Any Last Words?

“I want to see her! I can handle it! I’m not a kid!”

Oh, how wrong was I?

In life, there are moments wherein someone tries to step into your autocratic regime of self-governance and offers their two cents, justifying their invasion by saying, ” ________ (mommy, uncle, school master, tribal leader) knows best.” In all honesty,they usually are right. But I was angry, bitter, confused, and sad. I was lost. I should have listened to my Nana, but I was blinded by my own ignorance and guilt, as well as the part of me that was desperately yearning to be considered as an adult, an equal of sorts. Tired of being treated as a kid, I wanted to sit at, to be welcomed at the revered “adult table” for once in my life.

She’s not how you remember her. Death has changed her,” Nana pleaded with me to no avail.

But I was determined. I would see my mother. My mother.

I furiously shoved open the mahogany doors at the funeral home and marched down the aisle. As I approached the casket, I lost some of my initial resolve, and my cadence faltered as the cogs in my mind started reeling with latent processing. I had not seen her for several months. I took a deep gulp of precious air and peered into the cruel coffin that held my deceased mother in its wooden, mericless embrace.

The woman in there was and was not my mother. Her pale, alabaster cheeks were uncharacteristically puffy, the laugh lines that had once danced at the corners of her mouth were exaggeratedly chiseled, more defined. But underneath this deathly mask, I saw her. I saw my mother.

And all at once I had so many things that I wanted to say to this familiar stranger. I wanted to say that I loved her. That I missed her. That I was angry at her for leaving us. That I was sorry. Salty tears started to stream down my face forming an aqueous, gaping tapestry as I recalled the last time I had spoken to her…

My mother had recently been released from the hospital. I remember waking up to get ready before my grandfather was to arrive to take us to school. When I padded down the stairs to grab a quick breakfast, I found my mother walking around the house naked, muttering incoherently to herself. When I asked her where he clothes were and what she was doing, she just stared at me with glassy eyes. Her alcoholism had, at this point, ravaged her liver, making it difficult for her body to process proteins. She was hardly lucid. And I (fully aware of the nightcap that she had consumed several hours ago) was frustrated.

You should get dressed. Pap will be here any minute.”

That was the last thing I would ever say to her. And I cannot tell you how much I regret it.

Maybe that’s why I habitually make a point of reminding those near and dear to my heart that I love them (sometimes, perhaps annoyingly, more than once) before I drive off in my car or hang up the phone. “I love you” are three words in this life that should not be left unsaid, and I will never make that mistake again. I hope that, before she passed, she knew that she meant the world to me. That I loved her.

Good Morning Sunshine

Jess…We’ve hit rock-bottom.”

Well then. That wasn’t exactly what I had been expecting when my mother had said she had something important to tell me and sat me down on the edge of my bed in our house in Maryland. And by house, I mean my grandparents’ basement, which had been converted into an apartment of sorts for my family when my mother took a leap of faith/self-respect and finally left my father’s sorry ass in Texas. No, I’m not bitter.

Mom? What do you mean?,” I asked.

We have nothing. There’s nothing left in my bank account, ” she replied.

I was tempted to reply, “Well, that’s nothing new,” but I somehow managed to restrain my 12-year-old self. My mother had developed a nasty habit of living child support check to child support check and had never been really good at keeping up with her finances. In fact, I was the one who balanced her checkbook on a weekly basis after she had taught me how to do so, and judging by the numerous entries for Midway Discount Beverages, my mother could have justifiably been considered our local liquor store’s most valued customer. No, I’m not bitter about that either.

If nothing else, my childhood inadvertently taught me the art of worrying.

“Mom, we don’t have food for our lunches tomorrow.”

“Mom, we don’t have gas in the car.”

“Mom, we are going to be late.”

“Mom, people are looking.”

“Mom, we don’t have money.”

Without fail, my mother would always reply, “Stop being a worry wart.

Looking back on the ways things were and comparing it with how things are now, I am a bit disappointed to report that not much has changed. I still worry about what other people think of me. I still worry about the future, in all of its respects. I still worry about the problems of people whom I care for deeply, as well as others who are, quite frankly, undeserving of my concern. I still worry about the past, and whether or not I did the right thing.

I guess what I am trying to say is that I miss my mother, but I also miss the carefree, innocence-ridden childhood I never had.

Forever Yours

My mother. امي. Mi madre. There’s something about that universal word that tugs on one’s heart strings, eliciting the same response in spite of cultural differences and language barriers.

Dealing with my mother’s death was the single most difficult thing I have ever done in my life. But I don’t even think it’s accurate to use the term “done” because in all honesty, it’s an ongoing, eternal struggle. And frankly, I think it’s an insult to all mothers to insinuate that overcoming their death is a feat that can be so absolutely surmounted. My mother was the lynchpin to my chaotic childhood, but more than that, she was the woman who nurtured me for the nine months before I was born, the woman who underwent extreme pain to bring me into this world, the woman who sacrificed everything for me. I am eternally, unequivocally grateful.

That night. That phone call. That turmoil. Those few short moments were incredibly surreal. Surprisingly enough, the doctor had only  just recently expressed his positive outlook on my mother’s prognosis.

She should definitely be home before Christmas,” he had confidently told my family.

November 4, 2002: My brothers and I were spending the night at our aunt’s house when the phone shrilled that evening. The conversation was short, and she quickly hung up the phone, turning around to face us. Asking her what was wrong would be superfluous question; her tears already conveyed the answer that I didn’t want to hear.

My mother was dead.

I remember sitting on the couch and desperately trying to come terms with reality. I closed my eyes, and the memories that flooded my head crashed like waves on a beach. It was like watching a slideshow as snapshots of the past flashed in the inner recess of my mind: riding roller blades with my mother around the neighborhood, my mother tucking me in at night when I was a kid and reading my favorite book to me, starting our new life together in Maryland, and so many other memories, both good and bad. And in the blink of an eye those memories were gone, and I was left utterly alone with this wrenching hollow feeling in my chest. My heart sank into an inky abyss, and I wept uncontrollably, mourning the loss of the most beloved person in my life. I know it sounds cliche to say that my life would never be the same, but after losing my mother, how could it ever be?

She loved this song. I miss you more than you could ever know, mom.