Tag Archives: mother

What’s In a Christmas Movie?….

24 Dec

What do you find in a Christmas movie?  Some are filled with the magic of the season.  Some are filled with the knowledge that each one of us is special.  Some teach us that the spirit of Christmas is giving more than we receive.

Last night, my mother and I watched The Gathering, starring Ed Asner and Maureen Stapleton, made in 1977.  If you’ve never seen it, it’s about an older man who left his wife because of selfish reasons, and dismissed his grown children because of differences he was too proud to overlook (including one son who had dodged the Vietnam War draft).  This man is diagnosed with a fatal illness that will leave him only a month or two to live.  It dawns on him that he is out of time to mend his family, and decides to have one last Christmas gathering before he dies.

Not only is the message clear, and lasting, but it brought back memories of past Christmases in my family, especially for my mother.  My father looked quite a bit like Ed Asner, and was gruff and sometimes brutal in his view of how a family should be, and how the world should be.

When they were decorating the tree, Maureen Stapleton unwrapped a cookie made from baker’s clay, decorated with sequins and marker.  Just like the ones my siblings and I made when we were kids.  The head was broken from the body, and required super glue for mending, reminding my mother of all those baker’s clay cookies made and decorated so long ago, and crumbling after being stored and unwrapped year after year for the last 40 years.

Especially poignant was the scene where Ed Asner, as the patriarch of the family, read ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas to the kids before bedtime, adding to the magic and anticipation of Santa, whose reindeer and sleigh was surely not that far away.  My father did that too.  He had a special Night Before Christmas book – the cover padded and puffy – that was pulled out every year for the one traditional story that had to be read before bedtime.

But instead of leaving Santa cookies and milk, as Ed Asner suggested to his grandchildren, my dad had assured us that Santa was tired of so many cookies, and he was surely sick to death of milk.  Better to leave him a Big Mac from McDonald’s, with a cold Diet Dr. Pepper to wash it down.

The Gathering was bitter-sweet.  Bringing back those wonderful childhood memories of Christmas, but then reminding both my mother and me that sometimes you couldn’t go backwards, only forwards. Sometimes, there was simply no more time left. 

The movie ended with us knowing Ed Asner would never see his children again, and would leave his family behind within weeks.  My dad won’t be coming back either. 

Sometimes, it is, in fact, too late.  But more often than not, there’s still time to make things right, and to let others know how much they mean to us.  When the opportunity presents itself, don’t waste it – seize the gift when it’s given.

Merry Christmas to everyone: today, tomorrow, and throughout the year.  May your days be merry and bright!

Mom Rock…

21 Dec

And here I am.  My favorite color is pink, and I apparently have eyes all over.  I see all;  I am forever watching.

(I like the image!)

Hospital Impressions – Personal Snapshots of Life and Loss…

31 May

Hospital Impressions –   Personal Snapshots of Life and Loss                                                                                                      
                              – by K.L.Romo
 

I am a wife.

I am here for you
   I see, and hear, and feel for you.

The IV drip, lights blinking orange and green, silently sends its  
liquid relief in the early morning hours of your suffering.  Dispensing hydromorphone is its flashing declaration in the darkness.

I wipe the stray tears that escape your tired eyes, as you lay

flat and still, trying to trick the throbbing pain into believing it

can’t hurt you anymore. But unsuccessfully.

I gently touch your face, in vain attempts to comfort you.

 

I am a mother.

I am here for you
   I see, and hear, and feel for you.

Your terrified shrieks in the night still travel through my memory. Nurses poking you with tubes and needles; you wonder why I don’t  protect you.  My adult strength overpowers yours, and you spit at me in your last feeble attempt to make it stop.

Your screams and curses snake their way through the trauma that lives within these ER halls, between these walls that see so much, but keep their secrets to themselves. I beg you to stop fighting it;  the restraints dig deeper into your wrists.  But you don’t listen.

I mourn your suffering, the pain of childbirth but with no child, your anguish a punishment with no reward. A paper autumn leaf hangs from the door, a symbol to all that we are left with the cold and bitter vice of winter, not the warm and joyous touch of spring. Of  life.

 

I am a nana.

I am here for you
   I see, and hear, and feel for you.

You don’t cry upon entry into this world. There is no sound at all, only a total, hollow absence of joy; a vacuum of grief. It is the most horrible silence you can imagine, as if the world has stopped in respect for your birth. And death.

I’m the first to hold your swaddled form, to look at your face and wish you could look back. Your blanket holds only stillness – there is no breath inside. We hold you until your fragile body can no longer tolerate the warmth of our love for you; our need to hold you close. We gently lay you on the blanket that covers your tiny bed of ice.

Nana will always be here.

 

I am a mother-in-law.

I am here for you
   I see, and hear, and feel for you.

I hold your hand as you lay unconscious in the ICU, amidst the wires and tubes that are doing the living for you.  I listen to the family at the opposite bed say their goodbyes, and I pray that we won’t suffer the same anguish. I hang a rosary over your pillow.

I pray for miracles; I will not be disappointed.

 

I am a daughter.

I am here for you
   I see, and hear, and feel for you.

I expect to see you, but you aren’t here. In your place, I find an unfamiliar figure – a ventilator the only thing connecting you to the life you’d known.  Green numbers flicker on your machines but tell us nothing.  We already know.

Your chest rises and falls with each mechanical whoosh, the artificial breath filling your lungs, then leaving them just as quickly. It mimics life; we’re entranced by its mesmerizing sequence.  But we know better.

I hold your hand, the one you’d always said could never even sculpt a ball from clay. It had always been so strong, and now it lies still within my grasp. Mom covers your feet to lovingly protect you from the cold, her act of defiance against the gray winter that we know has come.

You always loved the winter.

We stand by your side. The machines are unplugged, the ventilator stops. It is just the end. No beeps or drawn-out squeals, the noisy pronouncements that your soul has left one world for another.

Only silence.

 

I am just me.

I am here for you
   I see, and hear, and feel for you.

I hold your hand, as I will, always.

No! Not…”THE SANDWICH”!!!…

14 May

The Middle School cafeteria peanut butter and jelly sandwich. The ultimate humiliation if your lunch money account runs low.

Yes, I admit – I did it.  Even in the computer age when lunch money is virtual, via an account on the school computer, accessed by the student’s account number, and even when the school sends me an email when the lunch money account is low, I can still find a way to be human and put my child through that embarrassment of embarrassments – having to eat the provided sack lunch that the kids who forgot their lunch money have to eat.

When I was in school, the coins for lunch money came from a small basket of change my mom kept on the shelf in the laundry room above the dryer.  I think the only thing we got to eat if we forgot our money was……….nothing?

I simply didn’t see my reminder note on Wednesday.   And only three days after Mother’s Day, I failed in my mission to  protect my child from mortification. (Do I have to give my presents back?)

For a twelve-year-old girl who doesn’t want to stand out from the crowd, and who doesn’t even like PB&J, Wednesday’s lunch was quite the mortification.

But one good thing about it – at least the free school lunch was the significant emotional experience my daughter needed to do her job of remembering she was out of lunch money. She took responsibility and got that lunch money as soon as I got home from work.

Amazing what kids will remember to do to avoid being disgraced in front of their friends.  :o )

Contributing to Working Mother Magazine…

11 Jan

Yes, I am going to join the MomBlogs on the Working Mother Magazine website.  See you there soon…

www.workingmother.com

Am I a Relative of Tony Romo, You Ask???…

7 Jan

Well, it is a very good question.  I’ve been asked it many times, and I would prefer to be asked if I were Tony’s sister for girlfriend.  However, I had the rude awakening when I announced the name on my reservation for dinner one night, and the hostess looked at me and asked if I were Tony’s mother.  (AAARRRGGGHHHH!!!) That one hurt!

Sometimes reality sucks.  (Oh well, at least she didn’t say grandmother!)

But the answer is “no” – I don’t think I’m a relative (unless many times removed), much to the dismay of the men in my family who would love free Cowboy tickets.

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