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In her defense, Red was an amazing dog. I loved him more than most people, too. |
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One day I was having an allergic reaction to a medication and I had to leave high school early because the hives were freaking out everyone. My mom, sister, and I piled into the car and went to the doctor. They gave me antibiotics, told me not to take sulfa drugs ever again, and the three of us got ice cream and went shopping where we all bought new clothes and shoes, and we drove fast through the two-lane country roads lined with corn and wheat fields, windows down, screaming out the lyrics to "Pour Some Sugar on Me."
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She used to say that you should always eat your dessert first because there might be a fire before dinner was finished and wouldn't it be a shame if you didn't get to eat dessert.
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She worked for the post office for over thirty years. She sorted mail, learned to drive a forklift, and could tell you every zip code for every small town in Michigan, Illinois, and Indiana. It was fun to test her on road trips. Climax! 49034! Corydon! 47112!
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At my wedding, she insisted on wear a pink top that clashed with the red that was our wedding color. Oh, well. She carried around an ugly old black purse and in every wedding photo, she's holding on to that damn purse. It makes me laugh now. At my sister's wedding, I took my mom's purse and cell phone from her and held them hostage in my car. Everyone she knew was at the wedding, so no one would call her. And damned if I was going to let her have an ugly purse in every one of my sister's wedding photos.
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The strap! |
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NO ONE ELSE HAS A PURSE ON THE DANCE FLOOR. |
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When she was a tween, her nightgown caught fire on a gas range when she was heating up water for tea. She had third-degree burns up and down the left side of her body. They grafted skin from her thighs for her upper arm and torso. She was heavily scarred and she was out of school for more than two years.
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She had nine brothers and sisters. She was number nine. There are only four remaining siblings now.
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She used to text me indecipherable words. The number of times I texted "I do not understand what you mean" is probably hundreds. The very last text she sent to me was "Rocket is he play with him steals his bones. And lets him have the big cat." The fuck, mom? (Translation: Rocket plays with Sy and steals his bones. He lets Sy sleep in the big cage. - Rocket and Sy are my sister's dogs.)
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One time she signed a birthday card to me Love, Fran instead of Love, Mom and then she didn't call me on my birthday and I cried. After I got married, she never called me on my birthday. She said it was my husband's job. I don't know. It made me sad.
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She worked nights and my father worked during the day. So he was the primary caretaker. Did she notice the bruises? The empty fridge? The fear in our eyes?
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One time we went for a walk in a county park. I though the loop was .75 miles, but at about mile two, my mom was getting tired. I saw a road across a field and made my mom troop through the field to get to the road, found a church, and parked her at a bench by the church. I looked a map on my phone, realized our car was about three-quarters of a mile away via sidewalks and ran to the car and drove back to get her. She referred to it as "our little hiking adventure."
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I remember Jenny writing once (on her blog? in a comment here?) that when her mom died, she had young children and she just kept doing the things that it takes when you have young children and then one day she woke up and her life was normal again. Like, different normal, of course. But she had to keep on waking up and tying the shoelaces and packing the lunches and whatever it is that you do with kids. And every morning I'm getting up and walking the dog and then I get home and I don't remember it. My day-to-day life has not changed much since I lived hundreds of miles away, but somehow the world seems different. And I feel different, but I can't put my finger on what exactly. But I'll keep waking up and living my life and someday it will be normal again.
Obviously our relationship was complicated, but I never doubted that she loved me and my sister with all her heart and she always did what she thought was best for us. I miss her random incomprehensible emails. I miss the jokes about how terrible men were and how I would have to defend them (ME!). My birthday just passed and I missed the card in the mailbox. But that's part of the process, right?
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Thank you to everybody who has checked in with me in the last few weeks. The texts, the cards, the flowers, the books, the random board game someone sent with no name on it - it has all been very much appreciated. If I didn't send you a note thanking you, I have to admit that you probably won't get one because I have done a lousy job of keeping track. Just know that I did appreciate it and I have felt very much surrounded by love and support.
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I'm going to attempt to do my regular bloggy thing, but posts may be sporadic. But at some point, it will become normal again.
I’m so sorry for your loss, Engie. Relationships with family members can be (usually are??) complicated and whatever emotions you're feeling on any given day/hour, they are all true and right and okay to feel. I can tell your love for each other was very real, even if it wasn’t always simple. Sending love your way as you navigate this new chapter without your mom. Hugs. XoXo
ReplyDeleteAnd thanks for giving voice to your mom's story. I always so appreciate learning about new people. We all have stories! That burn story is so horrific. Your poor mom.
DeleteAnd, as always, you are perhaps the most radiant, beautiful bride I have ever set eyes on in MY LIFE.
My condolences on the loss of your mom. It's hard, it gets easier, and then the grief can still hit me even after 20+ years of losing my mom.( I miss the phone calls on Wednesday to talk about her bowling league.) I hope you have a lot of support and comfort through these difficult time.
DeleteMy mom's life was very hard for a lot of it, so I am always glad that her retirement years seemed pretty fun for her. Imagine the burns! And then being married to my father! Egads.
