Saturday, June 24, 2017

5.

This. This is how she'd love you to remember her. Cheers to a life well lived, loved and full of laughter.




5 Birthdays.
5 Christmases.
2 Grandchildren.
Somehow, though, we knew you were there - and there we were, looking for your signs. We have held onto your "life is for the living," and we hold onto each other tight. Just like you held on to each one of us. Love you, Ma. More. 


...

Today marks the 5th anniversary of my Ma "crossing the rainbow bridge," the lovely metaphor she used for breaking the news of a loved ones death to me so many times over the course of our almost 35 years together. Somehow, though, when talking about your own Mom, it's not as picturesque or breezy.

It's true that anniversaries are tough - milestone ones, tougher. But to be perfectly honest, I have to tell you that from June 11-24th of every year since 2012, I have relived each day as if it were happening for the first time. Taking her into the hospital, calling Dad to get there, listening to the doctors each day, missing a morning with her to check the baby's heartbeat at my own appointment, witnessing her saying goodbyes and thank yous to loved ones, overhearing private conversations between my parents "You can date, you just can't remarry," telling Aunty Cookie and Uncle Don to get on a plane now... all of it. I feel like it's just happening for the first time. Even to today, the fifth anniversary of when I asked her Peruvian doctor in front of her, "¿Ella está muriendo hoy, sí?" to which he tearfully responded while looking away, "Sí. Lo siento mucho..." It's all very real, very current, and I don't foresee it going away any June soon. And I used to like the month of June.

I do have regrets. I wish I didn't honor all of her wishes and had friends and family come to see her. I would have happily applied her lipstick each time. I mean, Auntie Sharon had seen her through her teenage years, so what was the difference now? But to her, it mattered. It mattered more at that moment than anything. And honestly? I knew the time we had was so short I didn't want to feel any more cheated than I already did, so I obliged. So to those who didn't get the time that I did, I am deeply, deeply sorry.

...

The New Normal sucks. Sucks the wind out of your sails, sucks the breath from your chest, just sucks sucks sucks. I'm sorry for all of the times I've used that phrase to my friends who have lost a parent in the years since Ma... it's just protocol in helping others along through the passing of who made you who you are. A lifelong friend of mine, Bobby, told me he divides his life into the timeline: "Before Ma, After Ma"... I can see that...that may be a better way to phrase it since this life without her is anything but normal. "BM, AM" from now on. Although calling life with her the "BM" would really have pissed her off.

...

There are still some days that I honestly don't know how I get up and function in this world without her. But then there are my two little ones who are up with the early morning sunshine, excited about what each day brings: asking for a hug and some more chocolate milk, or telling me that they "love me more," and I get it together. One of the greatest responsibilities I have as a parent is making sure my children know the ones who have lived and gone before them. Judging by the excitement in their eyes when we call Papa's house on speaker and they hear her voice still on the machine, by the joy in their eyes when they see a rainbow, and by the thrill of finding that red cardinal bird nearby, I think I'm doing a darn good job. And if I'm not, just tell me I am anyway.

...

A close friend of mine lost her last remaining parent, her father, just recently after a brief illness. It was so important for me to quietly be there for her, as she has supported me, advised me, and guided me over the years, knowing herself what life is like after losing a Mom. It's a crappy club that someday we will all be a part of and until it's your time to join, you cannot even fathom what it's like to be in. I will never forget that while giving my Ma's eulogy, I looked up into a sea of faces and she was the only one I saw, standing along the back wall. With a nod, she gave me the confidence to continue when I didn't think I could.

In the days since her father's crossing of the rainbow bridge, she has said more than once to me that she "didn't know how I could get through that" reading - and the truth is it was because of her:  the nod of her head, and the knowledge I always had a friend to lean on if I needed it. So to that friend: you know who you are, thank you for always being there, understanding and nodding when I needed you to the most.

So with that, in the spirit of keeping my Ma's memory alive, I thought it was important to share again the words I spoke at her memorial service. So here goes...

