My mother celebrates ninety years today. She’s asked me to
keep it a secret. To tell people she is only eighty-nine. For some reason she
seems to think this sounds better. I beg to differ. No surprise there. I am her
daughter after all. We are supposed to have our share of disagreements. And on
this one I stand firm. I think ninety sounds pretty fantastic.
My mother contests she never thought she would live this
long. Neither did I. She had two near fatal illnesses under the age of twelve.
And then there was the fear of cancer. Her mother had died when my mother was
just seventeen, a tragic loss to breast cancer at a time when there was no such
thing as Breast Cancer Awareness Month much less a breast cancer survivor.
When I was a young teenager I was convinced that my life
would parallel hers, which meant that I too would lose my mother when I reached
the age of seventeen. I never shared my fears, instead lying awake at night in
my twin bed with the yellow and orange flowered bedspread she had made for me, counting
how much time we had left together.
What I didn’t know until years later was that she had
harbored the same fear. She told me, not that long ago, how she would write
away for every piece of information she could find on how to prevent the
dreaded disease. Until my father
made her stop. He told her she had to relax and stop worrying so much. She was going to be okay. He was right. She was going to be okay. And
one October, many years into the future we would be celebrating her ninetieth
birthday.
My mother is the reason I live the life I do. That alone is
cause for celebration. Her
fierceness and independence was how I learned to walk the path I have chosen. She
was always a forward thinker, reading up on what’s new and willing to try
something different. She embraced the multitude of change that has spanned her
lifetime. She taught me kindness and to look out for those less fortunate than
us. She has never forgotten her roots, the second and middle daughter of seven
children born to Greek immigrant parents, she lived through a real Depression,
a World War and great personal tragedy. And yes, her family had at one time
benefited from government help through food stamps.
She taught me to love the written word, reading to me every
day from a giant book of stories and nursery rhymes until I could read myself,
how accessorizing is the key to a good sense of fashion style and that cooking
and baking were arts as well as demonstrations of love to those you prepared
them for.
And when Dad died far too young, my mother was the one who
sat me down the afternoon after the funeral and told me life would go on, that
as hard as it was to imagine, I would be happy again. She helped me to
understand that death was a part of life we could never escape and we must
learn to be accepting of it. At the time I didn’t buy into it. But ultimately
she proved what she still likes to remind me. A mother is always right.
Our roles have reversed in recent years. She looks to me for
help now. She asks me what to do. She is the one to call me when she is worried
or concerned or needs help with something. I am the one who takes her shopping
instead of her taking me. I am the one baking her favorite Greek cookies
instead of her surprising me. I remind her what she needs to do.
She tells me constantly how proud she is of me and how
grateful she is for what I do for her. She doesn’t know where I get my calm
from and how I do all I do. She says that now she learns from me. And while I know that is all true, I am
still learning from her.
This gift of her long life has been a gift to me as well. She’s
lived long enough that we have gotten to work through our mother-daughter
“stuff” and really like each other. I have had the rare opportunity to see the
woman she didn’t share with me when I was growing up. The one who wasn’t always
so brave and strong and knowing, in control and independent. The one who was also
vulnerable and at times fragile. The
side she hid from her children so we could rely on her strength.
So once again she is teaching me. She is letting me see the
woman she reserved for her closest friends. She is demonstrating for me the
beauty in vulnerability. That it is not something to protect oneself from, but
instead one of the greatest acts of courage and strength.
My mother is one of the strongest people I know. As she
likes to remind me, she had no one to teach her. It was just how she learned to survive. I am more fortunate.
I have had her to lead the way. And I am so grateful.
So while my mother thinks we should keep this birthday
quiet, I am not listening. I am celebrating her and the great fortune I have
had to call her Mom.
Happy 90th!
Kourambiathes are Greek cookies baked for celebration. These are not in the traditional shape, nevertheless, they have been baked with love. |
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