Tag Archives: #mothersanddaughters

6 months today…

August 18, 2023

6 months today.

I’d like to say it’s gone by quickly.

I’d like to say I’ve started moving on from my grief and guilt.

I’d like to say I’ve accepted everything that happened and am now at peace with it.

I’d like to say I still don’t have periods where I suddenly burst into tears, or feel my heart pounding like a drum line marching o n a football field.

I’d like to say I am moving on. That I’m not paralyzed at times with indecision, or making choices I will either come to regret or instantly do.

I’d really like to say my life has finally gotten manageable again.

But I can’t.

I can’t say any of those things and be telling the truth.

What I can say is that I am taking it one day – sometimes one hour – at a time.

What I can say, truthfully, is that talking about it helps. Saying my feelings aloud not only validates them but fills me with a strange sense of purpose.

What I can say, is that each day is slightly better than the day before.

What I’ll never be able to say is that I don’t miss my mother.

Because I do. Every hour of every day.

Despite our tortured relationship…maybe even because of it…I miss her.

Terribly.

I miss the crazy malapropisms she unconsciously made almost daily.

I miss the way she’d ask me a thousand questions about the same thing.

I miss the way she referred to herself in third person when she was speaking hypothetically.

Does it make me sound crazy to say I miss fighting with her? Verbally sparring with her? Getting her to understand a different point of view than just hers?

I’m sad she only got to meet her great-grandson once.

I’m sad she’ll never meet her great-granddaughter when she arrives this winter.

I’m sad she’s not around to cook for anymore.

I’m just…sad.

6 months today.

The time flew by in a blink and yet dragged mercilessly.

6 months today…

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5 months…

I’ve been remembering the weirdest stuff lately.

Most of it has to do with how my mother’s mental status was tenuous during my teen years and my early twenties.

I don’t remember her as being angry or lashing out so much before I hit my teens, which coincided with her starting perimenopause. I understand the correlation now between off-the-charts emotional swings and her acting out behaviors. At thirteen I didn’t have a clue what was going on with her, I just knew she was craycray-to-the-max.

There was the time she got so mad at me over something I have no memory of doing or saying that she threw a hot slice of pizza she was holding at me. Hot, like just out of the oven hot. And, yes, the same infamous oven of the Easter ham-on-fire incident. Luckily, her aim was awful and the slice barely grazed me in the chest, which was covered with clothing. If she’d aimed higher, it would have landed across my face and the resulting burn would have been awful.

Decades later, while I was giving her a shower, I happened to mention how menopause-induced-insomnia was kicking my butt. I asked if she had any problems during her menopause (I already knew the answer!) and she said no. For whatever reason, call me a masochist, I brought up the pizza-tossing incident. I truly couldn’t remember what I’d said or done to make her throw it at me.

My mother’s entire face changed. Now, remember: she was naked as the day she was born, sitting on the shower chair, with shampoo in her hair. She looked up at me, lips pulled into a thin, hard line, eyes narrowing, elongating the wrinkles at her temples even more. In a pissed-off tone I remembered well from my teen years, she said, “You were such a little shit.”

“Such a shit that you needed to throw a slice of pizza at me?”

Without any remorse – not even the hint of it – she replied, “It was either that or throw you outta the house. Pack you off to your bastard of a father.”

That shut me up pretty quick. I was still underage at the time of the pizza toss, so this was a potential threat she could have made good on because I wasn’t old enough to be on my own, out in the world yet. Having to go live with my father was something I never, ever wanted to do.

Not that he would have taken me in, mind you, because he wouldn’t have. There was no way on God’s green earth he was going to do something that would cramp the lifestyle he’d carved out for himself and his second wife, and having a moody, overweight teenager thrown at him wasn’t in his playbook for living the high life.

It hadn’t been when I was a baby, either, evidenced by the fact he’d so easily walked away from his parental, fatherly responsibilities.

