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Mothers Day Without a Mom

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By Moonchild60


Mothers Day with no mom.

"Where's my mother?"

My grandmother was busily cleaning the kitchen, her dress swishing back and forth as she moved from one side of the narrow room to the other.

"She's dead" she said off handedly as if she just told me to sit up straight or close my mouth when I chew. I stood there for a moment in confusion. I was only 6 years old. I wasn't all that certain what death was.

A good minute must have passed when I finally blurted out "Well, is she coming back?" as if dead were a place and she were just visting.

"Nope" my grandmother said flatly. And there was nothing more to be said. I didn't have a mother. I had no idea where she was. She was just dead and she was never coming back. Although I really had no idea what this meant or how I was supposed to feel, I felt sad. I felt as if I were missing something, but I didn't really know what it was. It was an emptiness and at the age of 6 I had no words for it.

I decided that Donna Reed was my mother. I watched every episode so intently it was as if I were actually there. I lived in the perfect house with her and her perfect husband, Dr. Stone and Mary and Jeff, her perfect kids. I had always wanted a brother as I only had an older sister. We lived our perfect little lives in our perfect neighborhod where mishaps and wonderful moments happened every day. And when Donna Reed was over I would suddenly feel sad and alone.

Later when i started school it didn't take long to realize that everyone had a mother. Everyone in my first grade class, second grade class and third grade class had a mother. In the 60's you were hard pressed to find kids without moms. Kids without dads, yes, as Vietnam may have left the family without a father. But mothers were plentiful and it only made me feel more left out and different.

But it was Mothers Day that was the worst. Making macaroni presents or paintings for our moms. I made them anyway. Not wanting to feel freakish around my peers I acted as though I had a mother, just like them. I even talked about her making her up as I went along. Of course she had an uncanny resemblence to Donna Reed.

It was my year in fourth grade that I made a hot plate for Mother's Day. Since by now most the kids knew I was being raised by my grandmother and father I stopped talking about my Donna Reed mom. They all knew I was making my hot plate for my grandma. I painted it all black with a roller and wrote Happy Mothers Day on it in white paint in my best penmanship. Ofcourse it was just another relic that ended up in the back of the highest kitchen cabinet. Years later when my grandmother found it, she didn't even remember I had made it for her and commented on the nice hot plate my sister had made her.

When I was 10 my father married my stepmother. She was nice and pretty but young and not particularly interested in raising my sister and I. While I liked her very much I still considered myself mother-less. It was around this same time my sister and I found out our mother wasn't dead. My grandmother had told me that because she didn't know how to explain to a 6 year old that her mother was a party girl who didn't really want her. This was worse. She was alive, she just didn't want me. Mother's Day found me wondering where my mother was and if she would ever look for me.

And so this went, year after year, through my tween years of barrels full of acne cleansers and insecurity to my teen years of curves and boys. Every mothers day I would buy little tokens and gifts for my grandmother and stepmother and wonder what my own mother was doing. Did she have more children? did she ever think of my sister and I? Why didn't she want us? What did she look like? Would I be a lousey mother too?

Then one day it stopped. It just stopped. I was in my late teens and Mother's Day came and went and I didn't think about her. Not at all. Mother's Days came and went and she never entered my mind Many years passed and I had made it a habit to NEVER think of my mother on any given day. Not longing, not loving, not wondering, curious, painful, nothing. She didn't get another second of my time.

Then when I was 24 my sister called me at work "I found mom" she said excitedly.

"Mom who?" I asked immediately confused.

"Mom you nut, our mom".

My sister proceeded to tell me how she easily had found and contacted our mother and where she lived and that she was going to see her next week, did I want to come?

There was no way I was going to let this opportunity pass me by. This was my chance to come face to face with the person who had caused me so much pain by their absence. This was a chance to answer many questions. This was the woman who never got one of my Mother's Day Macaroni presents, or painted and glued paper plate art pieces I had painstakingly worked on for nobody.

I understood years earlier that mothers were very special. And if you grew up without a mother you had a hole in your heart. It was a hole that couldn't be filled with anything else. If your dog Spot died you eventually fell in love with another dog named fido. This doesn't work with moms. Neither my grandmother nor my stepmother or anyone could love me the way my mother was supposed to love me. A Mothers Love could not be duplicated. The hole would never be filled. Not even by my own mother.

