Sunday, May 10, 2009

mother's day project 2009

i don't know why i chose the fish either



It is hard to explain - what I refer to as the Mother's Day Project. It literally started with needing something to do with my rage and pity that seemed to seep out on Mother's Day, after my mother was gone.

It is hard to explain how it feels to be bombarded by ads in email, on television, the radio, the Internet, the highway, etc. about a day that no longer seems relevant to you. Part of me wanted to scream, while another part wanted to lock myself away until it was over. It was really weird too, since I didn't have such powerful emotions around father's day, but maybe that has more to say about how society feels about fathers.

At any rate, the hiding and the screaming ideas just weren't working. So I decided to divert my energy. The first year, I sent 3 or 4 cards to my friends who were moms. It gave me something to focus on. I bought the cards.

The next year I did the same, adding a few more moms to the list. Again, I didn't make the cards. At some point, I figured it would be very expensive to send store bought cards to everyone that I wanted to, and I also wanted to make it more personal. And so the idea of sending postcards came about, using my own photographs.

There was a year I didn't do it. And then the next year, the list of recipients grew. Now the list is just shy of one hundred. They go all over the world. I think that is the most amazing thing.

Despite thinking about this year's project 35 days ago, I sent them all out on Friday at 5pm. Most won't arrive on Mother's Day, but that's okay. I do my best. That's all I can do.

To some, I am sure it seems silly. Why go to the trouble and the expense? It keeps me off the streets and out of trouble. But it is also a way to honor my Mother, and the mothers I know. I may not be a mother, but I get the importance of the job. I get that all mothers need support. That's what the day is about after all.


on the night stand :: The Mercy Papers: A Memoir of Three Weeks by Robin Romm.

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Saturday, May 09, 2009

the words are the same




Since writing this I learned that Mother's Day was not the creation of the evil geniuses at Hallmark. It was created by Anna Jarvis of West Virginia in 1907. She started the tradition of wearing carnations: pink if your mother is alive; white is your mother is deceased.

originally posted on May 11, 2003

sometimes a lie is the best thing

This is a simple truth: the only way onto this planet (sans spacecraft) is via a mother. Sure, modern science has blurred a few lines about who exactly a mother is, although surrogacy has been around since biblical times. But even with test tubes and Petri dishes, it all boils down to the same thing. The largest cell joins the smallest cell, and creation takes place.

So a mother could be considered a vessel, a ship. A storage space that leads you to a passageway – a point of entrance into this world. Thus a connection/bond like no other is formed. We lived inside of this being. We were literally nurtured by her body. Fed by what she took in, good or bad. Her body offered shelter and protection. And then when certain conditions came together, we emerged, and were literally cut from that which created us. And that is why we cry.

No matter what happened after that, we still share that connection. We will have it with no one else. It is a one-time deal. No one comes into this world alone. There will only ever be one person who got us here. Like it or not, those are the facts.

Today I read an entry about the kinds of mothers that there are. The author mentioned mothers no longer with us, those with children who are no longer of this earth, mothers who no longer have custody of their children (because of court orders, adoption, or otherwise), and mothers who are estranged from their offspring, or at least in complicated relationships. I would like to add to that list mothers who felt that the best decision for them both was to not take things to term. They are all mothers, and should be honored on this day.

Today being that day brought to us by Hallmark, and sponsored by 1-800-flowers.com, South Western Bell, and Avon, I, of course, thought about my own mother. Mother’s Day 1999 was the last time I sent her a card. Had I known then that it would be the last, I’m still not sure what I would have said. I know on some deep level that she loved me, and that she knew I loved her. That my leaving was the best thing for me, and in some ways her, too. That she never wanted me to take on the role of mother to her, and yet it happened.

What haunts me still is something I found among her things. A note about how she wished she had sent me (in addition to my sister) back to live with our paternal grandmother. Also that she had never had the abortion that she did. The one that I am still not sure if she knew I knew about. [I was about 10.] These were her two greatest regrets.