But still, the threat was a valid one at that time in my life and she threw it out at me often. I recognize now it was her inadequate-parenting-skills attempt to get me to behave.

Has any child ever really behaved when threats are aimed their way?

Here’s the thing, though. Decades after that incident, my mother still had such a visceral memory of me making her do something as egregious as throw hot food at me. I can’t even imagine doing something like that to my daughter, no matter what the cause or reason for my anger.

The woman’s memory was long. And she rarely forgot when someone slighted her – whether they had or hadn’t.

I stopped talking about the incident right then because I could see her memories were getting her agitated. I knew if I pushed she’d be yelling and overly emotional before long, so I switched topics to my grandson.

She brightened up immediately, the bad memory relegated to the back corners and recesses of her aging mind.

Wish I’d had that insight into manipulating negative behaviors when I was a teen. Those years might have gone a little better.

Alas…

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Memories…

What sounds worse – or better – from your perspective: 16 weeks or 4 months?

They mean the same thing, but to me, referring to something in weeks makes it seem…worse, for some reason.

Either way, weeks or months, this is the amount of time my mother has been gone.

I’m doing better. I know that because I’ve been having a lot of memories surface of all the horrible events I experienced as a kid when my mother was at the height of her paranoia and mental issues.

Although, she and my stepfather always denied she had any issues. He still does to this day.

In the grocery store the other day I was standing in the meat section and I glanced over and spotted a section devoted to baked hams. All of a sudden, an Easter Sunday when I was 11 shot to the front of my mind.

We were living in Staten Island, still in an apartment. My grandmother, my aunt, and my cousin were coming for dinner. This was the first time my mother had ever cooked for a holiday since she’d married my stepfather. His family never came to our home. Ever. We usually went to my grandmother’s apartment in Brooklyn, or my aunt’s, in Bay Ridge to celebrate a holiday or just visit.

How it came about my mother was the cook this year I don’t know. But my aunt was driving them in and my mother was in a tizzy about…everything. From the state of our apartment to the cook time for the ham, to her worrying something was going to happen to ruin the day.

Paranoiac foreshadowing? As it turns out, yes.

My grandmother made her displeasure known immediately when she walked through the door. They’d gotten caught in traffic on the Verrazano Bridge and she’d had to sit in the car for fifteen minutes without moving an inch. Of course, it was my mother’s fault for living in Staten Island – the old bitch made that evident.

Needless to say, things progressed downward from there.

No one ate the cheese and crackers appetizers my mother put out except for me. My grandmother commented several times that cheese was fattening and I was fat enough.

No one wanted a drink of the sparkling cider my mother had bought, except for me, and I wasn’t allowed. My mother thought it contained alcohol.

It didn’t, but she wouldn’t listen to me when I tried to read her the ingredients.

Now, our apartment building wasn’t the best-maintained place on earth and the appliances were all at that stage where they should have been replaced by the building management.

They weren’t. They were all the originals and had gone through about ten tenants by the time we moved in.

 My mother preheated the oven to the desired temp and when it was ready, placed the ham inside it in a roasting pan.

About ten minutes before it should have come out, the acrid odor of smoke wafted from the tiny kitchen. When we went in, you could see actual flames inside the oven through the glass door.

My aunt screamed, grabbed her daughter up in her arms, and bolted through the front door, heading for the hills, or in this case, the stairwell. My stepfather let loose with a string of curses and stood there scowling across the room at the oven, and my mother – with the forethought to grab potholders – yanked the oven door open, then pulled the roasting pan out with the flaming, on-fire ham in it. Instead of tossing it into the sink and running water on it to douse the flames, she tossed it out the window, roasting pan and all.

Why? A question she could never answer.

We lived on the sixth floor and our apartment faced the alley. The crashing sound of the metal roasting pan hitting the concrete pavement thundered up from the street level. We all went to the window – all except my grandmother and my runaway aunt, that is – to see the ham, still shooting flames. It had bounced from the pan to the top of a metal garbage can and landed with a thud.

