Mother - A Remembrance

Mother18

I have many incomplete posts about my Mother. Thus far I have been unable to find words that are worthy of her. I doubt I ever will. I'll try again and hope that at least I can paint a picture that would not embarrass her in its inadequacy.

 

 

My Mother was beautiful, inside and out, smart as a whip and talented on accordion. That is how she met my Pop when he was in the Navy during World War II, when she was a USO Accordionist. Fast forward several decades....

 

She had already had a complete family – two girls and two boys – perfect really, but then she was pregnant with me. She thought she was menopausal when I was conceived and she was not Catholic so I've no idea why she went through with having me but she did.

 

No one was happy about my birth. I don't want to beat a dead horse if you have read anything I have written before. I was not planned, not wanted, resented...yada yada yada. Except by Mum.

 

When I was old enough to vocalize, “Why did you have me?” She said, “You were my gift to myself.” She explained every other child was planned, expected, wanted, mapped out but I was her surprise. I was the child she had by choice, not obligation. She could raise me without distraction. I was hers.

 

I don't remember a period where I did not know she had more grace and intelligence in her left earlobe than any other mother had in their entire frame. She helped so many with no appearance of assisting. She kept peace in our family. She was a rock to disabled Veterans and the marginalized alike. She never judged. Everyone deserved and received her love even if they were at odds with her. She never held grudges. She just wanted to do what ever she could to make people happy they were alive.

 

Grace. That should have been her name but instead it was May. May as in Spring. May as in birth, beginnings, emerald as new cut grass. May, fresh as daffodils or the first harvest to feed the hungry, her heart as pacific as oceans.

 

I've never met any to compare with her. And I know it is not just the years that separate us on this terrestrial plain that make me think this. When she left me she confessed that she felt guilt for leaving me motherless so young. I said to her, “I would rather have YOU for the years I've had you than another Mother for a life time.” I meant it then and I still mean it now.

 

That young orphan had no idea how hard life could be. She did not know she would be homeless and literally living on the street. She did not know there would be times where she would be asked to trade her integrity for survival and when she would not make the trade, she would, at one point, wish she was dead. She could not know then how the hole in her heart would feel after spending as many Mothers' Days without her Mother as with her but she had to know she would survive it because she is the daughter of May. Brilliant, beautiful, intellectual, kind, self sacrificing, funny, hard working, joyful, thankful, strong, patient May.

 

If I am anything, it is because I am the daughter of the most incredible person I have ever had the pleasure of knowing. If I won a Nobel Prize or Pulitzer it would still pale to being the daughter of May. I have friends who mourn the loss of their parents at seventy, eighty or ninety and I feel sad for them, adrift with their beginning ended, but not as sad as I feel for them, never having had my Mother as theirs.

 

I miss you, Mum. I love you. And I still would never trade a day with you for the comfort of having another mother for my lifetime.

On Bullies

Bully

For months I have been haunted by Phoebe Prince, the 15 year old South Hadley (Massachusetts) High School student who took her life after being bullied incessantly by classmates. I've read articles and the comments under those articles. Her classmates may have taunted Phoebe after her death but most of what I have seen has been outrage that the bullies were not stopped before the situation resulted in suicide.

 

 

Another theme I have seen running through the comments is people recognizing bullying has always existed. Why, in this instance, did this student succumb to it and decide to end her life? Was it because it was relentless and followed her home via Facebook, Twitter, Craigslist and Formspring? Couldn't she just shut these off? Or was it something unique to her situation?

 

From radio reports I have heard Phoebe Prince was a model student. None of her teachers in Ireland would have imagined her classmates treating her the way they did. She was neat in appearance, well behaved and earned good grades. She was loved by family and friends. She must have been excited to come to the United States, imagining all the people she would meet and opportunities awaiting her. Nothing could possibly have prepared her for what she received when she arrived here.

 

As I have mulled this over in my brain I had an epiphany the other night. Being loved has an unexpected dark side; you don't know how to behave or react when you are not loved. Everyone has to learn this eventually but how much can a fifteen year old have learned about hate without the exposure?

 

That isn't really how my epiphany started. It started when I realized I can't remember when I was NOT bullied. I wasn't “supposed to be born.” I “ruined all our lives by being born.” If I wasn't born “everything would have been better.” I could go on with the phases etched in my brain by my older siblings but I don't think that is necessary.