The irony of that is not lost on me. She didn’t want to deal with the children she did have, but yet regretted not bringing another into this world. Okay, I suppose it was more that she was not pregnant to begin with. And yes, I realize that she was quite sick when she wrote this. That her brain was literally rotting away. That she didn’t mean it.

But still it hurts. I can’t tell you that it doesn’t or that it shouldn’t. I just wish it didn’t.

This is the first m-day since then that I ventured out. To observe the world as it celebrated. I watched as a son helped his mother into Starbucks so that she could use the gift card that someone had given her on Mother’s Day. She had one of those new fangled walkers.

Meanwhile, at the table next to me, I listened, as the mother of three was chided by her teenage daughter for almost sitting in her space. Each had several shopping bags. I’d almost bet that none of it was for mom.

Across from me sat a woman on her cell phone. Alone. She kept looking over at me. I think we were both trying to figure out why we didn’t have a mom or children with us. I think she was gay; I think she thought I might have been.

I watched a son with his little boy and his grandma played outside. The grandmother seemed thrilled to get this opportunity to play with her son’s son. She was all dressed up. The little boy was beaming at all the attention being showered upon him.

I sat sipping my iced tea and observed. I wanted to tell them, warn them really, that life is short. To cherish these moments as they could be the last. But I know that no one listens. I didn’t. Why would I expect anyone else to hear the simple truth?

Eventually I couldn’t take any more. I could feel the tears welling in my eyes. So I headed back home to hide, wishing this day would be over. That the flowers and cards and displays would just go away. Some days are just too hard to celebrate.

There are some days that I wish I
could put your hand in mine and I
could let you feel, truly feel, the
experience of this loss. This grief, that
I am told will dissipate over time but
will never, ever go away

A single thought, and it all comes flooding back
remembering that that was when I last used a pay phone, for example
or even the taste of a particular cookie
the smell of someone wearing a particular perfume
total recall



on the night stand :: Motherless Daughters

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Thursday, April 30, 2009

time flies

becoming a swan



Ten years ago today I was fired by my friend. Okay, that isn't entirely true. She didn't fire me - she had the new person do it. Really, she did.

Honestly though, I shouldn't have been surprised. I was part of the firing of another when I was the new girl. That person was actually the ex-lover of her ex-lover. Oh yes, it was that insane a place to work.

For most of the time I worked there, it was a four women and a dog office. Who knew there could be so much drama and chaos in that? During my just more than a year there, at least two of my coworkers had nervous breakdowns. In fact, one was scheduled to return the day after I was let go, after a months leave. Probably not a coincidence.

I was fired because I was late. Less than ten minutes. I had been warned. Was put on probation. Written up. I was supposed to call so she didn't have to worry I was dead on MoPac. Of course this was before I had a cell phone.

In my defense, I didn't have a position that required me to be there promptly. I wasn't hired to answer the phones, although often found myself doing so. I also often worked 80 hours a week, usually coming in to the office at least six, sometimes seven, days a week.

Before she left, the woman who was out on nervous breakdown leave, had somehow managed to convince our boss and friend that I wasn't doing my share of the work. I had been labeled the problem employee, although the new woman - the one who had to fire me - saw that quite the opposite was true. She even took me aside at one point and explained that she had been told that I was the problem employee, although clearly she realized, that this wasn't the case - quite the opposite was true.

I had also had a heart-to-heart with my boss and friend just a few days prior to all of this going down. One of her issues was that I wasn't sharing enough. I explained that I was seeing a therapist for my depression, which on some level she knew. It was her that put the pamphlet in my hand that led me to him.

Only a few weeks before this, B had popped the question, and given me a ring. She said it would never happen. My first day back at the office, I hid the ring. I don't think I made it quite through the day before I told her. It was hard to keep secrets in that place.

There was another private talk, maybe a month before this went down. I was taken aside and given a jewelry box from her business trip to Korea. It had happened because I was there late, and answered the phone. She told me that everyone else got a pen, but she knew that I had been keeping the office running while she was gone, and so had gotten me something extra. Something special. You can only imagine how shaken to the core I was when a few weeks later I was being shown the door. I didn't trust myself. I didn't know what to believe.

