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[personal profile] ninanevermore
Today on my drive into work, I wasn't thinking about much except that I needed to hurry up and get to work. I thought about the fact that all the lights I was making on green were helping me make good time, but not giving me a chance to put on my makeup. I thought about what a beautiful day it is, with sunshine and blue skies.

I didn’t think about much until I sat down at my computer and noticed the date. It is my mother's birthday. She is, once again, 51 years old, the same age she has been since 1984 when the clock stopped ticking for her. Some years, this day passes and I hardly notice it. Some years, like this one, it hits me like a ton of bricks. I always thought that the older I got, the less it would affect me. I was wrong.

Every time I talk to my cousin, Leslie, she brings up my mother. My mother, who she talks to every night, even though she avoids talking to her own living mother on the phone unless absolutely necessary. My mother, who she says is kicking asses up in heaven and keeping an eye out for her (though I don't recall my mother as being all that violent when she was alive). Her memories of my mother are stronger and more vivid than my own, since she knew her for more years than I had the chance to. Like my mother, Leslie wears her heart on her sleeve. Like my mother, Leslie doesn't suffer fools easily, but is compassionate to those she thinks deserve it. She is more my mother's daughter than I am.

The last time we spoke, she mentioned the time when I told her that on some days I can barely remember my mother's face or the sound of her voice. Years after I said them, these words make Leslie cry, and I wish I could take them back.

"Nina, that tears me up," Leslie says, "You have no idea how much that tears me up, that you said you can't remember what she looks likes."

I've tried to explain myself to her, to soften the impact of that thoughtless statement and tell her that I really do know what my mother looked like. When I see a picture of her, I know who she is. If I were to hear a recording of her, my ears would know her voice, even after all this time. But I was so young, and it's been so many years, that her face is like that of a ghost that disappears around a corner in my mind when I try to focus on it, unless I have a concrete reminder like a photograph of it in front of me.

"Nina, she loved you kids so much. You don't know how much she loved you kids. And I can still remember her like I it was yesterday. I was one of the first ones she told about the cancer, you know. I was visiting her and we were standing in y'all's backyard underneath that big oak tree. We were feeding pecans to the squirrels. Do you remember she had all those squirrels so tame that they would take the pecans right out of your hand? We were standing out there and she tells me, 'I've found a lump in my breast. I've made an appointment with the doctor to get it checked out.' She said it so casual like, but I could tell she was scared. I'll never forget that day, Nina.

"And then when she was in the hospital that last time, if I'd known how sick she was I would have been with her. That's one thing I've never forgiven Mama and Daddy for. I was scheduled to go in for back surgery that week, and they didn't want to upset me. I asked Mama, 'How's Aunt Ruby doing?' and Mama said she was fine. I gave her a book to give to your mom for me, When Bad Things Happen To Good People, because I'd just read it and I got a lot out of it and I thought she would, too. So I was all excited and I said, 'Give her this book, make sure you give her this book, Mama.' Just a little paperback I'd picked up. I guess she got it, but I know she didn't get a chance to read it, because she died two days after that."

I remember the book. I'd seen it in the attic along with my mother's romance novels, looking pristine and unread. It must have come home with her things from the hospital. I think I sold it in a garage sale a couple of years later. If I'd known where it came from, I'd have held onto it, and perhaps read it. At the time, I figured that bad things happen to good people because they just do, and I could write my own damn book on the topic if I wanted to.

"You know, Nina, I never did have that back surgery. I cancelled it so I could go to her funeral, and I never rescheduled it. My back's been hurting me all these years. I'm still angry that they kept that from me, that I didn't get to tell her goodbye."

I think I told a joke at this point in the conversation to change the subject. I sometimes use jokes as handkerchiefs to dry tears when someone is crying across the phone long distance. I should have mentioned that I did get to tell my mother goodbye, and that goodbyes are overrated.

That last evening when I visited my mother at the hospital, she was so doped up on morphine that she didn't respond to me. I told her goodbye, but I didn't mean it as "goodbye forever." I hoped that when I came back the next day she would be more alert and would recognize me and maybe ask me about school. So I said goodbye, and that I loved her, and I kissed her cheek. I remember that her skin felt strangely cold to my lips. My middle brother then drove my youngest brother and me home. When my father and my oldest brother also came home a couple hours later, they told us she was gone.

