willowbrook farm

historic yellow springs

Mother’s Day Memories of My Great Blessings

This post is an edited version of one that I wrote a few years back but due to the loss of the main woman in this post this past summer amidst Covid… my Nan… I have rewritten and added to it.

As I prepared to write this blog post, my intent was to share ideas on special and unique ways to celebrate the upcoming Mother’s Day. I was going to give ideas on crafting a gorgeous champagne bar if you were celebrating at home. So to begin the post, I went digging in my photo albums (these celebrations took place before smart phones) to look for photos of my own past Mother’s Day celebrations when my children were young for I do like to connect my ideas to memories! Upon searching, I found the above photo in a frame that I had put it in 19 years ago, after it was taken. It is of our fourth child Aidan, giving a kiss that landed on the nose of his great grandmother, Nan, who was eighty years young on that day! As I gazed at its surface, I could barely see through the foggy and cloudy glass that covered the photo. Taking the photo out from behind the glass, I dropped it and it shattered on the kitchen floor. Sweeping up the broken pieces, I thought to myself how thankful I was that I had put this photo behind that now broken glass for it had protected that precious photo from the dust that had gathered on its surface and the photo was in perfect shape. If only the glass could have protected my grandmother from all of the pain that life brings along with its beauty.

Her first pain was of losing her mother Nana, as she was lovingly referred to by all. Nana’s husband had left them when she was a young girl, which was very unheard of in her 1920’s upbringing, leaving my Nan as an only child to be raised solo by her mother. Nana despite this difficulty, had a joy in life that is hard to come by. She had convictions of steel and a heart of cotton candy.

Nana was part of a trio of sisters, actually there were eight siblings in the bunch but the three women on the left, Nana, Auntie and Aunt Pearl, were a huge part of my life growing up and were lumped together in the term we used for them…The Ladies. Like their sister cohort Nana, these women were made of steel, all having lost their husbands early in life, but who banded together, put on their pantyhose and dresses and showed up with joy, a work ethic that was enviable, a little mischief… and their tea and hot toddies every day being of English descent. My grandmother Nan, cared for each of them as they lived with her until their departure to heaven at the glorious ages of 98, 96 and 94 respectively. Only one of the ladies had children of their own, my Nana due to their husbands early loss but all were mothers to their grand children and great grand children.

Nan’s next great loss in her life was that of my great grandfather Pops, who she happily shared a marriage with for sixty long years, entwined as they were with each other in every aspect of their lives.

Then in the past twenty years, both of her daughters passed away, my dad’s only siblings Corinne and Sannie. A loss that no parent should have to bear… that of loosing your children, no matter their age. She has enjoyed a very very long relatively healthy life but to outlive her children and her husband has been a heartache that she has born that stems from the love that a mother has for her children and their father. That thought made me recall the poem that I had been planning on using in this post.

“When God Created Mothers”

When the Good Lord was creating mothers, He was into His sixth day of overtime when the angel appeared and said, “You’re doing a lot of fiddling around on this one.”

And God said, “Have you read the specs on this order? She has to be completely washable, but not plastic. Have 180 moveable parts…all replaceable. Run on black coffee and leftovers. Have a lap that disappears when she stands up. A kiss that can cure anything from a broken leg to a disappointed love affair. And six pairs of hands.”

The angel shook her head slowly and said. “Six pairs of hands…. no way.” 

“It’s not the hands that are causing me problems”, God remarked, “it’s the three pairs of eyes that mothers have to have.”

“That’s on the standard model?” asked the angel. God nodded. 

“One pair that sees through closed doors when she asks, ‘What are you kids doing in there?’ When she already knows. Another here in the back of her head that sees what she shouldn’t but what she has to know, and of course the ones here in front that can look at a child when he goofs up and say, ‘I understand and I love you’ without so much as uttering a word.”

“God”, said the angel touching his sleeve gently, “Get some rest tomorrow….” 

“I can’t”, said God, “I’m so close to creating something so close to myself. Already I have one who heals herself when she is sick…can feed a family of six on one pound of hamburger…and can get a nine year old to stand under a shower.”

