
I would often come home from playing with the neighborhood
kids full of self-righteous indignation over some perceived injustice. Mom
would give her usual speech and admonish, “Yours will be the moral victory,” to which I would wail, “But
why can’t I just haul off and smack him/her . . . just once?”
Mom never took sides.
Neighborhood kids will always bicker and snipe at one
another, go home and tattle, hoping their parents will get involved and “make
it right,” but Mom never did.
“There are no sides,” she would say. “You’ll be friends
again soon enough.”
Of course she was right. Why stir the pot? Kids will argue
and fight, but they can make up and be best of friends just as quickly. Adults,
on the other hand, hold grudges for a long, long time.
Mom was smart that way. I often wonder how she would have
survived in the backstabbing corporate world of today. It’s difficult to
imagine. I can’t picture her being manipulative or playing games or trying to
make her way to the top. It was not her style. But that is not to say Mom had a
sheltered life. No, Mom’s life was filled with volunteering and working for
others.
Mom was a Sunday School superintendent, a 4H community
leader, a 4H project leader, was very involved in that very conservative
national political party, a member of the county board of social services and served
on any number of community committees.
In addition, all our meals were made from scratch – a TV
dinner on a TV tray in the living room was a rare treat – and she sewed most of
our clothes.
In fact, Mom taught my three sisters and I to sew. I think
my sisters are fairly good at it. I am not. I have to confess, I was the one
who carved “I hate sewing” into the case of our old Singer. And, surprisingly enough, I am the one who
inherited that old Singer from Mom when King and I were first married.
And I did try to use it. But after my first few attempts to make curtains for our new
apartment(s) Mom decided it might be better if she simply took me shopping for
material and made the curtains herself. If she was disappointed I can’t sew a
straight seam, she never said anything.
It is sometimes difficult to remember that woman. The one
who told me to take the high road. The one who made three-piece wool suits for
her daughters. The one who could campaign with the best of them. It’s difficult
to watch her as she struggles to find words or to watch as she panics because she knows
she is supposed to remember the name of the person who just sent her a Mother’s
Day card and can’t quite place who this person is.
But sometimes, not very often, but sometimes, a little bit
of that smart, classy woman comes to the surface and she’ll tell me a story about when she
was a child. Or she’ll help me get dinner ready and tell me her secret to
great-tasting potato salad. And in those rare moments I can peak into those
pale blue eyes and say to myself, “Oh, there you are. Thank you Mom. Happy
Mother’s Day.”
You made me smile, cry and remember.
ReplyDeleteI often forget the woman who was my mom. On this eve of Mother's Day, I want to say Thanks for helping me remember her, Aggie Logan, the strong, funny, kind and always loving woman.
Happy Mother's Day, Phyllis.
Thanks Barb. We (children in general) often complain about our mother's but deep in our hearts we know they did the best they could. I hope my children remember me that way.
DeleteHappy Mother's Day to you too.