A Royal Prediction…in the form of a God Wink!

 

Dear Reader:

There are few people, around the globe, that haven’t heard of Prince Harry and his soon-to-be American bride Meghan. There has been much fanfare leading up to the royal wedding tomorrow…for some maybe too much fanfare. (In fact some of you might be lamenting right now….“No…not here on Chapelofhopestories.com.’ Come on Becky!”)

What can I say? I am a hopeless romantic at heart and you certainly know I am a huge reader, lover, and supporter of fairy tales. This romance definitely has all the ingredients needed for one. It started out as a “Once Upon a Time”  chance meeting (blind date)… and we all hope it will end up “Happily Ever After.” This old war-weary world can certainly use a little more romance and a lot more love.

However, this story, I discovered from GuidePost, isn’t about Harry and Meghan…but it is about the Queen (Elizabeth) and a prediction that comes true after much time has passed…with many twists and turns along the way . Curious? Start reading!

Source: GuidePost/Mysterious Ways (“Mum Knows Best”) – author” Sheila Brady

Mum called me into the kitchen the minute I got home from school.

“Sit down, Sheila,” she said. “I want to tell you something.”

She was so stern that I sat up straight in my chair. I was 16 at the time. Maybe she was about to impart some special life wisdom now that I was almost an adult. Ev­eryone knew my mother gave the best advice. All the kids in our neigh­borhood came to see her whenever they had a problem.

Mum fiddled with the pearls at her neck and smoothed the wrinkles in her plaid skirt. Finally she spoke.

“Sheila, I want to prepare you,” she said, “for when you meet the Queen.”

The Queen? I almost burst out laughing. Was this some kind of joke? But Mum wasn’t smiling.

“The Queen of England?” I asked. There was no other queen it could be. Mum was an Anglophile—she loved nothing more than a good cup of English breakfast tea and a feath­ered wedding hat. My brother had even taken to calling her Mum. The name stuck. But we were as far re­moved from royalty as you could get. We lived in upstate New York. Dad was a refrigerator repairman. I was the youngest of 11 kids in a big Catholic family. Why would I need to know how to meet a queen?

You’ll need to be dressed proper­ly, of course,” Mum continued, obliv­ious to my shock. “Go to Harrods department store in London. Tell them you’re going to meet the Queen. They have people on duty there who can help you shop for just that occasion.”

Mum went through more particu­lars. She sounded as smart and practical as always. How in the world had this crazy notion gotten into her? She was a totally down-to-earth person! Before I could question her, she got up and started supper.

We never mentioned the conversation again. She never brought up meeting the Queen to any of my siblings. After that, she simply went back to giving me advice I could actually use.

I’d long forgotten about the whole thing by the time I moved to New York City after college and became a marketing consultant for a publishing company. Eventually, I started my own business. I couldn’t have done it without Mum. Although she’d never been in business herself, she knew all the keys to success.

Even after Mum passed away, I re­lied on her wisdom. I even passed it on to others. Like Sarah, a young English girl about 20 years younger than me, whom I met through work. She’d lost her mother while still in college, and I tried to help her the way Mum had always helped me. Sarah married a young man named Alistair, who worked for the British Foreign Office, and she asked me to give her away at the wedding. She moved to England, but we stayed in touch.

Sarah had been married for 10 years when I got a call from her. “Alistair’s been appointed British ambassador to Zambia!” she told me.

“Oh, that’s wonderful,” I said. “Congratulations!”

“Don’t congratulate me yet,” she said. “We’ve been invited to a private meeting with the Queen. I have absolutely no idea what to wear.…”

Mum’s face rose before me, as calm and serious as it had been that day in the kitchen. Somehow Mum had known. The advice hadn’t been for me.… It was for Sarah!

“Sheila? Sheila, are you still there?” Sarah said.

