Every year, I tell my sons what I’d like for Mother’s Day: a letter. Something written from the heart and offered freely rather than bought from a store and wrapped neatly. I don’t always get my wish, nor do I always take the time to write to my own mother. (Yes, it really is so much easier to buy a card, choose some flowers, indulge in a nice dinner out.)
This year will be a first — my boys will be in two different states on Mother’s Day, my mom and dad will be away together, and I’ll be driving home from a writer’s workshop in Massachusetts. Thinking of the many friends who have already lost their mothers, and the few who have lost children, I am deeply grateful that what separates us, for now at least, is merely distance. It won’t always be so, and there is no way to prepare for that fact other than to appreciate the moment that is. My sons know that they can please me on Sunday with a phone call or an e-mail, and that much as I love their words, the very best gift they can possibly give me is their own happiness, the very fact of their busy, full, well-lived lives.
Still, knowing that my years of receiving breakfast in bed and hand-drawn Crayola cards are over, I do feel the bittersweet bruise of change upon my heart. The truth is, I sort of miss being the center of the universe to two little boys. And this manufactured holiday can be a bit painful, a bittersweet reminder of what was, what is no longer, what will never be again.
I wonder if my own mother ever felt nostalgic for the passing of my childhood. I wonder if she realizes that she is still at the center of my universe and always has been. I don’t often pause to think about it, but of course she is the one person who has been right there, at my side and on my side, from the moment I drew my very first breath. How to ever fully appreciate the woman whose presence and love and example have shaped me into the adult I am? How to capture even a small part of the sharing, sacrificing, and support she has given me over the years?
I can’t possibly do you justice, Mom, nor give voice to all the memories, but here are just a few that come to mind:
I remember the bracelet, dark red and blue shoe-buttons strung on elastic, that I made for you in kindergarten when I was five, the first Mother’s Day gift fashioned by my hand. I remember seeing it for years, tucked in the corner of the jewelry box on your dresser where you kept it, loved and treasured if not worn.
I remember soft pajamas with feet and Sunday night suppers served on TV trays in the living room. You gave us Welsh rabbit on Saltines, milk in gray plastic mugs with brightly colored rims, The Wonderful World of Disney, and a bedtime that was the same every night. I remember lullabies and “Mairzie Doates,” and “Tell Me Why the Stars Do Shine” and the comfort of knowing, because you told me again and again, that I was good and well-loved and would always be taken care of.
I remember the first deliberate lie I tried to get away with, and how you somehow saw right through it and gave me time to figure out for myself that the truth would be better.
I remember that I could not, would not, put my face under water at the Air Force pool. I remember that, to my huge relief, you didn’t make me do it. And I also remember two small Dutch dolls, a girl and a boy, with wooden shoes and painted faces. I remember you giving them to me on a hot summer day for no reason at all, except, perhaps, because that was the afternoon when I finally coaxed my terrified self all the way into that pool.
I remember peeking through the keyhole of your bedroom door late at night, hoping for a black and white glimpse of Danny Kaye on TV, and hoping I wouldn’t get in too much trouble if you found me crouching there. I remember you taking me by the hand and leading me back to bed and tucking me in with a kiss.
I remember the only good part about being sick: your cool hand on my forehead as I knelt in front of the toilet bowl, retching up dinner. The comfort of being held. A cool washcloth. Clean sheets, a night breeze through the window, peace.
I remember a bedroom done over, just for me,
I remember a bright pink corduroy jumper that you sewed on the green Singer, and a shirt with daisies growing up the front, and playing dress up in your filmy blue nightgown and pearls, tottering down the driveway in your shoes, feeling like a princess in your grown-up things.
I remember Easter baskets and Easter dresses and your hand on my knee in church. The ting-a-ling on Christmas Eve, the tiny bronze angels pinging against the hot chimes as you read the story of Jesus’s birth from the book of Matthew. I remember watching you stuff turkey after turkey after turkey, a lifetime’s worth of turkeys roasted and holiday meals served and cleaned up after. I remember the kitchen table set with plates and silverware and folded napkins, every single night of our lives.
I remember finding your most precious books in a chest in Grammie Stanchfield’s attic, studying your careful, girlish penmanship, absorbing the shock of your maiden name inscribed all those years ago on the faded inside cover of “Black Beauty.” I remember being stunned by the realization of your childhood, the fact that you had once been a little girl yourself, and that you had had a whole, complete life before me.
I remember summer evenings, you reading out loud as we sprawled on John’s bed, scratching at mosquito bites and patches of poison ivy. The Family Finds Out, The Borrowers, Misty of Chincoteague. I remember wishing the books would never end, that you wouldn’t turn out the light, that the day didn’t have to be over so soon.
