A friend who lost her mother this year posted this poignant poster on her facebook page. Those whose mothers are still living will honor them on Sunday. But for those of us who have lost our mothers, the day is bittersweet. I wrote a story about missing my mother on that second Sunday in May a couple of years after she had passed away.. I sent it to Chicken Soup for the Soul and they liked it well enough to publish it in a book on moms.
So, for those who have lost their mother, whether this year, or many years ago, here is the story. I hope it will give some ease to hurting hearts.
My mother at age 19 |
Missing My Mother on
Mother’s Day
(The title in the
book was changed to With Us In Spirit. A better title, I think)
I stopped at a Hallmark shop the other day to buy Mother’s
Day cards for my daughter and daughter-in-law. The aisle where the cards for
this special day rested was a long one. There were Mother’s Day cards appropriate to send to everyone from your cleaning lady to your best friend.
The colors were soft and spring-like, fitting for the month of May. I moved up
and down the aisle looking for cards that worked for Karen and Amy, and
suddenly without any warning, an ache started deep inside. It swelled and moved upward, hit my heart and pushed a tear from my eye.
The one card I really wanted to buy was one for my own mother,
but she passed away more than two years ago. I could buy the card, write a
special note, sign it with love, then seal and stamp it. But where would I send
it? Heaven has no post office. A curtain of sadness dropped down and covered me
like a shroud for a moment or two. My hand reached out to a card that I knew
she’d love. It was lavender and purple, her favorite colors. I read the verse
and smiled. This was the one I’d buy her if I could only send it to her. I
slipped it back in the rack, picked it up and read it again, then replaced it.
I’m a mother and a grandmother of four, but I still miss my
mom. I miss our long talks. She had little formal education, but she possessed
a marvelous instinct and insight into human behavior. I learned so much
listening to her observations. I miss the stories she told about her childhood
in a coal mining town. She made me appreciate the differences in people’s
lives. I miss the wonderful pies and cakes she made. I miss her terrific sense
of humor and hearty laughter. I miss her hugs.
But as I look around my home, I see her in many places. I
see her warm smile in photos carefully arranged in several different rooms. I
see her every time I sift through my recipe box and finger the many cards with
her handwriting, all so precious now. I
see her when I use my rolling pin, once hers, now mine. Whenever I use it, I’m
reminded of the day she taught me how to put just the right pressure on a pie
crust with the heavy wooden rolling pin. I see her when I show visitors to our
guest room, for the bed is covered with a quilt she made by hand.
On Mother’s Day I will be with my daughter and her family at
a Mother’s Day Brunch. To spend the day with a child I love and her husband and
children will give me great pleasure. It wouldn’t surprise me if we sense
another presence that day, for my mother will be with us in spirit, spreading
her love once more.
© 2007 Mom at age 83
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