“She’d been going to the doctor every week for a dozen weeks complaining of pain. Near the end my brother started going with her to get some answers about what was going on and the doctor told him Mom was just getting old and looking for attention. Mistakes one through ten. Unbeknown to anyone she had a small hole in a kidney and blood was slowly seeping out and filling up her body cavity. Mistakes eleven and twelve came the day she died and the ambulance got lost trying to find my parents’ house. (They lived on a lake in a rural area where the township didn’t keep their maps up to date.) Mistake thirteen through fifteen happened on the way to the hospital when the ambulance caught on fire and they had to wait for another. She died of septic shock ten minutes after arriving a the hospital and a doctor told me later that dying that way is very painful. Her death was a series of human errors and oversights and it was filled with the kind of shoulda, coulda anguish that only comes with hindsight.”
My mom had a way of answering questions that didn’t really tell you anything. (Remember me writing about how when asked what's for dinner she'd say things like, "An old dead cow.") Another example of her non-answers was when I asked her where I came from and I thought I’d get the birds and the bees story I heard rumors about. The idea that the daddy bee stings the mommy bee with his—gasp!—penis was so outlandish that I counted on her to set the story straight. She did. She told me she found my brother and me under a pile of rocks. A few years later she finally did set the story straight—not with a conversation, of course, but by handing me a pamphlet from the health department.
One of those things she didn’t want to talk about was a screw-back, silver and blue Air Force wings pin that I found in her jewelry box. I didn’t have any uncles or grandfathers who served in the Air Force. Where did it come from and why did she let me wear that pin to high school during the period when I had an imaginary boyfriend named Roger who was off serving our country? And did she know about Roger? Did she read my diaries when I was at school? Years later I thought she might have had a boyfriend before she married my dad who died in a ‘dog fight’ in the air space over Europe during WWII. In my golden years I still think she had that boyfriend, but if so, why was she willing to let me wear that keepsake? I would have snatched it out of any daughter of mine’s hands and locked it away. Maybe she trusted me more than I realized. Or maybe she didn’t think of it as a keepsake at all. Maybe she found it under a pile of rocks.
After she died I went through her cedar chest and another mystery was discovered among the mostly photos and knickknacks. A pair of soft pink satin and cream-colored lace panties that buttoned down the side. 1940s boy-cut style. Why did she keep them for thirty odd years? Who does that? My parents were married in the late ‘40s so maybe it was her version of keeping a wedding dress? She was married in a drab gray suit trimmed in brown fir over a weekend spent in Chicago. I have pictures of that trip and she and my dad both looked really happy. Oh, and that drab suit? Mom cut it up to make a coat for a doll I got one Christmas and I still have them both.
What did I do with the panties? You ask. I put them in a fresh plastic bag with a note about when and where I found them and put them in a small trunk that is earmarked to go to my oldest niece. She still has the cedar chest I found the panties in and I suspect they will end up back in that chest for my great-niece to discover one day. Some families hand down grandfather clocks and quilts. I’m thinking I might be starting a tradition of handing down underwear.
In all seriousness. The questions I wish I’d asked my mom before she died are about gaining more details of her childhood and her parents. I know the basics of how her own mother died when she was nine and all seven siblings where separated and sent off to various places. It was like an informal foster care known as ‘farming children out’ that was arranged between families rather than the state. But knowing my mother, she probably wouldn’t have told me very much. Her childhood ended too soon, when she went off to live with a grandmother who ran a boarding house where she was expected to work for her keep. In her teens she was working in other people's homes as a housekeeper and by the time she met my dad she'd been a waitress for several years.
My mom was not a reminiscing type like I am. Maybe the past held too much pain? She focused on the future, always planning and plotting for ways to hedge her bets against bad luck and foul play, so to speak. We all leave a few blank pages behind; but with the brief outline she did leave, I’m pretty sure I could flesh her story out. But I know the important part: she was a strong woman who loved her family and I wish I'd have told her more often how much I loved her. ©
Photo at the top: Mom and dad on their honeymoon.

My aunt was having crippling headaches and jaw pain. She went to three different hospitals and a dozen doctors. Not one took her seriously or ran any real tests, well, until the last hospital. They did an CT and MRI.
ReplyDelete"Just a headache, take some aspirin and go home," other doctors said.
"You have advanced brain cancer," the final hospital said. They did surgery (horrible, absolutely horrible) and sent her home to "recover" (suffer and die).
Yeah.
Questions. We'd like to know the names of all the doctors who sent her away without running scans. Obviously, it was more than just the last few months, but several years, during which no one put the symptoms together.
Ah. Anyway. A painful and deep post.
Sorry about the A to Z "N" post. It has been repaired. 🫰🏾
"Starting strong is good. Finishing strong is epic." — Robin Sharma
J (he/him 👨🏽 or 🧑🏽 they/them) @JLenniDorner ~ Speculative Fiction & Reference Author and Co-host of the April Blogging #AtoZChallenge international blog hop
The older we get the more doctors tend to chalk up or symptoms to our imaginations. Anyone who really knew my mom knew she wasn't a complainer nor an attention seeker. I was getting that from my doctor until one of his Practical Nurses saw me and ordered tests that is solving an issue I've had on going for five years.
DeleteSo sorry about your aunt. She must have suffered, too.
How interesting! I guess you could make up some “fan fiction” about your mom ❤️
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DeleteOh, yes, I could make up all kinds of stories about those panties and the Air Force wings.
DeleteThey could form the basis of a cool book (which could have nothing to do with your mother).
DeleteI'm imagining those fancy panties under that dark gray suit on her wedding day. It's awful that the doctors didn't help your Mom.