Now, I neglected to mention it was raining buckets that Easter Sunday, which was the real reason for the traffic delay. Luckily, for my mother, it was coming down like crazy because the rainwater extinguished the ham after about a long minute of sitting on top of the garbage can lid, flaming.

I’m laughing like a hyena as I write this, but let me tell you, at the time it happened, no one was laughing, least of all my grandmother.

The old you-know-what screamed at my mother that she had ruined the holiest of holy days with her “stupidity.”

I remember asking, quite innocently, why she’d said that. My mother wasn’t stupid and it wasn’t her fault the oven caught on fire.

The backhand I got across my face shut me up quickly. My mother didn’t say or do a thing when her mother struck me. She just stood there, I believe, in shock.

My grandmother grabbed her purse and slammed out of the apartment, I assumed, to go look for my aunt. They obviously found one another, otherwise, my grandmother wouldn’t have been able to get home. She was never going to splurge on a taxi from Staten Island to Brooklyn – and remember: Uber didn’t exist in the 1970s.

I am still haunted by the utter deafening silence that filled our apartment after she left.

My stepfather cursed again and then started yelling at my mother that my grandmother was never welcome in his home again.

Silently, I said a prayer of thanks for that edict.

My mother, quietly, nodded, then slunk down to the kitchen table and dropped her head in her hands, and then began to cry.

My face was on fire – quite like the ham – from the slap. I remember being mad at my mother for not sticking up for me, but seeing her so ravaged with tears I did what I always did in situations where her emotions were overwhelming her, and sat down next to her and rubbed her back.

You can probably guess Easter isn’t my favorite holiday.

Those are the kinds of memories that have been surfacing for the past week or so. As I look back on them now, with an adult’s perspective, and through a mother’s eye, I realize several things I didn’t then:

  1. my grandmother was a psychopath
  2. she really hated my mother, and because I was her daughter, added me to the hated equation just because.
  3. my mother had deep-rooted mental issues, centering on abandonment, which manifested whenever situations became too overwhelming for her. She couldn’t protect me because she’d never learned how to protect herself.
  4. my stepfather was an enabler.

Kinda wish I’d known all these things as a kid, you know?

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Serenity…

This was the first week where I didn’t cry every single day. I cried, don’t get me wrong. Just not daily.

Progress?

Maybe. But more, I think I am finally starting to emotionally accept what happened. My logical, nursing-educated brain understood my mother’s death the day it occurred.

My heart and my emotional brain? Not so much.

But the absence this week of the daily tears, the heartbreak, and the guilt I was experiencing, and at the oddest, most inopportune moments, has abated.

For now.

I know that doesn’t mean I’m done caring about my mother. The furthest thing from it. I live with the daily wish I could have been there, held her hand, and told her I loved her one last time. And done everything I could to prevent her from dying.

But I wasn’t, and I didn’t.

What this suspension of daily waterworks means, I think, is that I’m coming to terms with my mother’s passing, knowing nothing I could have done would have prevented it. Nothing I could have done would have altered the course God sent her on. Nothing I could have done would have made what happened any less horrible – for her and me.

Accepting her death, how it came about, and what it means for those she left behind has been a tortuous road these past 13 weeks, one which I wasn’t prepared to travel and have been having a great deal of trouble navigating through.

I always assumed being a nurse, having watched so many patients die over my career, would have prepared me better for the end of my mother’s life.

What’s that old saw about assuming something? Yeah, joke’s on me, isn’t it?

Nothing could have prepared me for what happened. Or for losing her. Nothing. I think I am finally starting to understand that.

With a little time, a little self-reflection, and a little emotional distance, I think I’m starting to fully accept it and am learning to move forward.

As I do, I’ve been reciting The Serenity Prayer during those times when I find myself falling into guilt again:

“God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.”

It’s the wisdom part that’s taking a while to grow within me…

~ Peg

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3 months…

So today marks exactly 3 months since my mom died.

A lot has happened in those 12 weeks. Some good; some bad.

