My mother drove me crazy at
times. She had to talk to everybody, be
it the mailman, the Schwann’s man, or the bum on the street. She could strike up long convoluted
conversations with absolutely anybody. Perfect strangers ended up telling her
their life stories, their deepest fears, and their secret ambitions. And she remembered it all. Anybody she had ever talked to once could be
sure of a warm greeting whenever my Mom ran into them, be it months or even
years after their first meeting. She
never to my knowledge forgot a name.
All of this was highly irritating
to a child of my particular temperament.
I was shy, and couldn’t remember who had been in my class by the next
school year. But it wasn’t envy that
made me dislike my mother’s personability. It was impatience. Do you know how long it takes to go shopping
when you mom insists on talking to everyone she runs into in the store? And then has a ten-minute chat with the clerk
at the register?
Getting to and attending church was
its own adventure. We would all get up
on Sunday morning. Eat breakfast. Try to get dressed. Lose our shoes. Misplace our coats. Run around yelling to everyone else to help
us find our lost items—simultaneously.
Eventually we would all get bundled into the car, and after two or three
of us ran back to get two or three forgotten items, two or three times each, we
left. It took twenty minutes to get to
church, breaking the sound barrier all the way.
I never did find out how long it would take following the speed limit. We never did get pulled over for speeding on
the way to church, probably because any cop who saw us didn’t believe his eyes,
especially when his radar couldn’t get a fix on our speed.
We would then arrive for church,
only five minutes late, and find that Paul had forgotten that he never had
found his shoes. Did you know that
wadded up tinfoil, dredged from the depths beneath a seat and molded onto the
foot, makes beautifully fitted, futuristic footwear? It even serves the double purpose of assuring
that aliens can’t tell what your feet are thinking.
Before we entered the chapel, I was
ready to leave. I didn’t want to have to
enter a chapel full of already seated, tidy people. I didn’t want to be in the parade of six that
was my family, squeezing past our immaculate neighbors to find seats, with out
hair un-brushed and my brother modeling astro-boots. But I went in anyway, blushed, squeezed and
sat, while doing my best to avoid looking at anyone.
I then sat and for ten minutes
tried to listen to the speakers. Uniformly boring. I poked Allison. She, of course, poked me back. All-out war ensued, until ultimate peacekeeper
mom stepped in, returning momentary order.
Then one of us would pick op a program, obtain a pen from Dad, and start
to draw. This would of course start a
revival in abstract art, which in turn started a major wave of diplomacy
unrivaled in the annals of history, as those who didn’t have programs or pens
negotiated with those who did. There was
usually about one program and two pens (this being the number our Dad carried
in his pocket to church—why it was always two when there was one of him and
four of his children I will never know).
The one available 8” by 5” program would eventually be torn in anywhere
between two to fourteen unequal pieces, depending on the respective bargaining
power of each sibling, and the stubbornness of the program holder. All in all, sacrament meeting on our bench
rather resembled a year in central Africa, only with rather more violence and
political coups.
You may wonder why I was so
embarrassed to enter church, yet entirely unembarrassed to behave this way once
seated. That is probably because you
have forgotten the law of invisibility of children. Once a child is seated in a large room full of
people who aren’t doing much of anything, they of course become immediately
lost from sight. NOBODY can see them. Obviously.
But after church was the worst, so
far as my mother’s amazing sociability went. We always went to my grandma’s
house after church, where she had four perfectly evenly divided dishes of candy
laid out, one for each of us. The image
of that waiting candy seemed to taunt us as we waited between an hour and two
hours for mom to stop talking to everyone in the building. She simply had to find out how everyone’s
grandparent’s or child’s cold was doing.
My philosophy was that if anyone had perished of a sneezing attack, we
would have found out already, and that if there was plague in someone’s
household, you had better avoid them to keep from catching it. But no, we could only leave after practically
everyone else had already gone home, probably much later than they would have
if my mom hadn’t been there.
We would eventually get to
grandma’s house, where mom would sit in deep conference with grandma. But that was okay. I had my candy, and as the second oldest I
got the small sheet of funnies first, and the large sheet of funnies
second. But even the Sunday funnies must
come to an end, a characteristic unfortunately not shared by my mom’s
talk. It went on and on well after all
the funnies had been read and we were reduced to poking each other to distract
ourselves from our sugar headaches.
Then one day she was gone. Dead in the water without a sound on a
boating trip. Sudden heart failure. A great black hole opened in the sky and
threatened to consume the world.
The funeral home was bathed in
flowers. They spilled out of the chapel
and down the hall. Afterwards, the
extras supplied flowers for all the churches in the city and filled our house. Everyone sent flowers, even the clerk from
the store checkout line, though I don’t know how she even found out. The Billings Montana florists must have been
left without a rosebud. Out of all the
bouquets one stood out. It wasn’t
terribly attractive, having nothing but maroon roses. It wasn’t anywhere near the biggest, though
there were over four dozen flowers. The
thing was that to each rose was tied a note, all from the women and girls of
our ward. The notes weren’t written to
my dad, or to us kids. They were all
written to my mother. “Karen, you always listened to me.”
“Dear Karen, you always seemed to know when something was wrong, and you
always knew just what to say.” “Thank
you so much for everything you have done for my family. We were really struggling when we first moved
in. You made us feel like we really were
home at last.” The notes went on and
on. I wondered what these people were
thinking. The woman they addressed in
their notes could never read them. It
puzzled me. It was as though they wanted
one last chance to give the thanks they had held back one day too long. They wanted one last chance to say something
to a woman who had always listened to everything they had to say.
Nine years have passed since I last
read those notes. I’ve gotten older, and
I understand a little better now what my mom was trying to teach us all those
years before she died. And sometimes,
when someone wants to talk and I don’t feel like I have the time to listen, I
remember those notes and I make the time.
Mom’s influence didn’t end when she died. She touched everyone around her, in a way
that will last long after her memory is gone. If there is anyone who would care
enough to come down from heaven to read the things her friends so badly needed
to tell her, it is my mom.
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