Originally posted May 2010
My Mother died in December of 2007. A week after she died I sat down and wrote this brief and inadequate tribute to her.
A sincere Happy Mother's Day to all to whom it applies. I still miss her.
Early in the morning of her second day in the Intensive
Care Unit at Long
Beach Memorial
Hospital
my Mother, Beverly Richards, was startled awake by loud beeps and bells. Her
blood pressure had dropped precipitously and her hospital monitoring equipment
was alerting everyone. Four nurses, who had been instructed in no uncertain
terms that no heroic measures were to be taken to sustain her life, lined the
wall she faced. Once Mom understood what was happening (she told me that for a
moment she believed that death had finally arrived) she gathered her wits and
said, "'...any man's death diminishes me, because I am involved in
mankind; and therefore never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for
thee.'" Always the perfect line. But, much to her chagrin, she was not
Donne yet.
I awakened this morning at 6:45 AM, the exact time Mom
passed a week ago, and felt urgently compelled to write a bit about her. I
write only about the woman I knew, not the one you knew or my sister knew or my
brother knew or my father knew. Those are different women. I can only speak of
the woman I knew as my Mother.
She forever made me laugh. Not with jokes or wit, but with
character, the essence of all great comedy. One afternoon when I was at my desk
at my apartment in South
Pasadena the phone rang. I
answered and heard my Mother say, "Hello, this is Beverly Richards, I'm
calling to see if my prescription is ready yet." Altering my voice a bit I
replied, "I'm sorry, Mrs. Richards, I don't have any record of any prescriptions
to be refilled for you." Nothing drove my Mom crazier than incompetence.
She said in a stern, teacherly voice, "I phoned yesterday afternoon and
spoke to someone, it may have been you, and they assured me that my drugs would
be ready today." "I'm sorry, I just don't have any record of that
order. Are you certain you're calling the right pharmacy? Maybe you're
confused." Oh, man, that really got her. "You must be confused,"
she said, "for you've confused me with someone who doesn't know what they're
doing." "No need to get snippy, Mrs. Richards, I'm trying to
help." "I'd like to speak with a manager," Mom said. "I am
the manager, Ma'am, and I'm glad that you're speaking to me because I'd hate
for one of my employees to have to deal with you." Now she kicked into her
fed-up mode. "I'd like your name so that I can write a letter to your
employer," my Mother demanded. "Yes, Ma'am, my name is Ronald
Washam." There was a long pause. Over the phone line I could hear the
gears in her head buzzing. Then the light came on. She laughed. She had hit the
wrong number on her automatic dialer and called me instead of the pharmacy. She
was a bit peeved that I'd messed with her like that, though she admitted it was
funny. Then she asked me, "But are my prescriptions ready?"
It wasn't until I was in my 30's that I realized that my
Mom was one of the smartest people I have had the privilege to know. She had
always turned to literature and poetry for wisdom and guidance, and she was
indeed incomparably wise and contemplative. When she went into the hospital for
the last time on Thanksgiving, she made sure to take her homemade book of
poetry. The book is her personal collection of poems, from Frost and
Shakespeare and Wallace Stevens and Edna St. Vincent Millay and Whitman and
innumerable others. The poems are torn from books and newspapers, they are
taped and pasted into the book, a Kahlil Gibran Diary for 1976, with her
favorite passages underlined with her ubiquitous red pen. Like this excerpt
from Stanley Kunitz' poem, "Touch
Me."
I kneeled to the crickets trilling
underfoot as if about
to burst from their crusty shells;
and like a child again
marveled to hear so clear
and brave a music pour
from such a small machine.
What makes the engine go?
Desire, desire, desire.
She had me read "Touch Me" to her in her hospital
bed and spoke to me about that final line. As if to say to me that her desire
to live had abandoned her; that desire which had driven her all of her life, as
it drives us all, had fled; but that burning desire, desire, desire had driven
her to do all the wonderful things and all the foolish things she had done in
her long life; only now, at 83, desire had dried up and blown away, like the
abandoned exoskeleton of a dead cricket. If you think I read too much into the words
of a dying woman, you vastly underestimate that woman.
