Family Hands Lyrics by Mary Chapin Carpenter

Family Hands Lyrics

    Last sunday we got in the car and we drove
    To the town you were raised in, your boyhood home
    The trees were just turning, up on the ridge
    And this was your valley when you were a kid
    You showed me the railroad that your daddy worked on
    As we neared the old house where your granny lives on
    She's nearing ninety years now, with her daughters by her side
    Who tend the places in the heart where loneliness can hide

    Chorus: raised by the women who are stronger than you know
    A patchwork quilt of memory only women could have sewn
    The threads were stitched by family hands, protected from the moth
    By your mother...and her mother, the weavers of your cloth

    Your grandmother owned a gun in 1932
    When times were bad just everywhere, you said she used it too
    And the life and times of everyone are traced inside their palms
    Her skin may be so weathered, but her grip is still so strong
    And i see your eyes belong to her and too your mama too
    A slice of virginia sky, the clearest shade of blue

    Chorus:

    And a rich man you might never be, they'd love you just the same
    They've handed down so much to you besides your christian name
    And the spoken word won't heal you like the laying on of hands
    Belonging to the ones who raised you to a man

    Chorus:

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