Happy Mother’s Day

I post this every year on Mother’s Day.


This is the picture I write about in the post. My mother is the little blonde girl sitting on her mother’s lap. The boy is my Uncle Robert (AKA Uncle Pump because he got a penile implant when he was in his 70’s. Medicare paid for it. My tax dollars at work. It must have been good for him since he lived to be 92.) The girl is my Aunt Ginny. She died in her 60’s. Mom lived to be 85.

Have you ever looked at an old person and imagined what that person was like as a child? With some people it is inconceivable that they were ever children. With my mother, you could easily tell what she was like as a child, because she never lost her childlike love of parades, circuses, parties, and holidays.

I have a picture of my mother sitting on her mother’s lap. She looks to be around three years old. As a child she was blond and had rosy cheeks and a sunny disposition. So, she was nicknamed Peachy. To the day she died, everyone in the family called her Peachy.

She was the youngest of three children and the most adventuresome. I always thought my Aunt Ginny and my Uncle Robert were exceptionally dull. Not so my mother.

She was a Girl Scout. I don’t know if my aunt was, but I doubt it. There is no way I could ever picture her camping in the woods. When Amelia Ehrhart made a stop in St. Louis, Mom was the Girl Scout selected to present her with a bouquet of flowers.

High school cheerleaders used to be all male. The first year that Roosevelt High School, in St. Louis, had female cheerleaders, my mother was one of them. She showed me the article in the newspaper she had saved.

She had a friend, Janie, who loved to travel as much as Mom did. When they were around twenty years old, since this was the Depression and they had no money, they hitchhiked from St. Louis to the Grand Canyon. These were two young girls. No way they could do this today. They hiked to the bottom of the Canyon and spent Christmas with the CCC workers building Phantom Ranch. Think they had a good time? They were the only two girls there. Mom and Janie also thumbed their way down to Georgia. My sister has two little notebooks that my mother used to record expenses on these trips.

My mother met my father when she and a friend were canoeing on the Meramec River in Missouri. My father was canoeing with one of his friends. He got her number and the rest is history. They got married in 1939. Since my father worked for the railroad he got free travel privileges (like airline employees do today), and they went west for their honeymoon. I have a movie they took going through the Rockies.

My sister was born in 1942. My father went off to war, and when he returned in 1946, they had me.

In 1952, my father had a bad accident at work and sued the railroad company. He won. As a result, he lost his job. He used the settlement money to buy a new car and a bunch of camping equipment. This was before RV’s. Everyone used tents or, if they had money, they bought trailers. They were nothing like the trailers of today. In the summer of 1953, we took off for five weeks and hit every state east of the Mississippi and two states west of the Mississippi. We also went as far north as Quebec City in Canada. Even though it was summer it was still cold at night in New England and Canada. I don’t know how she did it but she managed to pack all the clothes we needed for the different climates we experienced.

We never had much money, but since both my parents liked to travel and liked to camp, almost every summer we would take off for two weeks and see the country. My dad drove, my sister navigated, and my mother thought of games to keep us occupied. I had been in 47 states by the time I was sixteen years old.

My mother always wanted to go to places outside of the country. My father, having spent WW II in Europe, had no desire to go back. After my sister moved to California, and I joined the Navy, she started her overseas trips. Still loving adventurous things, she went rafting on the Colorado River, through the Grand Canyon when she was in her sixties. When she retired, she, my sister, and my sister’s husband hiked the Grand Canyon. Here was this little, sixty-five year old woman with a backpack hiking the Canyon. At the end of the trip, when she reached the top, there were a bunch of hikers at the top who applauded.

But she wasn’t finished. Two days later all of us went sailing in the British Virgin Islands. It was a bareboat charter which means we sailed it ourselves. She went on three more sailing trips with us: Greece, the Grenadines, and the Florida Keys.

In 1988 I had a freak accident and broke my back which left me partially paralyzed from the waist down. I had been to Europe a few times with my mother but now in my condition I would be unable to travel. Wanna bet? After I had gotten out of a wheelchair and could walk with braces and crutches she suggested we go to England. It was a short flight and since there were a lot of old people on these tours I would be able to keep up. Previously, I had always taken care of the luggage. Now this little old lady in her seventies had to do it. My mother got me to Spain, England, Russia, Germany, Turkey, and Egypt. Europe, and especially places like Egypt and Turkey, are not very cripple friendly, but, with my mother’s assistance, I made it.