Very glad to see that you are wearing one of Ma’s favorite colors: Black.
Whether you called her: Margie, Marge, Midge, Midgie, Bridge, Bridget, Large Marge (her personal favorite), Lanny, Lumpy, Margeeee, Gee Gee, Godzilla, Auntie Margie, Uncle Margie, Margie go beep beep, Mick or Big Momma, to me, she was one syllable: Ma.
Amazing, isn’t it, that such a short syllable embodies such a character, but it’s her great influence, strength, kindness and thoughtfulness that gathers us here today. By the way, she would be a little upset about all of this fanfare for her. If you’ve wondered why you can’t give her a face-to-face sendoff: it’s because absolutely NO ONE would have been able to have ratted and puffed up her hair to the proper specifications! We all know that is true.
We know family and friends have come great distances to be here. So if you are family, know Ma lived for you. If you are a friend, know she cared for you. Regardless of which, know she always thought about you. If she made you Monster Cookies, took you to a New Kids Concert, or sent you pictures or greetings, she spoiled you. She even gave Kennedy the dog only bottled water – nobody could make you feel more special than my Ma did. – She did these things in her way, where half the time someone would say, “Got your Mom’s card,” and I had no idea what they were talking about. Always loving each and every one of you, behind the scenes.
For those of you who have followed the Carepages site that detailed what the last two weeks have been like, you know that this came out of no where. Nothing could have been done to have changed the course of the outcome, so we are relieved to know she didn’t have to go through this for a long duration. Ma deserved to go out in style: with the strength and grace she has always shown. But it’s funny when you spend days in the hospital – things start to run together, time doesn’t make sense. Every day we were there once the pain meds kicked in, Ma thought it was Sunday. I’d tell her, “No, Ma, it’s Wednesday,” and she would look at me like I had three heads. Anyway, Ma loved Sundays – the day family was together, the day her parents would come over years ago – a day to relax, and this last Sunday, well, it was no different.
Although it is shocking and heartbreaking, we got to spend some special moments with her the last few weeks – a friend pointed out to me that we never had to worry about making up for lost time, because we never had any. We were always close. Through this all, she didn’t shed a tear, and if she did, she never let us know it. I asked her if she was scared, and she said no. She told me she was ready to go home – and by home, I’m sure now she was talking about Heaven, and she would be sending us a rainbow here and there as a “sign”.
Words can never quite describe how holding your Ma’s hand as she is fading away, while at the same time feeling a little boy kick inside of you; we are finding comfort that Ma’s legacy will live on through baby James. She told me last week that I was going to be a great Mom and I told her that if I was half the mom she was, I’d be doing more than just okay. It was a special moment between us last week when I recorded the baby’s heartbeat at my own appointment and brought it to her to listen to. We somehow both knew she wouldn’t be there in person, but she will always be there in spirit. I told her she was the best Ma a girl could have, and she told me I was her Miracle baby, and the best kid she could have had. Ma always talked about the “Circle of Life” – and I guess she really knew what she was talking about.
She was quiet, dignified and peaceful in passing- the same way she lived her life.
Ma wouldn’t want me up here talking about her “walking the rainbow bridge” as she would call it – She would want me to talk about her life. A Short, but very full life. While I’ve always been one to know that life doesn’t end with departing from earth, I’d be willing to bet she is up there, perfecting her dance moves with Patrick Swayze as we speak.
Ma and I have joked through the years that she should just put some of “Margie’s Life’s Rules” on tape, because she liked to tell you the same things time and time again – not because she forgot she had told you something, but because, she wasn’t quite sure you had heard her the first time. Or, you kept making the same stupid mistakes after she told you the first time. So, throughout the years, she would start some of these thoughts with … “tape number…” And I thought I’d share some today.
Tape Number 20- crying makes you tired. Crying does nothing but make your face puffy and tired and then you’re all cried out and you’re thirsty. Stop crying.
Tape number 45 – my car only takes 93 gas. From the Mobil. Not that you have to fill it up or anything, but in case you do, it has to be 93 gas. From the Mobil.
Tape number 74. Quentin Road is a speed trap. When leaving the house, make sure you don’t speed, especially on Quentin Road. Cops sit there all the time. To write tickets…If, you’re speeding.
Tape number 88 – when going to the mall (at 10 am because that’s the time you need to run errands, not at 5 o’clock- are you crazy?) always park in the same section so you know where your car will be when you come out.
Tape number 126- beep beep beep. Tommy Skilling says, when a weather watch is issued, it means “watch out” and when a warning is issued, it means, “danger danger”. In both cases, put your gym shoes on (over your pantyhose,) grab your camera (in case you see any shapes that look like people in the clouds,) and then go in the bathtub or the basement. But first, turn off your computer because if you have a power surge, you want to make sure it’s okay. Don’t trust those surge protectors.
Tape number 207- don’t color your hair. I know what your natural color is, you’re not fooling anybody. (Easy for a natural blonde to say).
Tape Number 300- Don’t bother me when I’m on the phone. Unless you’re hurt or bleeding.
Tape number 320-don’t call me between 7-9pm Wednesday nights. Idol is on. –
Tape number 459 – Just stand in front of the mirror for this one picture, it’s so cool!
Tape number 466- when looking at paint colors, grab 500 paint chips and stare at them. Don’t just go and pick a paint color willy-nilly. Make sure you sample it on each wall, in the moonlight, sunlight and artificial light.
Tape number 555- Everything goes in circles. I should have saved the platform shoes from 1960s, the bellbottoms from the 70’s and the leggings from the 80’s.
Tape number 634 – Just relax. Don’t burn the candle at both ends because you’re going to get sick!
Tape number 699- Do NOT go up and down the wooden stairs with just socks on. You’re asking for trouble.
Tape number 702- don’t stick your hands into my bag of M&Ms. Dish ‘em out
Tape number 797 – No, I don’t want to travel, but be safe, have fun and bring me back a spoon.
Tape number 884 – Washing your hair in the sink prevents you from getting water in your ears.
Tape number 902 – When you find something you like, don’t just buy one of it. Buy in multiples.
Tape Number 941- eat slow and chew it good.
Tape number 983 – don’t use words like “it’s not fair,” because I don’t like the word “fair” It’s called “life.”
Years ago, my friend told me that, and I quote, “You and your Mom look nothing alike, but I swear, you are the same entity,” – at 22, I wasn’t sure I was in agreement or even liked this observation, but I find comfort in it now, because there is no better person to be like than her. But it’s funny, I have seen myself doing things over recent years that I am not sure have always been there, or if I’m just taking note now, but are just so “Ma”… and I don’t mind it a bit.
My sister would always tell Mom that she was “stupidly right”… and she was. My Dad the other night told me that I’ll carry out her legacy, and I will. So, stop your crying, because you’ll be sorry when your face is puffy, you’re tired and your makeup is outta whack.


