Category Archives: Memories

The True Gifts of Christmas: Family, Friends & Memories

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So many great things happened today, all in ONE day, that all of a sudden the true meaning of Christmas smacked me square in the face. It was fabulous feeling to know how blessed and lucky I am, and so overwhelming that it suddenly stopped me in my tracks. Not that I’m not aware of or don’t appreciate my blessings, but suddenly it just hit me. I was presented with the BEST gifts ever – and the givers didn’t even realize that they gave me a gift, and they certainly then didn’t realize the magnitude of their gifts!santa

First, at 10:30 this morning, a girlfriends’ group text came in wanting to know if anyone was available to meet for lunch at 12:30. Surprisingly, five of us were. And we did. It was the best lunch ever. With work schedules, kids, Christmas bustle and the like, it was a small miracle that an impromptu text had us gathered together two hours later. We couldn’t have done that if we tried. And then there we sat, long after the lunch plates were removed and the drink glasses were drained, and we talked and talked and enjoyed. We really caught up with each other.

With all of us having Seniors in high school on the verge of big college plans and diverse and exciting visions for themselves, we reminisced about our own plans and dreams that we had at that age. We learned that each of us moms has regrets that we didn’t follow our own dreams, didn’t become who we thought we would when we were embarking on our own college years. Had we followed our dreams, we would have been two lawyers, two nurses, and a movie star lunching around that table. But all of a sudden, we’re in our 50s and it seems that those dashed dreams are now just something that we talk about with our middle-aged girlfriends over lunch.

However, since we’ve known each other and each other’s children since the kids were in Kindergarten, it has been wonderful to watch our little bundles of joy grow, mature, and become young adult achievers. It’s exciting to see where our kids’ dreams will take them. We’re like a group of cheerleader moms, now watching and guiding our kids from the sidelines as they make important life decisions for themselves and blossom into adulthood, with each of us genuinely rooting for the others’ kid as much as we root for our own.

But better yet, it’s so easy to be 50-something with a small group of terrific women who aren’t embarrassed to share broken dreams, parenting faults, and fears and cautious hopes for ourselves and for our children. It’s refreshing to have honest friends. We don’t judge. We rally, encourage, love, and laugh.

Today, we found out that each of us still has the dreams and ideals of our 18-year-old selves simmering inside. With our own children almost ready to fly the coop, we realized after sharing our innermost thoughts that we can modify our long-forgotten dreams, make new goals for ourselves, find a new kind of fulfillment. I left our lunch date today with a precious, uplifting, motivational gift from these girlfriends, and they don’t even know that they gave me this gift. Or maybe they do – because I have a sneaking suspicion that they left with the same gift. : )

img_6419When I got home, the mail had been delivered. Among the junk mail flyers, sale ads, and solicitations for car insurance was a small package from my aunt. I carefully opened the package because I knew that it held precious cargo. Inside was a blue and green plaid jumper with a white shirt that my brother wore almost 50 years ago! This outfit was passed on to our younger boy cousins when my brothers outgrew it back in the ’70s, and who knew that my aunt had lovingly cared for and saved this outfit for all of these years! On my brother’s 48th birthday last month, I had posted on Facebook a picture of him (wearing this outfit) from 1969. To my surprise and delight, my aunt saw the post and told me that she still had that outfit and wondered if I would like to have it. So now here it was, right there on my kitchen counter all these years later! Someday, when and if my sons have sons, I will have my grandson(s) wear it.

I am so thankful for my aunt, that she is sentimental and sweet, that she provided this throwback to me. I was only four when my brother wore that outfit, but our mom had had Olan Mills portraits taken of her babies when we were each eight months old – and my brother was wearing the blue and green plaid jumper in his portrait. Mom eventually had the four portraits professionally matted into one elegant frame. She hung it proudly on the wall in her bedroom for most of my life, and it now hangs in my own hallway.

By opening this package with the plaid jumper and white collared shirt inside, my aunt immediately sent me back in time to my childhood, to my mom, to my siblings and the house that we grew up in, to a time that makes me feel so happy to recollect. Time flies so fast, but for a moment, my little-girl memories came flooding back. I closed my eyes and embraced them, drank them in. Happiness.

