April 1924
to
January 1994
I was very, very lucky in that I had great parents. Mom only had her Mother for 8yrs before she passed then had a very cold unloving step mother and a stern disciplinarian for a father. But in those first 8yrs of my Mother's life she must have been shown a tremendous amount of love because she certainly knew how to show love to not just us kids but to everyone who passed thru her life. My Dad always said that Mom taught him how to love and to show love!
Both parents instilled love, honesty, faithfulness, integrity, work ethic and compassion in my life.
Mom would camp out on the front porch with me, have snowball fights with me, build snowmen, sing to me, (oh boy) build in home tents with blankets and chairs and then she would make us a 'picnic' to eat in the tent, she taught me the joy of reading, taught me to perfectly iron a man's dress shirt as good as any pro laundry, drove me crazy with never putting pot and pans back in the same place twice, laughed with me and at me, cried with me and for me way to many times to count, taught the joy of flower gardening, I could go on and on..... Of all the memories the most prominent one is going for a walk during the first good snowstorm of the season. We would walk uptown and go window shopping and in JJ Newbury's we would have cocoa. Then she would call Dad to come pick up up and we would go to a restaurant called Patsy's and have an Italian supper.
Mom was quick to dust my britches when I did something wrong or disobeyed. But she was even quicker to show love and pride in my accomplishments.
She was an awesome Grandmother. Both my kids adored her and David thought she could walk on water.
Never bought my Mother cut flowers for Mother's Day. If there wasn't something that I could go out and pick, it was always something growing whether an indoor house plant or something she could plant outside. The last item I bought was a Tea Rose bush in a salmon color. After she and Dad both died and the house was to be sold I dug that rose bush up and took it to TN with me and transplanted it. No matter what I did or tried to do with that bush I could not save it. It slowly faded away and died. I cried harder over than bush than I did at Mom's funeral. Sounds funny, huh? But we knew that Mom was dying and when she did it was a welcome release for her and the family to know that she was not in pain any more. But that rose bush dying brought forth all the grief and anguish I had been holding inside.
When I was little I use to dream of being her flower girl while waiting for her and Dad to get married. It finally happened Nov 7, 1993 but by then I had to be her matron of honor. It was my honor to stand with my parents when they finally got married the day before I turned 39.
17yrs since Mom passed over and I miss her voice and touch each and every day. And even tho I didn't like her perfume? I miss that too.