As a child, indeed all of my life, my Mother allowed me to
be myself. That cannot have been easy. I was shy, withdrawn, moody, stubborn
and the pickiest eater on the planet. She indulged all of that, and more (as my
family will gleefully attest). I often sat in a different room at dinner. My
grandmother would make a different meal for me if the family's meal were
loathsome fish or disgusting chipped beef or some other food item I wouldn't dream
of eating. Subtly, graciously, lovingly, my Mother's acceptance of me gave me
self-esteem and power. Are there greater gifts a son can receive?
Don't worry, I won't go on much longer. My Mother's courage
and grace the last few days of her life were awe-inspiring. At the end of each
of those last few precious days, after visiting with her family and best
friends and her saints-for-neighbors she would say, "I had a lovely day
today." She's laying (lying?--where are you, Mom, when I need you?) in a
bed in her living room, unable to walk, internally bleeding to death,
contemplating her mortality, and, for her, it could not have been a better day.
She'd ask me to read poetry to her. Another of her favorite poems (you should look
these up, friends) "Sunday Morning" by the great Wallace Stevens.
Here's one of her red underlined excerpts from that poem:
Death is the mother of beauty, mystical,
Within whose burning bosom we devise
Our earthly mothers waiting, sleeplessly.
"we" is double-underlined, it represents a shift
in the poem much too subtle for me to have noticed, but language was Mom's
stock in trade and little escaped her insight, or her red pen. But, really,
"Death is the mother of beauty" is a strange and wonderful thing to
read aloud to your mother on her death bed.
The night after the bells tolled for her in the hospital, my Mother stayed awake all night fearing that she would die in her sleep before seeing my brother Robert who was driving in from Las Vegas that night. Inevitably, she found a blank piece of paper, folded it into quarters, unconsciously mimicking the folios of her beloved Shakespeare (or maybe not unconsciously--I, too, tend to underestimate her), and wrote down her thoughts. I know that she would not mind my sharing a bit of what she wrote.
"I stayed awake all night being grateful for all the
wonderful, precious people in my life. How incredibly blessed I've been with a
brave, loving mother always caring for me, with children who brought so much
joy and pride and adventures. How diminished my life would have been without
them! I loved the happy days, growing up with my father and mother, my sister
and brother, and later in life. The arrival of my dear little grandsons brought
new and unexpected joy. And who can express how much our friends and lovers are
worth for all they give to enrich our lives?
I stayed awake last night to read the poems I love, many
that hold hidden jewels that illuminate life's mysteries in short flashes of
insight into our own complex inner being, and the poems that are sheer delight
or are beauty made manifest.
My heart is filled with gratitude today, so thankful for
one more day."
Mother went into hospice care at home on a Tuesday and had
four more days to be thankful for. I am thankful for every day I spent in her
company. Her last days fueled my Desire to be more grateful, more thankful,
more accepting. My desire to live, not merely exist.
22 comments:
I'm crying
I am so very proud to know you....
Proud to be a mother of a son
I can only hope to be the kind of mother that inspires this much honor, understanding and love.
You take my breath away
I love you
Thank you for making me proud Ron
Thank you for sharing her with us...
Oh, crikeys, you are taking lessons from Samantha and I have tears rolling down my cheeks.
Ron
I can only hope that someday my daughter might be inspired to write about me the way you have written about your mother.
Amy
This is particularly inspiring on the (near) eve of my 40th - the proverbial peak of one's life's trajectory.
Ron - perhaps brief and inadequate for a woman of such stature, who gave you breath and bread, and so many years of love. But more than enough to touch this curmudgeonly heart. Thanks. You are a mensch (I think; I was raised Catholic).
