Celebrating Mother's Day When Your Child is Gone?

 

Every morning I hear some radio announcer encouraging people everywhere to enter their station's Mother’s Day contest and lauding the fabulous prizes.

Junk mail reminds us the day is fast approaching and television commercials broadcast everything from fine chocolates to floral bouquets to the finest jewelry.

Everyone wants us to remember the world’s mothers, to pay tribute to women everywhere, females who know what that classroom is all about...

...diaper changes, colic, singalongs, and all things Gerber...

 

 

...the heartbreaking, the celebratory, fond memories, and the misguided...

...those joyous first steps and those heartwarming first smiles…

…graduations and grand babies and pictures of four-generation giggles…

…and everything in between...

The years are changing for me, as they do for all of us; Fave now lives several states away and I secretly hope he remembers his mama on this special day.

Beauty has some things to tend to having freshly graduated on Saturday and will be spending this Mother's Day with someone else's mom.

And Big Guy, well, he and Warren and I will probably find some last minute place to dine...

And my oldest? Gavin? He's turning twenty-five years old on Monday... TWENTY-FIVE, JOURNEYER!!

That just sounds so mysterious and mature and exciting!

I don't really wonder what he'll be doing because I don't know what the options are.

You see, for those of you who don't know us, my Gavin will mark his quarter-century celebration in heaven.

What I do know is that he will be with me, if not all day, at least for a portion of it. He'll send me a sign, a hummingbird, maybe, an unusual smell, a warm unexpected breeze or possibly a glimpse of his long-legged self.

This Mother's Day also marks my twenty-fifth Mother's Day, all of which haven't been celebrated.

You see, Gavin was born two days before this annual commemoration.

I remember sobbing as I read the two Mother's Day cards friends had sent.

What kind of mother has no child?

There are so, so many of us who have lived this truth, this nagging question.

This is the kind of mother I was and am, that you and our other grieving mothers are:

We are the women who longed for a child since we were children ourselves...

We are the women who swore we wanted no part of parenting and somehow found ourselves with child; some of us embraced this new life while others of us lament...something...

We are the women whose bodies bulged early or late, whose breasts swelled and ached in preparation and then spilled over when there was no mouth to release the stored up nourishment...

We are the women who laughed when we saw our friend's infant smile as he passed gas and we dreamed when we spotted a toddler taking her first steps...

Some of us plotted and planned a nursery while others plugged away, bellies bulging, in the day-to-day grind...

We are the women whose children left their physical, earthly form far earlier than we expected...

We are the humans who plead with Gods to reveal the Why's even after we realize that sometimes the only explanation is simply Because it is...

We are the beings who beg for forgiveness even when there is nothing to forgive...

We are the souls who love, as I used to say to my three living children: "Always, forever, and no matter what."

We love, Journeyer; we love so fully our bodies split with pride and shame and joy and fear and hope...

Split wide open, sometimes...

Not too long ago I came across a quote that I cannot find now...I thought I'd shared it on one of my social media sites but I can't find it...so sorry I'm not able to credit the source or able to repeat it verbatim...it went something like this: Where this is great pain there is an even greater love.

 I'm pretty sure the quote said "there was great love," but I prefer to leave it in the present tense for I don't believe our love ever dies, it just takes on different forms.

One of the cornerstones of The Five Facets of Healing is built on this premise: The level of our grief is not determined by what we've lost, but rather it is about our attachment to what has gone missing from our lives.

The more we love, the greater our loss, and in the end, when we finally reach the place where we can be okay in the face of adversity, the greater our individual growth and our healing...

Journeyer, if you are struggling with this day, please know that you are not alone, you have neighbors all over the world who are experiencing similar feelings and circumstances and you also have countless allies in healing, those who share similar pain, similar experiences, hopes, and dreams, and who believe fully in the power of the human spirit to heal...

We are here, Journeyer. Please reach out. Tell us what kind of mother you are now or the kind of mother you want to be...share your story, your need...allow us to share in your celebrations and your sorrows...

Leave a comment below or e-mail me privately. If you can't do either, please trust that you are the kind of mother who cares, simply because you are here and you are the kind of mother who loves, simply because you hurt...

Until we meet again, yours in hope, healing, and happiness,

 

 p.s. Gavin's 24th birthday fell on Mother's Day last year!

Surprisingly, yet not surprisingly, I reflected on this same subject...

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About the Author
Annah Elizabeth is the founder and creator of The Five Facets of Healing. Motivated by the death of her son, Annah Elizabeth set out to uncover the secrets that allow some people to triumph over tragedy. She has spent more than twenty years studying how we recover from mayhem and mishap. She is passionate about the power within each of us to heal our heartaches and to triumph over tragedy. She shares her insights and discoveries through writing, from the stage, and in a series of workshops.
I'm Grieving, Now What?