It is Mother's Day. And for me, it was much like any other day. Maggie flooded the kitchen floor before we left for church. Will argued with me over the shirt I
picked for him, I performed a “splinter removal operation” on Maggie’s
foot, did three loads of laundry, washed the dishes, and cleaned the bathroom. In the mostly normal routine of this
special Sunday, I thought continuously of my own mother. Her selflessness. Her
sacrifice. The few times I actually remember her enjoying a meal while sitting
down. And as those pictures of her danced in my head, I felt that overwhelming
gratitude I always feel for her each and every day.
Of course, that gratitude wasn’t always as visceral as it is
now. She would probably even insist that Chrissy and I love Daddy more. As
girls, we have always shown him favor. Of course I love him. I even
paid tribute to him on Father’s Day a few years ago (A Tribute to My Dad). And for his part, he was
thrilled that he got to “read the eulogy while still alive.” But as I’ve walked and stumbled and even crawled
my way down the road of motherhood, the love, admiration, and downright awe I
feel for my mother has swelled so significantly over time that I can barely put
it into words.
Momma and I are different and we are the same. I am more patient. Easy-natured. Probably a little too

Many nights she walked the floor with sick, screaming
children. She never panicked. Not when the metal sliding board cut my ankle so deep
that it exposed the bone, or when I dislocated my shoulders or tore the
ligaments in my knee, or when Chrissy put the pitch fork through my foot. Even when
my hand got stuck in the belt on the tomato grading machine, she acted fast to
cut the power so I wouldn’t lose my hand, even though she broke her own toes in
the process. She weathered the storm of having an accident-prone, clumsy child
and managed to keep a smile on her face.
She has that sixth sense, like all mothers do. I was always
amazed that she knew which one of us was standing in the dark at her bedside in
the middle of the night without ever seeing our face. Now that I am a mother, I
know that what seemed like magic was actually that she knows me so well that she can identify me by the sound of my footsteps. She also always instinctively knew
when we were lying, when we were trying to play she and Dad against each other,
and when we said we cleaned our rooms but really didn’t. She could be stern and
strict, did not tolerate sass or disrespect, and believed wholeheartedly that a
spared rod led to a spoiled child. Though Chrissy and I loathed her “unfair
rules,” we managed to walk the moral high ground in our teenage years without
the need for cell phones or GPS tracking because we dared not cross the door (or our mother)
after curfew.
While she never aimed to be my friend, she certainly became
my most trusted ally. She taught me to stand up for myself in the “nobody
likes me, everybody hates me” mean girl stages, drilling in me that self-worth
found in faith would travel with me much longer than most friends. We struggled
through those teen years when I was always right and demanded to have the last
word. Daddy had to step in a time or two, common ground
was hard to come by, and I am pretty sure she found it hard to like me at times, but she never stopped loving me--Unconditional love is always proven on the
battlefield of adolescence. She consoled me over my first broken heart. And
the second. And then the third. She listened through hours of me talking myself into
love and then talking myself out of it. She taught me early that a boy that
didn’t value my brain didn’t value the rest of me. She made sure I knew that I
didn’t have to compromise myself to be loved and that if a man’s touch was ever
anything but tender, it should be met with an equalizer--either a shotgun or a
frying pan--whichever I could get my hand on the fastest. She was my counselor,
coach & cheerleader—and later my most trusted advisor. No life decision
large or small is made without her.
And though her work was always hard and thankless and no
doubt exhausting, she did the one thing I sometimes find hard to believe. She
kept showing up. And in a big way. She never missed anything. She went on every
field trip, she planned every class party, served faithfully as the chairman of
the Sally Foster Fundraiser every year without fail. She traveled near and far to football games to
watch me cheer in the rain, kept the book for at least a thousand volleyball
and basketball games, hauled us and all of our friends around faithfully in her
minivan for practices and tournaments. When they operated on her to remove the
large (thankfully benign) lump from her left breast, still bruised from shoulder to hip two days later, she rode two very long and painful hours to
watch me play a basketball game. And then rode two hours back home without
complaint. When I told her before the trip that it was obvious that she needed
to stay home to heal, she insisted that life must go on and there was nothing I
could do to talk her out of going. She is stubborn like that.
When money was tight, she never denied us opportunities to
go to camp in the summer or on trips to see the world. New York. Hawaii. South
Africa. She not only paid for those trips with money she probably couldn't afford to spare,
she let me go without her. She entrusted me with independence. While she was
certainly giving us the best life possible, she wasn’t trying to live through
us. She gave me space and time to figure it out for myself. To think on my feet.
To be creative. To survive on my own. And to give me those opportunities, a 13
year private school education, a bachelor’s and master’s degree, she sacrificed and did without. She always put
our needs above her own. She ate last, ate the leftovers, wore underwear with
holes in them, whatever it took to make sure we had what we needed and most of
what we wanted.
And not least of all, she taught me to rely on my faith and
to follow my heart. I know at times, to her own initial disappointment. When I
called home to tell her I wasn’t going to law school and after 3 years of
college that I didn’t know what I wanted to do with my life. When I told her I
met a guy that was already a father and that I felt certain that he was the
one. I know she questioned my judgement. She probably even questioned if she went
wrong somewhere. But she just kept praying and loving me through to follow
my own dreams. And then she gave me her blessing when I became a wife to Josh and a
mother to Ian. She was there when Will and Maggie were born. She gave me the
confidence to stay at home with my children when they were babies even though I
was certain we would starve. She believes in me when I don’t believe in myself. She encourages me to
use my spiritual gifts. She makes the time to talk to me every single morning
and is never too busy to be there when I need her.
No comments:
Post a Comment