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I spend most of my time running after my two toddlers. Married to the man of my dreams, I strive to live the life Christ would want me to live. I am...
 
 
 
 

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Mourning Mom

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I mourned my mother last night. I've been mourning her for more than a year now, but I think it was different this time. This time, I missed her with no reservations. No judgment. No blame. This time, when I cried for her, I was in her arms. Surrounded by her smell, her soft arms I would rub in my hands and say felt like kneaded flour. Not hard like mine. And I would laugh. She would smile. Oh, the arrogance of youth.

I was twenty-nine when she died. I wasn't a mother.

I miss her now. And in missing her, I am inexorably drawn to miss my childhood, my teenage years, my youthful twenties. I miss knowing that my entire life is ahead of me. Possibilities are now crystallized into goals and everything is over thought and analyzed. Every decision has an end. Objectives have replaced dreams. There is a hard edge to imagination and there is never, ever enough time. I want to relive that. I want to be able to ignore dishes in the sink and be perfectly, completely oblivious to laundry piling up. I want to surprise myself by stuffing something hot into my mouth without blowing on it first. I want to enjoy peanut butter and jelly sandwiches without the worrying about gaining weight. I want to forget phrases like “glycemic index.”

And then I look at my three month old. I love how she sleeps with her hands by her side, a tiny perfect being on the seat of a couch and her defiant, confident cry that announces to whoever will listen that she is hungry. How she gives herself up wholly in her sleep, how she smiles with her entire body. I hate to think growing up is going to change that. I want to rescue her, but I cannot. I am on the other side of the river and I cannot carry her across. I can only throw out a mental bridge – soft as a cobweb – and hope she catches it. She has to bear her own weight, swim against her own tide.

I wish my mother was here to see me swim against mine. Then again, there is a certain beauty in her not seeing me struggle through the ugly pupal stage of becoming an adult. Through her, in some small place in my heart, I can remain forever a child. I can waste time by sleeping in. I can burn my lips and never learn. I can get my clothes dirty in the rain and let my daughter do the same. It’s just as fine to throw a fit and cry over being bored in the summer. It’s all just fine. Because when you are a child in the world of mothers, everything is just all right.

It's a huge responsibility to be a mother to my daughter, this tiny being now nestled in my arms. But then again, it's the easiest thing in the world. I just have to be here. As long as I can. And I have to love her and hug her for a lifetime.

I am the bridge between my mother and my daughter. And I am here.

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dpavlichek 5 pts

I lost my mother in March 2006, and yes, I still miss her but in different ways now. That's the thing about grief. It's never really gone, but it always changes and somehow becomes easier to bear.

May your mother's soul be at peace - D

purvabrown 5 pts

Michelle,

Thanks for reading. I hope you will visit my other blog at Mommy Wants Another ( http://mommywantsanotherbaby.blogspot.com ) - I write there more often.

Thanks,

Purva

sognatrice 5 pts

Thank you, Purva, for reminding me how fortunate I am to have a fabulous relationship with my mom and to still have her just a phone call (and an ocean) away. This is a truly beautiful post.

Hugs from southern Italy,

Michelle Fabio of Bleeding Espresso ( http://bleedingespresso.com )

purvabrown 5 pts

... while growing up. Sometimes, I took her for granted a lot. You just have to live and learn. And I guess, at some point, accept.

Purva.

purvabrown 5 pts

I really wish you luck. I'm so glad my mother and I had that last Christmas in which I felt truly accepted by her. If we hadn't perhaps I would still feel differently about her.

Purva.

muimi07 5 pts

Thank you for sharing this beautiful post. I am sorry for your loss.  I cannot imagine losing my mother and yet there are many times I take her for granted.

Michelle ~ http://www.mommymisadventures.com/

lucyandrez 5 pts

Thank you for sharing your mind. You make me realized how precious the time we have with our mother. My mother is still alive now. We recently involved in conflict...Very often. I feel so guilty now. I promise I will give more time to share and care with her. Once again thank you...

Lucy ( http://www.besttoyguide.com/ )

purvabrown 5 pts

I think you absolutely have it right! Talking to her even when she's not around should help. I talk to her only in dreams - and sometimes when I've had too much wine :) Interestingly enough, she did come to me in my dreams and introduced me to my daughter in my womb at 18 weeks. Weird? I don't know. All I know was I grew up knowing she loved me and I was having a daughter.