ReplyDeleteI was shocked at panties having buttons down the side. But it was during the war so I'm sure that had something to do with it.
DeleteShe was only in her early 70s which isn't that old either.
My mother developed severe balance issues, numbness,etc. Her doctors told her she was getting old (early 70's). I went to appointments and got nasty. ALS.
ReplyDeleteMeanwhile - I want to ask my maternal grandmother and paternal grandfather questions (which they won't answer, I know). I found out that both were orphaned, my grandmother at 9 when her mother died and 11 when her father died. My grandfather lost his father at 18 months and his mother at 12. I found out through old newspapers and census records. Wouldn't you think someone would have mentioned it? I was told my grandmother was abandoned and raiseed by her grandparents and had no contact with older children in the family. The gossip section of the out of state newspaper had her arriving my train once a year to visit family. I am pretty sure any family story I ever heard about anyone on either side of my family isn't true, lol.
Same with my parents----the both lost their mothers at 8/9 years old. I suppose it's hard to talk about that kind of pain happening so young. Genealogy research turns up some interesting things, doesn't it.
DeleteSounds like you had a wonderful mother. The things that we tend to forget is that our parents were real-live human beings with their own foibles, quirks, and bits of wonder. Now that I have grandkids, I know they only see me as Papa, but I have a story which predates them by decades (for instance, I still have the shawl my mother had when she passed away of lung cancer 43 years ago. You gave me a wonderful idea-I'll put a note into its plastic bag, explaining who it belonged to). One thing I did for my kids: I gave them each a copy of those books called "Story of My Life" (or something like that). In it, I recorded those bits about me as a young person. That way, when I'm spoken of in the past tense, they won't have to wonder what Dad's favorite color was. They can look at the book. By the way, my "Navy" books are pretty much a series of memoirs. That way, they can read about my life as a young sailor.
ReplyDeleteIncidentally, my favorite color is "blue."
Neither one of my parents had a mother after ages 8/9 years old so they had a scant role model for how one should be. It kind of worked to my advantage growing up because my brother and I were not treated down gender lines when it came to chores or future aspirations.
ReplyDeleteI gave my niece one of those 'story of my life' books. I love them and know your kids and grandkids will treasure them more and more as the years past by.
Oh my that is so tragic. Interesting how we don't know so much about our parents.
ReplyDeleteI think they came from a different generation that wasn't encouraged to talk about their emotions. And in my case my parents lived through the Great Depression, the Stock Market Crash, WWII ---all before they turned 25...lots of pain during those years for most.
DeleteThat is very sad how many mistakes were made in your mom's illness and death. For a doctor to say she's just old and trying to get attention is horrendous. From what your post tells about your mother, I doubt she would have told you answers to any of these questions. So many times I wish I could talk to my mom. Even more times, I wish I had listened to her when she gave me advice.
ReplyDeleteI know what you mean about listening to you mom when she gave advice. I'm sure my mom told me things that I didn't pay much attention.
DeleteThe fact that here were so many mistakes and mis-steps the day my mom died almost made it easier to accept---down the road. I told myself they all meant it was her time to go.
That is horrible the way your mom died. My mom had bad doctors when she died of lung cancer. It was just arthritis in her back for months as she suffered. She also was not a complainer and I loved her very much.
ReplyDeleteJust because a doctor can't explain something is no excuse for doctors making stuff up. My mom's doctor---shortly after---left his practice to go work as a doctor at an army base.
DeleteI hope you sued that doctor for malpractice. Yikes.
ReplyDeleteYou might have asked the questions, but it sounds like she wouldn't have answered them. Interesting mysteries she left behind. Perhaps you should let your nibblings interview you on camera so their questions will be answered.
No, we didn't sue. But the last day we could joint a class action suit against the company that built the ambulance was one of the toughest days of my life. We didn't join it or sue because it would have meant my dad would have go through a bunch of legal stuff by then he was starting to heal in the grieving process and we didn't think it was good for him to relive it for the courts.
DeleteYour Parents were a sharp dressing Stylish Couple, your Dad very Handsome and your Mom Pretty. I think their Generation mostly had it rough, both of my Parents rarely discussed their Childhoods becoz it wasn't easy and there was a lot of Pain went thru and Hardships. Your Mom does sound like a Strong Woman with a dry Wit about her when giving Answers to Questions she didn't really wanna Answer. *LOL* How she Died so Painfully due to Neglect and a series of unfortunate Events is particularly tragic Jean, I'm so sorry, that had to be so hard for the Family. Knowing that with proper Medical intervention, prevention, proper Diagnosis and more Urgent Care rather than Neglect, it could have been avoided is terrible and adds to the Pain to know.
ReplyDeleteI love that photo. The both look so happy and my dad looked so confident and playful. That generation really did go through a lot.
DeleteThe way my mom died really was the hardest thing I've gone through in my life. The county ended up getting a grant to map the area residents for the small town ambulance company. There are so many lake in the area with a lot of cottages that didn't have formal addresses. So some good came from it because now they all do have house numbers. The lawsuit against the ambulance company resulted in finding out way so many of them were catching on fire across the country. Her's wasn't the only one. And the doctor left his practice.
I loved reading about your mom and her answers (or non-answers) to your youthful questions. And, like you, there are so many questions I would ask now that never came to mind as someone younger, though we did talk a lot and I did get many answers about your youth, up north, meeting dad and such. They formed a big part of that section of my book. But yes, there is so much more to ask. I wrote about her today on the anniversary of her death. So many questions.
ReplyDeleteOh, I can't wait to go read your post today! Those of us who blog have made it easy for future generations to piece together answers to their questions.
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