I remember that you always called your mother on the day of the first snowfall of winter. I remember the day you lost her.
I remember when you allowed me to buy “Magical Mystery Tour” and bring my phonograph outside on the back deck and play The Beatles really loud. I remember being in the back seat of our red Plymouth Fury as you drove along, eyes on the road, and explained to me about sex. And I remember being disappointed that it sounded so weird and unfun. I remember, cringing a bit even now, the first bra you bought me and how embarrassed I was — by the color (red!!), the name (“Little Me”), the prospect of wearing it, the very possibility of breasts.
I remember countless long walks in the woods and one picnic lunch on the stoop of an abandoned house, and an early morning breakfast we carried up into the low, embracing branches of a special tree. I remember admitting to my best friend at school that you were my best friend.
I remember how good you looked on a horse. Back tall and straight, hands quiet, heels down. I remember how nervous you were about riding and that you did it anyway. I remember the day you flew a plane by yourself — and I remember thinking, “I will never do that.”
I remember confiding in you ahead of time that I was going to sleep with my boyfriend, and then realizing that you might have preferred not to know. I remember wanting to tell you all about it the next day and forcing myself, for your sake, to keep quiet.
I remember going out to lunch, just you and me, the day before I left for college, at a long-gone place called The Avocado, and ordering a drink, and feeling sadness and excitement all mixed up together, already missing you on the one hand and, on the other, just itching to be gone.
I remember that you filled a house with hearts and flowers on Valentines Day, when you thought my lukewarm romance needed a little push, and that I was mortified and touched and then had to give you credit. (Would I be married today, if not for those ridiculous cut-out cupids and candy hearts and strategically placed love poems?)
I remember the two of us, eating lobster and drinking wine, two nights before my wedding, and how much fun we had picking flowers and making bouquets for every single guest room. I remember a moment just before the ceremony, when we stood in the bedroom in the house in Maine, and said something that felt like a good-bye and a hello at the same time. I remember your funny, relieved curtsey in the kitchen on the morning after, when every wedding task was done, and I was finally married to the right man, and you could relax at last.
I remember when Henry was born, how you somehow managed — despite your dread of city driving, despite not having any idea where the hospital was — to get there anyway, to be right at my side when I became a mother myself. I remember how completely, utterly glad I was to see you.
And I remember the night, three years later, when my water broke and I told you not to hurry, there was plenty of time. I remember that you ignored me and jumped in your car and came anyway — just in time, of course, for Steve to rush me to the hospital.
I remember all the ways you have loved and cared for my children these last twenty-one years, how gracefully and joyfully you became a grandmother. How much I’ve needed you to help me through the hard days of motherhood. And how, when there is something wonderful to report, you are always the first person I need to tell.
I remember — and I know this still — that you have always believed in me, even when I couldn’t believe in myself. We have believed in each another, taken care of one another’s hearts, and shared one another’s joys and sorrows for half a century. On this Mother’s Day, I rejoice in our good fortune, the blessing of each other and of our lives as mother and daughter.
Today, I wish for myself, for all mothers, the simple gifts of love and gratitude. May we remember that in living our own lives well, we offer our children the gift of good lives, too.
From The Parent’s Tao te Ching
Words of Life
–by William MartinYou can speak to your children of life,
but your words are not life itself.
You can show them what you see,
but your showing and their seeing
are forever different things.You cannot speak to them of Divinity Itself.
But you can share with them
the millions of manifestations of this Reality
arrayed before them every moment.
Since these manifestations have their origin
in the Tao,
the visible will reveal the invisible to them.Don’t mistake your desire to talk for their
readiness to listen.
Far more important are the wordless truths they
learn from you.
If you take delight in the ordinary wonders of life,
they will feel the depth of your pleasure
and learn to experience joy.
If you walk with them in the darkness of life’s mysteries,
you will open the gate of understanding.
They will learn to see in the darkness
and not be afraid.Go for a slow and mindful walk.
Show them every little thing that catches your eye.
Notice every little thing that catches theirs.
Don’t look for great lessons or seek to teach great things.
Just notice.
The lesson will teach itself.
Denise says
What beautiful tribute to your Mom, Katrina – thanks for sharing it.
I read a story somewhere about a man who sends his Mom flowers each year on HIS birthday, to thank her for all she has done for him, and for being his Mom. I plan to copy his action, as I love the idea that it honors his Mom on a day that isn’t “mandated” for such things.
Happy Mothers’ Day to all!
Judy says
Have a wonderful, peaceful day on Sunday. I’ll be doing last minute house projects and counting down the days until the ‘for sale’ sign is in the yard. I told my family, “All I want for Mother’s Day is for the house to be on the market and the next phase started..”