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The framed portraits of her four babies that Mom displayed so proudly.

Also in the mail was a Christmas card with a return address from the vicinity of my hometown, 1200 miles away in Pittsburgh. It was from a gracious and lovely cousin in our large, extended Italian family. It’s always a feel-good feeling to be remembered and I was grateful to have received the card. However, what was inside went straight to my heart. Along with a save-the-date for next summer’s family reunion, she wrote one simple sentence that meant everything to me: “Loved your Facebook posting at Thanksgiving dedicated to your mom. So sweet!”.

My mom, gone 17 years now, was loved by everyone. I had written a post about our last Thanksgiving together, bittersweet, as her cancerous body was failing her. Knowing that she’s in others’ hearts and minds means the world to me. Knowing that my writing is aiding in keeping Mom’s memory alive is the most rewarding thing ever. I miss my mom so much, and to have her mentioned, remembered, and missed by others too is such a gift to me. I carry my mom in my heart every single day and I can’t even explain how amazing it feels to know that others also carry her still. Along with their own beloved moms, they have room for mine.

That one simple sentence inside this Christmas card just stopped me in my tracks. Standing there in the kitchen, so thankful for those words, then smiling again at the baby outfit from long ago sent by my sweet aunt, and pumped from the spontaneous and uplifting lunch date with my girlfriends that I had just come home from, it suddenly became so clear to me that I had just received my Christmas presents. No need for Santa to come down my chimney on Christmas Eve. I had just experienced the true gifts and real meaning of Christmas: Friendship, family, and memories.

What was lovely about today: The gifts I received today are what was lovely about today. And….driving home,  James Taylor’s and Carly Simon’s catchy version of “Mockingbird” came on the radio. It’s much faster and more flashy than the lullaby rendition that I used to sing to my newborn sons, but a total pleasure to hear and sing along with. So after the long conversation over lunch with my girlfriends about our Seniors’ college paths, it was nice to go back to when my Senior son was tiny enough to fit in the crook of my arm, a precious little six-pounder whom I had so many hopes and dreams for. He is everything I hoped and dreamed he would be.

Siblings: Lifelong Best Friends, If You’re Lucky

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The other morning, Facebook told me that it was National Siblings Day and so I spent that lazy Sunday morning perusing through my Facebook friends’ posts of old pictures and well wishes to their beloved siblings. I had never heard of such a day and suspected that Hallmark was behind it with a new and lucrative line of “Sibling” greeting cards, but, okay, I went with it. It was nice to see childhood photos against grown-up pictures of today, and it was nice to read some funny memories shared from the decades in between.

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When paging through our old family photo albums to find some childhood pictures to post of my siblings and me, it made me realize (once again) that no one on this earth can ever know the path that I’ve walked like my siblings know – because they’ve walked the same path, and we share the same roots. We have been together since day one, and we still unconditionally stick together 40-to 50-something years later. The decades in between have been full of joy and pain and laughter and arguments and holidays shared and family vacations and helping each other to paint walls in our respective new houses. I am so appreciative that I have siblings who understand me, who value me, who go way, way back with me to before we were even humanly capable of retaining memories. My siblings are my lifelong best friends, the precious few who I know will always have my back, always want the best for me, always support me or discourage me (depending on the situation ha ha), and whom I know I can count on – for anything and everything and for always.

