I’m back to writing following a brief hiatus. Camping with my son on
Friday night prevented me from writing and publishing a post that
evening. Sharing in dinner, laughter, and community with dear friends
(not to mention a couple of bottles of wine and some Scotch) precluded
my writing routine last night. So now that I had “the weekend off”, I’m
here to write the second to last post of the month, and perhaps the last
routine post for a while (you’ll have to tune in to Monday night’s post
for details).
You’ve seen me write about my kids and also about
my wife Lee. My family means so much to me it’s hard to put it into
words sometimes, and it’s definitely a challenge to come up with new
ways to describe the feelings I get when I think about my wife and my
kids. Given all that, I am very remiss in the fact that I don’t write
nearly enough about someone so equally special to me and that is such an
important part in my life.
My mom is my constant. She is, in a
way, the architect of who I am today. Where my dad was more the designer
of my persona, I would say my mom was always focused on the engineering
aspect of who I was. On top of a deep foundation of family and Catholic
fundamentals, my mom placed brick after brick of life lessons, each
reinforced with the mortar that was her love, as well as the unwavering
rebar that was her strict discipline.
My mom was nothing if not
consistent. She never caved to any puppy-dog-eyed please for exception
or mercy. She never faltered in ensuring the rules that applied to
everyone else also applied to me. It’s as if she measured every brick
precisely, none greater than the last, none diminished by any sense of
complacency. What made my mom truly remarkable in her masonry of
motherhood was her ability to be meticulous. Style was not really
important. For my mom, the substance of what she was making would serve
to be the measure of value, respect, and integrity.
I love my mom
and I truly enjoy her company. I wish we did not live so far apart with
her in Miami and me in Tampa. I wish we had the opportunity to interact
more and for my kids to be with their grandmother more often. All that
being said, no one sets me off or pushes my buttons quite the way my mom
does. The last several years have been an exercise in me learning to be
more patient with her so as to ensure the limited time we do share is
that of quality time. This is especially true given the very recent
reminders that mortality is an eventuality, and I don’t want to waste
time being upset at or bothered by my mother.
I hate to admit how
little I’ve been able to show my mom the love and appreciation she
deserves. At the very least we speak weekly and every conversation ends
with an exchange of ‘I love you’. Yet, I know that’s not enough. It’s
not enough to bank on a phone call. It’s not enough to really on
Hallmark cards on Mother’s Day and her birthday. All of that doesn’t
even begin to come close to being enough when I consider how my mom has
always been there for me. Unwavering. Unassuming. Unbelievably constant.
I
don’t know what the solution is in the long run. My life is here in
Tampa, and until my kids graduate from high school (2019), my life will
remain here in Tampa. I’ve talked to my mom about moving up here to be
closer to her grandchildren, and we discussed the many pros and cons to
that idea. Still, we each remain resigned to the fact we’ll see each
other a handful of times per year and maintain the formal and cordial
relationship of mother and son. Until I can figure out a way to change
and improve this, I guess the best I can do is to live a life of value,
respect, and integrity, and always give her a reason to be proud of what
she created.
May my actions as a husband, a father, and a human being serve as a monument to her legacy as a mother.