By Stephanie Foo
Mother’s Day used to make me mad. Nothing personal, all you moms out there. The truth is, I was just jealous.
As I wrote in a guest essay for Times Opinion this week, I had a pretty awful mother. She was abusive and made it very clear she did not love me before abandoning me when I was 13. And so on a day that celebrates the importance of a mother’s love, I got resentful and bitter. So what? Moms are overrated! Who needs a mom, anyway?
Well, as it turns out, me. A few years ago, I was eventually loved by a second mother, my mother-in-law. I didn’t ask to be — was skeptical of her, in fact — but she embraced me from the moment she met me and just never let go. She was generous, forgiving, a hilariously savvy cheater at board games and an expert at unconditional love. She helped heal me. She told me, “I will never leave you.” She was a treasure.
My husband and I lost her to a painful disease in April of last year, so this will be only my second Mother’s Day without her. But the holiday doesn’t make me mad anymore. It’s just plain sad. There’s a purity to this grief, and a motivation: to mother the motherless like she did, to love others with abandon.
This year our family is celebrating together by living her lessons. We’ll spend time together, taking care of one another with generosity and kindness. And yes, we’ll play some board games, too.
Mother’s Day used to make me mad. Nothing personal, all you moms out there. The truth is, I was just jealous.
As I wrote in a guest essay for Times Opinion this week, I had a pretty awful mother. She was abusive and made it very clear she did not love me before abandoning me when I was 13. And so on a day that celebrates the importance of a mother’s love, I got resentful and bitter. So what? Moms are overrated! Who needs a mom, anyway?
Well, as it turns out, me. A few years ago, I was eventually loved by a second mother, my mother-in-law. I didn’t ask to be — was skeptical of her, in fact — but she embraced me from the moment she met me and just never let go. She was generous, forgiving, a hilariously savvy cheater at board games and an expert at unconditional love. She helped heal me. She told me, “I will never leave you.” She was a treasure.
My husband and I lost her to a painful disease in April of last year, so this will be only my second Mother’s Day without her. But the holiday doesn’t make me mad anymore. It’s just plain sad. There’s a purity to this grief, and a motivation: to mother the motherless like she did, to love others with abandon.
This year our family is celebrating together by living her lessons. We’ll spend time together, taking care of one another with generosity and kindness. And yes, we’ll play some board games, too.
8 comments:
loser.
A question from Marilyn, a longtime Green Bay Packer fan and shareholder, to team management -
Out of the 11 players drafted by the Packers in the 2022 NFL Draft none are white. I also looked at the first two rounds of 64 and found that only 11 players drafted by all the teams were white. When I Googled the question of how many white overall were drafted, Google wouldn't answer it. I wonder why. I sure hope we aren't going to have to hear all the whining about equity, justice and all the markings on hats and shoes and all else. I suggest the NFL is actually racist for always choosing and highlighting black players. I am sure that is why you chose Love for a QB when he never should have been chosen. I hope the Packers will play the National Anthem and fly the flag high with the planes going over as they always have. Anyone who doesn't respect and honor our flag and our military heroes does not belong on the Packer roster. So for the 2022-2023 season, let's just play football and leave all the politics and racism out of the stadium.
(Plenty of whites in pro football!)
I'd like to see one of those food-giving candidates come back and do it after they win office!
Has never happened.
Lennon:
"Mother, you had me.
But I never had you..."
Spending your life figuring it out, is what keeps you in a forward motion
May 8, 2022 at 3:42 PM
One truth is that the Black players are just being used and discarded.
They know how to play, they have the energy and the guts to play.
But the coaches do not help them, nor educate them, nor help them survive after the game is over.
The owners of the teams just want to make money out of these Black players.
They suffer big hits in the head, and body.
Then the owners and the coaches, go and find more new Black players.
I might be wrong. You might be right.
May 8, 2022 at 3:42 PM
Owners just pickin cotton, remember?
Gladys Porter Zoo to offer free admission to students
ABOUT TIME pinches mamones want everything free
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