The good, first.

I was able to sell their home without too much trouble.

I’ve been able to cancel all their accounts with relative ease. Some, truthfully, were harder to cancel than others. I’m NEVER getting a Discover Card for myself,  that is for sure. Worst customer service I have ever experienced and there is still an issue 3 months on.

My stepfather, despite the second fall and subsequent re-surgery on the same broken hip that started the entire rigmarole, is doing okay in the nursing home, physically. Mentally and emotionally? Another story entirely.

Now, the bad.

My stepfather did have to have a second surgery since he re-broke his operative hip the day after my mother died.

He is failing mentally. Quickly. He repeats the same thing over and over to me when I visit. He cries often when I visit, lamenting my mother’s death. He has not accepted he will be living in the nursing facility from now on, yet. I don’t know if he ever will. Just the other day he asked if he had enough money saved so that when he “gets out maybe he can buy a little mobile home.”

It broke my heart in two when he asked that. I tried telling him he was a resident of the nursing home for the umptenth time. He cried.

The bills keep piling up. 2 surgeries; 2 multi-state ambulance transports; his care in the nursing home. It’s a lot. All their savings will be gone sooner than I think they ever expected. And they never had any kind of insurance other than Medicare. And we all know how that’s going.

For me, I am still feeling the guilt. I had a dear friend tell me, recently, something from her husband. He feels the sense of extreme guilt I am experiencing about putting them in the nursing home and then mom dying within 2 weeks, is actually my grief manifesting itself as guilt.

I think he may be right.

I carry my grief like I wear my clothing – always on me. It is a little easier, though, to get through a day without crying now. Some days I don’t cry at all. Then I lie down to go to sleep and when I say my prayers, the tears form.

I know this will pass.

Eventually.

For now, it’s just a day to day, sometime hour to hour thing.

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#mugmonday 5/8/2023

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May 8, 2023 · 12:15 am

1 month…

Today marks 4 weeks since my mother died.

People keep telling me the pain, the sorrow, the shock, will fade.

When?

When will I wake up and immediately not remember she’s gone? When will I stop crying at the most inopportune times? When will I be able to feel like myself – whole – again?

No answers come back. I understand that. Grieving is different for every person.

I was thinking last night about the differences in how my mother and I were raised.

My mother was the middle child of three girls. The oldest was the shining star of both her parents. Smart, Dependable. Independent. Loyal.

The youngest was my grandmother’s favorite. Why? Only the old woman knew, but after my grandfather died, it was the youngest upon whom she bestowed her smothering love.

My mother, the middle, was her least favorite, something my grandmother told her – actually spoke words to her about – often after her husband passed on. I think I can answer this one with ease: Why did the old lady dislike her so much? Because my mother was my grandfather’s favorite and he made no secret about it. From everyone I ever talked to back then who knew them all – namely the old aunts and uncles in the family when they were all still alive – my mother was the apple of his eye.

She wasn’t smart like her older sister.

She wasn’t as pretty as the youngest.

What she was, was funny, outgoing, sang like an angel – just like him – and thought the man hung the moon.

Apparently, my grandmother was jealous.

I can’t conceive of how a wife would be jealous of a child, but the old lady was, and kept being so, until her dying day. Which, was when she was 86, exactly 53 years after he died. Yup, she was 33 years old when he had a major heart attack and died on his way to work.

Since my mother was raised with the knowledge she wasn’t loved by her own mother, and basically ignored, my mother raised me in the exact opposite way. My grandmother’s way certainly wasn’t healthy for a child’s psyche.

But my mother’s tendency toward her own version of smother love wasn’t either.

She went out of her way, every single day when I was under her roof, to – in her words – protect me from the world. That meant I wasn’t allowed to bring any friends I may have made home after school because she didn’t want other kids corrupting what she was trying to teach me.

Subsequently, I never invited anyone over to our house, even as a teen and then as an adult. I had no close friends, no boyfriend, never had a sleepover at my house and didn’t attend my very first one with a “friend” until I was a senior in high school.