Sometimes having something to cross off a long list is the perfect present. 🙂
Judy
Wylie Hunt says
This was so beautiful, Katrina. Made me cry! My mother,87, always sends me a card on Mother’s Day, thanking me for making her a mother.
ann says
These words are so beautiful and make us all want to read more about you and your mother..
c. danz says
my GOSH Katrina. Beautiful.
6512 and growing says
“Still, knowing that my years of receiving breakfast in bed and hand-drawn Crayola cards are over, I do feel the bittersweet bruise of change upon my heart. The truth is, I sort of miss being the center of the universe to two little boys.”
Oh, this got me right in the heart…and gut. Hard to realize I won’t always be the center of my children’s universe. Thanks for keeping me on track.
Catherine Parenteau says
Katrina- What a wonderful piece honoring your very dear Mother- my special friend for 57 years!! You and I have never met but I did know of you when you were
“in utero”. I look forward to your weekly blog and get such joy out of your writings. Good luck with your new book!
Happy Mother’s Day to you and all your followers.
Pamela says
Wow, Katrina, this is so amazingly beautiful! What a wonderful letter to your mom. She is gorgeous. Thank you for sharing your role model with us – now she can be ours as well.
Have a wonderful time at Kripalu! I wish I could join you in the fun – next time!
xoxo
Misty says
(Tears are flowing .) You are blessed to have a mother and a best friend – one of life’s greatest gifts!
Claudia says
Thank you so much for this beautiful piece, Katrina. I especially liked the line about our children’s happiness being the greatest gift a mother could ever have. I’ve already repeated it many times, and have told my sons that’s all I want, too!
Meredith Resnick says
What a beautiful tribute!
It makes me want to hug my own mom and continue to strive to be the best mom I can be to my own three children.
Having just lost my father, it also makes me long for him… He was not one of those stereotypical dads, but a very mom-like dad (as so many are!)– warm and loving and always showering me with “I love yous” and confidence. Boy do I miss him as my heart fills with gratitude for what was and mourns for what is no longer.
I believe firmly that the universe sends us messages when we are meant to receive them (Katrina, I know we e-mailed about that months ago in reference to my favorite childhood book!). Your post is actually a wonderful example…
When I was young, my parents used to sing me a song that I always believed was made jus tfor me: “Mersy Dotes and Little Lambs of Ivy.” They called me “Mer” and “Mers” short for Meredith, all my life, so of course I believed this song was their personal tribute to me!
35+ years later, I read your post, see “Mairzie Doates,” look it up and learn that this was a “real song” all along… And my parents made me feel so important that I never questioned that they would create a song, just for me.
That’s special!
Lisa Coughlin says
Happy Mother’s Day to you, Katrina.
What you say is so true: “May we remember that in living our own lives well, we offer our children the gift of good lives, too.”
The memories of your childhood are beautiful. I can’t relate, from my own childhood, but I strive to create those memories for my daughter every day. So, for anyone reading who feels similarly, remember you can give the gift to your own children–Live well, and pass it on to them.
Thank you so much for this, Katrina. And for writing books that remind me to cherish every day of motherhood.
Okay, now I’m crying! Mother’s Day can be a tough day for me–bittersweet. Changing the mother-daughter legacy isn’t easy, but my daughter is so worth it.
Alisa says
Well, I am crying. Wow, that was beautiful and has inspired me to write a letter to my mother. I’m sure your mother was touched by this flood of memories. Happy Mother’s Day!
Lindsey says
A gorgeous and heartfelt tribute – thank you for sharing it. I have goosebumps because yesterday during one of Dani’s sessions I found myself writing down things about my own mother, specific memories, things I knew about her before she was my mother and things we shared after. Clearly our spirits are humming along to the same tune this weekend. xoxo
Privilege of Parenting says
All Good Wishes for Mothers—and for the Mothering principle. Namaste
Christine says
So wonderful, every word.
Thank you for sharing and also for being so kind and heartfelt this weekend. I am so grateful we’ve connected.
xo
M K Countryman says
Katrina,
I had to take this posts in pieces.
I was at Kripalu last weekend also.
I came to this blog through Lindsey or Christine.
I read the first part on Monday, and spent the day feeling sad that I left town this weekend, missing one of my mothers day breakfasts in bed, which now I realized are numbered.
I read the I remembers today and again am sad, and yet hopeful. A good eye opener for what kids remember. I feel like my kids would never say these things, so I need to step up.
I went to Kripalu this weekend depleted, having given up every part of myself that I have ever known. I didn’t realize it until I was empty, having given it up gradually over time.
I am slowly taking my self back, so that I will be able to be the mother I want to be.
Your sharing is certainly helping me.
Thank you.