The angel circled the model of a mother very slowly. “It’s too soft,” she sighed. 

“But tough!” said God excitedly. “You can imagine what this mother can do or endure.”

“Can it think?”

“Not only can it think, but it can reason and compromise,” said the Creator.

Finally, the angel bent over and ran her finger across the cheek. 

There’s a leak,” she pronounced. “I told You that You were trying to put too much into this model.”

“It’s not a leak,” said the Lord, “It’s a tear.”

“What’s it for?”

“It’s for joy, sadness, disappointment, pain, loneliness, and pride.”

“You are a genius”, said the angel.

Somberly, God said, “I didn’t put it there.” 
― Erma Bombeck

This excerpt is my absolute favorite, hands down, in expressing what it means to be a mother. I am sure that many of you have read it before and know it well. Erma Bombeck nailed it, as she did with so many other pieces of her writing, and as I read it, yet again for its “upti-umpf” time, it brings that same leak to my cheek that it always does.

Between the two images that were going to fuel my blog post about mothers and celebrating them, the photo of my great grandmother, and this poem, I couldn’t possibly write about a Mimosa bar. But I could write about the fact that even through the cloudy glass that had covered that photo, that image brought me back to that day as if it was last year’s mother’s day, not one that had occurred almost twenty years ago. The sun was brilliant that day. We had gone to brunch at a local restaurant that had been housed in an old farmhouse called the Lions Share. It has since closed and a pool or hot tub store was added onto it and the character has been remodeled out of it, but that is another story. Four of my five siblings had attended with my own Mom, Dad, my Grandfather and Grandmother, the above pictured woman. We had four of our five children at that time and since the day was so beautiful and the children having been all under the age of eight, were fairly ready to play after the brunch. Should I say, bursting at the seams to get out of their seats and play. The restaurant, having a front yard full of grass, became their playground as we exited and there they played as we adults watched them and finished our conversations. Nan had sat on the ground with them to play, as she was known to do and Aidan planted that kiss on we think, what was intended to hit her lips but landed on her nose. Even better was that I happened to capture that image on my camera… not my iPhone for they did not exist at that time! While I curse i-phones on a regular basis, I do wish that I had one when my children were young only so that I could have captured many more images of the everyday like this one.

The point in recalling that day for you that are reading this, is that I have no idea what I ate that day at the brunch, nor do I even remember the decor of the table, nor the room we were seated in, although I do remember it was cozy. It could be that I did not sit for long since I think I had a spring where my behind used to be that launched me into action as the young ones called and caused me to sit very little in those days… Erma… you forgot to write about that part of God’s creation! What I do remember was sitting in that grass with THOSE people, enjoying each other’s company and the sunshine…and that kiss.

It truly is the moments, not the things that we remember that cause those shining memories to still glitter and not dull like that dusty glass. As I mentioned in the beginning of this post, we lost our beloved grandmother this past Summer amidst the Covid crisis where we were not allowed to see her for the lockdown that was put into effect in her assisted living home to protect her from its wrath, like so many others. We did not loose her to Covid yet the loneliness that it instilled certainly made its mark and took its toll. That loss still weighs heavy in our hearts, where guilt lies that we could not see her to celebrate her 100th Birthday before she passed. Covid has taken away so many moments like this across the planet. Moments where grief has not been fully processed. Where good byes have not been fully said. Where words that were meant to be spoken to our loved ones never passed our lips. This past year has taught us lessons that we wish we had not learned in this fashion but ones that hopefully will create more meaning and the undeniable value of connection in our lives.

So this Mother’s Day, if you have three pairs of eyes, six pairs of hands, a disappearing lap and the rest of the accoutrements that the angel described, while I hope you imbibe in a lovely champagne brunch, or breakfast at a diner or in your bed, or in cooking one yourself (if that is your thing) or in whatever manner of being treated to a day celebrating mothers, I hope that you are able to create those moments with THOSE people that you have created or partake in creating memories with those that have created you. Those beautiful memories are the pieces that will support us when THOSE people are not on this Earth with us any longer.  By all means, create that Mimosa bar, that glorious arrangement, that beautiful wrapped gift, that handmade card to celebrate mothers and women as well, for it is the icing on the cake. It is in making those things that can assist in creating beautiful memories.