I could tell you so many stories of my time at the company. Most you would think I had made up, they were so unbelievable. They really were. I don't think I believed what was happening. I think that is what they mean when they say by willing suspension of disbelief. I lived in that state a lot.

But back to that day. It was a Friday. I remember packing up my stuff. I had already brought much of my stuff home - a part of me knew this was possible. I called B at his work, and then went home and cried for a bit. I had one of those daily meditation books. It had an angel on the cover. I opened it to the date. It said something about windows opening when a door closed. It was somewhat comforting, but I think I cried some more anyway.

B met me for lunch at a place around the corner called Bubba's. We were in Austin, after all. Did I mention I started working at this company in San Francisco? I came out for what was supposed to be a few weeks to finish a project, and ended up staying five years. My being let go happened just a couple of weeks shy of my one year mark in Austin. Of course at the point most of my friends and connections were through that job. I didn't kid myself that I would be on my own henceforth.

What I never talked about, and which I am sure was never even understood was what a part of me knew was brewing inside. In that almost year in Austin, everyone else's mother came to visit (from California, Colorado, and even France). I was invited to lunches and/or dinners with these women. It was a painful reminder of what a part of me knew was happening - that my mother was drinking herself to death.

I am sure that I was probably more down than usual after those visits. I am sure on some level they noticed, but didn't make the connection. As I said, a part of me could feel it happening, although I was in deep denial for the most part. I didn't talk about it. Even in therapy I had managed to focus on thinking about my father's death (I had somehow learned he had had a stroke), but not my mother's, even though it would happen within six weeks of my being let go.

There was a part of me that wanted to call her after I learned about my mother's passing. It took a lot not to. I couldn't get sucked back in. I was at least far enough out to know that my leaving there, wasn't entirely a bad thing.

I confess I have looked her up (online) over the last decade a few times. I know that her mother, too has passed. She now has a restaurant that bears her mother's name.

on the night stand :: The Mercy Papers

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suspended disbelief

becoming a swan



Ten years ago today I was fired by my friend. Okay, that isn't entirely true. She didn't fire me - she had the new person do it. Really, she did.

Honestly though, I shouldn't have been surprised. I was part of the firing of another when I was the new girl. That person was actually the ex-lover of her ex-lover. Oh yes, it was that insane a place to work.

For most of the time I worked there, it was a four women and a dog office. Who knew there could be so much drama and chaos in that? During my just more than a year there, at least two of my coworkers had nervous breakdowns. In fact, one was scheduled to return the day after I was let go, after a months leave. Probably not a coincidence.

I was fired because I was late. Less than ten minutes. I had been warned. Was put on probation. Written up. I was supposed to call so she didn't have to worry I was dead on MoPac. Of course this was before I had a cell phone.

In my defense, I didn't have a position that required me to be there promptly. I wasn't hired to answer the phones, although often found myself doing so. I also often worked 80 hours a week, usually coming in to the office at least six, sometimes seven, days a week.

Before she left, the woman who was out on nervous breakdown leave, had somehow managed to convince our boss and friend that I wasn't doing my share of the work. I had been labeled the problem employee, although the new woman - the one who had to fire me - saw that quite the opposite was true. She even took me aside at one point and explained that she had been told that I was the problem employee, although clearly she realized, that this wasn't the case - quite the opposite was true.

I had also had a heart-to-heart with my boss and friend just a few days prior to all of this going down. One of her issues was that I wasn't sharing enough. I explained that I was seeing a therapist for my depression, which on some level she knew. It was her that put the pamphlet in my hand that led me to him.

Only a few weeks before this, B had popped the question, and given me a ring. She said it would never happen. My first day back at the office, I hid the ring. I don't think I made it quite through the day before I told her. It was hard to keep secrets in that place.