She called the friend’s house three times the first night and then bright and early the next morning to find out when I was coming home.

As a seventeen-year-old, I was mortified, and believe me – a huge fight ensued once I’d gotten home about how embarrassed I was. My mother counter-attacked with the “I’m trying to keep you safe” argument. Like my friends were dope fiends, or thieves, or something equally as nefarious. Which they weren’t. They also weren’t my friends for very long because they thought my mother was crazy and their mothers thought she was rude.

With the advent of maturity and age, I can understand why she acted this way. I still don’t agree with it, but I get it now that I’ve had my own child.

And I bet if you ask my daughter, there were more than a few occasions where I performed my own version of smother love.

Truer words were never written than we are all products of our upbringings, whether good or bad, abusive, or apathetic.

I tried to break the cycle when I had my child. Apparently, it’s harder to break than I realized because there are still some days when I hear my mother’s voice and words blow between my lips – as my daughter is quick to point out. LOL.

Mothers and daughters. Thousands of years of evolution haven’t changed them much, has it?

I miss you, Mommy. Every hour of every day…

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more thoughts…

Three weeks today since my mother passed away.

I was thinking yesterday of all the things I didn’t know about her that I wish I did.

How old was she when she got her first kiss? Who was the boy?

Who were her friends when she was a kid? Did she even have any, because she never spoke of anyone?

Did she like school?

Was she upset when she had to drop out of high school to help support her sick mom and my younger aunt? Resentful?

Why did her mother dislike her so much – this one I realize I should have asked my evil grandmother when she was alive, but I stopped speaking to her after I got married.

What was her favorite book when she was a kid? An adult? Did she even have one? Did she even like to read?

Why did she stop singing?

How disappointed was she when she was excommunicated?

Why did she marry my stepfather and why didn’t she leave him when things got really bad between them?

Was it hard changing jobs so often in her 50s? Going from the banking world to cleaning snooty people’s houses? Then caring for them when they got ill?

Where did she get her strong sense of self-worth from?

Why did she never vote?

What had she wanted to be when she grew up? Did she ever think college was for her?

What was her biggest fear? Regret? Desire?

Why did she continue to love her faith when the powers that be stripped her of practicing it?

Why did she like vanilla over chocolate? Okay, this one really bothers me because why does anyone like vanilla over chocolate??

The shock is fading…the pain, ebbing. But the sense of loss is still so, so great. I can’t imagine it will ever not be.

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thoughts…

Today marks two weeks since my mother passed away.

I’m still in the shock phase, to be honest.

How could I see her one day, and she be laughing, joking, and wishing everyone well, and the next, within twelve hours after being admitted to the hospital, be dead?

Right now that’s too much to think about, so I’m putting it someplace else. I will get back to it…someday. But not today.

Today I am remembering all the times she made me crazy in the ways only a mother can.

For instance, my mother was like that proverbial dog with a bone when a thought came into her head. The example I think about was when she’d call me in college and tell me to make sure I locked my dorm room door before heading out to class. She was always worried about people sneaking into my room to harm me. I could never understand why she thought this because I lived in a protected dorm. You had to sign in and sign out and approve all visitors. But she’d say it to me two or three times with every call and it made me nuts.

When I was in my forties I learned why.

My mother had been left alone one day when she was about eight or nine. My grandmother was out with my younger aunt and my older aunt wasn’t home. Someone knocked on the door – a neighbor man they all knew. Since he was well known to her, she let him in. I don’t really have to go into detail about what happened, do I? Suffice it to say, while she wasn’t raped, she was molested…something that gave her the greatest of shame in her young life and that she carried with her the rest of her life.

Knowing this explained her behavior, and I feel deep shame that I let her persistent worry bother me so much. She had a good reason to be worried – in her mind, at least.

