FRESH
YARN presents:
Lose
Your Mother
Find Yourself
By Beverly Kopf
My
mother died on January 6, 2004 in West Palm Beach, Florida. I remember
what an absolutely beautiful day it was, sunny and sweet. The phone rang
at exactly 9:00 AM. I was alone in my parents' Century Village condo.
My father was just coming back from synagogue, and I was dressed and ready
to take him to the hospice where, against his wishes, I had insisted my
mother be taken. For the last week, I had been caught between my parents'
conflicting needs: my mother, clearly ready to die, and my father, desperate
for her to come home. Come to think of it, it was a very familiar feeling.
Growing up, my mom insisted I was God's gift to the world and my dad --
well, I can't remember ever really pleasing him at all.
"Your
mother died a little while ago," the nurse whispered.
"What
are you talking about? You promised to call me when you saw the signs,"
I cried, feeling myself slip into that altered state where I would remain
for many, many weeks. "How could this have happened?"
"There
were no signs. She just went. I'm so, so sorry."
It wasn't the nurse's fault -- it was just my mother -- God forbid she
should be a burden to anyone.
For the next
12 hours, I was transformed into an Olympic athlete competing for the
gold medal in 'good Jewish daughter.' I talked my dad into burying my
mom in Florida, near her firstborn child, my brother Barry, whom she had
buried seven years before and with whom she would soon, happily, be reunited.
I found the perfect funeral director whose dedicated staff was willing
to work late into the night so the funeral could take place the next day,
as required by Orthodox law. Then I marched my disabled dad into the Veteran's
Administration -- without an appointment -- and demanded that they provide
him with home health care, effective immediately. They agreed. I mean
who could resist the screams of an anguished daughter: "He just lost
his wife!"
Then I drove
to the most ostentatious funeral parlor I had ever seen and met with my
new best friend, Joe, the owner -- whose picture appears on his business
card -- and gratefully put every last detail of my mother's burial into
his capable and well-manicured hands. And when I finally returned to the
condo to find my shell-shocked dad -- who had just lost his soul mate
of 65 years -- doing a crossword puzzle, with Law & Order blasting
in the background -- I awarded myself the bronze. And I thanked God that
I had spent the years since my brother's death healing old wounds and
giving my mom the chance to be the mother I had always dreamed of.
As millions
of women are discovering, losing your mother, even in your 40s and 50s,
is a life-altering experience. At times, the pain seems unbearable. It's
almost impossible to not go back and relive certain moments -- "Oh,
God, if only I had insisted she go to the doctor sooner." I never
knew from moment to moment what I would be feeling -- laughing hysterically
one minute, crying uncontrollably the next. No one was spared my desperate
need to talk about her in excruciatingly intimate detail. "She loved
my girlfriend Bobbie, you know -- my frum little mom who safety-pinned
her house key to her girdle every Saturday morning because carrying anything
on the Sabbath was simply out of the question -- loved my girlfriend like
her own daughter." "Once, during my darkest days of shock therapy
and food orgies, we were speeding down the Belt Parkway and I had to pee.
Without shifting gears or changing lanes, my mom emptied her humongous
vinyl purse, shoved it in my crotch and gently whispered, 'Here Mamala,
pee to your heart's content.' Lots of parents say they'd do anything for
their kids -- my mother meant it." This went on for months.
Then a funny
thing happened. I started to get the hang of it -- my own process, I guess
I would call it, and its wisdom. I didn't give a shit what anyone thought
-- I had nothing to prove. I was going to experience my mom's death in
my own way, and that's all there was to it.
And then
one day I woke up with the unbelievably exhilarating sensation that I
was free. Free of what? Who the hell knows. My mother's expectations
hysteria
need to be needed? My own desperate need to believe that
she would always be there for me? That I couldn't live without her? It
didn't seem to matter -- I just knew that my life would never be the same.
So I casually
mentioned this to my friend, Catherine, who had lost her mom about six
months before I did. She looked at me with abject horror, "Oh, I
could never admit to feeling that way. I'd be a puddle of guilt."
I just looked at her and smiled, "It's okay, whatever you feel, it's
really okay."
Look, I'm
no expert, but whatever your mother/daughter relationship -- symbiotic
or synergistic, empowering or downright dysfunctional -- I know one thing.
We honor our mothers by honoring our own unique experience of their death.
And in that simple act, one of the great tragedies of our lives becomes
a springboard into a better life -- an unimaginably better life. And that's
all our moms ever really wanted for us, right?
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