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Kreis Beall - The Great Blue Hills of God: A Story of Facing Loss, Finding Peace, and Learning the True Meaning of Home

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Kreis Beall The Great Blue Hills of God: A Story of Facing Loss, Finding Peace, and Learning the True Meaning of Home
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The Great Blue Hills of God: A Story of Facing Loss, Finding Peace, and Learning the True Meaning of Home: summary, description and annotation

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The creative force behind Blackberry Farm, Tennessees award-winning farm-to-table resort, reveals how she found herself only after losing everything in this powerful memoir of resilience.
I couldnt put down this wise, honest, beautifully written story.Shauna Niequist, New York Times bestselling author of Present Over Perfect and Bread & Wine
Born with the gift of hospitality, Kreis Beall helped create one of the nations most renowned resort destinations, Blackberry Farm, in Tennessees Smoky Mountain foothills. For decades, she was a fixture in the travel and entertaining world and frequently appeared in the pages of popular home and design magazines. But at the pinnacle of her success, Kreis faced a series of challenges that reframed her life, including a brain injury that permanently impaired her hearing and the conclusion of her thirty-six-year marriage to her best friend and business partner, Sandy Beall.
Alone and uncertain as her world shifts and marriage ends, Kreis begins a new journey to find her faith and find God. After spending years on her beautiful exterior life and work, she begins the hardest undertaking of all: reclaiming and redesigning her interior life and soul.
Kreis retreats to Blackberry Farm, moving into an unassuming, 300-square-foot shed with peeling paint on the exterior walls, where I met myself for the first time. She examines what it takes to redefine life after deep loss and acknowledges, for the first time, often unbearable truths that existed beneath the beauty she had created.
By turns fiercely honest, heartbreaking, and warm, Kreis Bealls story will resonate with anyone who can benefit from her discovery that All it takes is all youve got. And it is worth it.

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Copyright 2020 by Kreis Beall All rights reserved Published in the United - photo 1
Copyright 2020 by Kreis Beall All rights reserved Published in the United - photo 2

Copyright 2020 by Kreis Beall

All rights reserved.

Published in the United States by Convergent Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

CONVERGENT BOOKS is a registered trademark and its C colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

Grateful acknowledgment is made to Zachry K. Douglas for permission to reprint the poem The Broken, originally self-published in the collection More Soul Than Human, copyright 2014 by Zachry K. Douglas. Used by permission of Zachry K. Douglas. All right reserved.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Beall, Kreis, author. | Blackberry Farm (Walland, Tenn.)

Title: The great blue hills of god : from the founder of Blackberry Farm, a story of enormous success, unfathomable loss, and discovering the true meaning of home / Kreis Beall.

Identifiers: LCCN 2019021508 (print) | LCCN 2019980744 (ebook) | ISBN 9781984822246 (hardcover) | ISBN 9781984822253 (ebook)

Subjects: LCSH: Beall, Kreis. | Blackberry Farm (Walland, Tenn.) | FarmersTennesseeBiography. | Farm lifeTennesseeBiography.

Classification: LCC S417.B34 A3 2019 (print) | LCC S417.B34 (ebook) | DDC 630.9768dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019021508

LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019980744

Ebook ISBN9781984822253

convergentbooks.com

Book design by Diane Hobbing, adapted for ebook

Cover design: Jessie Sayward Bright

Cover photograph: Jason Madara / Gallery Stock

ep_prh_5.4_c0_r1

Contents
Chapter 1
BREAKING

Most women of my certain age line their walls or fill their shelves with photos of children and grandchildrenhappy, gap-toothed smiles inside glossy frames. For years, my walls were hung with beautiful color photos and magazine spreads of my houses, each one unique, expertly decorated, and having its own given name: Hedgerose, Rose Bay, Maple Cottage, Toad Hall. I thought that the physical space, the walls, the paint, the rugs and windows, the way the chairs faced and how the side tables accented a room, the meals that came out of the kitcheneverything that made a house look great and feel greatwere the building blocks of home. I believed all it took was organization, hard work, and planning.

Now all my plans had come undone. As I stood on the threshold of sixty, my marriage was over, I was disconnected from my sons, I spent too little meaningful time with my grandchildren.