Having the ability to see it, record it, remember it, what a lovely gift. As both myself & wife are the youngest of our families, we hold deep feelings for our sainted mothers. Our daughter will celebrate her birthday this weekend. She will carry our memories forward. Our hope is that she is blessed to meet and know such wonderful people like those of you that gather here on Ron's back porch. 'Now, eat every carrot and pea on your plate..'
Ironically the word verification is "tentate" which in Italian means to "try."
Jimmy sez< 'Now, eat every carrot and pee on your plate..'
Why would I want to do that?
I'll eat my peas but I would rather get a spanking than eat carrots.
Sam:
"I would rather get a spanking than eat carrots"
...does that mean you like spankings or hate carrots?
Well done sir!
Mom taught me to appreciate great writing and the power of words. She could quote Shakespeare for pages and was a heartless critic of almost anyone else. I gave her a Saramago book to read once and she absolutely hated it. "I couldn't figure out what he was saying, and, when I did, it wasn't worth figuring it out." One of my proudest moments was when she loved a novel that I have always loved, Tim O'Brien's "In the Lake of the Woods." She stayed up all night reading it and we talked about it for hours afterward. But Faulkner and Melville were more her style.
I suspect she would have little use for this blog. For one thing, you can't mark the grammatical mistakes with a red pen. And wine writing is almost universally sloppy and imprecise, as sloppy and imprecise as our own abilities to smell and taste. I actually shudder to think what she'd have said about so many of my posts. The Mis(s) Feiring post would have solicited a very long note from her.
It feels like I never write a single sentence without feeling her looking over my shoulder. She doesn't get the jokes, but she appreciates the effort.
Ron, that was beautiful and I admire you for putting it out there. Life perpetually brings challenging twists and turns- taking time to breathe and to love is sometimes all we have. But the love can be wound up so tightly within us that sometimes it's difficult to get out. Your piece moved me into the direction of getting it out... thanks for that.
"She doesn't get the jokes, but she appreciates the effort."
So much insight and lesson in character contained in one seemingly simple sentence. Thanks, Ron.
Matt,
Thanks. I'm mostly here to mock people and have some fun with the relatively uptight wine business, but every once in a while I step out from behind the curtain and act like a normal human being. As so many of us know, Mother's Day becomes infinitely more poignant when your own is no longer alive. I was incredibly fortunate to have had a very healthy and happy relationship with my Mom. That has been a blessing every day of my life.
And, welcome to the HoseMaster Flying Circus. I hope you hang around and contribute often.
Dave,
Folks always ask where I got my sense of humor. I honor Mom by saying it wasn't from her. But you may certainly blame her for my unearned sense of confidence.
I think your pharmacy story is a testament to your mother's sense of humor and her ability to appreciate yours. Thanks for being human and sharing your mother just a bit with us, I feel like I understand you a bit better. Uh oh.
Beautiful stuff, Ron. I am 99 on it. I could have been 100 on it, except for the gratuitous drive-by shooting of the chipped beef. I adore creamed chipped beef!
Ron,
So glad you posted it again: always a poignant and inspiring read.
Your tribute has drawn me to your mother, but her response to having read Saramago has made me understand her.
Bill,
99? Thanks. You're the Jay Miller of commenters.
Now that's a gratuitous drive-by!
Thomas,
I concede Saramago is an acquired taste. But I think it was really Saramago's atheism that offended my Mom. That, and his punctuation. She believed that God is in the proper use of semi-colons.
Very interesting to re-read this lovely piece now. Still as powerful and heartfelt as the first time I read it but I can see even more of you in it now. I know your mother had to be proud of you and the man that you became Ron, and trust me, as a mother, one of the most amazing feelings there is.
I love you.
Ron,
I love the idea that after slogging through the writing she came to the conclusion that the author's conclusions weren't worth the horrible trip--a double indictment (I believe in the Godliness of the dash).
Well worth posting again. Thanks.
Sometimes, we just have to stop talking about wine.
Thank you, Beverly.
1. A mom must show herself to her kids.
2. Words are golden.
Thanks again, Ron.
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