 

Our mother was my saving grace but there wasn't much she could do once I was in school. Back then you did not question educators for fear they would kick your child out of school. They put me in the “stupid class” because “you Devlins are stupid and never amount to anything.” There I was treated like “white trash” even though my mother paid the deepest attention to make sure I was clothed well, had manners and good grooming.

 

In high school I was informed they were “expecting me.” They knew I'd “be trouble” because there had been a line of Devlins before me who proved “you are no good.” I don't think anyone likes to be type cast, especially when you are not the one casted but people before you. But I was used to it by now and knew there was little I could do. I was a freak my freshman year when my father, brother in law and grandfather all died within six months of each other. I never missed an hour of school. (There as a scholarship for perfect attendance.) Kids aren't used to death but adults are and children follow the lead of adults.

 

I discovered power my sophomore year of high school. I was not a suicide risk but I did not really care if I died. I saw a known bully unmercifully picking on a freshman and I stepped in. I said something like,

“You want to pick on someone, pick on me. You do it anyhow. She's fat and defenseless. An easy target. Go ahead, beat my face in.”

 

And it didn't happen. Neither to me nor the originally intended victim. (We became friends). I learned then it's no fun when your target is unafraid of what you may do to them. I wasn't unafraid. I did not care. Subtleties in those definitions are rarely picked up by bullies.

 

After that I was bullied by the school administration. They tried to keep me out of the honor society. In my school you had to not only academically excel but also excel in the community. I was a First Class Girl Scout (equivalent of Eagle Scout in Boy Scouts) and was Head Acolyte in my church as well as being in the choir. My art teacher spoke up for me: Ryder Martin, and his wife, my home room teacher, Mrs. Margaret Martin. I'll never forget that. Some people are just golden.

 

Senior year, our class project was to clean and make beautiful the quadrangle of our high school. I helped. While I was out there the Spanish Teacher, Ms. Hartung, interrupted her class to yell out the window, “Isn't that appropriate? Trash cleaning up trash.” I kept doing what I was doing. Funny to think of that now. Teachers could get away with more back then without repercussion. Behavior like that is not right but we were tougher back then. When there is little recourse, you have to be.

 

In college, freshman year, I was raped. I reported it to the Assistant Dean of Students and was informed, “That doesn't happen at our school. If you want to remain a student here, you would do well to remember that.”

 

When I was twenty two, Mum died. After being her primary care giver for months, I rushed back to work and my siblings divided my belongings, as well as hers, when settling the estate. They neglected the portion of her will that singled me out to divide everything she had not specifically willed to others.

 

It goes on and on to this day. I am adult now; old enough to have my own children, had not decided early on I would never subject a child to the possibility of the life I have had. Since I can not guarantee my child would never say, “I wish I were never born,” I can not in good conscious have a child.

 

When my oldest sister calls, she can still make me mental. For days. Mind you, she does not call often. She only calls when someone is dead or dying. She left me alone for a while, lulling me into a false sense of serenity. I raised her ire when she found out I had been communicating with our ill sister in law before she had the opportunity to tell me she was dead. She did not plan to tell me until after her funeral and there I was, AT her funeral. Her joy is telling me enough to upset me but not enough to have closure with anyone in our family. Heck, she made up a drug dependency with our mother's half of family. She told them I was hopelessly addicted to something requiring rehabilitation. Me, who just went through wisdom tooth removal without filling my prescription for narcotics. You can't combat that kind of rumour because then you just look like you are in denial. So I had to kiss half my family goodbye. When you are bullied you learn to be a realist. Even if doing so is very painful.

 

Our oldest brother leaves me alone, for the most past. As a little girl I worshiped him. When he flung me face first on concrete that was a little passive aggressive wake up call. When he embezzled funds from our mother's estate, I uncovered it and held him accountable. That was our playground moment. “Go ahead, beat my face in.” I know even more which he has done and I think he is aware of that so he leaves me alone. Best not to wake a sleeping tiger.