She hated to sit around with nothing to do. Before my accident, on a trip to Italy, we had a free day and, since Venice was not in our itinerary, we took a night train from Rome to Venice, spent the day sightseeing, and took an evening train back to Rome. When in Turkey, we had a free day and she talked the tour guide into setting up a day trip to Troy. Travelling with my mother was always an adventure. Thanks to her wanting to go to Troy I could now say that I had stood on the heights of Mycenae (on our Greece trip in 1985), the home of Agamemnon, and at the gates of Troy. I also have a picture of me standing in front of the largest pyramid at Giza. Had I not been a cripple, I would have climbed up and gone inside, but without my mother I would not have even been there in the first place.

My father was an alcoholic and would lose jobs so my mother had to work. My sister and I also had to work. She had babysitting jobs and I did yard work and worked in the school cafeteria. My mother really knew how to stretch a dollar. My mother taught us self reliance and the fact that actions had consequences. My sister, being smarter, did well in school and won a four year scholarship to college. I flunked out of junior college. My mother welcomed me to the real world and told me I would now have to start paying room and board so I better get a job. This was the 60’s. I was 1A, so I joined the Navy to learn electronics and stay out of Viet Nam. One out of two ain’t bad. I learned electronics, but both of the ships I served on went to Viet Nam. I went back to college after the Navy, but burned out in my junior year, quit, and got a job with IBM. I moved to Atlanta in 1985 to be a technical instructor with IBM teaching mainframes and Mass Storage (and early tape library). My mother never tired of telling her friends that her college dropout son was now a teacher.

My mother had an ulcer and had surgery to remove part of her stomach. She had had two heart attacks. She had had a tumor removed from one of her breasts and took chemo for that. I remember she was talking to my friend Cindy after the tumor was removed and told Cindy she was not going on chemo because her cousin Rosemary had gotten very sick when she was on chemo. When Cindy asked what medication she was taking and she told her Cindy didn’t tell her that that was chemo.

In her eighties, she developed macular degeneration. She could no longer drive at night and was worried that she might soon not be able to drive at all. This not only affected her, but all the other little old ladies she had to ferry around. The last time I saw her, she was blind in one eye.
My mother was the most active person I have ever met. She took aerobics, did line dancing, was in a hiking club called The Wild Side Walkers (which she joined to build up her endurance to hike the Grand Canyon), and went on lots of one and two day trips with various organizations. We were at a night club in Egypt and the band started playing the Macerena. Up jumped my mother to do the Macerena! My sister and I had to buy her an answering machine since she was never at home and her friends could never get in touch with her.

We talked once a week. We alternated calling. It used to be on a Saturday, but we had to change, because she couldn’t fit me in her schedule on a Saturday. We changed to Sunday morning. She only forgot to call once. So, one Sunday, when she didn’t call, and she didn’t answer when I called, I feared the worst. I had her cousins go to her condo and check and they found her dead. She had gone to a movie with friends on Saturday and returned home and died that night. She was active on the last day of her life. That’s how I want to go. She had dreaded going into a nursing or assisted living home so I’m glad that she was active to the very end. When my sister and I went to St. Louis to take care of affairs we found literature about activities for the blind. We also noted that her calendar was full of events for the next three months. Somehow I never thought that she would be able to ever fit dying into her busy schedule. She lived to be eighty five years old.

She died in 1999. Every Mother’s Day I regret that I never told her how much I loved her and what a wonderful mother she was. She was one hell of a mom.
Happy Mother’s Day, Mom, where ever you are!

16 comments on “Happy Mother’s Day

  1. Denny said: Every Mother’s Day I regret that I never told her how much I loved her and what a wonderful mother she was.
    ———————
    She knew.

  2. It’s good of you to remember her like this and it’s good for us that she brought you into this world so we can read your musings every day.

  3. Your Mom was a remarkable woman. You are lucky to be her son. Very touching story.

    My Mom died last year so this is the first Mothers Day without her. It hurts. Even all the advertisements for Mothers Day gifts hurt.

    My Mom died at 92 so she had a long wonderful life with 6 kids no less.

