a website.”
But it wasn’t easy for me.
And I couldn’t call on my husband Ken for help because he won’t touch the computer. He calls on me to do his emailing and look things up on the web for him.
After struggling with it for about five days, instead of five minutes, I put the blog aside and turned to the writing projects I had piling up on my desk. When I decided to try again, I got a blog set up and did my first post. (As you can see, that was quite awhile ago.) But things didn’t wind up on the page the way I wanted them.
In exasperation, I called my granddaughter Christy about 9:30 one night thinking she might give me instructions over the phone. Instead, she came up and showed me how to rearrange things. It looked pretty good. I was pleased.
The next morning I sat down at the computer anxious to open my blog and post another entry before working on the manuscript I needed to complete.
But I couldn’t find my blog!
“I guess I lost it somehow,“ I told Ken. “And I’m tired of fooling with it.“ I put that project aside and went back to work on a manuscript.
Several days later I decided to call Christy again. “I’m not sure what you should do to find it, Maw Maw,” she said. “I’ll call Jason (her Air Force husband) and ask him.”
In a few minutes she called me back. The directions were simple and my blog was still there.
Romans 12:6 says that we all have “gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us…“
I truly thank God for this difference. For, although He didn’t give me a gift for technical things, He gave it to my granddaughter and her husband, along with a few other members of my family. And I’m so thankful that they are willing to use the gift to help their Mama and Maw Maw with these frustrating technical things on the computer.
Saturday, May 5, 2007
(Be Still and Know) Writing and illness
This is what happened to me. I’ve wanted to be a writer since I was in second grade. It wasn’t until I was a young mother, full-time bookkeeper and church youth leader -- thinking I didn’t have time to write -- that I began to sense God calling me to a writing ministry. Then it took chronic illness -- an autoimmune disease -- to make me listen to God‘s voice.
Lying in bed during recuperation from my first major flare, I kept a pad and pencil under my pillow where I wrote prayers and thoughts from God. As soon as I was able to be up, I began writing stories and poems with a borrowed typewriter, then sending them out to editors. Before long, I was seeing my work in print. Then my ministry moved out into other areas.
Talking with other chronically ill persons, I’ve found that many of them had similar experiences. Some with writing. Some with other ministries, new relationships or new jobs. Many with a new or renewed relationship with God.
It was also a chronic health condition that forced my sister Janice to leave work with the public, and brought her back to her love of writing.
My friend Nita doesn’t want to write, but she loves to read Christian books. Reading about other people’s walk with the Lord, inspires and strengthens her in her walk. But a few years ago she found herself so busy that she never had time to read. “I was working two jobs and doing a lot of things at the church,“ she recalls. “I was always rushing to go someplace or do something so I would rush through my Bible reading and prayer time. I longed for a closer relationship with the Lord, but never seemed to have time to just be alone with Him.”
Then Nita came down with an illness that put her to bed for several weeks. “Now I had plenty time to read, listen to Christian tapes, talk to the Lord and listen to him talk to me,” she says. “And it was so good.”
This time alone with God helped Nita sort out some things in her busy life, and after she was better, she gave up the two jobs. Instead, she began working in the church office where she could still minister to people as well as earn a little money toward family expenses.
"Be still and know that I am God...," The Lord said through the Psalmist (46:10). "...commune with your own heart upon your bed, and be still" (4:4)
Sometimes it takes putting us upon our beds before He can get our attention so we will listen to Him.