DeleteThank you for the support. It means a lot to me.
I am so sorry. This is a wonderful post. I think you describe life after loss very well-- at some point it WILL become normal again.
ReplyDeleteRight? There will be a new normal someday.
DeleteHugs hugs hugs, Engie. (Loved hearing the stories and always just a phone call away.) <3
ReplyDelete(Engie, I'm posting this second comment hours after the first one. I love that you can tell these stories in a both-and way. I do not love the pain in them. I think you know that, but I was kicking myself all morning and thought I should clarify.)
DeleteI did understand, Maya. No need to kick yourself. Your support is exactly the thing I need.
DeleteI’m so very sorry for your loss. This reflection is deeply moving. Wishing you comfort, peace, and love.
ReplyDeleteThanks for that. I hope that someday it helps someone else navigating complex emotions.
DeleteThank you so much for sharing this, Engie. You have been on my mind and in my heart. Relationships can be complicated but your mom is your mom and losing her is hard and sad. Things will be normal (or "normal") again one day, and we are all here for you. xoxoxo
ReplyDeleteI have really appreciated all the support from the blog world. People around the world are thinking about my mom and how amazing is that?
DeleteI'm sorry for your loss. Yes, at some point the new normal will kick in and things will feel more normal, at least most of the time. In addition to the grief and sadness when my father died, I felt disoriented, and that has mostly passed, but it just takes as long as it takes, damn it.
ReplyDeleteI think I'm still in shock about it, to be fair. It just doesn't feel real yet and I know that when it does I'm going to be miserable about it.
DeletePlease take the very best care of yourself. I have been thinking of you--as we all have--and we want you to do what is right and healthiest for you. People and relationships are complicated, and the people and relationships in families even moreso. Whatever it takes and as long as it takes. XO
ReplyDeleteFamilies are so complicated. We can't choose them, right?!
DeleteThis is a beautiful reflection of the complicated relationship you had with your mom. I have been thinking of you, like all of us have. I’m sending you lots of love and hugs.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the support, friend.
DeleteThat Red is a pretty cute dog. I love the purse pics, especially on the dance floor, and good for you for hiding her purse at your sister’s wedding!
ReplyDeleteI remember the first few weeks after my mom died, I could almost hear the words along with the sound of my heartbeat pulsing through my ears (as I did the normal things) - “My mom is dead, my mom is dead, my mom is dead.” She died in 2008, and life did eventually become “Normal”. As normal as living in a world without your mother can ever be.
Sending you love and peace as you navigate your grief. Ugh, that burn story.
Red was a perfect dog. A true angel. No living creature was perfection like that little guy.
DeleteIt seems so weird that I'll just be doing laundry and think that my mom will never do laundry again. It's just a a weird time and I will be glad when it's not constantly circling my thoughts.
My deepest condolences. I dread this day myself. Complicated or not, you loved each other, and that's all that matters.
ReplyDeleteWell, I for one do not believe love is all that matters, but I do think it's important.
DeleteThis was equally as lovely as it was sad. Having been through this sort of complicated loss in recent years, it's all a lot - and you still have to be a person and do the things. The day to day is still there, even if something is seismically changed, and normal finds its way back in. Thinking of you - and have been - as you navigate this next part. <3
ReplyDeleteYes, normal does sneak in, doesn't it? Thanks for your kind thoughts and words.
DeleteI’m sorry for your loss. I appreciated hearing about your mom with all of the complicated feelings that go with it.
ReplyDeleteI hope that it might help someone else navigate complicated grief someday.
DeleteI am tearing up, reading this. People, relationships, feelings...they're all so complicated. And none of us can truly understand anyone else's experiences. Thank you for sharing all of this - for giving us all a peek of your life with your mom. And, sorry, but OMG. What IS it with mothers and bright pink lipstick?? (I could not be less of a bright pink lipstick person...) Thinking of you as you navigate all of this. <3
ReplyDeleteMy mom always picked makeup for me that would be better suited for a blonde. Maybe she secretly wished I was blonde?!
DeleteOh, Engie, I’m so sorry. I cried while reading this. Thank you for sharing something so layered and real. I’m sending you love and holding space for all the feelings that come with it.
ReplyDeleteI laughed at the purse strap. 💜
The purse strap. It's very funny to me now. It was not as funny when I was going through my wedding photos for the first time!
DeleteOh dear! But I like the way that you scattered snippets of memories here and there. It was interesting to jump around like that.
ReplyDeleteIsn't that jumping around what happens when your brain is fried?
DeleteThank you for sharing this beautiful tribute to your mom. I am so sorry for your loss. And, yes the grieving process does result in a new normal.
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading about her. I like to think she's being remembered all around the world.
DeleteI am so sorry to hear about your loss, and nearly cried reading this as it brought back so many memories of my own mother and our own complicated relationship. Is that a thing with mothers and daughters? I hope that in sharing these memories with us, that you find some solace and peace.