  4. Great stories about your mother! This is our first Mother’s Day without our last grandma! She had driven to the grocery store herself as always on Sunday. Then on Monday afternoon she got a headache & went to lay down! Apparently she was having a stroke! Her Assistance Care Nurse came on an off-day & figured something was wrong & went in and found her stuck in bed, paralyzed on one side! As sharp as Grandma Bern was she ‘never wanted to be a burden on anyone’ (her words)! So she just “let-go” and was gone 10 days later! She wasn’t active like your mom but she loved playing board & card games! I think that’s what kept her so “sharp” to the end!
    “Here’s to all of the Mom’s out there”, past, present & future!

  5. My mom is still with us and as active as ever…as a matter of fact, she still drives, travels, is fully engaged in life and talking to her is like talking to a much younger adult though now in her late eighties she is starting to show her age.
    However, that said, I sometimes wish I had been born to a different mother as I find her a problem to deal with.
    My mother is a very astute woman though her level of integrity leaves something to be desired and this goes back many years to when I was a young child in the early 50’s.

    Her crowning achievement for me was about twenty years ago when she was single (widowed- 3rd time), in her late 60’s and met this nice guy who had been taking care of his severely crippled wife for many years. When she died, he was lonely and met my mom and after a 4 month whirlwind romance, they got married and moved down to Florida where he proceeded to die after 3 mos. of marriage.
    My mom claimed as much of his substantial estate as the courts would let her take and needless to say, his grown kids were choked as in less than 6 months, they lost their mom, their dad and a substantial part of their inheritance to this strange woman.

    I told my mom that she was wrong and should of walked with her ring and maybe a few tokens, as she wasn’t with him long enough to lay claim to much, but she was having nothing to
    do with that reasoning.
    She has since remarried twice since then and the present character is younger than me and I’m the youngest of her 4 kids.

    He’s probably hoping to cash in on her estate which is fine by me as I’m not getting involved in tainted money.
    I rarely talk to her so I guess everything does come with a price and I’m part of that price.
    However she is my mom, so I will wish her the best today as it is the right thing to do.

  6. Denny , I read your Mother post every year & hang on every word…Then I think about my mom & things get misty, but I like you was very fortunate to have the mother I had.
    Mom used to call me almost every day at work to see how I was doing , my phone then was a push button type & shortly after her passing the Company I worked for “American Sterilizer” replaced those phones. My phone went home with me in my brief case & today it sits on a riser shelf on my home office desk.
    I kept it memory of her & sometimes I look at it wishing it would ring again so I could hear her say “How you doing kid?” .
    Its true none of us could ever tell our mothers how much we loved them but as NHTOM posted they knew & still do ..But damn I wish that phone would ring again.
    Take care Denny…Dudley

  7. I’ve got lots of pictures like that. My mom was into genealogy and traced our family tree back to the old country on both sides.

    Sadly, we lost her two weeks ago (cancer). She was the last of her generation on that side of the family.

  8. Terrific writing my friend. That was straight from your heart. Memories are the best part of life sometimes.

  9. My mom’s 72 years young right now and like your mom, is very young at heart. She was widowed early as my dad died at 48 (when mom was 46) like his father at 48 and his grandfather at 47 (I’m 51 now and think I’m on borrowed time). I have a good relationship with her but am not the most open person in the world. If there’s one thing I could tell her now that would be that my dad and her provided me and my 3 younger sisters with a great childhood. Never wanting for anything that we needed, but never getting anything that we didn’t earn or wasn’t deserved. I watched both she and my dad work hard, skimp on things so us kids could have, and raise a traditional nuclear family. I know when she’s gone, I’ll regret not being more open and talkative with her about these things, but I’d like to think that as she watches me live my life that her and my dad’s raising had a positive impact on me. Good post Denny.

  10. Good ole Peachie. I have many fond memories of her. For that matter, I miss Robert too. I don’t have a lot of memories of Virginia. I remember going to her house to swim. I was a kid when she passed away.

    • Virginia was a hypochondriac. She was in her 60’s when she died so maybe she was on to something. She was my godmother so she was nice to me. She wasn’t as much fun as my godfather, your dad. If you haven’t heard the story, ask your mom about my mom trying to teach her how to drive a stick shift.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *