Mom in 1st grade, Bradford, Massachusetts |
I feel as if I have been away from this blog forever and miss both the creative outlet it provides and the friendships I have formed through blogging. I've written many posts in my head during the past six weeks but haven't had the emotional energy to put them into words.
Mom as a baby in Bradford, England |
Over the past month I've come to learn a lot about my Mom that I overlooked when she was well and I took her presence in my life for granted. I learned what an incredibly strong woman she is and I'm humbled every day by her patience, positive attitude, and will to live.
Mom is a member of the Greatest Generation. Her young British parents, seeking a better life for her than the mills of Yorkshire had offered them, sailed with her to America when she was 3 years old. Mom was a child during the Depression and a young woman coming of age during WWII, when all of the men her age were overseas.
Mom at Hampton Beach, N.H., 1943...age 22. |
After marrying our Dad in 1946, Mom was busy raising four daughters in the 50's, 60's and 70's.
(We definitely gave her a run for her money back then...)
Uncle Arthur , Dad, Mom, Aunt Marion, Bradford, Mass., June 1946 |
After marrying our Dad in 1946, Mom was busy raising four daughters in the 50's, 60's and 70's.
(We definitely gave her a run for her money back then...)
Our family in 1967...Cheryl, Andrea, Joanne and Nancy with Mom & Dad |
We saw Mom's strength when Dad, and then Nancy, got sick...
And I saw it when we I caught her "exercising" her stroke-weakened arms and legs as she lay all alone in her room at Maine Medical Center. When I asked what she was doing, she managed to tell me that she was "doing my exercises so that I can go home". I just stood there and cried.
Mom on 91st Birthday at Texas Roadhouse... She rode the bull! |
It is because of the example Mom set for us.
So now, as I visit Mom each day, I whisper to her what I wish I had said to her more often over the years...
"Thank you, Mom...I love you."