And to you, my sweet Ma, I love you… “More.”


And today, when we visit the flower park and send our balloon flying up high to Heaven, think of us and give us a nod... it's going to be anything but normal, but it's going to be okay. And as long as we have each other we can keep her spirit, her strength, and her memory amongst us.

Thursday, June 22, 2017

No Worries...I Got This...

As a "threenager," our little Mads has grown very witty, independent, and very much an old soul in her own right. Almost daily, while assisting her in putting on shoes, buckling her carseat or filling her water cup, she waves me away with a quick: "No worries, I got this..."

Whaaattt? 

Kid, you're 3. And you still use a pacifier (don't judge- that fairy will get here sooner or later). I guess that's just my little way of controlling the ruthless, unforgiving clock of childhood that my Ma used to talk so much about as she watched her babies grow up in that cliché blink of an eye.

But the Mads? At three, she gets it. I mean, GETS it. She "gets" Life more than many of 40-somethings I know and love. And that fact makes me love her endearing charm, shameless stubbornness, and sweet, nurturing soul all the more.

...

The other day, we tested out a new park nearby - one that was well suited for ages 5-12 (or at least that is what the sticker on the equipment said). Nevertheless, Jimmy found a rope bridge to zoom across, only a mere minor obstacle in his way to the giant rock slide. Maddy, in trying to keep up with Brudder, coupled with her less adept footing, ran up to the rope bridge and terrifyingly whined, "I scared, Mama. Help!" complete with her arms outstretched. Reassuring her she was safe, I helped her down and she moved onto something else to try. 

Not five minutes later, she found herself on that part of the playground again. Faced with the giant tightrope in front of her, she took one step and nervously choked, "I scared, Mama. Help me!" Reaching out my arms, she leapt into them and focused her attention on the sand lot next. 

Watching her play in the sand, I couldn't help but notice her focus her sights on that rope bridge. If you know the Mads, you know what happens next. 

"Help me, Mama," she quietly insisted (more than asked) as her little foot took its first step on the rope bridge. She kept both hands on the guide ropes and I told her I would keep my "hand on your arm until you make it." 

