A Eulogy for My Mother

My mother passed away on October 7, 2020. She’d outlived all her friends, but she lived to see her four great-grandchildren. She was 101 years old.

It’s hard to explain to someone who didn’t know her, what a force of nature my mother was, but I’ve been writing about her in this blog, off and on, for years. You can begin to get an idea of what she was like by following this thread.

Never one to shirk a difficult task, my mother planned her own funeral and wrote her own obituary and her own eulogy. And that eulogy says more about her than I ever did, with all my blog posts. I would like to share it with you.

Say this of me: I loved life and mostly everything in it. The world is mostly beautiful and I have tried to add a bit of beauty to it. My involvement in art for most of my life has brought me pleasure and solace, and I have been grateful for the gift.

I have been blessed with length of days, generally good health, family and friends, and thanked God for all of it every day of my life. Most blessed was I with grandchildren—my arrows into the future.

I do not fear death, that final, inevitable chapter which is a part of life, the endless circle. I have enjoyed my stay in this world but do not regret my leaving to return to whence I came. I have faith that the Creator of All (of which I am but a tiny part) has yet another purpose for having created me.

I give thanks to all my loved ones for having been a part of my life.

My daughter, my mother, and me, on the occasion of my mother’s 101st birthday

My sweet little Garden City Beautification Award

All unbeknownst to Dan and me, my mother submitted our garden to the Newton Community Pride organization, a nonprofit loosely affiliated with our city government, for an award. Each year, Newton Community Pride gives out a number of these. So behold, last week we got a letter in the mail saying that we’d won!

Our first thought was that there must have been some kind of mistake, and we’d have to give it back.

But no. They read me the description over the phone. “A steep hill was terraced into a gorgeous triple-decker garden complete with waterfall.” There aren’t too many like that. Definitely had to be ours.

 

 

Tonight I went with my mother and my delighted landscape architect Vicki Hibbard to the awards ceremony. Where I was presented with a professional-looking certificate suitable for framing, and my picture was taken for all posterity.

 

If you don’t use your head…

My mother is packing to leave Florida, where she has spent the winter. She just came out of her bedroom shaking her head. “If you don’t use your head, you use your feet,” she said.

I looked up from my computer and smiled. “That’s what my mother always used to say.”

“These days,” my mother said, “sometimes you also have to use your car.”

My mom and me 03/12/2011

Feeding the movie queue monster

Dan and I are having trouble keeping our Netflix queue full. We just don’t hear of good movies to add to the queue as quickly as we watch the movies that are already in it. Most of the methods we’ve tried to find more movies we might like haven’t succeeded very well:

  • Adding movies that look good in the trailers that come with other movies. This system works well for weeding out movies we *don’t* want to see, but there are some real duds out there whose only good moments are those incorporated into the trailer. Great trailer, lousy movie. Who was to know?
  • Adding movies to the queue based on recommendations from friends. You’d think this would work really well, but we were surprised. Some of our extraordinary, smart, and delightful friends recommend the most ordinary and dull movies. In particular, we’ve learned never to trust the “hot” movies that everyone is seeing and talking about right now. By the time they make it to DVD they are no longer “hot” and often of little inherent worth.
  • Using the Netflix recommendations (“Movies You’ll ‘Heart’”). The results of this, as nearly as I can tell, are totally random and useless.
  • Adding movies directed by the same person as other movies we like. This isn’t a bad system if the director is consistently good. For example, Ridley Scott was, for the most part, a great success for us. However, any director’s oeuvre is limited, but our Netflix queue never ends.

But finally we have hit upon a system that works.

We ask my mother.

She is unerringly on the mark.

It’s gotten kind of scary. Dan always puts my mother’s recommendations at the top of the queue. And we always really like them. I think my mother is nervous now about recommending additional movies to us. The stakes keep getting higher.

Her most recent success was Vantage Point, a movie that tells the story of an attempted terrorist coup from a number of different but unexpectedly related perspectives, each layer adding depth and complexity to the story. It’s also a nonstop action movie that would do the TV series 24—the only ongoing TV show that I like—proud.

The movie that this reminds me of the most is Crash, which portrays the multifaceted interactions in the lives of a number of complete strangers in Los Angeles, some of whom meet by automobile crash or hijacking and some of whom never meet. We actually saw Crash twice, and enjoyed it both times. Frighteningly, this was another of my mother’s recommendations. Tonight I discovered that there is a name for this type of movie, and there are members of the genre Dan and I haven’t yet seen. Food for the queue monster.

Other movies that share this quality are Memento, Run Lola Run, and Babel. We liked all of these, too. I wish there were a Web site where you could enter the names of some particular movies, and it would tell you others that are in some way similar.

But meanwhile, Mom, you’ve scored again. Please keep those recommendations coming.

And, dear reader, I’m open to *your* recommendations, too!

Mom’s 90th birthday

This month was my mom’s birthday–her 90th. We had a memorable party attended by all her relatives and several friends that live nearby. Dan and I were the hosts, but Mom worked hard herself to prepare several of the items on the menu, and she came over early to help set up. Before all the guests arrived, Dan and I presented her with a gift in honor of this special birthday–a trip she’s always been hoping to take. Her response was pure delight:

“That’s what I like about life: wonderful things are always happening!”

