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an everyday life

an everyday life

Tag Archives: Parents

Wintertime Berries

04 Tuesday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in In the Garden, Life at Home, The Great Outdoors, Writing

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Entertaining, Everyday Life, Oklahoma Gardening, Parents, Writing

The berries have been there for months.  First hidden behind a flush of summer green, they began small green and hard.  But with leaves now gone, my Possumhaw Holly stands alone in silent splendor, within a winter garden gone dormant and brown.

With a male holly near by to play his role in creation, only females set fruit.  The birds love her bright red berries as much as me.  While I enjoy the mere sight of her from my kitchen window, I especially like to bring a few cuttings indoors.  The trimming improves her form while the trimmings form effortlessly into a nice table centerpiece —  like the one I put together Sunday with sprigs of French Lavender, in honor of my mother-in-law’s birthday supper.

The post could stop here but for that word, “mother-in-law,” which carries with it such common connotations.  Most are unflattering; and they hurt and belittle with a big bite.  I wish to remove its tarnish and soften the sharp edges with my own small words.  But try as I write, words evade.  I search for phrases and images to honor, to tell of the many ways my mother-in-law has enriched my life.  And I come up empty.

So I begin with a confession:  Janice and I have come a long way, since the first time we met thirty-eight years ago; because I’m positive she didn’t like me.  Or if not me in particular, then at least the general idea of her son dating anyone exclusively.  At seventeen, he was too young to narrow the field.  And when considering her son’s girlfriend as a prospective daughter-in-law, perhaps Janice felt her son could do better.  Having greater appreciation for her wisdom these days, I’m inclined to agree — though I’m very glad that son of hers  believes otherwise.  And she as well —  now that we know each other better.

Janice is infinitely interesting.  Unlike me, she can comfortably converse with anyone anywhere.  She is well-read and borrows many books each week from her local library.  She especially enjoys a good mystery.  She’s a fine cook, though she cooks less these days — nine years of living with cancer and chemotherapy cocktails takes its toll — though she lives everyday grateful.

Her grandmother raised Janice because her mother wasn’t up to the task.  As a new widow with two toddlers at home, having lost her husband in a tragic train accident, Janice’s mother knew her  limits.  So Janice grew up calling her grandmother “Mother,”  and her mother she called “Mammy”, same as all her mother’s grandchildren.

Janice married young.  Ironically, at sixteen.  But thanks to her Mother, she married for love.  Because her Mother wanted for Janice what she herself had been denied, when forced to marry a man she did not love.

When time drew near for delivery of my oldest son, Janice put aside her fear of flying and came to Texas to help out.   But it’s not the help I’m remembering today but all our good visits.  During one lovely afternoon chat, in my final days of that third pregnancy, Janice fondly recounted how she had “a thing” for a man in uniform when young.  I suppose her future husband looked fine in his crisp Marine khakis, walking down the streets of the small town where Janice lived.  It wasn’t long before they married.  Then not much longer before Janice and a new daughter were on their way to France.  And a year or so later and a very long way from home, with no family nearby save for her young husband, Janice gave birth to her second child: My husband.

To this day, Janice cannot resist the hard crusty french bread she came to love as a young French housewife.   Enough so, that I created her birthday menu around loaves of  hard crusty bread, ensuring I acquired the finest Oklahoma City offers.  With them, I served a side of my best spaghetti and meatballs.  And a fresh tossed salad and home-made vinaigrette and croutons — made  with french bread, of course.  And because I make pies and cobblers better than cakes, Janice had birthday candles planted into a big dish of apple cobbler.

But as I look back on Sunday night’s supper table, it’s not the food or the beloved people seated there which grab at my attention but that lovely mix of winter flora:  Those silvery sprigs of French Lavender which I have adored for so long — whose scent fills my home and my soap dispensers and lingers above my pillow at night — reminds me of Janice and the gift of a French-born husband whose love we share; and those spacious berries remind me of Janice too, since she always has space and time to visit.

These wintertime berries invite me to make my own space — for visits with those I love —  with time ripe for picking.

Riches and Beauty

29 Wednesday Sep 2010

Posted by Janell in In the Garden, Life at Home, The Great Outdoors

≈ 8 Comments

Tags

Childhood Memories, Everyday Life, Oklahoma Gardening, Parents

That gnarly old Magnolia outside my bedroom window is looking good — for the first time in years.

And I am amazed this should be so, given the trials the tree has endured.  First there was the long drought of 2006 with triple digit temperatures — then the one-two punch it suffered in 2007 — a crippling ice storm preceded by a sewer line replacement that sliced and diced deep roots on its western boundary.  And as if these indignities weren’t enough, I delivered what I later feared to be its down-for-the-count  knock-out when, in 2008, I severed two sides of feeder roots with my new flagstone path.

But today, under a gorgeous blue autumn sky, the Magnolia’s large waxy leaves cup sunshine while its coral seed pods look like Christmas lights shimmering across a full canopy. In a polar-opposite way, my window view reminds me of other trees I saw today, getting spruced up for the holidays.   Uptown on Western Avenue, patient, capable hands of a local landscape crew were busy stringing twinkling lights on a large number of tall trees bordering a large corporate campus.  From tree trunk to limb to branch, the crews worked its way up to the big blue sky, covering each tree in tight ringlets of all shades of light.

Mother had a favorite saying about the life of “the rich,” and if any trees in our neck of the woods are “rich,” it’s these that live on the well-groomed grounds of Chesapeake Energy.  Mom always spoke these words in response to my own observation of how beautiful some rich or famous person was — like Jackie O for instance — that I’d run across in the pages of a glossy magazine.

I’d say my “how pretty” bit.  Then, Mom would look up from her sewing to peek at whoever had garnished my compliment — and without fail —  she’d hmmph her way to a comeback:  “It’s easy to look good when you’re rich.  I’d look good too with her money.”

I never paid these particular words of Mom much mind.  And today was no different — when I sat down to write for the first time in two weeks, Mother’s oft spoken words on the “rich and the beautiful” were the furthest thing from my mind.  But rising out of the big blue yonder, they came home to roost in my Magnolia tree, with a will and life of their own.

As I sat contrasting the natural beauty of my poor Job tree against the gussied up beauty of the well-heeled trees of my rich neighbor, all I could think of was Mother’s same old words.

Sturdy Irish Fiber

18 Wednesday Aug 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

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Tags

Death, Everyday Life, Parents

It happened during the great purge – the day we wiped the house clean of my parent’s lives.

We were tired.  Like tin men, we had moved through mountains of memories.  Recycle this.  Trash that.  What remained were a few pieces of clothing.

My sister reached in, pulling out blue wool.  The shade that once matched Mom’s eyes match mine now.  I watched my sister’s fingers draw circles in its softness.  Of sturdy Irish fiber, the sweater and Mom were outside prickly — but comfortable when wrapped in their warmth.

So much had happened since Sis and I picked this sweater out for Mom.  Had it really been twelve years?  Hard to imagine anyone else wearing Mom’s sweater.

My sister looked at me.  “Do you want this?”

Caught off guard, I don’t know how to answer.  I only know Mom had —  Mom had wanted this sweater.  She loved wearing it.  She bragged it kept her warm on below freezing days, even when the Oklahoma wind whipped up her legs.   Without bothering with buttons, Mom would draw its looseness tight against her body before hurrying out to brave the cold.

Back in the closet, Sis drew Mom’s sweater toward her face.  Then, looking at me, she buried her nose in its folds.  Breathing in, she shook her head.  “Gone.”

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