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When My Mother Went Away

In my mother’s kitchen

When my mother went away, she took with her a large part of my foundation.

If she were still with us, she would have just turned ninety-six. As it is though, she was gone seven years this Mother’s Day.

Her passing, though she was ready, tore my heart wide open.

Although I knew my parents would probably proceed me in death, I never really saw my mom as the sort of person who would actually die.

She had already survived so much.

She survived her own mother dying when she was five,

She survived her father signing her away to be adopted when she was six.

She survived being cut off from all her siblings because, as my grandmother saw it, those people weren’t her family anymore.

She survived being put out on the porch without a coat or shoes in the middle of a North Dakota winter because she passed gas at the supper table.

She survived losing the father who adopted her (whom she loved dearly) shortly after she graduated from high school.

She also survived raising the six of us.

When she actually died, even though it was imminent, it was a shock.

When I came back home, it still felt like I could pick up the phone and call her. Many times I almost did, realizing after that urge to call, that she wouldn’t be there to answer.

My grieving was interrupted. The year my mother died, my husband had the first of three surgeries-one after the other-about 4 months apart with physical therapy in between.

Me-far left, mom-third to the right of me circa 1974

Stop.

It was at this point in writing this post two weeks ago, that I just stopped writing this and stared at the screen, all this emotion just piling up on me.

Fast forward two weeks. Two weeks in real time-our time now. Once again, I begin to write.

After my mom died, we had the surgeries. My husband, who thought he would recover and go back to work, was disabled and was not able to work anymore.

My dad died the following year, and because it was Easter week and many family members were out of town, we scheduled my parent’s funeral (they were both cremated) for four months later.

Then there was the cleaning out of the house.

The three story and a basement house.

The fifty-eight of their almost sixty-one years together house.

As I live so far away and I was working at the time, and with my husband’s disability, I wasn’t there to help as much as I would have liked to have been, but the rest of my siblings (there are six of us) did a great job of getting the house ready to sell.

The following year, the house sold.

It takes my mind time to make sense of things. To find the patterns. To work through all the emotions.

I need to put all the pieces together to understand it and move through it.

I’m still not on the other side of it yet.

I was half orphaned at fifty-five and fully orphaned at fifty-seven and I’m still not sure what to do with that.

It has altered every part of my being. It has affected my thinking and sent my mind to places familiar and places long forgotten.

My dad often wondered what kind of music it would make in heaven if someone from every language on the planet said the rosary in their own language at the same time.

I hope he was greeted with that beautiful sound when he arrived in heaven and I hope mom and Elizabeth, my sister who was stillborn, were there to share that with him.

I’d like to go to heaven for a sleepover with my mother like I did when she was in the nursing home. We stayed up late talking and laughing and enjoying each other’s company until the night nurse poked her head in and told us to go to sleep.

It made me smile for a long time. It still does.

I so miss having them physically here to hug and to cook for and to talk to. I miss my dad’s potato pancake story. I miss my mother’s clothes pins. I miss going home. I miss grilling out hot dogs and making potato salad with my siblings for a family gathering.

I miss sitting on the front porch in my pajamas sipping coffee early on a summer morning sucking in the cool air and my dad tells me I need a jacket and I tell him I’m sucking in all the cool air to take back to Georgia with me because it’s so stinking hot down there.

I hate that they’re not with us for the debut of their first great-great grandchild. I’m sure they met him in heaven before he came down here, but it would be so great to be able to share this experience with them.

I’m so grateful though, that I got to have my parents as long as I had them.

There is so much more to all this–some of it funny, some of it heartbreaking. I’m still working through it all.

The love and joy of family, the good times, the rough times, the times we are apart, the times we are together-it’s all so simple and basic and yet it’s so complicated–a paradox for sure.

I wouldn’t trade it for anything.

The beginnings of my memory wall in my office.

~~~

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10 Replies

  1. Mary Dooley Cooper

    Love that Carol! Just rembering how wonderful your mom and dad were brings tears to my eyes they were so special to me. I always think of our families as we were always cousins. Just wanted to let you know that I miss them so much and think of them often. I was blessed to have them as my God parents.
    Love you! Marme!

    1. carol

      Thanks Marme! We were all lucky to have each other. What a childhood we had! I’ve sure missed all of you over the years. I miss your dad and I need to call your mom and talk with her. I love all of you so much! Thanks for sharing!

      1. Lori

        Carol, I love reading everything you write. You are amazing. Can’t wait to read what’s next.

        1. carol

          Thanks so much Lori, I appreciate that!

  2. Jim L.

    I know, right?

    1. carol

      Absolutely cuz!

  3. lou

    Some lessons, for me anyway, cannot be fully learned until they are lived. I just want to shout to the world, “Appreciate what you have before it’s gone!!!” But, I myself had heard that a thousand times over, and I thought that I did.

    I didn’t!

    I think it is impossible to comprehend the depth of a loss, as well as the depth of our love, before it is gone. Because the depth of our loss is equal to the depth of our love, the only way to not hurt in life is to not love.

    With that in mind, I have to say that this is the most beautiful pain I have ever experienced in my life. I miss them both more than I ever thought possible.

    1. carol

      Beautifully put. As cousin Jim said, “I know, right?” That kinda says it all.

  4. Colleen Dooley

    Beautiful!! Thank you for sharing! So many fond memories! I remember when my parents went on a trip and we stayed with you guys. I had left on the stereo at our place and felt incredibly guilty for leaving it on. I went to your Mom and confessed of my wrong doing. She held me so tight and stroked my hair and told me that everything was going to be okay. I felt much better. I know this story is strange. But, the power of her hugs could heal anything! Love to you and the Lester Family…

    1. carol

      That’s awesome and so mom! She was an incredibly good woman. She always knew the right thing to say to make you feel better. We were so lucky to have two families when we were growing up.

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