In 1968, two red-heads, a mom and daughter, are dressed up in front of their apartment building.

Missing Mom

My mom is riding the bus into Detroit for her first job selling ladies shoes in a department store
My mom is riding the bus into Detroit for her first job selling ladies shoes in a department store

My mom has been on my mind a lot lately. I lost her in 2007 from a stroke. She worked most of her life, and loved working despite the struggle of raising three kids at the same time. She kept house and cooked after coming home from work, often finishing the dishes after all of us had gone to bed. I’m ashamed to admit it, but I didn’t help her very much. I gave up offering because she said it was easier for her to do it herself.  I think, now, as I reflect back, that she was trying to make my life easier than she had growing up.

In my memoir, DANCE WHILE THE FIRE BURNS, I tell about when Mom reveals to me that she learned to drive when she was pregnant with me. She managed with my two brothers, then four and five, without a car. Back in those days, she often rode the bus like in the picture above. She was eighteen and on her way to her first job in downtown Detroit to sell ladies shoes in a department store, a job she was proud to have because of the independence it gave her. I learned another secret about my birth that day, but I’ll let you read that in the book when it’s released. (No date yet.)

There is still much I don’t know about my mom. She was good at keeping secrets. I plan on pumping every last memory from my Aunt Dee as soon as we can get together. I do know that Mom was a strong woman, from a line of strong women, and that I continue in the spirit of that lineage. At the same time, she was fragile–a fact she worked hard to disguise.

Perhaps Mom was vulnerable to any criticism because she never knew her biological father. She was born from love, but out of wedlock in the Milwaukee Home for Unwed Mothers, a place that I think was connected to the Salvation Army.  I didn’t learn that piece of family history until I was twenty-four when a drunk driver hit the car Mom was driving head-on, hospitalizing her and killing her mother. Even after I learned the truth, she wouldn’t talk about her her origins unless I greased the wheels of her memory with a few glasses of wine.

In addition to her unresolved youth, Mom married two complex men–first my father for twenty-four years and then another brilliant but troubled German for thirty-seven years. Both men drank what they called socially, but was much more than would now be acceptable.  Despite the difficulties it brought her, she resigned herself to her life because she felt it was something over which she had no control.

She was a beautiful, red-haired woman who worked hard every day of her life and was at her best in her role as caretaker, balancing everyone’s needs. She sometimes struggled with too many balls in the air in her attempt to please everyone, but she managed to charm and smile her way through the troubled times. When asked how she coped, she would say, “It doesn’t help anyone if I just mope around. So I make lemonade out of lemons. That’s just life.”

In her later years, she could say almost anything and make me laugh. Always kind and compassionate, she took the time to listen to any troubled soul that passed through her life, lending encouragement and words of wisdom. I still hear her voice whispered out of the ether, guiding me everyday, about all things big and small. I honor all the gifts she gave me, but mostly the way she raised me to be fiercely independent.

Many times, we’d be visiting my grandparents for a holiday or summer visit and I would hear Grandma question Mom’s leniency with me. Mom would say, “I’m giving her her head,” as if I was a horse that was allowed to run free. As a latchkey kid, I did roam free, often coming home at night only to eat and sleep, preparing to take off for a new adventure the following day. No wonder I’ve loved being with horses all my life.  Their spirit matches my own.

When Mom was busy working or entertaining with Dad, I spent my time with my imaginary horses. They kept me company, running with me in open fields and along edges of Michigan lakes or in the Arizona desert.

My horses are not imaginary any more. Although I’ve lost all of my family, I have my three four-legged beauties that live in the field just beyond my front porch. Just looking out at them brings me joy like my mother did when she smiled and laughed. It is the small things in life that make it truly rich.

What brings you joy on an ordinary day?

Do you have a love of horses? Or a childhood memory triggered by a picture?

Please leave a comment and I will answer. I love a good conversation. I learned that from my mother, too.

My sweet Anglo-Arab gelding, born the year we lived in Salt Lake City, named after my brother, my dad and my grandfather.
My sweet Anglo-Arab gelding, born the year we lived in Salt Lake City, named after my brother, my dad and my grandfather.

4 thoughts on “Missing Mom

  1. Deborah,
    Charlie is beautiful. And I very much enjoyed reading about your Mother and her influence on you.
    I’ve had my mother on my mind , too, as her birthday was last week, the 3rd. She has been gone for 28 years,and I miss her a lot.
    Thinking about how I could possibly contain her on a page is daunting. You did a good job, (I think). Maybe I will try sometime.
    Ann

  2. Ann, Thanks for the kind words. When you get ready to write about your mom, I’d like to read it. You’re right about the impossibility of containing my mom on a page. She’s a big part of my first memoir DANCE WHILE THE FIRE BURNS, but it mostly centers around my brother Chuck and me. We were very close and I lost him in 1995 when he was only 49. It sounds like your mom was young too when you lost her. That’s so hard. Birthdays are good times to celebrate the gifts our mother’s gave us. I catch myself almost everyday saying a word or using a gesture that I know I learned from Mom. It makes me laugh and feel warm and tingly because I know she is still with me in that way.
    Are you a writer too? It sounds like you might be in the future, if you haven’t started yet. I do art too, but right now, my writing is filling my days and my dreams.

  3. It took a while to realize I was more like my mother than I wanted to admit. Isn’t it wonderful to have strong women run in your family? I grew up riding with the “white hats” (Roy Rogers & Gene Autry) on real ponies and horses. Now I can only enjoy the pictures. Your photo Out of the Fog in the Midwest Prairie Review is beautiful. I’ve enjoyed meeting you at In Print.

    1. Thanks for commenting. The picture of our horses coming out of the woods is a favorite of mine, too. I’m glad you like it. I can’t ride anymore either, but I enjoy just hanging out with my three babies (we’ve had all of them since birth). I do ground work especially with Charlie because he can get pushy with the two mares. Today he looked magnificent prancing around while we had the riding mowers out. I wish I’d gotten a picture of that. Maybe next time. I’ll post it when I do.

Leave a Reply

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