The first memory I have of my Aunt Chris was when she was pregnant with Kelsey. She was eating a salad with ranch and drinking a diet coke with ice, the glass slick with condensation. She made me Kraft macaroni and cheese and let me add the milk. I added too much, but she didn�t mind. �As long as you�ll eat it,� she said.
Later, Jeremy and Wes chased us around the house with some kind of spray. It ruined Tiffany�s umbrella and both boys ended up on stools at the opposite sides of the kitchen.
There was the smell of horses, makeup, and hairspray as Tiffany and I tried out for queen contests, rode in parades, or participated in 4-H. Bending down to pop tar bubbles on the hot asphalt, we would walk to the store for penny candy with their dog, Muffin. I remember rides in their boat, sand between my toes, skin peeling off my shoulders. Uncle Chuck telling me that if I swallowed a watermelon seed, I�d end up pregnant (I was seven, I think, and terrified).
I remember jumping on her trampoline and feeling like I could fly, just for a minute.
There were long summer afternoons in her beautiful yard�hot dogs that were a little burned and fingers stained with raspberry juice. When we were older, we would pick raspberries for hours, a cramp in our backs and our arms and legs scratched and stinging. But we didn�t mind as we laughed and chatted. Chris would always overfill her costumer�s boxes because that�s just how she was.
I remember Women�s Conference and trips to the craft fair. I remember her laugh and the way she would slouch in her chair, wrists on the end of the armrest so her hand�s dangled. And the crafts she could make with those hands! Beautiful blankets, doilies, scrapbooks�she crocheted the dress both my daughter and I were blessed in as infants.
I love you, Aunt Chris.
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