There was another private talk, maybe a month before this went down. I was taken aside and given a jewelry box from her business trip to Korea. It had happened because I was there late, and answered the phone. She told me that everyone else got a pen, but she knew that I had been keeping the office running while she was gone, and so had gotten me something extra. Something special. You can only imagine how shaken to the core I was when a few weeks later I was being shown the door. I didn't trust myself. I didn't know what to believe.

I could tell you so many stories of my time at the company. Most you would think I had made up, they were so unbelievable. They really were. I don't think I believed what was happening. I think that is what they mean when they say by willing suspension of disbelief. I lived in that state a lot.

But back to that day. It was a Friday. I remember packing up my stuff. I had already brought much of my stuff home - a part of me knew this was possible. I called B at his work, and then went home and cried for a bit. I had one of those daily meditation books. It had an angel on the cover. I opened it to the date. It said something about windows opening when a door closed. It was somewhat comforting, but I think I cried some more anyway.

B met me for lunch at a place around the corner called Bubba's. We were in Austin, after all. Did I mention I started working at this company in San Francisco? I came out for what was supposed to be a few weeks to finish a project, and ended up staying five years. My being let go happened just a couple of weeks shy of my one year mark in Austin. Of course at the point most of my friends and connections were through that job. I didn't kid myself that I would be on my own henceforth.

What I never talked about, and which I am sure was never even understood was what a part of me knew was brewing inside. In that almost year in Austin, everyone else's mother came to visit (from California, Colorado, and even France). I was invited to lunches and/or dinners with these women. It was a painful reminder of what a part of me knew was happening - that my mother was drinking herself to death.

I am sure that I was probably more down than usual after those visits. I am sure on some level they noticed, but didn't make the connection. As I said, a part of me could feel it happening, although I was in deep denial for the most part. I didn't talk about it. Even in therapy I had managed to focus on thinking about my father's death (I had somehow learned he had had a stroke), but not my mother's, even though it would happen within six weeks of my being let go.

There was a part of me that wanted to call her after I learned about my mother's passing. It took a lot not to. I couldn't get sucked back in. I was at least far enough out to know that my leaving there, wasn't entirely a bad thing.

I confess I have looked her up (online) over the last decade a few times. I know that her mother, too has passed. She now has a restaurant that bears her mother's name.

on the night stand :: The Mercy Papers

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Sunday, April 05, 2009

35 days until mother's day



I realize I probably should finish start my wedding announcements, but am already thinking about my annual Mother's Day Project. Of course, if you don't know, my Mother has been dead for nearly a decade, and I am not a mother myself. So why would I bother with a Mother's Day Project?

Several years back, I was completely overwhelmed by Mother's Day. I had decided I would just stay inside all day, and try to ignore it, but it didn't work. So I did something about it. The first year I sent cards to a couple of my friends who had recently had babies, and one to a friend that was a nun, and a bit like a grandmother to me. She was the first person I called after learning about my mother.

The next year, I did the same thing again, but added a few more people to the list. I was buying cards back then. Then I got the bright idea of putting my photography to work. I found these cool postcard papers that let you easily adhere a photo. The list kept growing. I think last year I came close to 100 cards sent. They went all over the world.

So the question becomes do I grow the project? Thanks to Twitter, I know a lot more moms. Or do I do something different? Would love feedback.


on the night stand :: The Little Giant of Aberdeen County by Tiffany Baker


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Saturday, June 21, 2008

3288 days later

black and white


Nine years ago today, the SF Coroner's office took possession of my 49-year old mother's body. It isn't clear exactly when she died. Phone records indicated she called her father for Father's Day. It took them a few days to find me (I had moved to Austin, Texas and my mother did not update her emergency contact information), so June 21, 1999, was just another day to me. I got up, went to work, ate, and slept in ignorant bliss. I remember making this argument to my therapist - that because I didn't have a reaction to the event when it happened, then it was really senseless to have a reaction now. Grief makes you say (and do) crazy things.

I found out on a Friday night. It was probably around 9pm. I was watching AbFab on the couch in my nightgown. I was tired from a long week at work. My house needed some tidying. What would have otherwise would have been a forgotten night, changed when the doorbell rang. It was the police.