To the outside world, I was the co-founder of one of the most idyllic spots on earth, Blackberry Farm. It was not a farm in the conventional sense of raising dairy cattle or crops. Rather, my husband, Sandy, and I had started with a dilapidated, 1940 low-ceiling house with eight guest rooms and grew it into a Relais & Chteaux estate and restaurant, a stylish, award-winning destination at the edge of Tennessees Great Smoky Mountains. Its iconic views, the shimmering trees and hills, the white-painted rockers perched above a sweeping lawn, were routinely featured in glossy lifestyle and travel magazines. People began referring to it simply as Blackberry.

Beyond Blackberry, I was known for my own cooking and entertaining, for being married to Sandy, founder of the Ruby Tuesday restaurant chain, and for my photogenic family and two successful sons. And I never dissuaded anyone, not even my mother, my sisters, or my closest friends, that this was my story until I could no longer paper over and pretend. Until I had no choice but to tell my truth.


I began by giving up what I had clung to the longest: my image of the perfect home. From a multi-bedroom house, I moved to a 324-square-foot farm shed on the edge of Blackberrya space that not long before had been piled high with broken Christmas decorations that no one could quite commit to the rubbish bin. When I stepped into that single room, I left behind the cushion of things, an oversize closet, kitchen gadgets, a long dining table, and matched sets of comfy chairs. Suddenly unburdened of creature comforts and objects, I had no choice but to meet myself head-on.

If I wanted a view, I would have to step outside into whatever weather we were having and let my eyes rest on the mountains the Cherokee Indians had named the Great Blue Hills of God. If I wanted a rush of cooling air, I would have to stand and breathe the morning fog rising from the creek or the clumps of heavy dew on the meadow. If I wanted people, I would have to intentionally seek them. If I wanted a project, the only available thing to be worked on was me, perhaps the hardest renovation of all.

But I could not begin to build a future until I found a new foundation on which to rebuild my life. It began with a prayer:

Heavenly Father,

Grant me courage,

Grant me wisdom

To learn from the past

And not be crippled by it.

So that like Joseph, I may be a

Blessing to my earthly family

And the world at large.

In Jesus name,

Amen.

Starting with those words, I did something I had never done before: I told the truth to myself. I realized I had helped to create a place of flawless beauty, accolades, and daily perfection, Blackberry Farm, while living a life that was flawed. Now, I could finally see the scars. What I learned was that my real story was not the one I had expected. Its a story about success, yes, but also about tragedy and heartache. Ultimately, it is a story of deciding to consciously choose joy and live through pain, with a deep and abiding faith in God.

When I started on this journey, I did not know all the ways in which life could be hard and yet still be beautiful. I did not know that seeking forgiveness and finding Gods fierce love would change so many things. I was still learning that home is not a physical place, but the space you make inside your heart. Only when I let go of perfectionism and learned to sit with devastation, and from there slowly breathe in meaning, did I discover that what I had built was not a picture-perfect life, but a real and beautiful one, stronger for the breaking.

Chapter 2
BEGINNINGS

I had two truths growing up: that I lived in the most beautifully decorated house in Knoxville, and that most mornings I could not wait to race out our front door.

The house was beautiful because of my mother. She selected the antique Heriz rugs that lay heavy on our floors. She hung rich crewel-embroidered drapery to accent our windows and chose the crushed burnt orange velvet upholstery that covered our sofa in the den. Rather than the painted porcelain figurines and colored glass so popular in Knoxville homes, she arranged blue and white Chinese ginger jars and Japanese Imari vases on our shelves and tabletops. In the 1950s, when everyone else was buying matched furniture store sets, Jane Bailey started collecting antiques, intricate secretaries and tall mahogany highboys. Those highboys were the furniture equivalent of Mom, so pretty to look at with their willowy lines, slender legs, and graceful motion. But it was my father, David Bailey, the exUniversity of Tennessee linebacker and youngest football player to take the field during the 1945 Rose Bowl, whose outsized presence ruled our home.

My older sister, Keith, and I cannot clearly recall the basic details of our fathers face from our childhood. I can picture his broad shoulders and balding head, his thick hands, the cut of his suits, his fedora hats, and his big legs, but when I try to envision his face, my mind draws a blank. Probably because when he spoke to us, my sister and I were always looking down.

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