And then she started this:


"No worries, Mama, I got this. I can do anything." With that she proceeded to sing-song: "I can do anything, I can do any-thing, I can do anything, anything..." 


And, fourteen little steps later, she turned to me and beamed: "I did it!"

Cue the ugly, ugly cry. There I was, at the park amongst a zillion other moms and kids, sobbing, hoping my Jackie O sunglasses disguised my vulnerability, but not my pride. 

...

So, the moral of the story is this: There should be no worries because YOU GOT THIS. You can do anything, anything, any-thing. You may give up a handful of times, but in the end, you got this. Use your guide ropes, ask for help, and be grateful if you are lucky enough to have someone to keep their hand on your arm until you make it. Because you will. All you have to do is make it past that first, scary step.

Thursday, May 11, 2017

I'm Still Here... A Reflection on Mother's Day


Sunday will mark the fifth Mother's Day I will have spent without her. Sunday will also mark the fifth Mother's Day that I, myself, actually have been a mother. Life's timing still takes my breath away sometimes. 

...

Brunch? Nope. A nice dinner out somewhere? Not so much. Ma's favorite Mother's Days were spent at home, with us girls, my Dad, her parents and her sister. I'm pretty sure we usually just barbecued after planting some flowers. Or maybe we even picked up Burger King, since an occasional Whopper made her happy. I'm fairly certain I made her more than one macaroni necklace and homemade card, always secretly wishing she would put them in her Hope Chest for safekeeping. Mother's Day was uncomplicated, happy, warm and sunny... meant for playing with bubbles saved from Easter baskets and dirty knees from "helping" pot the petunias. 

The ease of togetherness and not feeling obligated to share her M&Ms...that's what she loved about her special day.
...

1988

She didn't want to be wished a "Happy Mother's Day" because it was anything but happy. It was raw, unfair, and unnatural. She had lost her oldest child and now the second Sunday of May was a glaring reminder of how cruel life could be. She hated it. Any forward progress she had made in grieving had been unwound. Any flowers or cards we gave were met with a half-smile, a quick hug, and a quiet "Thank you." Any semblance of what we had known of the day to celebrate the most important woman in our lives floated away like bubbles catching a breeze off the wand, just right.

And on that day, it rained.
So, I searched. I searched for the rainbows Debbie had promised she'd send.
She didn't disappoint. 
The best gift Ma got that year was Hope. There is always Hope.

...

By the time I was 13, I grew impatient with the uncomfortableness of Mother's Day. "I'm still here, Mom," I told her, because at thirteen years old, I knew that I knew it all. She understood where I was going, even if it came out wrong. Even after she had lost her own Mom the year after that, she tried. She tried to embrace the day, for me. After all, I was still there.

...

So here I am, almost 5 years after Ma changed her residence to the other side of the stars, that I will spend the second Sunday of May, embracing the moment for my children. After all, they are here. They are who made ME a mother. But my Ma... she made me the mother I am. And for her, I will celebrate. We will take our annual Circle Tour, finding comfort in the simplicity of the day. We will search for rainbows and any signs to show my children SHE is still here, invisible, very much a part of me, very much a part of them. We will delight in our hotdog picnic, enjoy the warmth of the sun and the ease of being together as a family. 

And maybe even blow a few bubbles up high to Heaven.
One may even reach her. 
Hope. There is always Hope.





Friday, April 28, 2017

Be Brave, Bunny

With all of the changes happening in the last year for the Hacketts: some by chance, some by choice, some by misfortune and even some which may be blessings in disguise, my children have been the only constant variable of joy, of laughter, and of innocent wisdom to brighten the possibilities of what is yet to come. 

Change is never easy for anybody...and if you're reading this and you're thinking "Change is good. I like change..." Imma punch you in the snotlocker... You must lead a beautiful life in which you've never lost anyone you have loved, you've never had opportunities or dreams ripped away from you or you've never tucked your youngest into her crib on the last night before moving her to a toddler bed.

Yah, yah, I get it. She is three. It's time. Probably past time, actually, but since she had a rocky start to her life, I wanted to savor the "crib days" a little while longer... I mean, I would keep her in until she was ten but then people would talk or she might even try to climb out by that time. Or not. 

