MalabyRuth

MalabyRuth Semi Precious & Sterling Silver Jewellery. Ethical & Sustainable. Handcrafted in Bay, Ontario

Laporte is the best‼️
05/19/2026

Laporte is the best‼️

So True‼️Don’t you agree?❤️
05/19/2026

So True‼️Don’t you agree?❤️

05/12/2026

She was found tied to a fence post waiting for someone to notice her...

05/12/2026

Be Kind please👍
05/12/2026

Be Kind please👍

04/28/2026

We've been asked many times to re-post this poem since we first shared it many months ago. Sorry, but we do not know the author or the artist of the picture.

For anyone who has lost a loved one......

𝗔𝗳𝘁𝗲𝗿𝗹𝗶𝗳𝗲 & 𝗔 𝗟𝗼𝘀𝘀 𝗙𝗼𝗿 𝗪𝗼𝗿𝗱𝘀
I stood by your bed last night, I came to have a peep.
I could see that you were crying...you found it hard to sleep.
I whined to you softly as you brushed away a tear.
"It's me, I haven't left you...I'm well, I'm fine, I'm here."
I was close to you at breakfast, I watched you pour the tea.
You were thinking of the many times, your hands reached down to me.
I was with you at the shops today, your arms were getting sore.
I longed to take your parcels, I wish I could do more.
I was with you at my grave today, you tend it with such care.
I want to reassure you that I am not lying there.
I walked with you toward the house, as you fumbled for your key,
I gently put my paw on you. I smiled and said, "It's me."
You looked so very tired, and sank into a chair.
I tried so hard to let you know that I was standing there.
It's possible for me to be so near you every day.
To say to you with certainty, "I never went away."
You sat there very quietly, then smiled, I think you knew...
In the stillness of that evening, I was very close to you.
The day is over...I smile and watch you yawning
And say, "Goodnight, God bless, I'll see you in the morning."
And when the time is right for you to cross the brief divide,
I'll rush across to greet you and we will stand, side-by-side.
I have so many things to show you, there is so much for you to see.
Be patient, live your journey out...then come home to be with me.
-Author Unknown

Love you Willie❤️❤️❤️
04/20/2026

Love you Willie❤️❤️❤️

His name is Willie Hugh Nelson.
He was born on April 29, 1933, in the tiny farming town of Abbott, Texas, a place of dusty roads and cotton fields during the worst years of the Great Depression. His parents, Ira and Myrle, were too young, too restless, and too unhappy to build a home together. When Willie was about six months old, his mother packed her things and left to chase her own life out west, working as a dancer, waitress, and card dealer. His father remarried and drifted away too.
Willie and his older sister Bobbie could have been forgotten.
They were not.
Their paternal grandparents, Alfred and Nancy Nelson, stepped in without hesitation. They were poor. They were tired. They had already raised their own children. But they opened their small home in Abbott and took the two little ones into their arms.
To Willie and Bobbie, these grandparents were not grandparents at all.
They were "Daddy" and "Mama."
Alfred worked as a blacksmith, hammering iron in the hot Texas sun to keep food on the table. Nancy picked cotton alongside her neighbors, her hands rough from work, her heart soft for the children she was raising. But Alfred and Nancy carried something else with them from Arkansas — a deep, lifelong love of music.
Nancy had studied music through a correspondence program with the Chicago School of Music. She taught piano to children in their small community. Both she and Alfred sang. Both of them played. And both of them believed that music was one of the greatest gifts a person could pass down to a child.
So they passed it on.
When Willie was just 6 years old, his grandfather Alfred bought him his very first guitar. It was a simple instrument, nothing fancy. But Alfred sat with the little boy on the porch and slowly taught him a few basic chords. He showed him how to hold it. How to strum it. How to let the music flow out of his fingers.
That moment, in a small wooden house in Abbott, quietly shaped the future of American music.
Willie wrote his very first song at just 7 years old. By the time he was 10, he was playing in local bands at small dances and churches. Alongside Bobbie on the piano, he sang gospel hymns that lifted the spirits of everyone who listened.
But in 1940, tragedy struck. Grandfather Alfred died of pneumonia. Willie was still just a child. The man who had placed that first guitar in his hands was gone too soon.
Nancy, however, stayed.
She stayed through the Depression. She stayed through the war years. She stayed through Willie's high school performances, his early struggles, his move to Nashville, his heartbreaks, his failures, and finally, his rise.
Nancy Nelson lived until 1979. She passed away at the age of 97.
By the time she died, she had seen her grandson transform from a barefoot Abbott boy into one of the brightest stars in country music. She saw the success of his 1975 masterpiece Red Headed Stranger. She saw him become the outlaw country legend who refused to bow to Nashville's rules. She saw the world slowly begin to understand what she had always known.
That her grandson was special. That his voice was unforgettable. That her little boy had become a poet with a guitar.
Willie has always spoken about his grandparents with deep love. Without them, there would have been no music. No songs. No Red Headed Stranger. No Farm Aid. No Crazy. No On the Road Again. No Willie Nelson as we know him.
Just two people, poor but rich in love, who decided that two abandoned children deserved a home, a melody, and a future.
That is the real beginning of Willie Nelson's story.
Not the fame. Not the Grammys. Not the stages. Not the millions of fans.
It started with a blacksmith who handed a little boy his first guitar. It started with a cotton picker who taught him piano chords between chores. It started with two grandparents who believed that love could raise a child the world had discarded.
Today, Willie Nelson is 92 years old. He has sold millions of records. He has played for presidents, written hundreds of songs, and become a living legend of American music. But if you ask him where it all began, he will not point to Nashville. He will not point to a concert stage.
He will point to Abbott, Texas. To a small house where music lived in every corner. To Alfred and Nancy.
Because real legacy is not about how many records you sell.
It is about the hands that shaped you when you were small.
The hands that held you when your parents could not.
The hands that taught you music when you had no other language.
The hands that believed in you before the rest of the world ever did.
Every time a Willie Nelson song plays on a radio anywhere in the world, those hands are still singing.
A grandmother who taught piano.
A grandfather who tuned a tiny first guitar.
And a little boy in Abbott, Texas, who learned from them that love and music were the only things in this world that truly last.
Sometimes the greatest gift a grandparent can give a child is not money. Not success. Not a grand future.
It is simply this.
To stay.
Alfred and Nancy Nelson stayed.
And because they did, the world got Willie.

