My stepsister took my mother out for Mothers Day brunch yesterday.
Which fills my heart in a way I can't describe. Though, here I am, a writer -- so I have to try.
I have conflicted feelings about Mothers Day, as I wrote about the other day. Part of that comes from my relationship with my stepchidren. It's never easy, piecing together families.
For us, for me and Hope and Davey, it's different. We never had to share a household. My mother married Hope and Davey's father two years ago this Tuesday. I'm an only child who lost her father young and her stepfather a few years ago. Hope lost her mother a few years ago also, far too young, to cancer. I can't imagine what that would be like.
It's always meant a great deal to me, that Hope has been so kind to my mother. Not all daughters would be so accepting of their father's second wife. Not all would embrace their father finding a new life and new happiness. But Hope has a kind and generous spirit.
And she took my mother out for brunch, down in Tucson. To a lovely restaurant on a patio at a resort overlooking a pool -- a perfect spot to please my mom.
When I was a little girl, I used to fantasize about my little sister, Sally. She had blond ringlets and followed me everywhere. Okay, I had a lot of imaginary friends, including Casper the Ghost and Wendy the Witch. Most of the time, I didn't mind not having siblings. It seemed like they mostly fought with each other. But there was something there. Maybe because I knew my mom had wanted more children. My father died before he could give her more. If not for the tragic accident of his death, I might have been the eldest, not the only.
Loving my mom has never been difficult. She's low maintenance on the mother-scale. She also has a habit of giving back far more than she receives. But it's wonderful for me that my mom has another daughter now, to appreciate her.
Thank you, Hope.
The Blog Has Moved!
12 years ago
I can't even imagine you with siblings. I think you would have turned out very differently. We're thrilled with who you are, of course, but I sure would have loved to see how that genetic combination looked on a younger brother, as well.
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