Tomorrow is Mother’s Day, the second such observance
since my Mom passed away. This year the day does not bring with it as much
sadness and loss. Maybe it’s just the passing of time, but this year when I think
of Mom I’m remembering funny stuff. The woman was hysterical.
It was very easy to get my Mom riled up about things.
There were topics you learned to avoid around her, words better left unsaid if
you knew what was good for you. But I was mischievous enough to intentionally
provoke her every now and then just to watch her “get up in the pictures.”
Me: Oh great. I see from the church bulletin that we’ll
have to endure another boring Lottie Moon speaker Sunday.
Me: Jeeze, that Billy Graham sure is a stiff!
Me: I don’t know about you, but I sure am getting
tired of singing the same old hymns every Sunday.
Either of these three conversation starters would
guarantee an unhinged 15 minute speech that would begin with Mom being so
flustered that she would forget which of her children she was actually talking
to. It sounded something like this:
Mom: Now you listen to me Donnie..eh, er, Linda, I
mean…er, Paula, phooey!!! Douglas!
My Mother was a woman of high passions and could
argue with a fence post about virtually anything. She would sprinkle her
speeches with veiled physical threats which to people who didn’t know her might
lead them to believe that she was some sort of violent thug. I’m glad that no
social worker ever overheard her say stuff like this:
Mom: Boy, stop that crying or I’ll take this rolling
pin to you and give you something to cry about!
Mom: If those John Brown people over at Safeway keep
raising the price of milk, I’m gonna go over there and wipe the floor up with them!
Mom: Donnie, if you put your hand in that bowl of
strawberries one more time before dinner, you’re gonna draw back a nub!
Of course, she never made good on any of her
threats. Or maybe she did. There is the curious case of my third grade teacher,
Mrs. Carbunckle (not her real name…I’m taking no chances here). It was my first
year in the New Orleans public school system, and Mrs. C wasn’t enamored with
my inability to stay in my seat, neither was she fond of my penchant for paper
airplane construction. Anyway, one day I got home from school with very red
ears and started complaining to Mom about how horrible Mrs. Carbunckle was and
how she was constantly boxing my ears for no reason! I immediately endured
a 15 minute tirade from my Mother which sounded something like this:
Mom: Let me tell you something, Mrs. Carbunckle is a
saint to have to not only put up with you all day but another 25 hellions just
as bad as you! She is your teacher, and what she says goes, and if she had to
box your ears today it’s because you deserved it!! You only have one job in
that classroom and that is to sit still, shut up and do what you’re told.
Me: That’s more than one job Mom. That’s like three
jobs.
Mom: Don’t back talk me!
To my Mother, teachers were some sort of cross
between Joan of Ark and the Virgin Mary. They were always right, and I was
always wrong. Still, I found it odd that within a week of the above
conversation, Mrs. Carbunckle was transformed into the most docile, gentle,
smiling, solicitous teacher in the history of education. I learned 35 years
later that Mom had, unbeknownst to me, paid her a visit that included the
admonition that if Mrs. Carbunckle ever laid a hand on me again that Mom would
come over there and mop up the classroom floor with her. Apparently, Mrs. C
believed her.
So, tomorrow I will miss my Mother, but no more
grief, just some great memories.
I think of her often and miss her so.She touched my life like no other person . Terri Richmond
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