"Do you like my dress?" she asked of a passing stranger. "My
mommy made it just
for me." She said with a tear in her eye.
"Well, I think it's very pretty, so tell me little one, why are
you crying?"
With a quiver in her voice the little girl answered.
"After Mommy made me this dress, she had to go away."
"Well, now," said the lady, "with a little girl like you waiting
for her, I'm
sure she'll be right back."
"No ma'am, you don't understand," said the child through her
tears, "my Daddy
said that she's up in heaven now with Grandfather."
Finally the woman realized what the child meant, and why she was
crying.
Kneeling down she gently cradled the child in her arms and
together they cried
for the mommy that was gone. Then suddenly the little girl did
something that
the woman thought was a bit strange.
She stopped crying, stepped back from the woman and began to
sing.
She sang so softly that it was almost a whisper. It was the
sweetest sound the
woman had ever heard, almost like the song of a very small bird.
After the child stopped singing she explained to the lady, "My
mommy used to
sing that song to me before she went away, and she made me
promise to sing it
whenever I started crying and it would make me stop." "See,"
she exclaimed, "it
did, and now my eyes are dry!"
As the woman turned to go, the little girl grabbed her sleeve,
"Lady, can you
stay just a minute? I want to show you something."
"Of course," she answered, "what do you want me to see?"
Pointing to a spot on her dress, she said, "Right here is where
my Mommy kissed
my dress, and here," pointing to another spot, "and here is
another kiss, and
here, and here,"
"Mommy said that she put all those kisses on my dress so that I
would have her
kisses for every boo-boo that made me cry."
Then the lady realized that she wasn't just looking at a dress,
no, she was
looking at a Mother who knew that she was going away and would
not be there to
kiss away the hurts that she knew her daughter would get.
So she took all the love she had for her beautiful little girl
and put them into
this dress, that her child now so proudly wore.
She no longer saw a little girl in a simple dress, she saw a
child wrapped in
her Mother's love.