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Nights are restless. I sleep for a couple of hours and then wake and toss and turn confronted by the sad mess that has become my life. I cannot concentrate. In the shower, I forget whether I have conditioned my hair or not. If you’ve seen my hair, you know I must condition!! I cannot for the life of me remember where I put the coupon I needed for the sale at the store that ends this week. I will hold something in my hand, and think, “oh so glad I found this.” Twenty seconds later I lay it down and it is never to be found again. I come home in the afternoon, home from the pool or running errands, lunch with friends, whatever I can find to fill my day and exhaustion overtakes me. When left alone on the sofa, I fall into a deep sleep and wake with drool on my chin hours later. I cannot organize my home, I cannot even see a load of laundry through from start to finish. I did get a facial, and a manicure; baby steps for self-care and yesterday a pedicure. That’s when it hit me. It was my first pedicure without my mom in this world. Pedicures we usually did together, even celebrating “Merry Spa Christmas” with my nieces each year. We did it so often that the manicurist asks me how my mother is doing, and there it is, I have to speak it. “My mom passed away.” “Oh, no!” the manicurist says, as if her heart is broken a little too. “She was such a sweet lady,” she says, and it’s true. Everyone who knew her loved her, even the girl who polished her nails when she visited me in Indiana got to know her as a warm smile, a gentle embrace, a loving conversation.
I am not sobbing every hour, not even every day, though I have my moments. What I am is lost—off balance, stumbling around life bumping into things like I’m learning to walk all over again. It’s a bit like watching a baby calf hours after she is born—struggling to stand and walk around the stable on the soft hay. I am trying to learn how to stand, to survive, to find my way in this new reality, one that I have never known before in a world where she is not. She who was so good with all my firsts; protective and guarding, nervous for me but believing in my all the while. When I was just two she signed me up for swimming lessons. Living in Tennessee, my family was on the water a lot, so much so that she wanted me to know what to do if I ever “got in over my head.” She told me the story of dropping me off at the pool and sitting in the parking lot with her mother crying her eyes out in anxiety fearing the worst for her baby girl on the other side of the wall covered from head to toe in floaties. She cried her tears, then wiped them away and picked me up, raving all the way home about how good I had swam, how brave I was and how I could do anything. This is how I was formed. I was encouraged—always, to give that thing that seemed beyond my reach a try; steadfastly cheered on as if I were already the champion, the expert, the queen of any given thing. I cut my teeth on “you can do this,” “believe in yourself,” and her favorite, “there’s nothing you, me and God can’t handle together.” I must be honest here, I did not always appreciate or welcome her sunny disposition. I remember, in college, a particular crying fit we had together on the phone. I complained that I just wanted her to recognize how hard it all was. “You don’t understand all this pressure,” I wailed. “Too many papers to finish this weekend, too much research to compile; I can’t do it.” She was relentless, “I don’t believe that baby. Look at how far you’ve come; I’m so very proud of you.” I hung up the phone, disappointed that she wouldn’t let me quit, disgusted that she wouldn’t even admit that I was weak and what stood in front of me seemed impassible. The truth is simple; these notions did not exist for her. So today, as I find I am, quite literally, over my head, I hear her. Her voice is strong in my spirit, cheering me on from that great cloud of witnesses, “You can do this, I know you can. This is why I gave you all those lessons, so you’d know what to do.” There was a time when I didn’t believe I could walk, but she told me I could and I did. I didn’t believe I could ride a bike, but she told me I could and I did. I didn’t believe I’d survive my first broken heart; she said I would and I’m still here. Today, she tells me to take a deep breath, rely on the love that surrounds me and believe I can fly—so I will.
8 Comments
Sherrelyn
6/9/2011 06:19:14 am
Oh! I know that feeling...after 4 years I am still have too many of those days. Losing a Mother somehow took my "having everything organized and in control away!" I have such a "lost" feeling. I can not seem to stay focused . My mother taught me how to live but living without her here on earth I am struggling with keeping everything organized and focused. Sometimes I think why clean the house?? My mother will not be coming to visit? WHAT is wrong with me??? Clean the house for myself, my family, becasue my mother wants me to keep a clean house, because it is my responsibility. I am not sure why losing my mother to death and her eternal heavenly home has caused my mind to not function correctly. I am glad mother is not suffering anymore. But I am not functioning at the top level since she passed away. Still trying to improve everyday.
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Ondrea Robinson
6/9/2011 06:28:49 am
My Dear Kimberly,
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Tamara
6/9/2011 06:43:26 am
Thank you for sharing these beautiful words from your heart, although so painful. Tears began to flow as I think about the love and relationship that exists between a mother and daughter that is like none other. I can't quite imagine the lostness of it all. Your strength and authenticity continues to be a wonderful inspiration. Love you!
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JJ
6/9/2011 04:16:09 pm
You're doing it. This writing is exquisite and true and evidence of a sustaining work in the midst of sorrow. You are tethered. You are loved.
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Jackie
6/9/2011 04:50:13 pm
Though I haven't had the chance to really know you, when I look at you I see beauty; when I listen I hear brilliance. When people talk about you you are "the best" and when I read the words from your heart you are amazingly authentic. The world is a better place because of a mother who believed in her daughter and shaped her into a woman I hope to get to know. Rest in the warmth of your memories and remember... conditioning twice never hurt anyone
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Sherri
6/10/2011 10:55:00 am
I felt Rosie's love surround me so many times in my life and although we did not have a lot of time together these past few years...I always felt her love across the miles. I feel it still. I will never know another woman who loves as mightily as she did. Your words bring me comfort and I hope they comfort you in the sharing of them. Loving you - Sherri
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Darlene
9/12/2011 04:12:38 am
My Precious Kimmie....your words have greatly help me to understand that what I'm feeling is "normal"....although I'm so uncertain of what normal is anymore. Trying to live in this world without my mama is most definitely a "new" normal. In some strange but comforting way, your words make my heart feel that it has found its way into a sisterhood.....a place of complete understanding with others who have lost their bestfriend...their mama. We "sisters" put on our smiles and fight through this unbearable sadness while wearing our many hats of grace. Isn't that funny.....isn't this exactly what our mothers did?
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