Today, her father decided was THE day she would transition to a toddler bed, which, in his defense, I had mentioned the suggestion, like, yesterday. Usually, though, and I say this lovingly as I know my beloved will be reading this, it takes a  little  lot longer than 24 hours to make bigger changes like these happen. Changing how we make changes is a good thing, right? 

With naptime looming, Jim made the finishing touches on Maddy's "Big Girl Bed," which she delighted in knowing she could get in and out of on a whim. As she laid down, lights out, she called out: "I'm scared"... her Brudder, her Daddy and I went in her room to reassure her that "Everything is going to be okay," "You're doing great," and the "Don't be scared, Mads, goodnight" coming from her brother, which sealed the naptime deal. 
...

Early this evening, while standing on the porch waving goodbye to Papa (a relatively new custom - or more so a side effect of the changes of the past year really), Jimmy and Maddy caught glimpse of a rabbit, fixed like a statue in our front yard, whose eyes implied he was clearly startled. "Look at that bunny, Mom!" Jimmy whispered, so as not to alarm the cute little guy. "I see him too," I whispered back, helping Maddy adjust her focus to lay eyes on him. "Mama," she said, slowly raising her hand in his direction, eyes transfixed now, "he is scared. Awwww. It's okay. Be brave, bunny. Be brave." Jimmy, never to be outdone, added: "Stay brave, bunny..." (complete with a thumbs up in his direction). With that, my dynamic duo turned slowly and head back into the house, for a moment leaving me speechless and heartbroken on the front porch, staring at a bunny, now the metaphor of my life. 

How can a 3 and 4 year old have more confidence in the world than I do? How can they recognize that change can make you stand still, afraid, unsure of the unknown? I couldn't help but think of all of the changes. Of Maddy and her "Big Girl Bed". Of a scared-stiff bunny in my yard. Of what's yet to be. Be brave, bunny. Be brave. 

It's true, and I've written about them before, those inevitable "peaks and valleys" of life hit at the most unassuming times. Never do you expect the unexpected, although told time and time again to do just that. It's the unexpected, I've decided, that the best and brightest moments yet to come are derived. So when feeling overwhelmed with things out of my control I will always remember: "Everything is going to be okay," "You're doing great," "Don't be scared," and "Be brave, bunny. Be brave." 

...

While tucking her in, Mads sang me some of the lyrics to her favorite song:


If you trust your rebel heart, ride it into battle
Don't be afraid, take the road less traveled
Wear out your boots and kick up the gravel
Don't be afraid, take the road less traveled on.


We finished the chorus together and she smiled, "I won't be scared, Mommy"... "No need to be, Love," I told her. She said her prayers and I said mine: "Be brave, bunny. Be brave"...














Friday, March 17, 2017

In a Field of Roses...

She is the wildflower. 

And today, that Wildflower turns 3. 
Three. 
I can't even.

I wish I knew then what I know now...much of what those ol' timers say is true: The days are long but the years are short. Everything goes full circle. Life is a series of peaks and valleys. Life moves pretty fast, if you don't stop and look around once in awhile, you could miss it...  Okay, that last one was Ferris Bueller - but I guess you can argue now even HE is an ol' timer.

But my dear, Madelyn Marjorie, this is the letter my heart has written for you...

---
Dear Maddy (The Mads, The Princess, 'Punzel),

Today, you turn three. Your presence here on this earth is nothing short of a miracle - a premonition your GeeGee had in her last days on this side of the stars. I can't help but think you have met in another time and space... So much of you is her: your hair, your eyes, your spirit and strength. You closed a hole in my heart I thought would remain forever - three years ago today. 

You were the best gift I didn't know I had needed. You smile and sing and laugh when Life throws things our way that make me feel like crying. You are brave. You are fierce. You are wonderful. I'm so proud to be your mom. 

You are the sidekick your brother can't be without, the little Princess who turns her father into a doting servant... and the sign from Heaven your Papa needed that life, love and happiness goes on.

You are so many things to so many people. But as for me, my baby you'll always be. And today, as we wish you a lucky St. Paddy's Birthday, know that your spunk, sass and wit are cute only because you are 3...but won't be so cute someday when you turn 13. Seems silly to think that far ahead but let's face it, life moves pretty fast... but I know you'll stop, look around, and not miss it.


I love you most.