My Mom's 1st Mother's Day (May 1955) |
My Mother passed away in January of this year.
This will be our first Mother’s Day without her.
What do I miss most about my Mom?
The emotions are almost too complex to put into words.
I imagine the list will expand as the passing months and years go by.
My brother and sister have been sifting through some of Mom’s things—a normal process following the death of a loved-one. Mom marked some items that she thought we’d like to have with a note inside, or a simple hand-printed name on the back.
A Tiffany pen I gave her as a Mother’s Day gift one year turned up with a note on the inside of the box, “Brent gave me this pen from Tiffany's. He should have it when I 'croak.'"
Yes, my prim and proper school-marm Mom often so referred to her demise…and now we have it in writing.
In her later years, Mom was an avid crossword puzzle worker. She would dutifully work the daily puzzle in the Temple Telegram newspaper, but skipped the Sunday edition because, “it was too hard,” as she would say. Her spot at the kitchen table was frequently cluttered with the past week’s puzzles, clipped from the paper by my Dad, and worked in pen by my Mom. She was confident!
A metal cart still stands sentinel next to her place at the table, laden with a giant crossword puzzle dictionary, extra pens, note pads, and crossword puzzle books. There is also an assortment of greeting cards and her hand-written address book in that cart.Mom was an avid card-sender.
In her desk I discovered many blank card envelopes with postage stamps already
affixed. They’re the “forever” stamps issued by the post office, and knowing
Mom, she probably bought them back in 2007 when the stamps were first introduced
at 41-cents. She knew they’d be more expensive later.
Everyone says, “be sure to hug your loved-ones because you never know when it will be the last time you see them.” On this first Mother’s Day without my Mom, I take solace in the fact that we always did, and we always told her we loved her, too. She knew that she was loved.
And now, she is missed.
2 comments:
My first without my mom and my mother in law. I think about both of them often. Love and miss them.
I dread my first Mother’s Day without my mom. Same for my first birthday without her. I hope we will spend many more together before those things happen. I don’t want to have any regrets that we missed something, didn’t say “I love you” enough or missed a chance to do something together. I realize time is not on my side and whenever it happens, my life will never be the same. Fewer and fewer of my friends still have their moms and my heart aches when I hear how much they’d love to have just one more hug or conversation.
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