Dear Mom,
Happy Birthday! I was
getting ready for this day, thinking of you and what to get you. I cam up with the
Collected Works of ee cummings which will be released on July 12th,
which made me grateful that you don’t mind waiting a little bit for your
birthday present, as usual. And, as I was thinking of you and reading the news
about how Hillary Clinton seems to have clinched the Democratic Nomination for
President, I thought to myself, it’s all over. The glass ceiling has broken.
And, of course it hasn’t, just as the racists came out in force when Obama was
elected, so will the misogynists come out for Hillary. But, like maggots
exposed to sun, the racisms and sexism, exposed to light, will eventually
whither and die, I believe. Or at least I hope. I didn’t think I was that
invested in this election. I love neither Bernie nor Hillary like I love Obama.
They are not in my heart like he is. But I was near tears, thinking, 56
elections, only 23 in which women could vote, and this is the first time a woman
has been nominated to run for president.
And, as I thought to myself, “we did it,” I meant, in a lot of ways,
that you did it, mom.
There were
the overt ways you made sure me and Paige and Valerie knew we could achieve
whatever we set out to achieve. The shirt you bought me that read, “Anything
Boys Can Do Girls Can Do Better.” Maybe it was a little “neener neener” but I
never played four-square better than when I wore that shirt.
Yesterday, Max
and Zoe were playing baseball with Erik in the backyard. Zoe can hit like mad.
I wasn’t as good as she at sports but that never stopped you and dad from
enrolling me in t-ball and softball and Paige and Val in soccer. You played
catch with us in the backyard. You took me to fancy dinners when I swam hard and
when I got good grades. You made me mow the lawn, like any regular son.
You were on
the board of League of Women Voters. You hosted book clubs where mainly women
authors were read. You watched Connie Chung on the Nightly News. Murphy Brown
on Prime Time. You bought me a copy of Our
Bodies Ourselves. You let me choose what college to go to. You never once
let me think I wouldn’t go to college or grad school or get a job or be a
professor or write books.
You pointed
out injustices. Friends of yours whose husbands divorced them, left them broke.
You made it clear that no matter how tough I felt I had it, I had two parents
growing up and plenty of food and clothes. You made it clear from your own
mother and grandmother’s experience that poverty is often a mom and kid problem
and that feminism meant working to raise everyone up. Feeding your kids took all of your time and most
of your attention. You also made it clear that even though there was injustice
and too much work, there was time to dance and sing. Remember the time we
painted great-grandma’s house? You and me and Paige and Val, my cousins and
Aunt Sue. We all know the lyrics to “Baby, you can’t love one.”
So, it’s
not like it’s all over. There’s work to be done for everyone. But mom, you were
a big part of making it clear how to understand what it means to be a woman. I
am on the lookout for injustice but I’m also noticing that I am part of the
singing and dancing world. You made me believe I could have kids and raise a
boy and a girl to each believe they were equal in each other’s eyes. You made
me think I could rise up as far as I wanted, even as far as Hillary Clinton, if
I so wanted.
The world’s
perception has shifted. It’s not just tokenism or chance that made it possible
for a woman to get this far. It’s people like you, who, although raised in a
patriarchal culture that presumed your role was to support a man, thought
differently. You have a lot of opinions. You don’t mind making them known. You
worked so hard to give me and Paige and Val extraordinary lives. It’s thanks,
in part to you, that we are living in extraordinary times.
6 comments:
This made me cry. I love it. You are amazing and your mom is too. Cheers to all of you!
Happy birthday, Nicole's mom. Thanks for Nicole.
Thank you my true blog team! You guys keep me afloat.
I love this! This letter will be the best possible birthday present for your mom.
Thanks, What Now! I hope she likes it! I'm sad I'm not with her on her birthday.
Beautiful!
Worth a reread
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