MY BEAUTIFUL MOTHER
I have always been okay with a day set aside to celebrate
Mothers and Fathers. And I was even okay when we added Grandparent’s Day to the
calendar. But then we just kept adding special days to the calendar to where we
now celebrate…heck, I don’t know…even Tacos. It is ridiculous!
With that said, I celebrated my mother EVERYDAY, not just on
Mother’s Day. I had one of the BEST mothers ever. She was with my heart and soul
every day of my life. She placed my needs (not ‘wants’) above everything else. She
loved me with agape love. I learned much from her because of her deep and
discerning wisdom. She departed it to me in subtle ways, just by being there
for me, more especially as an adult. I knew as a child that her role was to be
respected first and foremost as my mother. When I went to college, I realized
that she was wise about EVERYTHING. And at that point, she became my best friend.
There is so much hype about Mother’s Day, especially on FB that is feels more
like a competition. I’m aware that everyone feels their mother is special (well, maybe not everyone)…but
there is a completely different side to Mother’s Day and how it may stir a
different emotion in some women.
I read a piece yesterday on FaceBook that could be my
sentiments exactly. It was written by Anne Lamott, a well-known author. She is
a recovering alcoholic and I agree with her philosophy, maybe not all of it…but
a good chunk of it. This piece was rather long so I will paraphrase what I took
away from it.
This has become Ms. Lamott’s annual Mother’s Day Post….
“Here is my annual Mother’s Day post, ONLY for those of you
who dread the holiday, dread having strangers, cashiers & waiters exclaim
cheerfully, mindlessly, “Happy Mother’s Day!”…
This is for those of you who may feel a kind of sheet metal
loneliness on Sunday, who had an awful mother, or a mother who recently died,
or wanted to but didn't get to have kids, or had kids who ended up breaking
your hearts… I did not raise my son, Sam, to celebrate Mother’s Day. I didn’t
want him to feel some obligation to buy me pricey lunches or flowers, some
obligatory annual display of gratitude…. But Mother’s Day celebrates a huge lie
about the value of women: that mothers are superior beings, that they have done
more with their lives and chosen a more difficult path. Ha! Every woman’s path
is difficult, and many mothers were as equipped to raise children as wire
monkey mothers. I say that without judgment: It is true. An unhealthy mother’s
love is withering.
The illusion is that mothers are automatically more
fulfilled and complete…. I hate the way the holiday makes all non-mothers, and
the daughters of dead mothers, and the mothers of dead or lost children, feel
the deepest kind of grief and failure. The non-mothers must sit in their
churches, temples, mosques, recovery rooms and pretend to feel good about the
day while they are excluded from a holiday that benefits no one but Hallmark
and See’s. There is no refuge — not at the horse races, movies, malls, museums….
Mothering perpetuates the dangerous idea that all parents are somehow superior
to non-parents…. Don’t get me wrong: There were a million times I could have
literally died of love for my son, and I’ve felt stoned on his rich, desperate
love for me. I felt it yesterday when I was in despair. But I bristle at the
whispered lie that you can know this level of love and self-sacrifice only if
you are a parent. What a crock! We talk about “loving one’s child” as if a
child were a mystical unicorn. A majority of American parents secretly feel
that if you have not had and raised a child, your capacity for love is somehow
diminished. They secretly believe that non-parents cannot possibly know what it
is to love unconditionally, to be selfless, to put yourself at risk for the
gravest loss…. But my main gripe about Mother’s Day is that it feels incomplete
and imprecise. The main thing that ever helped mothers was other people
mothering them, including aunties and brothers; a chain of mothering that keeps
the whole shebang afloat….”
And yes, I've been told by family, that there is no way I could understand because I don't have children. But they have no idea how much I love family and how many hours I have spent understanding my heritage and appreciating EVERY mother and father who has gone before me.
Keeping all of that in mind, the way I spent honoring my
mother when she was alive was to GO VISIT WITH HER. I didn’t lavish her with
flowers; I didn’t take her to a fancy restaurant that required reservations. I
made my own reservation to just spend time with her, and not just on Mother's Day. I gave the gift of time, and it was during a time of her life when she needed me the most! Just
being with her on that special day was what meant the most to both of us.