B said he knew right away why they were there. But even when the officer said that it was in regards to my mother, I never went there. I figured she was in trouble of some sort, maybe locked up in a mental hospital at worse, but not dead. I hit the first phase of grief before the words were even out.

And once the words were out, I lost it. I started screaming. Wailing, almost. It was so bad the officer asked B if I had asthma, and was having an attack.

That insanity was broken by the phone ringing. Who could be calling at this hour, on a Friday? It was B's mother. For some reason I answered the phone. I must have been nearest or somehow thought that someone was going to tell me this was all a joke - a very bad one. This was the last person I wanted to talk to. She asked me how I was. I managed to say, not good and passed the phone to B. He took the call in the other room, never telling his mother was was going on in our living room. Yes, he did not mention that my mother was dead.

The officer left. He was accompanied by a woman who I guess was a social worker. I don't know. Her job was basically to give me the information I needed to deal with the body. She said that I could talk to the coroner's office if I had any questions. Actually I had to call them. All I wanted to ask, but didn't, was what kind of questions might those be? I had lots of questions, but I didn't think they were probably appropriate for the coroner.

In talking with this woman, whose name I don't recall, and who most likely I could not pick out of a line up to save my life, my sister came up. In irony of ironies, the last piece of correspondence I received from my mother was a postcard with my sister's address (and the request that I send my estranged sister money for an air conditioning unit). This woman explained that she could have someone go and share the news with her. What she didn't say was that said person would go post haste. My sister was in the eastern time zone, and ended up be awoken by the police at 3am local time. This caused her to call me quite pissed off about the whole incident (not that our mother was dead) as soon as they left.

By this time I had spoken to the coroner's office. I learned that I needed to make arrangements for my mother's body. I also talked to my mother's brother in California, who agreed to tell their father and other siblings. I also talked to his wife, my aunt, who had been friends with my mother since they were 13. She lost it on the phone. My first call was actually to my friend, and former high school teacher, who is a nun. She knew my mom too, and was able to help me figure out a plan of attack, so to speak.

My sister passed over the fact that we hadn't spoken to each other on the phone in about a decade. It didn't even phase her that the last time she had contacted me, she sent me email pretending to be an adopted 17-year old girl from Maine. I actually had a hunch that it was a hoax, but when I told B he said I was paranoid. He wasn't overly amused when my hunches turned out to be correct and she revealed her identity over IM. She was plain angry that I gave her address to the police. This was the purpose of her call - to tell me off!

When I was able to get her on track - our mother was dead, remember - things went downhill pretty quickly. She felt that the body should be cremated and the ashes scattered on the Golden Gate Bridge. [That is totally illegal, by the way.] My mother had disowned my sister when she was 15 and sent her to live with her paternal grandmother. They hadn't seen each other since she was 17 at a lunch which I also attended. They had made some contact recently, but my mother's brain was so pickled, that it is hard to call it a reconciliation. I can't recall how the call ended, but by that point I was completely spent. Life as I knew it would never be the same, and now I had to deal with all this craziness to boot. I wanted to just stay up all night, but B insisted I at least try and sleep.

I woke up the next morning, and B insisted we try and take his car in for service. I followed him in my car, and was not thrilled with the idea of being alone. I remember asking not to be left alone. As it turned out the service center was closed, so we went back to the house and carried on with the day in one car.

We also needed to stop by the office (he had to work), and I had an eye appointment later that afternoon. I believed that canceling it would anger my mother, so didn't call and try to reschedule. In truth, I didn't want to have to say why I needed to cancel.

First, though, we had lunch. We went to this sort of Irish Pub called Faddo. It is actually a chain. There is one in Chicago too. I remember going to the pay phone and calling my therapist to see if he could see me. I had to leave a message, and just said "something bad happened". I didn't have a cell phone, and so had to leave B's office number.