Leslie still cries over that goodbye she was denied, and she holds onto the pain in her back to compliment the pain in her heart. I don't dare tell her that I don't cherish that goodbye the way she thinks I should. Leslie can have my goodbye, for all I care. For my part, I would gladly trade it for just one more chance to tell my mother, "Happy birthday."


* ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * # * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~

Date: 2007-07-26 05:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] callmekili.livejournal.com
this makes me want to cry.

so much floatin through my mind about this topic, im not even sure where to begin....

Leslie can have my goodbye, for all I care. For my part, I would gladly trade it for just one more chance to tell my mother, "Happy birthday."

this is something that i can completely understand, with both my parents... i think theres that part of me that wants to rage when i hear people talkin about their nonexistent or strained relationships with their parents or when they speak so ill of their parents....

i guess the grass is always greener....

Date: 2007-07-26 06:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
I used to get upset when people ragged on their moms... and then I met some of their moms. Not all parents are good parents. I've come to believe that recovering from a life with an inept and unloving parent can be even more traumatic than recovering from the death of a good parent that you love dearly.

When I hear someone complaining about a mother who drives them nuts and makes their life hell, I've come to feel more grateful for the mother I had and didn't get to keep for very long.

*hugs*

Date: 2007-07-27 07:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] robin-rule.livejournal.com
yr scrappy sparrow story made me look in yr journal. my husband's mother died of cancer when he was six and she spent a week in that hospital with a box of crayons and paper writing them letters (he has a brother) with pictures drawn on them, so they would remember her when they got older, but even with pictures and letters my husband says he hardly remembers her cuz he was so young, but all the stories about her , she was a wonderful loving person who loved everyone, danced with Gene Kelly, played flute like she was an elven girl in the woods and all this came out at her sister's death two years ago and the family had 16 mm home movies of the two of them. those boys got to see their mother and father holding their little boy hands, walking on a little bridge in the woods, huge sunset behind them like a movie and that "gave" their mother back to them. he has grieved everyday for her absence and he's 57, he just can't help it. yr story reminded me of him and i think it's wonderful that you remember to wish her a happy birthday. my mother, still alive, is one of those people that shouldn't have been allowed to have children, tho i am grateful to be alive. i have worked thru my damage with the help of my husband and others and we acknowledge the irony of one with no mother who should have one, and one with a mother who shouldn't have one. yr mother sounds so very wonderful to have given leslie what she needed. and that tells me she gave you what you needed as well, you were just too little to know. i truly believe that.

Date: 2007-07-27 06:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
I'm sorry you didn't get the mother you deserved (every child deserves a good mother). It's seems cliche to say that the good die young, but goodness does seem to have a way of doing people in, while depravity seems to preserve them. Science should do more research on why this is.

I was in my early teens when I lost mine, but even then my memories of her are like those of a well-loved book I've read, or a favorite film, and less like those of a real person. Her absence became as solid as her presence in my life ever could be. Once a person becomes a motherless child, they stay one for the rest of their lives, no matter how hold they get. I'm sure your husband will back me up on this.

Date: 2007-07-28 06:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] robin-rule.livejournal.com
yes he would back you. and when the step mother who raised him from 7 to 14 left one mysterious week end, it was "all over again" abandonment issues. his dad was a wonderful person, but in grief, picked the wrong step mother... i am so glad you were at least a young teen. that DOES give you memories of a sort. i feel better for you.

Date: 2007-07-27 09:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
I like your journal...and your profile. Do you mind if I friend you? You seem like the selective sort, so I don't want to intrude.

Date: 2007-07-28 06:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] robin-rule.livejournal.com
i don't mind at all; i'm not all that selective; i'm a techno moron, so often don't know how to friend someone back (will try) but also i'm shy, and...well, you'll see if you stick around...welcome aboard the Ghost Train

Date: 2007-07-28 01:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
Thank you! Welcome to my sureality!

Date: 2007-07-28 07:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] robin-rule.livejournal.com
i'm pretty sure i made it happen. i just need to check, but i think i've friended you.

Date: 2007-07-28 09:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
You did; I got a notice sent to me. If you look on your profile page, I will be listed under your mutual friends.

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