The edges of our relationship are softened like the frayed
old faded bath towels that belonged to my mom, still neatly folded on a shelf
in my closet, next to the crystal vases that were my grandmother’s
treasures. I know she wouldn’t even
remember them anymore, but I hold on to them nonetheless.
My mother’s eyes drift in and out of focus when I visit her
these days. Out of the blue, she will occasionally ask a question or make a
comment that is remarkably perceptive, almost psychic. Most of the time, she is
content to sit silently after a lifetime of doing and fixing and being in
constant motion. There’s no more anger
or guilt in me because she’s no longer capable of launching the emotional bombs
that she was able to throw so accurately for so many years. Only three more months until she turns 100. So,
we are in the last chapter of our relationship, talking about what’s blooming
in my garden or some other neutral, in-the-moment activity that will not upset
anyone.
I brought her a small bouquet of violets in a tiny bud vase
last week. With all the rain we’ve had, our lush green yard is filled with
little purple and white flowers right now.
They reminded me of how on Saturday nights when I was a child, my father
and mother liked to go out to dinner with me in Chicago at a Polynesian
restaurant called “Don the Beachcomber” just off of Rush Street. They ordered
exotic rum drinks called “fog-cutters”, and the waiter royally presented me with
pineapple juice with a fake camellia and a paper Japanese umbrella floating in
it. After we ate, we would walk back to
the parking garage, soaking up the glamorous nightlife of the “Gold Coast” that
was so much more exciting to me than our quiet, boring country village. On one street corner, incongruous to all the glitz, for a couple of weeks
in the Spring, there was a little folding table filled with nosegay bouquets of
violets being sold by a bent over old gypsy who looked like she had stepped out of a fairy
tale. My father stopped every time we saw her and bought my mother and I each a
little purple bunch of flowers nested in a white paper lace doily.
I couldn’t find any doilies at the grocery store, but when I
presented the violets to my mom the other day, she smiled delightedly and said, “Just like
Papa used to give us.”
5 comments:
How sweet you were to bring her the violets. Seems her memory of sharing them with you and Papa are still intact.
Happy Mothers Day!
Victoria - this post was simply breathtaking.
Thank you.
Thanks, guys - Happy Mother's Day!
Lovely!! Happy Mother's Day!
We are sisters of violets today, as I picked a luscious bouquet of these beauties (as I do every year) in honor of my nana, who passed away when I was six months old. My mom once told me violets were Nana's favorite wildflower so I have adopted them for mine as well.
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