“If at first you don’t succeed, try doing it the way mom told you to in the beginning.”

Special days have special posts.

Today is Mother’s Day. It is the day I honor my mother and my memories of her. Every year I post basically this same entry with only a few little changes. 

I am amazed at how long ago I lost my mother. Sometimes it seems like a day while other times it feels like forever. I keep her close always, in my heart. 

My mother was amazing. She was generous, fun to be with and was the perfect martyr when she needed to be, a skill I think most mothers have. It was her tone of voice so filled with pain that caused our guilt to well to the surface. “I’ll do it myself,” she’d say. We’d scurry to do whatever she wanted. She was tricky, that woman.

My sisters and I laugh often about the curses she inflicted on us: the love of everything Christmas and never thinking you have enough presents for everyone, giving Easter baskets overflowing with candy and fun toys and surprising people with a gift just because.

My mother had a generosity of spirit. She was funny and smart and the belle of every ball. She always had music going in the kitchen as she worked so she could sing along. She played Frank and Tony and Johnny and from her I learned the old songs. My mother drew all the relatives to her, and her house was filled on holidays and weekends. My cousins visited often. She was their favorite aunty. My mother loved to play Big Boggle, and we’d sit for hours at the kitchen table and play so many games we’d lose track of the time. Christmas was always amazing, and she passed this love to all of us. We traveled together, she and I, and my mother was game for anything. I remember Italy and my mother and me after dinner at the hotel bar where she’d enjoy her cognac. She never had it any other time, but we’re on vacation she said and anything goes. I talked to her just about every day, as did my sisters. I loved it when she came to visit. We’d shop, have dinner out then play games at night. I always waited on her when she was here. I figured it was the least I could do.

My mother loved extreme weather shows, TV judges and crime. She never missed Judge Judy. She also liked quiz shows and she and I used to play Jeopardy together on the phone at night. She always had a crossword puzzle book with a pen inside on the table beside her chair, and I used to try to fill in some of the blanks. On the dining room table was often a jig saw puzzle, and we all stopped to add pieces on the way to the kitchen. My mother loved a good time.

She did get feisty, and I remember flying slippers aimed at my head when I was a kid and one time a dictionary, a big dictionary, was thrown which luckily missed me though the binding broke when it hit the wall. I pointed that out to her and that made her madder. She expertly used mother’s guilt on us, her poor victims. We sometimes drove her crazy, and she let us know, none too quietly. We never argued over politics. She kept her opinions close. We sometimes argued over other things, but the arguments never lasted long.

Even after all this time, I still think to reach for the phone to call my mother when I see something interesting or have a question I know only she can answer, but then in a split second I remember. When I woke up this morning, my first thought was of her, and how much she is missed. No one ever told me how hard it would be. Happy Mother’s Day, Mom!!

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5 Comments on ““If at first you don’t succeed, try doing it the way mom told you to in the beginning.””

  1. Bob's avatar Bob Says:

    Hi Kat,

    I know how you feel. My mother has been gone 59 years and certain memories of her are as vivid as they were in 1961. Others have faded completely away. For example I can remember things she said but I can’t remember the sound of her voice. I have no recordings of her voice and if I did I wouldn’t have a means to play back reel to reel tape.

    Another sunny day with highs in the upper 70s.

    • katry's avatar katry Says:

      Hi Bob,
      I’m sure there are places where reel to reel is copied and saved in a different format. It would be worth it.

      I talked to my mother just about every day. Now there is that void, that place where she should be.

      Chilly all day!

  2. Hedley's avatar Hedley Says:

    We wait patiently in Detroit for the arrival of a Grand daughter, somewhere out in Denver our Son and his wife are in the week of expectancy. Other than via digital media we have no idea how we will see her or when

    My Mum boogied 20 years ago this Fall, taken very quickly by cancer. Of the parental generation we were certain that she would live longest but it wasn’t to be. Like Bob, there is stuff sliding out of my mind. I remain fundamentally resentful that she has missed so much.

    So time changes to a brand new generation but it never erases a Mother’s love and memory.

    • katry's avatar katry Says:

      My Dear Hedley,
      My mother and father were on the phone for hours when my first nephew was born in Colorado. They were out the door winging their way westward the minute Ryan was born.

      My father went far too early, in his mid-60’s. It was quick, a heartbeat. My mother had cancer. It was slow. We were all there.

      My mother is easy to remember.


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