After lunch, which I didn't eat, we went to the office. Technically I worked there too, but part-time, as a contractor. Still, I had no idea what to do with myself. The CEO, my boss, was in, so I went to his office and broke down. I couldn't get the words out before the tears were streaming down my face. He handled it well. He said I could take any time I needed. I think he was a little surprised we were there, but also grateful as there was a release deadline looming. Somehow word did not spread, and so despite it being an office of about a dozen people, many of them had no idea that this happened while I worked there. Ah, life at a start up in the days before the dot boom.

It was then time for the eye doctor. It was a busy Saturday. They left me in the exam room by myself for a few minutes. I just sat there and cried. I was so afraid someone would ask what was the matter with me. Thankfully no one did, because I think I would have lost it.

I arrived at my therapist's office with my eyes still dilated. I remember the first thing I told him was that I had just been to the optometrist, and that I didn't look this bad because I had been crying uncontrollably since I learned about my mother's death.

Over the course of the next few days, things went from crazy to insane. My mother's siblings on the east coast had at one point tried to steal my mother's body. They felt she should be buried with their mother in a Catholic cemetery in New Jersey, and that I should foot the bill for an Irish wake complete with free-flowing alcohol. I guess they forgot that my mother had just lost her life to alcoholism. What they didn't even take into account was that my mother was converting to Judaism. I was never able to determine how far she had gotten, but at one point she had made arrangements at a Jewish cemetery. She later asked for her money back, and when I called in inquire was met with "you don't have a Jewish name" and basically told to get lost.

In the end, my mother was cremated and buried in the same plot as her mother (and her father and his second wife and possibly my sister). There was a funeral at the church of the Catholic school my sister and I attended for a year. This was the same place where after meeting with the principal, and learning what my sister (who was in first grade at the time) was up to, left the meeting and passed out on the front steps of the school, blocking out what she had been told because it was so awful.

I did not attend the funeral. I can only imagine what this group of people said about a woman they didn't know. About a woman who when she was able, helped out her siblings in every way she could, but when she tried to get her life back, they turned their back on her. I am sure it was a giant guilt festival -something my mother would have hated - but I felt like she probably wouldn't have attended unless it was for the humor of it all.

My aunt and uncle in California did go to the funeral home, but didn't attend the funeral either. They pushed the button for the cremation, and then went across the street to an Irish pub to toast her. I ended up in that same pub when we returned to the Bay Area after B got his MBA. There was a gathering of the interns summering in San Francisco, and we met up at a bar in North Beach . When that got too crowded, we moved the party. We walked a few blocks to Green Street, and as we turned the corner, I realized where we were, even though I had never been there. And there we were in the bar my Aunt described. I freaked out a bit, but somehow got though that night too.

on the night stand :: Motherless Mothers

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Monday, May 12, 2008

i want to be a mom

mother's day project '08


There, I've said it. I am now on the record with the universe, although I don't think that this is entirely a secret.

For the last several years I have tried to turn that pain that is mother's day (for me) around. I started by sending three store-bought cards to friends who are moms, and on Saturday sent close to seventy postcards featuring the photos above.

Losing a mother is hard. It doesn't matter what your relationship was like with her, it will be painful. The person who brought you into this world is no more, and so if nothing else you are forced to realize your own fleeting mortality on some level.

Seeing other people with their mothers is hard. It is even harder when said people treat said mothers badly. It makes me very angry. And maybe even more so because I know there is no way to explain. And thus, very little I can do about it. It is like being on the other side of a locked door, holding the key.

This year I decided to stay home. I didn't want to watch the world celebrate something that I couldn't. Reportedly nearly 40% of people were going out to eat yesterday. I didn't feel up to dealing with crowds.

We sent flowers to B's mother and his sister. I feel like perhaps we should have sent two separate bouquets (B's mother is visiting his sister in New York), but it seemed like the best option at the time. It was a beautiful arrangement and included a nice vase which I figured his sister could keep and hopefully use. I don't know. We got an email from the mother. Nothing from his sister. It was probably wrong that we didn't call too. But I never know what to say and really I wasn't all there yesterday. I wish it wasn't so complicated.


on the night stand :: ultreo ultrasound toothbrush

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