mother
writes
by peggy millin and friends
Did
you know you can start with any concrete noun or active verb, drop
it in your unconscious, and let creativity flow out the end of your
pen? These pieces were written in 5-10 minutes of speed-writing (don’t
stop, don’t edit!) by students responding to a word or image
in a poem. If you don’t have a book of poems handy, look around
the room or out the window: table, vase, socks, expresso, sip, pour,
rain, skate. And...start writing. Your hand will go faster than your
brain can control, so what comes out may well surprise you. Do it
over and over, make it a practice like meditation or running and you
will find yourself revealed—all your foibles and all your gifts
displayed in the space between the letters. Then you can gather them
all up and bring them into your heart.
Although
written to different prompts, these writes all have some aspect of
mothering in common.
Cheryl
Dietrich
Prompt: “When the Shoe fits” by Chuang Tzu
Carrie Bradshaw. Sex and the City. Manolo Blahniks. My mind taken
over by pop culture, picturing shoes in neon colors. Little strappy
things worth $100 per inch of leather. Uncomfortable, wobbly, but
oh so appealing. I drool over them in the shop window. I stand there
in my rubber-soled, sensible brown walking shoes and drool over ridiculous
little pink and green polka-dotted sandals and rich red stilettos.
Comfort wins out. I’m happy to drool, happy to wish, most of
all happy NOT to wear them, happy in my sensible Naturalizers walking
down the cracked pavement outside TOPS.
I
have one pair of shoes that are wild—for me, not for Carrie
or her friends certainly. They are sensible flats but with pointy
toes and a bright fabric design of green and rust and orange. I saw
them years ago in Florida while shopping with my mother. I admired
them. They would go so nicely with this one outfit I had. Still, I
put them back on the shelf. My mother had taught me well. I could
only wear them with the one outfit, so they’d be wasteful. How
much wear could I get out of them?
I
turned to my mother for approval. She, staunch, old-fashioned Republican
matron that she was, said to me, “Cheryl, don’t be so
damned conservative. Buy the shoes!”
I
bought the shoes. I think of them as the last gift she gave me.
Maisiebuds@cs.com
Peggy
Tabor Millin
Prompt: “I Stop Writing the Poem” by Tess Gallagher
I’ll get back to being a woman when I can stop being a mother,
that giant shirt I put on 32 years ago, have worn all these decades,
dragging the cuffs through the mud until they are dirty and frayed.
The tail of the shirt also is torn from too many hands hanging onto
it.
The collar
is worn out with expectations.
Only
the yoke across the shoulders stays strong, won’t give, holds
it all together.
Still,
nothing can stop my tenderness, my ability to feel each small hand,
to peer into each upturned face.
I’ll
get back to being a woman the moment I’m sure they are okay,
I say, recognizing it will never be so.
Their
lives as fraught as mine with peril, as graced by blessings.
“I have so much wisdom to give you,” I want to shout.
“Here! Look at my shirt.”
But they
turn away, wanting to wear out their own clothes.
pmillin@clarityworksonline.com
Deane
Giordano
Prompt: “And if you get out of your own way, something beautiful
is born.”
Ninety-nine
years and nine months on the planet. My grandmother, Mary Ethna Wilson,
died last month. She passed the matriarchal torch to my Aunt Nancy,
who hadn’t had time, as of the funeral, to mature into her role.
But she will manage quickly enough. The wake was grand at Nancy’s
home, a cozy gathering place teeming with squealing kids and storytelling
adults, a warm kitchen with a comforting spread on the island—potato
salad, brisket that everyone agreed is better with gravy, frozen pink
salad, rolls, cheese grits, gooey chess pie, chocolate pie, lemon
pie, coconut pie. All of it rich and designed to comfort in sad times.
My grandmother,
Muna, died in December. She finally gave up and, according to my uncle,
went to heaven and joined her friends who asked her what took so long
and dealt her into the great bridge game in the sky. Just three weeks
before she passed, she sat at the head of the mahogany table at Aunt
Nancy’s house and demanded to know how Nancy was going to top
her 99th birthday party. Aunt Nancy had outdone herself on that one.
One hundred guests had made an appearance at the Country Club of Fulton,
a squat building with a checkerboard floor, decorated for the occasion
with balloons and crepe paper streamers and paper tablecloths printed
with roses, Muna’s favorite.
There
was cheap wine to drink, and Natural light beer, and seven different
birthday cakes homemade by one of Muna’s devotees. This was
a 99th birthday party, a celebration of the matriarch, and Ralph and
I joined my father and Uncle Bill in the parking lot where someone
thought to bring a bottle of Wild Turkey, someone who knew in advance
about the cheap wine and cheap beer inside.
Muna,
meanwhile, held court in grand style, beaming in particular when her
young, handsome doctor made his entrance.
Dr. Greg
gave the eulogy at Muna’s funeral. He told stories about his
unofficial favorite patient, my grandmother, who swore that she was
single handedly financing his new pool. She kept him guessing, and
laughing, till the end. She told him once that she didn’t know
what a longneck was, but that she thought she might like to try one
some day. He brought her a longneck, much to community dismay. At
92 years old, he’d asked her if she had two children. Without
hesitation, Muna responded, “So far.”
nadeane@bellsouth.net
Maggie
Wynne
Prompt: “I Stop Writing the Poem” by Tess Gallagher
I know
from watching my mother die that there is a sad lie in the lines of
this poem—“I’m still a woman. /I’ll always
have plenty to do.” I will not always have plenty to do.
Even being a woman cannot rescue me from aloneness and emptiness.
Mother’s busy hands, her stack of mending, her needlepoint,
the buttons to be sewn on, the pot of soup on the stove—all
blew away from her like a pile of dry leaves, dead brush. She
tried her best to keep her shaking hands moving in meaningfulness.
She made tiny tucks and invisible stitches in the edges of her
housecoat. She stuffed her empty purse with stolen packets of
sugar, napkins, utensils from the dining room at the nursing home.
Pieces of bread. She held on to the strap of the old navy
blue purse, believing she could still play her part in life if she
carried a full pocketbook—full of something, anything.
Cataracts and macular degeneration came between her eyes and her beloved
books, notes from her sisters, cards from her church circle. Just
as well—she couldn’t read without her mind. There
was only one thing left for her to do. She could receive our
love. That had always been so hard. But with nothing else
to do, the walls came down.
[ MBWynne@aol.com
]