“Yes, sorry, I’m here,” I said. “Here’s what you need to do. First, go to Harrods.…”

Sarah called me back the next week and told me all about her private meeting with the Queen. “It was just as you said,” Sarah said. I couldn’t help but feel as if Mum had been listening in on our conversation, no longer stern but smiling.

Years later, I got an e-mail from Sarah. Alistair had been promoted to Marshal of the Diplomatic Corps. “One of his duties is organizing royal garden parties,” Sarah wrote. How Mum would have loved that! I read the next line of Sarah’s e-mail, though, and almost fell off my chair. I had to read it twice, just to make sure I wasn’t dreaming.

“Sheila, how would you like to be our guest at the next party?” Sarah wrote. “What do you say…would you like to meet the Queen?”

That’s how I wound up at Buckingham Palace in London one sunny afternoon in June. Dressed to perfection in a black dress with a polka-dot jacket and matching hat. And the string of pearls that had once be­longed to Mum. I took a deep breath as Alistair approached me in the Royal Tea Tent, a petite woman by his side. I tried to remember everything I’d been taught all those years ago.

“This is Sheila Brady,” Alistair said. “My guest from New York. Her  Majesty took my hand in her own. “How lovely,” she said.

Lovely indeed. Just as Mum had always known it would be.

………………………………………………………………………………………………..

So until tomorrow….I love it when the Universe winks at us and opens our eyes to all the surprises still left to come.

“Today is my favorite day”  Winnie the Pooh

*What fun Anne’s “groupies” had (that’s us) last night at the The Little Cottage Community Cafe listening to the Old Tickers’ Band.Wonderful, fun music that brought back a lot of nostalgia among all of us. When I got there my two all-time favorite couples from church already had a table and I hopped right in.

Bob and Joan Semle, Dee and Mike Lesko…so happy y’all were there! Fun band, music, refreshments, and friendship…it doesn’t get much better than this!

Look what I pulled up next to when I parked at the cafe…what a beauty from the past! And speaking of simple beauty…is there anything more beautiful than a daisy in a clear vase of water…simplicity at its best!

About Becky Dingle

I was born a Tarheel but ended up a Sandlapper. My grandparents were cotton farmers in Laurens, South Carolina and it was in my grandmother’s house that my love of storytelling began beside an old Franklin stove. When I graduated from Laurens High School, I attended Erskine College (Due West of what?) and would later get my Masters Degree in Education/Social Studies from Charleston Southern. I am presently an adjunct professor/clinical supervisor at CSU and have also taught at the College of Charleston. For 28 years I taught Social Studies through storytelling. My philosophy matched Rudyard Kipling’s quote: “If history were taught in the form of stories, it would never be forgotten.” Today I still spread this message through workshops and presentations throughout the state. The secret of success in teaching social studies is always in the story. I want to keep learning and being surprised by life…it is the greatest teacher. Like Kermit said, “When you’re green you grow, when you’re ripe you rot.”
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6 Responses to A Royal Prediction…in the form of a God Wink!

  1. bcparkison says:

    Love the story and a daisy in a jar is just perfection.

  2. What a great story. It reaffirms my belief in God who speaks. Lovely post, and yes, that car is absolutely stunning! I love old cars.

    • Becky Dingle says:

      Wasn’t that car beautiful? It always comes back to God’s time…not ours….the path we travel is always just around another bend…and who knows but God what we find there. the gifts of life unveiled.

  3. Joan Semle says:

    That was a great night with great entertainment, including our star fiddler, Anne Peterson! Becky, you and Anne are both amazing. Bob and I are glad we found you two on our path to follow!

    • Becky Dingle says:

      Joan…what a lovely thing to say…Anne has done amazing things since her retirement….art and music among others…it is so wonderful to see people take advantage of this wonderful time in our lives…open to so many possibilities. I think we all know how fortunate we are to be able to experience “retirement” in ways that bring us fulfillment in our lives….and having you two as friends complete this wonderful period of life.You will always hold a special place in my heart.

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