Thanks for reading.

Purva ( http://mommywantsanotherbaby.blogspot.com ).

purvabrown 5 pts

Even though she isn't here today, I like to believe she knows what I'm doing and is proud of me. You're very lucky. and yes, you should hug your mother!

Purva ( http://mommywantsanotherbaby.blogspot.com )

purvabrown 5 pts

One of the things I didn't mention in the post was that it wasn't an easy relationship with my mother either. There was just the last Christmas when it was perfect. Maybe we both needed that, maybe I needed it more than her! But I thank God for that everyday.

Purva ( http://mommywantsanotherbaby.blogspot.com ).

purvabrown 5 pts

I find she lives in me always... more so now that I am a mother myself. Thanks for reading!

Purva. ( http://mommywantsanotherbaby.blogspot.com )

The Accidental Housewife 5 pts

I am so sorry for your loss.  My heart aches for you. 

I lost my mother two years ago Christmas.  There is not a day that goes by that I don't miss her and want to talk to  her.  I pick up the phone to call her and realize she's not there.  Crazy as it may seem I just talk to her anyway.  I tell her about her beautiful funny great grandaughter.  I ask what was the secret ingredient in her meatloaf that always made it taste so much better than mine.  I know she is here with me every minute in my heart but I so want to sit with her and talk with her.

She is one of the reasons that I blog.  I used to call and talk to her and now she's gone so I write instead.

Hugs to you and your family from my mom and me.

christinajeanne 5 pts

Your post reminded me how fragile life truly can be. You never know what will or can happen. I don't have any children yet but I do hope my mom get's to see her grand kids even though I don't think she is in a hurry to be a grandmother. I hope my mother is around for a very long time. She says she wants to see me do something great with my life and I hope she does get to see that.

Christina

Lauriesm 5 pts

I haven't stopped missing her either. Sometimes I forget she's gone and reach for the phone to call her.

Ours wasn't an easy relationship, but it doesn't change that she's gone and I won't ever have a chance to talk to her again.

Through it all, my son has been the one who keeps me going. You're so right. We are the bridges between the past and the future.

Laurie J. Storey-Manseau

www.walkinginmysleep.com ( http://www.walkinginmysleep.com/ )

www.storeymanseau.com ( http://www.storeymanseau.com/ )

JC 5 pts

My mom looks so frail to me.  I enjoy being with her but feel the twinge of knowing that one day she'll be gone.  I really feel for you.  But like Laura said, your mom lives within you as you pass on and use what she taught you with your own daughter.

http://www.storyrhyme.com/jcsblog

rebellious thinker 5 pts

Beautiful post. My mother turned 75 the other day, and has watched me in that "maternal pupal stage" and now, now we are old hats talking about my daughters in that way that mothers who become friends have. I'm sorry that you don't have that, but you have the beauty of her memory and lessons within in, and they are surely being passed on to your daughter.

Laura, www.RebelliousThoughtsofaWoman.com ( http://www.rebelliousthoughtsofawoman.com/ )

purvabrown 5 pts

Laura,

Lucky, lucky, lucky you! I wish I had had that experience with her. But I do intend to be there as long as possible with my daughter. Thank you for reading.

Purva. http://mommywantsanotherbaby.blogspot.com

purvabrown 5 pts

Giyen,

You're right. I don't think I'm ever going to stop missing her. I do know she is here in spirit, though. Thanks for the hug.

Purva ( http://MommyWantsAnotherBaby.Blogspot.com ).

purvabrown 5 pts

Kristin,

Thanks much for the compliments on the post. I hope you'll check back often or go to http://mommywantsanotherbaby.blogspot.com ( http://mommywantsanotherbaby.blogspot.com/ ) - I write there more often.

Purva.

Kristin Darguzas 5 pts

What an incredbily beautiful and profound post -- you have such a keen ability to convey the bittersweet of aging, motherhood and loss.  Lovely.

Giyen 5 pts

It's been almost 30 years since my mom died.  I've missed her at every milestone in my life but you'll find that having a daughter helps to heal that big hole left in your heart.  That's what I found. : )

Sending you a big hug!

Giyen

Bacon Is My Enemy ( http://www.baconismyenemy.com )

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