~Old Photo Club

Lou Gehrig
04/20/2026

Lou Gehrig

Christina Gehrig came to New York from Germany with no money, no English, and no family waiting for her. She settled in Yorkville, a poor German neighborhood in Manhattan, where disease swept through the tenements and families buried children far too often.
She and her husband Heinrich had four babies. Three of them died in childhood — two sisters lost to whooping cough and measles, and a brother who never made it out of infancy. Only one child survived. His name was Henry Louis Gehrig. The world would later call him Lou.
From that day forward, Christina made a silent promise. Her one living son would not just survive. He would rise. And she would carry the whole family on her back to make it happen.
Heinrich struggled with illness and could rarely hold a steady job. So Christina worked. She took in laundry and scrubbed strangers' clothes until her hands cracked. She cooked. She cleaned other people's homes. She worked as a housekeeper and cook at a Columbia University fraternity house — years before Lou ever set foot on campus as a student. Young Lou often came to help her serve dinner and wash the dishes after.
When Lou earned a football scholarship to Columbia, it was a miracle. A poor immigrant's son, studying engineering at one of America's best universities. But Christina kept working. Every scrubbed floor, every pot of soup, every basket of laundry was a brick in the road her son was walking.
Lou saw it all. He saw her swollen hands. He saw her exhaustion. He understood exactly what his chance was costing her.
And he never forgot.
In 1923, Lou left Columbia after his sophomore year and signed with the New York Yankees for a $1,500 bonus. It was a huge sum back then. He did not sign for glory. He signed so his mother could finally rest.
He sent nearly every paycheck home. While other young players in the roaring 1920s spent their money on cars and nightlife, Lou lived simply. He bought his parents a home in the suburbs. He paid for an operation his mother needed. He made sure she never had to clean another floor for anyone.
On the field, he became a legend. He played 2,130 straight games — a record that stood for 56 years. He hit with quiet, crushing power. He won the Triple Crown. He never showed off. He just showed up. Every single day. Because that is what his mother had taught him.
In 1939, at only 36 years old, his body began to fail. Doctors gave him a name for it: amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. ALS. The disease would one day carry his name.
On July 4, 1939, before more than 61,000 fans at Yankee Stadium, Lou stepped up to the microphone. He was dying, and he knew it. But his words were not about himself.
"Today, I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth."
And he thanked his parents. He thanked the mother and father who had worked their whole lives so he could have an education and build his body. He called it a blessing.
Lou died on June 2, 1941, seventeen days before his 38th birthday. Christina outlived him. She had crossed an ocean and buried three children to give her fourth a chance — and she lived to see that fourth child become one of the most beloved athletes in American history.
The Iron Horse did not get his strength from the gym. He got it from watching a small German woman outwork the world, every single day, without a single complaint.
He played through pain because she had. He faced death with grace because she had taught him that life is not about what happens to you. It is about how you stand up to it.
The real hero of Lou Gehrig's story was never the man with the bat.
It was the mother who scrubbed floors at the university so her only surviving son could one day stand in Yankee Stadium — and call himself the luckiest man on earth.

~Old Photo Club

04/16/2026
04/16/2026

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North Bay, ON

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