Helene Post Thompson Scott Bourson



I awoke from a nap with a fully formed plan to load up the dogs and go spend the night with my mom at the 20th street house.  Long naps leave me disorientated, no understatement that.  I had richly detailed visuals running through my mind of the steeply pitched roof, red door, towering laurel hedges lining the backyard, Mom waiting for me in the kitchen. 

My mind was addled between past and present but gradually realized I was missing a key point.  We didn’t own that house anymore.  Our family home for 27 years, sold long ago.

Mom bought that house in 1970, the first house she ever purchased on her own.  It was an act of courage and a step toward new beginnings.  Dad died suddenly the previous year leaving her, at age 37, with three teenagers to rear.  She was petrified at the financial commitment of a $28,000 mortgage. 
   
She was barely functioning when we first moved into the house, sleeping away the days until enough time passed that the first assault of grief had passed.  Bruce and I were under strict orders to perk coffee before leaving for school, dire consequences to follow should we not comply.  In an attempt to regain some semblance of normal, (as opposed to just being selfish little twits,) we badgered her about not making us breakfast until one morning here she came, clomping down the stairs, poured herself a cup of coffee, then put a pan of water on the range and said, “when it boils, add the oatmeal” before clomping back upstairs to her bed.  Bruce and I gazed at each other open-mouthed.   (This a far different behavior than later years.  Tyler says “Grandma spoiled you so much she even poured the milk in your cereal every morning.” I contend that was a control issue to get her little darlings to the table at the same time.)

A new normalcy slowly came into being.  Mom went back to work, met Neil, they married in 1976.  But before any of that, he had to survive the ordeal of meeting the children, so she brought him home for dinner.  So there sat we three savoring her nervousness and pulling our traditional inside jokes.  “Mom, I don’t think Neil likes the salad.”  Neil of course sputters a denial.  Mom serving scalding hot gravy spilled some on Neil’s lap.  We three are cracking up while Mom is hovering with a towel.  That story’s gotten lots of mileage over the years.  Mom said she didn’t know Neil well enough to wipe the gravy off him.  He carried the day with the quip “That’s okay, I’ll just save that for the potatoes in my pocket.”  I liked him from the get go.  In those early days we encouraged Neil to come for dinner so Mom would whip up an elaborate spread.  Later Neil would turn the tables and encourage us to come for dinner for the same reason.  And good company, of course.

There are so many happy memories associated with that house.  During intervening years Mom married off us three, who duly produced four grandchildren, who in turn occasioned traditions of sleepovers, Easter egg hunts, picking up bothersome fir cones for a penny apiece, cinnamon toast, good grand-parenting stuff. 

Those thoughts came later though.  In my post dream state I was so certain Mom would be waiting for me in the kitchen, and I was so anticipating seeing her, but the realization that wasn’t possible filtered through.  She died six years ago.  But I’m visualizing her standing in front of me, smiling.  I thank her for her love and admire her graciousness in life.  And I’m still learning from her.













Comments

Janice said…
Very touching...keep visualizing those Mom memories. I do.
Catherine said…
When you dream about her, she's with you.
Stephanie said…
I agree Cath. She doesn't show up very often; I love it when she does!

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