hummingwolf: squiggly symbol floating over rippling water (Default)
hummingwolf ([personal profile] hummingwolf) wrote2003-05-11 08:55 pm
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Mother's Day

It's been a long time since I celebrated Mother's Day. Mom died when I was fourteen years old; she was only forty-nine. She's buried in a veterans cemetery I don't remember the name of. I don't believe in sending cards and chocolates to the dead unless they ask.

I was the one blood relative available who skipped the open casket version of the funeral. I didn't want to remember her as a corpse, with far more makeup than she ever wore in life. For more than a year after she died, I could only remember what she was like in pain, raging at the illnesses that caused her such misery and the people around her alike, crying, sometimes calm and seeming resigned to her fate, sometimes hallucinating because of the drugs she was on. Even before she got lung cancer--well before, in fact, longer than I'd been alive--she was in pain much of the time, back pains and leg pains and assorted other problems I believe would be diagnosed as fibromyalgia were she alive now. She had numerous surgeries, smoked two packs of cigarettes per day, and at one point drank twenty cups of coffee each day to try to make herself feel better.

After a few years passed, I remembered more of her. I agonized for a while over the fact that I could never remember talking to her alone--there was always somebody else around, she was always playing to some kind of an audience. I tried hard to remember my real Mom, then finally realized what an idiot I was being. She was far from being an introvert like I am; of course there were always others around. If I'm half wolf and half hummingbird, she was the wolf, the pack animal; if she wasn't the alpha female, then she was the alpha female's confidante. She never quite knew what to make of me. After having two boys and raising them to adolescence, she finally had the girl she'd always wanted and the girl turned out to be the kind who dreamed of being a tomboy but was too slow and clumsy to succeed. Where she was outgoing, I was often an outcast. When I was in elementary school, the other girls preferred talking with my mother to hanging out with me.

Her father died of a heart attack when she was eight years old; for years afterward, she expected to have a heart attack too. At the age of nine, she was flirting with marines who thought she was much older. After she got married, she half fell in love with Elvis. She watched all the movie and music awards shows on TV even when she didn't go to the theaters and thought most modern rock music was evil. She made jokes I didn't understand; I'd remember them years later with a sudden shock of realization that she'd been referring to the male anatomy. She was always doing something with her hands--oil painting, watercolor, macrame, needlepoint, Hook-a-Rug, liquid embroidery, sewing machine embroidery, crochet. Thunderstorms excited her--the wilder the weather, she happier she was. She was dogmatic in her opinions and tolerant of those who disagreed with her. She was one of the small group of white people in the '60s to integrate the local black college. In one way or another, she was a teacher her whole life. I miss her.

[identity profile] daisydumont.livejournal.com 2003-05-11 06:07 pm (UTC)(link)
this is a stunning portrait of a complicated woman. wow. i'd have felt overshadowed by a mother like that. i think i'd have looked for the "real her" too. the introvert/extravert thing is a serious difference and block to understanding, in my experience.

[identity profile] unwilly.livejournal.com 2003-05-11 11:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Perhaps you would like to talk to Lady Un. Her mother died when she was fifteen. She has some interesting memories of her mother too.

Unwilly

[identity profile] sophy.livejournal.com 2003-05-12 12:08 am (UTC)(link)
*hugs*

In the same way that I love to see my best friend's mother through her eyes in the stories she tells of what she remembers of her before she died, I enjoyed hearing about your mother and who she was through your eyes. It tells as much about you as it does an important person in your life.
Thank you for sharing that.
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[identity profile] hummingwolf.livejournal.com 2003-05-12 05:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm glad to get a wow from you! I don't think I felt so much overshadowed by her as confused. My personality is pretty different from hers; I'm much more like my Dad in a lot of ways, though I do share my mother's love of making artsy-type things.
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[identity profile] hummingwolf.livejournal.com 2003-05-12 05:24 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks! How was Mother's Day weekend for you and Lady Un?
ext_3407: squiggly symbol floating over water (Default)

[identity profile] hummingwolf.livejournal.com 2003-05-12 05:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for responding!

Re:

[identity profile] unwilly.livejournal.com 2003-05-12 08:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Disneyland. Fun was had by all.

(except Un got a sun burn, ick)

Un

[identity profile] masterbuilder.livejournal.com 2003-05-16 05:21 am (UTC)(link)
This is lovely writing. I really feel for you in trying to find other memories that just won't come - my mum is alive but we have a difficult relationship, and that clouds what I can remember of her from my childhood. I try to remember all the times that she was happy and light-hearted and paying attention to me, (because there was so much of that, I'm sure?) but I just can't find them. All I find is the anger that I get from her nowadays. It's such a shame.

PS: I found your lj via our shared love of Neneh Cherry xxx
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[identity profile] hummingwolf.livejournal.com 2003-05-17 07:59 am (UTC)(link)
This is lovely writing.

Thank you.

[identity profile] compostwormbin.livejournal.com 2007-05-15 03:14 am (UTC)(link)
*hugs*
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[identity profile] hummingwolf.livejournal.com 2007-05-15 07:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you.