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Ages 2 1/2 and 5

My sister was my first friend. She was a toddler and I was an infant and there’s an old picture that I love of her “reading” to me as I lay swaddled on my mother’s bed. She played Barbies with me in our driveway. She walked with me to the corner candy store and to piano lessons. She (and, in all fairness, her friends) made me eat a worm; if I ate the worm then they would let me play with them. Yes, it’s funny now but not so much then. It tasted earthy. I did not tell on her because I worshiped her. She was an all-star softball player as I twirled my pigtails and picked clovers in right field. When I struck out at bat and started crying on the spot, it was my sister who came and put her arms around me and walked me out of the batter’s cage. When someone shattered a kitchen window and tried to break in to our house during the night (unsuccessful and uneventful, really), it was my sister who I ran to and hid with under the covers of her daisy-quilted twin bed. As we grew up, she introduced me to Stephen King novels and Saturday Night Live. She taught me to dive in the pool at our grandparents’ condo complex. (But not before she would practically “play” drown me. She was on the swim team, I was not. I lost – every time.) She introduced me to raw oysters and blue cheese dressing and gave me big-sister advice on boys and first jobs. She wouldn’t let me wear her clothes but she wore whatever she wanted of mine – without asking. It was her privilege as the big sister, she said. Sometimes I couldn’t stand her. But I missed her dearly when she went away to college and I even moved into her room for a bit, vacating my own tiny bedroom just a few feet away, and I couldn’t wait till she came home for a weekend visit. We bought our first house – together. We were 22 and 25, out of college and starting our careers, and she advised that if we put our money together, we could buy a nicer place than if we bought separately. So we did, and we moved into adulthood responsibilities together under the watchful eye and with the gifted furniture of our very proud mother.

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Don’t let the angelic gaze fool you : )

With the birth of my younger brother, I had became a big sister and little mother. My mom said that because I was a preschooler at home with her during her pregnancy, I really thought that he was my baby. I remember when my first brother was brought home from the hospital. I was laughing and crying at the screened door as my mom and dad and grandparents pulled into the driveway, and I couldn’t wait to see him. I loved him so much before he was even born. He was a good little brother – funny, cute, feisty, bald, big blue eyes, dimples. My mom called him “ornery” with an amused twinkle in her eye. He was very good at playing the charm card, even as a toddler. He didn’t really have a choice, but he let me read to him, play house with him, dress him up like a girl, sit on him till he cried. As we grew up, I cheered him on at his baseball games, football games, basketball games. (All of my siblings inherited the athletic gene; clearly, I did not.) I ate the unfrosted chocolate cakes that he would bake after supper, and I listened to his KC and the Sunshine Band records with him. I watched him get away with a ton of things that my sister and I would have never been allowed to do. I admired his intelligence and go-get-’em attitude, and I enjoyed his sense of humor. I respected his work ethic. He woke up super early before high school started to go bake bagels at the bagel shop, went to school, then worked again after school. And I respected his play ethic. We lived where we had to cross a causeway to get home and one late night as I was crossing, I passed my brother and his girlfriend parked on the sandy shore, windows steamed up. Ew. I kept on going. He was the one who saved me when I came home one night way too late, without a house key and maybe a bit tipsy. I threw garden mulch at his upstairs bedroom window to wake him up so that he could quietly let me in. My brother taught me how to kill the engine and slowly and carefully coast into our noisy-crunchy, crushed-shell driveway so that our mother would not be awakened and then privy to and definitely disappointed in our late-night shenanigans. I proudly watched as my brother graduated from Florida State, and cheered him on as he built his career. I was the one whom he called to tell about a girl who was different than all the rest, whom he couldn’t live without. I told him to go get her. They’ll be married 20 years next month.

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Our youngest brother was the sidekick of my first brother and an adorable real-life baby doll to my sister and me. My sister and I were the main best friends and tormentors of our little brothers. Our youngest brother was an outstanding athlete, a handsome kid, loving, friendly, smart. He was my game-playing partner. We’d play Scrabble, Backgammon, Life, Clue. Home from school together with strep throat, we’d watch The Price is Right and keep track of all of the prizes that we’d won over the game-show hour and then determine which of us was the ultimate Price is Right champion.He was my hospital roommate when we got our tonsils out at the same time. I helped him pick out a Valentine rose for his girlfriend when he was in fourth grade. Eventually, he caught up to me in size and we’d share the same Levi’s. IMG_4925We listened to Bryan Adams, Journey, and REO Speedwagon albums nonstop. I had my first job as a K Mart cashier, and he was into disassembling his Matchbox and Hotwheels cars, then repainting and reassembling them. He came with me to pick up my part-time paycheck and I let him talk me into buying him a fancy model car paint and brush carousel with every paint color in the rainbow. He said he’d pay me back. ha ha We worked on superb school projects and baked cookies together, sometimes pigging out on the rest of the raw dough because we got tired of baking it. ha ha (Mom didn’t know that.)

