Before giving birth, Mother undoubtedly
read child development books and baby-proofed her house. But no one could tell her what to
anticipate. No one could tell her that
the little girl she’d soon birth would come with a personality all her own and it
would often run in direct opposition to her own.
I guess what got me thinking about
Mother was a Mother’s Day keepsake the six-year old me prepared for her in
school. Our teacher mimeographed
pictures for us to color; I selected the rose picture and colored the roses red
because Mother’s favorite flower was red roses.
When I ran across the keepsake in one of my scrapbooks, my mind was
flooded with memories of Mother.
I remember the summer I picked plums
with her from the tree beside our house and made plum jelly. I remember walking with her to the nearby
corner store, buying a package of M&Ms, and washing them down with a diet Dr.
Pepper. I remember her making me peanut
butter sandwiches; combing the tangles out of my wispy, fine, hair; and making
me wear the itchy, frilly dresses that she made. I remember the five-year old
me sitting on her lap while she read me books.
The older me remembers her reading the dictionary to me every
night. “Words are powerful,” she
repeatedly said. “Learn their meanings,
how to spell them, and how to use them properly. The teenage me half-heartedly listened
as she impressed upon me, “ Choose your words carefully and kindly when
conversing with others.”
From kindergarten on, she dropped me
off at school. As she drove away, she rolled
down the window and said, “Remember, you’re smart. You’ll do well in school.” Whenever I wrote a paper for any class, she
always read it before I turned it in.
Rather than offering criticism, she asked, “Is this your best
effort?” Even now, her words echo in my
mind whenever I’m critiquing or editing my own writing. Her methodology gave me
confidence by teaching me to measure my own abilities and efforts from an
internal standard and compass.
I thank Mother for her shaping words—words
that made a difference. There have been those times in my professional career and
personal life when I felt stretched beyond my ability. But I would always hear her gentle voice
telling a younger me, “You’re smart; you can do whatever you need or choose to
do.” Her words pushed me beyond where I might have been tempted to stop.
The much older version of me stares
into the eyes of the reckless, demanding, know-it-all child I was; it must’ve
been difficult to be my mother, for my personality and hers clashed. Frequently, I think about the words I said and
wish I could take them back. I was unbelievably blessed with the quintessential
mother. Were Mother still alive, I’d
thank her for the words she gave me and the non-stop encouragement she administered—encouragement
that’s sustained me my entire life.
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