ReplyDeleteI do think same sex parental relationships are frequently more fraught than opposite sex parental relationships. I'm not sure why, but it seems true in my experience. I hope most people have less complicated feelings about parents, though.
DeleteSo sorry for your loss, and so admiring of the way you accept that she was many things, some good and some less good (the black purse story is gold). I am at a crisis point with my parents and it is all so complicated. Sending so much love.
ReplyDeleteWatching parents age is SO HARD. I wish you luck in your own parental journey.
DeleteOh, and Lucy kisses. xoxoxox
ReplyDeleteAnd that dog does look amazing.
ReplyDeleteRed was 100% The Best Dog and I would even say that in front of Hannah.
DeleteMade me cry.
ReplyDeleteI had a Mom too. Our relationship was also complicated and, honestly, I'm still sorting it out. In case this might help: https://thinkstew-dbs.blogspot.com/2014/05/her-song-her-carol.html
It was nice to read about your mom. I like that these blog posts will keep their memories alive.
DeleteOh, Engie. I'm so sorry for your loss. This post was a great reflection. I appreciate you sharing the difficult parts along with the fond memories. This sounds so hard and I am impressed with how you accept that she did the best that she could. I enjoyed the purse strap story (so funny) and the accompanying photos. You are a beautiful bride. The story of her burn is hard to fathom. Two years out of school, oh my. I imagine it will take time until you find a new 'normal.' I'll be thinking of you. xo
ReplyDeleteIt took a lot of therapy for me to realize that my parents really were just muddling along like most of us. And now that I'm an adult, I realize that no one knows the answers to anything, you know? If you had talked to me in my 20s, my reflections were not so kind. Thanks for your kind thoughts.
DeleteOh Mom. I hope that she is in a place where she has a nice comfy bed with stacks of trashy romance novels under it, a couple of dogs to snuggle with, her purse, and has a steady supply of people coming by to quiz her on zip codes. Always eat dessert first is a wise maxim to live by.
ReplyDeleteHugs and love as you find new normal.
Eating dessert first is something we should all aspire to!
DeleteEngie - I'm so very sorry and sending you all the loving hugs that I can via the ethernet. Our relationships with our parents can be...fraught. But, there is still a relationship there that needs to acknowledged and mourned. I will be thinking of you. xo
ReplyDeleteThanks, Gigi. I am treating myself with kindness and hoping that someday I'll only remember the good and the not so good will retreat.
DeleteOh Engie. All the love to you and your family.
ReplyDeleteThank you, friend.
DeleteSo much love to you, Engie. This is so hard, and I think it can be especially hard when it's a complicated relationship and you're working through those feelings alongside grief. Take your time, friend. <3
ReplyDeleteI'm doing my best, Stephany. Sometimes I just want to instantly go back to normal, though. As if me wanting to rush it will work!
DeleteI'm so sorry for your loss. What a lovely tribute to your mum, take care. Sending lots of love to you and your loved ones.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your kindness.
DeleteOh Engie! Thinking of you. Thank you for sharing about your mom here, the joyful things and the hard things and the complicated things.
ReplyDeleteOkay, to be fair, I never know what to do with my purse while I'm on the dance floor either.
You know what, Diane? You just set your purse down on your chair and assume that your hosts have not invited hooligans who will steal from you. No purses on dance floors!! That's going to be my new mantra for life.
DeleteDessert first is a very wise way to live. You never know when there may be a fire. I love these stories and I know that even though this has been inevitable, it does not make it any easier. Also if nobody else takes credit for the board game, it was me.
ReplyDeleteI figured out who sent the board game!!! It was a birthday present. (I wish I could explain how complicated my mailbox is right now. There are condolences, rando notes I would have gotten anyway, birthday cards, and lots of bills. I am not organized enough to keep track of any of it!)
DeleteENGIE. You are going through one of the hardest things we have to face in life. In spite of your complicated relationship, no one can ever replace your mom. I love this post so, so much. I love how you recognize your mom was doing her best, with the tools she had to work with at the time. I love how you can laugh at the ugly black purse at your wedding, and that you have happy memories as well.
ReplyDeleteIt takes about a year before you start to feel "normal" again. You have to go through every single holiday for the first time without your mom, and your own birthday is a hard one. I remember my first birthday without my mom, and realizing that no one else in the world really, REALLY cares about your birthday except your own mother (even when she didn't send you a card I promise you she was thinking about you, and the day you were born).
Sending all the hugs in the world... <3
Thank you, Jenny. My birthday came two weeks after my mom died, so I think maybe next year it will be harder? Or maybe easier? Who even knows anymore? But your words that you just keep doing day to day stuff and then it's normal again gave me a lot of hope when you wrote them and are still giving me hope today.
DeleteThank you for sharing this lovely tribute. I love the photo of your mom dancing at your wedding, I am enthralled by her expression. You are on my mind, and in my heart, as you navigate the coming months.
ReplyDeleteThis was a lovely tribute to your mom, Engie. I'm so sorry for your loss.
ReplyDelete