After I met Cruella I realized that I was very lucky to have never had her in my life. Everything happens for a reason. There was a reason my father took me with him. My life was supposed to be better than any kind of a life I would have had with my own mother. God had been very good to me and so was my dad.

Now I am older with children of my own. Mother's Day is not a day of pain or avoidance. It is a day for ME. I am not a lousey mother and I am nothing like my mom was and I am grateful for that and a multitude of other things. So I didn't have a mother. I had a step-mother who became one of my dearest friends, I had my friends mothers who were wonderful to me and I had the best dad on earth. Everything balances out.

While I am someone who likes to experience everything personally, this is one experience I will just never know. I will never know what it is to have a mothers love. And thats okay because the rest of my heart is so full, you can barely tell there's a hole there at all.

Comments

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C. C. Riter  says:
8 months ago

Good story, but sad. I'm glad that you discovered the truth and grew into a good mother in your own home. I am now an orphan at 58. I miss Mom, but have adopted some other elderly women who kind of fill the gap.

LAmatadora  says:
8 months ago

Wonderful account..so sad though. You are such a good writer. I am so sorry that you have had to go through this pain. But as you said later you realized your dad saved you from a life way worse than the one you experienced. You are right, Mother's Day is YOUR DAY and always remember what a good person you are and that you are definitely NOT your mother's daughter "so to speak". GOOD HUB!

Moonchild60 profile image

Moonchild60  says:
8 months ago

Thank you C.C. I must share this with you, my father died last week. I will no doubt write about him in the future. I understand how you feel. I always had a feeling that I would feel like an orphan when he was gone. And I do. I am 48, but age brings no relief. You still feel a certain "alone-ness" when you have no parents, regardless of age.

Thank you once again LAmatadora. You are very very kind!!

Passionate1 profile image

Passionate1  says:
8 months ago

wow incredible kudos to you sister. You are a wonderful mother as I knew it would be. Life has truly given us blessings we are lucky we shall live for that and more.

C. C. Riter  says:
8 months ago

Moon I am so very sorry to hear that news. My deepest sympathy to you. Well, hubpages will help you in many ways as it does others as well as myself for comfort or to release tensions and sorrows among others. (((((hugs)))))

sheenarobins profile image

sheenarobins  says:
8 months ago

Hi, I think I like you very much. This is a very good hub and yes God is really good.Everything happens for a reason. I am very glad for you.

Although, I have met my mother she wasn't there for me and even if she was she is not capable of being one. I am an adult now and I am glad I am not like her as a mom and as a person. Not a perfect mom myself but I try with every veins in my body.

Thank you for sharing your hub. you got me excited when finally you met her.

Moonchild60 profile image

Moonchild60  says:
8 months ago

Thank you C.C. You are correct, I am certian HubPages will be my theraputic outlet when I am ready to let go of the story of my father. You are very very kind.

Sheena - I am sorry your mom, although present, was unavailable to you. I know what you mean, I am not a perfect mom either, but those of us who grew up without moms (physically or emotionally), usually try very hard to be the moms we always wanted. I have a feeling you are a very good one.

Disturbia profile image

Disturbia  says:
7 months ago

This is a very interesting hub. My husband was 26 when he met his real mother. His parents split up when he was around 2 years old, so he had no real memory of her. He was also told that she was dead, obviously not to hurt him. I'm sure his father and grandmother thought it was the best thing to do. If she was dead, he could move on. She spent years wanting to see him, but was afraid. I've met her and she's just wonderful. The two of us get along so well, I feel like she's my mother too. I lost my mom when I was 11, so I know how it feels to be motherless and especially how painful it can be around Mother's Day.

Moonchild60 profile image

Moonchild60  says:
7 months ago

Disturbia - wow, a few parallels there. Yes, I am sure the reason they say they are dead is really to avoid all the other emotional baggage that goes with saying they're not. I am glad she turned out to be a wonderful person! Thank you so much for writing. That was interesting.

brownlickie profile image

brownlickie  says:
4 months ago

very well done. My mothers mother left her and my grandfather for dead when she was two but she was hated by her step mother and it caused a great deal of trauma for the rest of her life. regards brownlickie

Moonchild60 profile image

Moonchild60  says:
4 months ago

brownlickie - Thank you for your comment. I am so sorry for your mom. That is terribly sad. I don't understand how anyone can hate a child. It has to be their own insecurities and selfishness.

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