 

Even through social media I have met people who bully. Someone gains fame through something remarkable and lets that define them. Suddenly none of their other actions matter. They feel they are bigger than you or anything you contribute to them. You are an ass to think otherwise. Unless you have spent a lifetime being bullied and manipulated. Then you can walk away from that behavior even if it makes you a pariah. You still have your soul.

 

I now have no wonder Phoebe Prince took her own life but it does not make me less sad. She likely saw her future life being full of manipulation and bullying. She did not want to live in that world. I don't want to either. But there is light in that world. When one has moments of triumph despite the deck being stacked against them, the triumph is sweeter. I wasn't “supposed to be born” and was a “mistake.” I am “stupid” and will “never amount to anything” but I am still here. And I speak for the stupid, worthless detritus, like me, who sprinkle mankind. We survive. We even accomplish great things when we are allowed to. Look at the civil rights movement.

 

Phoebe, I will never forget your trial. One reason for your fifteen years on earth was for the eventual wake up call to everyone else. We could use more people like you. What saddens me most is, this was not your battle to fight. You were and still are loved. It should have been me. I was born and raised for this battle.

 

Go ahead, beat my face in.

 

(Image courtesy of: http://www.themedguru.com )

Family: Questions Regarding Obligation and Love

I am baffled by family; at least my family. I can't quite figure out the balance between what loyalty I owe people because we carry the same genetics and where I can, with good conscience, draw the line to save my own sanity and break from their control. The advice of others hasn't helped either because their viewpoints vary drastically depending on their own reality and upbringing.

 

My mother was very loyal to family. Her own family immigrated to the United States in the early nineteen hundreds. When she married, she moved across the United States from California to New England but still kept her ties with the left coast. My father never drifted far from family. He raised his children in the same town in which his parents raised him since the age of five. Together they bore four children in less than seven years and then a last one over twelve years later.

 

A niece wrote me recently, “I miss the times when grandma was alive not only because she was a good grandma, but because she kept you all together.” She is right; Mum did a great job at keeping us together. The niece goes on to say, “I miss when the ... family actually liked being around each other or at least faked it.” If we did fake it (and I won't argue the point one way or another – you can decide), we haven't done anything many families have not done before us.

 

Several of my siblings were starting their own families when I was still a child. Our father died when we were 31, 29, 25, 24 and 12 years old. Shortly after, our mother & I moved to a small cottage and we started rotating holidays between the siblings' homes because entertaining in our cottage was not practical. When I was thirteen Christmas was at my oldest sister's house and I witnessed a telephone argument between her and my mother where my mother kept saying, “No. I am not going to leave Emma home. If I can't bring her, I'm not coming either.” I know a thirteen year old is not nearly the same as a six year old but I can't imagine a parent going off to celebrate Christmas while leaving her thirteen year old home alone. And no, I wasn't a kleptomaniac, smelly, particularly loud, disruptive or any of the myriad reasons you could think of to engender desertion. Mum didn't, of course, leave me alone but I also didn't enjoy the holiday because only one person wanted me there.

 

Nine years later Mum died. I was her final caretaker. She had been sick for a few years so I was back and forth between college, work and home. I had not yet fully moved out. When I rushed back to work after my prolonged leave of absence, the two oldest siblings not only liquidated our mother's belongings from the house but also mine. There were a few things of value but those could be replaced. The achievement awards, photographs, and little mementos of childhood can not.

 

I recently inherited a copy of our family tree written by the oldest sibling for our grandmother. It was written approximately three years after our father's death. I am the only one living at the time who is not on it.

 

These days we are only brought together by death. The youngest child, but me, is dead from cancer. Our middle sibling had a stroke many years ago and can barely communicate. The second oldest is only seen at funerals. The oldest only calls to announce death or impending death. I jump every time my caller ID shows her number. I would be no less alarmed if a man in a dark hooded cape carrying a scythe knocked on my door.

 

There is a break in the family cloud though. Loved ones I've lost but could not get information about from immediate family (they hoard information as if it were a commodity) are finding me and being found through social networking and the internet. I did learn our mother's lesson and do value family so these reunions are poignant, yet exciting. Also, in banding together we have other means of circumventing the cone of silence and misinformation.

 

What do you think? Do we owe our elders the respect to jump when called, disappear when asked and obey the rules they set for family or can we create our own rules? Are we obligated to be controlled by family simply because they are family?