coming out of my shell

coming out of my shell

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Accepting my mother

A year ago this week I left Central Florida to go to Northern Indiana to help my siblings manage my mother's death. I spent a week listening to her labored breathing, listening for that last breath   signalling a peaceful end to a long, hard life. We protected her in death, she was never alone until she...was. When she took that final breath four of her seven children were standing sentinel at the four corners of her bed. She had to leave us, because we were not about to leave her.

My mother was always important to me, always a key figure in my development. She was not the perfect mother, but how many of us are? I think that might be an unrealistic expectation; a childish fantasy.
I decided long ago to cut her some slack.

If I held her responsible for all my neuroses I would never have a chance at overcoming them on my own. I would never grow up. But then again, my mother was never a monster. I wonder if it is even possible to accept the shortcomings of a mother who actually tries to do her children harm?  It is easier to forgive ignorance than it is to forgive meanness.

In many ways my Mom
was the typical woman and mother of her working class, Midwestern U.S.A. milieu. Those mothers from Tim Brokaw's Greatest Generation did not pay close attention to their children's psychological well-being. For them, knowing right from wrong was simple, they did not think overmuch about the gray areas.

Things changed in the 1960's, and I don't think t
he older generations ever understood how complex and challenging the world became for their children. I have spent my whole life trying to figure out right from wrong, often making it up as I go along. For better or worse, that sort of moral confusion was a foreign concept to my mother.


She tried to be a good person.
Sometimes she fell short, but overall she was kind and good. She could also be quirky and stubborn. I liked that part of her the best. She loved her family in a simple, casual way. However, it has been neither simple nor casual letting her go.

I think my mother's best maternal quality was that she accepted her children for who we were as children and for who we became as adults. In retrospect, that was huge. She trusted love. Not many of my friends' mothers were so accepting. And with seven strong-willed (and very different) baby-boomer children that couldn't have been easy.

Easter 1953



8 comments:

  1. Very thoughtful, it is possible to forgive a mother who meant harm but it's a constant work in progress. On both sides. Like you, I've decided to cut her some slack... particularly after having learned about episodes from her past. The gift of acceptance you and your siblings received from your mother is a very great thing; I am truly glad for you. =)

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    1. Yes, I am very thankful for my mother's acceptance and love. My father was the problematic one in my family. But like you say, knowing how they were raised sometimes help us in understanding the underlying motives of a troubled person.

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  2. Love like that from a mom is huge. You were lucky to have had that.

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  3. Very tender and truthful. It was only when I hit 40 that I realised that my mother was actually an attractive woman apart from being my mother and that she she was never an old woman until much much later.

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    1. It is really hard to see them as separate people, and not just The Mom.

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  4. Unlike my brothers I spent most every day of my life with my mother until her death three years ago. And yes, I was there at the very end, with my daughter by my side. Without getting too deep so early I shall just say this post hit very close to home.

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So, whadayathink?