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1983: Sixth-grade pic shortly before the unthinkable happened

But, everything changed when our youngest brother was 12 and died after being hit by a car. My sister, brother and I know each other’s pain. We have the same pain. We walked the same path when, as teenagers, we said goodbye to our beloved little brother and somehow learned to go on without him. Fifteen years later, we walked the same path again as we watched our beloved mother die of pancreatic cancer. These are journeys that are intimate and private to us, and really only fully understood and felt by us. Since then, we’ve battled more cancer, heart issues, divorce, lost jobs – and we did it together, with the support of each other. We turn to each other first. That’s just the way it’s always been.

And this includes my sister-in-law, my brother’s wife, who over the past 20 years has been on the journey with us – and we’ve been on her journey with her. To our mother, she was another beautiful daughter to love, and to my sister and me, she is our sister from another mother, her mother, who died of cancer just one year after our mother died. Same shoes.

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2001: The three of us and my babies

 

This brings me back to National Siblings Day and the sense that nobody knows me or gets me as well as my siblings do. For as much pain as our shared life journey has given us, we’ve also shared a wonderful fill of joy. We know each other’s joy and it’s deep and it goes way back. We’ve celebrated each other’s accomplishments, we’ve excitedly advised each other on home purchases and helped each other out with the serious (negotiating) to the trivial but fun (which area rug to buy). When I gave birth to each of my sons, who was there? My

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2011: Brother + sister-in-law + sons = mucho fun

brother and sister and sister-in-law. These aunts and this uncle studied their newborn nephews for the first time with pure joy and awe – just like I did – and genuinely shared in my wonder. We spent Christmas and New Year’s together in London when my brother and sister-in-law transferred there with his job because we had never been apart during those holidays.  We have comfort in knowing that each of us has found our soulmates and that we’re all happy and secure, have contented lives. We know that we’re only a phone call away. No storm will ever have to be weathered alone, no success will ever go without communal celebration, and no disagreement will ever go unresolved. Because of the loss of our brother and mother, and because our father never wanted to be in the picture, the three of us are probably especially connected. Alongside our terrific spouses, aunts, uncles, cousins, and friends – who have also lived our joys and pain with us, and whom we treasure dearly – we are happily living our lives.

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Our beautiful mom

 

 

We are the core created at infancy – the three of us. Siblings. We tread with care and gratefulness that we have each other. We have walked in the same shoes over the past 50ish years. We have each blazed our own paths, but the shoes are the same. National Siblings Day (real or not) was a valuable reminder to me that my roots, my past, my present, and my future are directly tied to my sister and my brother and I wouldn’t want it any other way. I am lucky.

 

What was lovely about today: Looking at old family photos was a refreshing trip down memory lane. It brought a flood of emotions back but I only let the joy in as I relived each photo in my mind. Those memories are what was lovely about today.

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Remembering Mom With a Smile In My Heart

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On the day before Thanksgiving, I was preparing my dining room table and my kitchen for the next day’s feast, and consulting my mom’s notes every step of the way. Thanksgiving 1998 was my mother’s last Thanksgiving before she succumbed to pancreatic cancer on the following Easter Sunday, at the age of 56. Young. Not fair. I miss her every single day. The holidays are especially bittersweet, but I am 1,000% sure that my mother would not want me to be sad. I know this because I am a mom, and I would never want my own kids to spend their holidays in a glum and heartsick state of mind when I’m not around anymore. I want them to be happy, to celebrate, to carry on our family traditions, and to think of me and my quirks with a smile in their hearts.DSCN1222

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Some of Mom’s notes to me

And so, on the day before Thanksgiving, I opened up the menus and recipes and notes from my mom and embraced the memories with a contented heart. I lit some autumn-scented candles and tuned my satellite radio to “70s on 7” which never fails to take me back in time to a really happy place: My childhood and teen years. I was then transported back to our eat-in kitchen with the dark oak cabinets, Harvest Gold appliances, and tidy linoleum floors, all the rage at the time. My siblings and I grew up with our mom, aunt, and/or grandmother always in a kitchen – their kitchens, the neighbor’s, other friend’s or family’s kitchens. If there was a kitchen around, you would find Mom, Auntie, and/or Nana in it. As all of us who have Italian moms, aunties, and grandmothers know, this is a really good and happy combination with delicious end results.