Another thing she always did that drove me insane was ask a question of me and then immediately answer it. For instance, “How are you doing today? I bet you’re good.” Like that. Then she’d immediately go off on a ten-minute diatribe about the weather or any other topic she’d called me about. Drove me to distraction because you could never get a word in. One day a few months ago my daughter pointed out that I was getting like grandma. I asked how? And she said you just asked me a question and then answered it. We laughed about it, but in reality I was a little flustered.

Again, knowing why she did this explained so much to me. My stepfather is not and has never been what you’d call a talkative man. He is deeply quiet to the point you think he is mute if you don’t know him. Underlying depression had always been my diagnosis, but what do I know? I’m not a shrink. My mother was the alpha in the relationship. She would ask him questions or try to engage him in conversation, but most of the time he gave non-verbal answers. When I lived at home I didn’t notice this as much because she had me to talk to – or talk at, as the case is. But once they were empty nesters, his silence became obvious so it was up to my mother to keep the conversation going.

One of the nurses in the nursing home said she was a chatty Cathy. Well, here’s the reason why.

Today, I’m thinking of all the times I was short with my mother, lost my temper, or said things I really should have thought about before speaking. Guilt doesn’t come close to what I’m feeling right now.

I could have been such a better daughter. I could have listened more; not judged; been more tolerant.

I could have been…nicer.

I could have been…more loving.

Even saying all this I know my mother loved me above all else. She told me every single time she spoke with me.

Every. Single. Time.

One last thing that used to drive me cray-cray was that she never said Goodbye. At the end of every phone call or personal visit, she would say, “My love to you all.” I don’t know why it bothered me, but it did, so one day, about a year ago, I asked her why she always ended a conversation with me like that.

Her answer was, again, very enlightening.

My grandfather died, suddenly, of a heart attack when my mother was 9. He went off to work after kissing his girls goodbye and saying “goodbye” and then never came back home. Doesn’t take a genius or a psychiatrist to understand why the word was one she couldn’t bear to use.

There’s still so much about my mother and her life and her thoughts I don’t know. I’ll never get the answers now… I’m putting that one away someplace, too. It truly is too much to bear right now…

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On birthdays, getting older, and being your parents’ advocate…

Today, this little lady is 87 years old.

Up until last week, she was able to live in her own home, with her husband of 57 years. That all changed when my stepfather, her husband, fell on February 27, broke his hip, and had to be transported to the hospital for a total hip repair.

You may remember I told you that in the past 5 years my mother has broken both her hips which resulted in subsequent stints in rehab. My stepfather, after surgery, was admitted to the same rehab nursing home she’d been in.

Since he was, effectively, her legs, her re-heater of food I cooked, did the washing up and the preparing, plus walked 3/4 of a mile to the mailbox and back each day, she couldn’t be left alone in her home without him or someone to help her out, no matter how much she said she didn’t need the help. She did.

By a miracle, or angels dancing together, or even all the planets aligning, I was able to get her admitted to the same nursing rehab facility as my father and yesterday, after a week in separate rooms, they were transferred to the same room.

Despite the few-day blip, they are back together again.

And this is where they will live out their days.

For the past week, I have had to cancel their lives – their independent lives. Their cable had to be discontinued, and disconnected, the box returned to the store. I had to get their taxes done. I had to first clean their home, then clean it out and get it ready for sale. By myself. No easy feat, and very time-consuming. I’ve had to become their Power of attorney so I could cancel credit cards, pay their bills, and attempt to sell their home.

I’ve always hated being an only child and never more so than this week.

But this isn’t a pity party for one, folks. This blog is about my mother. She’s 87 today and every day she wakes up, thanks God she is alive, and then says that she never thought she’d lived to see this age.

In all honesty, I didn’t either.

But… I am thankful she is reunited with the love of her life, is being cared for by an excellent staff 24/7, is eating well, and getting some much-needed physical rehab and mental stimulation. My stepfather is as well.

So if you have a moment free today, say a prayer for this little lady and then call your mother and tell her you love her. ~ Peg.

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