That’s what I like about you too, Mom. You are a “wonderful thing” in my life!

Songs

I generally hate having a tune stuck in my head. There are some songs I can no longer even listen to because I know that if I listen to them, they will be stuck in my head for weeks afterwards, long after they turn from song to jingle to an advanced torture device best reserved for suspected terrorists.

But my mom has a different take on it. She has, it turns out, been humming the same song for at least the last quarter of a century. (The song, as it turns out, is “La Vie en Rose”.) “I love having this song in my head,” she told me. “This way, I never have to worry about what I’m going to hum.”

Hmmm. Oddly, I’ve never worried about that either. At least–not yet.

“So… what did you do today?”

For Dan more than for me, telephone conversations catching up with loved ones seem to revolve around the theme of activities. “So… what have you been doing today?” “How’s your day going?” “What have you been up to?”

I sometimes find this a bit disconcerting–partially because it means that when we’ve finished recounting the activities of the day (or whatever period since we last talked), the conversation is over. Hey! Wait a minute! I wanted to talk about a movie I just saw, or about string theory, or doppelgangers, or whether the world is really going downhill or is that just a perception that comes of getting older.

But primarily I find this disconcerting because when I am the one at the other end of this conversation, I can seldom adequately remember everything I did. Sometimes I feel so… dumb in these conversations. “What did you do today?” “Er… I don’t really know. I can’t remember…”

Apparently, my mother has this problem, too. She has noticed Dan’s tendency to ask about her day’s activities, and this time she came prepared. She made a list. Here it is:

Friday July 13
Made bed & breakfast
AM 10:30 – 11:30 exercise
lunch
12:30 Van to Natick Mall
walked end to end
Shopped Sears (& bought)
…Lord & Taylor
…Macy’s
Returned 4:30
1/2 hr nap
Some desk work
Dinner
Relaxed

So… My Mom’s been pretty busy. Now, how about YOU? What did YOU do today? Oh, and hey: Do you think there might be whole other universes curled up in infinitesmally small gaps inside of this one?

Outspoken Old Women

After a late lunch at The Crab House in Jupiter, my mother and I walked to the end of the pier to watch the Manatee Queen dock and unload her passengers. She had just returned from a two-hour cruise viewing the homes of the rich and famous on Jupiter Island.

Mom and I had thought about going on that cruise, but she had listened the previous night to a garbled recorded message that seemed to suggest that the price was $24, which she found a bit unbelievable. I called the next morning to check the price. “It’s $24 for adults,” the man at the other end of the phone told me, “and $15 for children.” “What about seniors?” I queried. He replied, “They can come too.”

Hmmm. A comedian we have here. “And at what price can they come?” I persisted. “Darling,” he told me, “it’s the same price as anyone else. Almost all my passengers are seniors.”

Mom quickly and decisively dropped any plans for the boat ride. However, I was curious how many passengers they had for the price. The answer was: The small and rather uncomfortable-looking pontoon boat was crowded to the gills. Forty-eight people disembarked, none of them children. So the two-hour trip grossed a bit over $1,150. Subtract a couple of hours worth of gas at, say, ten knots maximum, and you get, oh, call it a thousand dollars? Times two trips per day. Much of it in cash from people arriving at the last minute just before departure. No expenses on food or even pillows for the benches. It seemed to me that this was a very lucrative business.

“Excuse me!” shouted my mother over the boat owner’s loud music. When he noticed someone seemed to be trying to talk with him, he turned the music off. “Do you also own the restaurant?” “No,” he said, “I just rent the dock from them.” “Why is the tour so expensive?” my mother asked. “This isn’t much of a boat you have here. The benches don’t even have backs.” He didn’t deign to reply. “Didn’t there used to be a bigger, better boat that did the same tour?” “Yes,” he said, “but they couldn’t make a go of it. They kept running aground.” “How about if you gave a one-hour tour for half the price” persisted my mother. (“I don’t know this woman,” I muttered to no one in particular. “Just met her on the dock two minutes ago.”) “Lady,” said the boat owner, “you don’t like anything do you? First you criticize me [this was not fair], then my boat, and now my prices. I don’t have to talk to you.” He turned the music back up, loud.

At this point a good-sized yacht approached the dock. A well-tanned fortyish man was at the helm, and his barefoot, blonde wife (probably) prepared to fasten lines upon arrival. Two young girls and an older couple were also aboard. Unfortunately, the man came in at too head-first an angle and too fast. He couldn’t slow down enough, nor make his turn completely. The boat hit the dock hard bow-first and then drifted back away. On the second approach, the woman was able to leap off the boat and pull it to a stop, cleating it to the dock fore and aft.

Catching the man’s eye, my mother said, “You didn’t do a very good job of that, did you?”

No kidding, Mom.

And just in case anyone is wondering, I was the invisible one melted under the floorboards.