 Moms out there, we are not perfect, nor should we be. But we do the best that we can guided by our hearts and our intuition, our strength and our love. I hope you can take this upcoming day to stop those leaks, if only for a day, and celebrate the moments, the beauty and the blessings in motherhood and let the worry, the fear and the uncertainty that comes with this job go. The most difficult yet the most fulfilling job on Earth!

A lovely toast to all of you this Mother’s Day and a true remembrance of those that have shaped us into the Mothers that we have become.

~ XOXO

Meg

share to:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

  1. Maureen Markley says:

    Lovely Meg…so lovely! Thanks for sharing and I hope you enjoy a relaxing, joy-filled Mothers Day:)

    xo ~ M

    • Meg Veno says:

      You are quite welcome Maureen! We had a lovely brunch and then sang row- row- row your boat in our parkas! Ha! Ha! quite a chilly day but spent with family… the best days! Hope you did as well!
      xo Meg

  2. Kiki says:

    Back at Ya
    Cheers!
    Best Job ever !
    Enjoy the rain today think it’s a leak of lots of angel Love ❤️

  3. Lois Mitchell says:

    Beautifully written. Thank you for this, Meg. I am missing my own mother so much today. It was a doubly hard day for my husband because his mother passed away when he was small, and then, after 49 years of her mothering, he lost another when my mother died.
    Keep making those special memories.

    • Meg Veno says:

      Lois, thank you for both reading and commenting! I know that Mother’s Day can be extremely painful for many and will be for me one day as well. It is in making those memories while our loved ones are still here that love carries on when they are gone. I hope that both you and your husband were able to think of both mother’s on this day with memories to carry you both through the day!
      XX
      Meg

  4. CiNdy says:

    Happy belated Mother’s Day Sweet Meg. What a beautiful post. I was transported myself.

    Tim and I are celebrating our 20th anniversary in Bermuda this weekend. (It was either this weekend or next and next is the junior prom). It was hard to be away from my boys and mom but a beautiful gift to spend time with my husband. Yesterday morning on the pink sands of Warwick Long Beach we FaceTimed (this is when I am grateful for the iPhone) with the boys, and Tim gave me the little gifts and card they sent with him. Needless to say I was touched. To top it off, they were taking my 93 year old mom to dinner and to play ping pong, so that her companions could enjoy their own Mother’s Day. They helped her get ready for bed, made her laugh and feel loved and she went to bed a happy lady. That was one special Mother’s day gift that they gave me and her.

    The people of Bermuda are lovely and everywhere we went yesterday there were moms with their young and adult kids dressed in bright, colorful clothing. We took pictures of them and felt the genuine, simple love they shared.

    It’s been a lovely getaway but I can’t wait to return this afternoon and give my boys and my mom a warm hug and kiss.

    • Meg Veno says:

      And to you as well Cindy! What you have described here sounds like the ultimate Mother’s Day… for both you and your mom! You had time away with your awesome hubby and your young men, were able to use the gifts of love that both you and Tim have planted in them to give your mother a day to be remembered for both your mom and her friends. Wow! An amazing testament to all of you! Hugs to all of you!
      XX
      Meg

  5. Patti says:

    Lovely. As usual. RIP to those who have left.

    • Meg Veno says:

      Thank you Patti and yes memories of those who have left!
      May your day be beautiful!
      XX
      Meg

  6. June Eisenhard says:

    Meg,
    Great post as always! Loved hearing the history of the women in your family!
    I remember the Lion’s Share !

    Happy Mother’s Day!

    • Meg Veno says:

      Thank you so much for reading June!
      Yes, remember the Lion’s Share? It was such a pretty place in a beautiful old Farmhouse.
      Thank you for your Mother’s Day wishes and right back at you!
      XX
      Meg