When I was a teenager, and I got in trouble for smoking cigarettes at the mall, my mom grounded me. I remember curling up like a little shell on my bed, sobbing, as my mom gave me a stern lecture about the dangers of tobacco.
Suddenly, a sly look flashed across her face as she said, “But what kind of cigarettes were they? … I used to smoke Camels.”
Mine were Winston Ultra Lights, but that’s beside the point.
The point is that this story summarizes my mom. She knew the rules, and she played by them. But there was also a wild streak that she rarely indulged, a cheeky side that I only saw in bursts and flickers.
Today is the 12th anniversary of her death, and for some reason it’s hitting me hard this year.
I often wonder if she had known how it would end, would she have lived her life differently? I don’t mean smoking cigarettes or even tearing through a to-do list à la Queen Latifah in “Last Holiday.” But something in between. How would she have inhabited her days?
I think about how my mom occasionally took the long route home from church, the country road that meandered past a farm with peacocks, simply because she wanted to catch a glimpse of the colors. Perhaps she would have taken the scenic route more often. Maybe it would’ve been all scenic routes.
I remember how she denied herself pleasure simply to keep up appearances or to fit into a specific pair of pants or to follow someone else’s playbook, and none of that matters anymore. It never mattered.
Maybe today, in honor of my mom’s passing, you could indulge yourself. Eat a pastry you’ve never tried before. Play a new sport. Take the long road. Sing out loud. Wear something sparkly. Devour a mango and let it be juicy. Love something fiercely.
“We’re nothing but brief bodies,” writes poet Joy Sullivan, which is true, and we deserve to lead scrumptious lives. Do something wonderful and succulent today.
1 Comment
So sorry for losing your Mom, Maggie. It’s something I dread fiercely – losing my parents. Even as a child it was at the forefront of my mind (how would I survive without them, and the same intensity applies even as a 59-year-old daughter). And so I ensure that I spend every other weekend with them. They are 80 and 86 and thankfully still living together at home, cooking, gardening (garden is manicured to perfection – my Mom gets down on her hands and knee to trim the grass edging with SCISSORS at the age of 80!).
But going back to you, your Mom was far too young and had so much more to do, specifically to enjoy her family! There are no magic words to provide to anyone who is grieving loss, only to feel the uncomfortable feeling and to not be afraid of it – your Mom IS you now and you are living for her. And from what I have learned from your posts, you are a positive lady with so much energy for life with the gift of sharing your stories most eloquently – your Mom would have been (and is) so proud of her daughter! 🌺