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Auntie and Mom having a grand time frying smelts, Christmas Eve in the ’80s

Our family traditions have not changed over the decades. They’ve been tweaked, but the foundation is the same. The week of my mom’s last Thanksgiving in 1998 found us in her kitchen. With my five-month-old son napping in the bedroom, Mom and I began the turkey, stuffing, and side dish preparations. After happily chatting and working our way through the morning, chemo was getting the best of her and Mom finally had to sit on a chair in the middle of the kitchen, exhausted, and just direct me. I didn’t really need direction; this preparation has been the same my entire life and I know it by heart. It’s all I know, in fact. But on this particular day, with my mother’s body failing and her future health uncertain, I could sense that it meant everything to her to especially have this Thanksgiving prep day together. So I did as she gently directed from her kitchen chair perch, wrote things down for posterity, absorbed every tip, asked questions, enjoyed every minute of that entire day, laughed with her and held it together when I really just wanted to cry. That was 16 Thanksgivings ago, our last together, and it feels like yesterday.

So now the holidays are upon us again, and again my mom is not here. But I can feel her presence. I know that she was in the kitchen with me and my ’70s music and my autumn-scented candles on Wednesday. She would have had the Three Tenors playing and candles lit, too. I sang out loud to the soundtrack of my childhood while I made my way through the preparations, thought of her and times past when she was teaching me recipes, smiled at the memories. I looked at the recipes and menus and notes, some in my mom’s own beautiful penmanship, not necessarily out of need but rather for comforting reassurance and memories. It was a good day. I felt lighthearted and peaceful. I felt my mother near me.

I know my mom would have loved my table this Thanksgiving –  shopping for and setting the table for Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter was one of our favorite things to do.

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Mom would surely have liked my table this year.

I know my mom would be proud of how my sister, brother and I have carried on the family holiday traditions (except for the lima beans – sorry, Mom), and how we’re teaching my sons by example. I know she’d be proud of my son, who has learned to make perfect pizzelles, just like her. She’d be so pleased with the care that we take when unpacking and hanging her beloved and very fragile teapot Christmas tree ornament, which has now survived every single one of its 55 years without the slightest mishap. She’d love how my sister and I still make a beautiful antipasta on her old but still shiny square silver tray, how my brother still brings good wine and good cheer, how we all traveled across the pond in order to be together and celebrate Christmas and New Year’s the year that my brother transferred with his job. She’d love how, after Christmas Eve dinner, we bring out the big silver cookie tray of our childhood, overflowing with biscotti, pizzelles, church windows, silver tops, and more – dotted with the red and green Andes candies and silver-wrapped Hershey Kisses for festive color like she taught me, and always baked with love from our decades-old family recipes.

I do miss my mom every single day of my life, and following the traditions that were so dear to her and that were the fabric of our childhood is a way to celebrate and honor her. It’s a way of remembering her endearing quirks, visualizing her smile, hearing her voice, and remembering – and still taking – her knowing advice. I can then hear her laughter, I can see her smiling blue eyes. And when her quirks, her smile, her voice and laughter, and her advice are alive and vividly running through my mind like that, I smile and I know that she’s all around me, like my own special angel. Surely she must be cringing sometimes (like when my brother amusingly discovered that I roasted the turkey with the giblet bag still inside – oops), but I know that she’s watching over me with an immense smile, pleased that her daughter has turned out okay in the 16 years without her – and is very much her mother’s daughter.

What was lovely about today: With the end of Thanksgiving weekend here, I especially enjoyed the bit of Christmas shopping that I did today, and I enjoyed anticipating Christmas in all of its decorative glory as I put away the Thanksgiving and Fall decorations and putzed around the house. It was a productive but peaceful and quiet day and I can still feel my mom here with me. She’d be putzing around on this final day of this long weekend, too, probably still in her nightgown – and content as ever. It was that kind of lovely day.