Bessie's Story

Bessie "Granny" Stephens
March 30, 1903 – December 12, 1996


By Bessie's Hope co-founder, Linda Holloway

Granny loved school and was very bright, becoming the teacher’s assistant at only 13-yrs of age. However, her dad abandoned the family, and she had to quit school to help her mother support four children.

When she married, she quit work to be a homemaker. She raised a spectacular garden of many vegetables, along with fruit trees and beautiful flowers, always using only a shovel and a hoe. Her cellar was always full of her canning expertise. She also had a cow and chickens, so her work yielded most of the food.

Being an extraordinary seamstress, she also made all of my mother's clothes, as well as the clothes for herself and my grandfather, including his suits. She and my mother would go "window shopping", because there was not enough money to buy my mother the clothes Granny wanted for her. When they would get home, they would have the material, and soon, my mother would have the dresses, just like the ones in the windows.
When I came onto the scene, I too benefited from her sewing talent. In fact, I never had a "store bought" formal gown until I was in my 20’s and living away from home. ThroughPic high school and college, I told Granny what I’d like my gown to look like, and she would cut the pattern from a newspaper. We’d go look for the material I had in mind, and she would create the most beautiful formals I’d ever seen. Her old treadle sewing machine was never traded in for the new models, and she used it into her 80's.

When my grandfather left her, she again went to work, as did my mother at the age of 12. To make sure my mother continued her piano lessons, Granny made and sold beautiful quilts. Because they didn’t have a car, they took the bus to work, and they walked to the store and to church. My grandmother was a founding member of a Baptist church, and her faith was always like a light in the darkness. Sunday morning, Sunday evening and Wednesday evening meant church.
Shortly after I was conceived, my father left my mother and me. We moved in with Granny, my mother went to work and Granny stayed at home with me. Entertainment was great then---radio programs, playing dominoes on a neighbor’s front porch, making home-made ice cream, lying on a blanket in the front yard and watching clouds create pictures, catching and releasing fireflies at night, making" mud pies----.

When my mother remarried, and we moved out, Granny went back to work. The last job she had was her true calling, and she remained in that job until she was 70. She became a nurse aide at a hospital and worked many double shifts, even triple shifts. Patients improved with her loving touch, friendly smile and gentle reassurance. Being a gifted poet, Granny would often send a patient home with his/her very own poem. She made a significant difference in the lives of her patients and their families.
My Grandmother and her house were like a fortress in a storm and a welcoming cookie jar for so many---from her own siblings and my grandfather's siblings to her grandchildren and great grandchildren. She always had an ear to listen, a bed to rest in, and your favorite food to make everything better.

Granny lived alone until her disease no longer permitted her to do so. It was with great struggle that my mother decided that granny needed to live in a nursing home. We were hopeful that she would at least have her basic needs taken care of and that she would be treated with respect. Even considering my mother’s visits almost every day, and my monthly trips to see granny, she could not avoid the tragic treatment she incurred in the nursing home.

While in prayer one day, I was lamenting to God about "Granny’s" unfair life, when I heard a very clear and inaudible voice repeating, "Bring them together---the young and the old." With eyes closed, I saw the work that would be Granny's legacy. Sharron Brandrup and I began training young children to interact with nursing home elders, and we taught them our original songs about respect and caring. Marge Utne, the third co-founder, helped us launch an organization built upon the work we had already begun, which was the mandate from God to bring together the young and the old.

Bessie "Granny" Stephens became blind during the last two years of life, but her light seemed to grow brighter. She enjoyed sitting outside listening to the birds and humming her favorite hymns. One such hymn remained a mystery to me until after her death. I discovered that the words were "Farther Along, we’ll know all about it-----Farther along, we'll understand why-----Cheer up, my brother, walk in the sunshine-----We'll understand it all by and by."

Although she was unable to walk or feed herself or express her needs, one could always feel unconditional love glowing from her. Granny spent her entire life helping and caring for others, and death did not end this. She is still touching hearts and changing lives in profound ways. Her spirit inspired, created and will always guide the work of Bessie’s Hope, formerly Rainbow Bridge.

During her last year of life, she wrote a song through me. She wasn’t aware on a human consciousness level of the song being written, but her spirit wanted to speak for so many who simply want to be remembered the way they were, but loved the way they are. The name of the song is "Remember Me the Way I was; Love Me the Way I Am"