Introspection in a cold breeze

The gates of introspection were thrown open late the other night. It was a mistake, I was not thinking, but they opened all the same. The only public item that washed up was the death of my Mother. She died a few years ago, three days before Christmas.

I took off a month of work, left my family alone, travelled across country, and stayed at her home with her in October/November. I was there twenty four hours a day seven days a week. Or most of it any way. She had told me back in July, that as the time got closer, and it looked like she did not know what she was doing, she did know what she was doing, and it was okay.

Okay, I could understand that. My father in the weeks before he went, did everything he could (or so it seemed) to help me hate him. So my Mother saying this was not something that shocked me. When I was with my Mom, after about a week, I needed a few hours to myself, time away from reality. I asked my Mom if she was okay with me leaving the house for an evening, and she said yes, she would be okay.

It was close to freezing when I left. Less than two hours later I received a phone call from a neighbor that my Mom was outside laying on the ground. They called the ambulance, I raced to the hospital. About ten days later, there was a repeat, this time she was in the back yard, the weather was still freezing. Repeat the story, a few days in the hospital, and home she came. Some days I thought she was really there, and other days I was not sure who was home, if anybody.

One afternoon she wanted to go for a ride. I helped her in the car, started driving, and she started singing. Not a song from her childhood, or a song from the romantic days of her life, but another song. This song had one line, and the same rhythm. For over two hours I drove my Mom around listening to her one line song. I want to mention first that I rarely heard my Mom use any off color language in her life. On this day for over two hours, I listened to her sing, “Thanks for being a prick.” Over and over again. The fact that she was constantly grabbing at the steering wheel trying to turn the car into the ditch was minor compared to the song. She didn’t want to go home, fwiw, so we rode around the countryside, her singing her song, and grabbing at the steering wheel now and again.

A few days later she seemed to want to talk about her life. I asked her something about my Dad. “I don’t know why I married that son-of-a-bitch”, was the only thing she had to say about him. She told me some things about a Great Aunt I never knew I had. She talked a little bit about her Dad, Sisters, and Brothers, and that was about it. End of the end of my life conversation.

Because of all the problems with her body dying, it was impossible for her to come and live with me. I live at altitude, she could not survive without oxygen, and she kept pulling it off. Want to or not, it was time for me to pack up, and go back home. Over the next few weeks, there were some phone conversations, but they were not good, they were pretty ugly actually. She called me on the fifteenth to wish me a Merry Christmas. A week went by, and the phone call came. The hospital made the call as easy as they could, and I appreciated their effort.

It was a day of introspection for me, as I went over that month in my mind. Fortunately for most of us, each day is not our last, and there is time to fix the something we did, or at least acknowledge our faults. I can not guess if that month was really a month with my Mom, or with a shell. A month where things were said, and I never knew if they were true, or even thought about.

Of course it was an hours walk today with a cold stiff breeze, thinking about those last days with my Mom to realize it does not matter. She’s gone, and I am left to walk, and wonder.

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Female heroes are missing?

I do not know if you are aware of it or not, but Matt Langdon has a blog, the Hero Workshop in which he actively looks for everyday heroes in everyday life. I have been following Matt’s blog for a few weeks now. Recently, Matt wrote about female heroes, and why are there not more of them in print. I thought that was a good question!

I thought of a few women right off the top of my head that may fit the hero category, Golda Meir came to my mind. Golda Meir served as Prime Minister of Israel from 1969 until 1974. Golda Meir took Israel though some tough times, and some serious conflict. She was a lady of iron, with a will few men could match in her position. While I know little about here other than what was on the news, she did she thought had to be done.

Another stateswoman Margaret Thatcher served as the British Prime Minister from 1979 to 1990 was another tough lady. Margaret Thatcher took Britain through the then recent war with Northern Ireland, and led the engagement to retake the Falkland Islands. Once again, I thought few men could match her resolve and determination to do what she thought needed to be done.

Maybe I was not looking in the right places for female heroes…. I was looking for women who fit my idea of a hero, people I admire such as Ali, Eddie Rickenbacker and the like. It became apparent that female heroes do not play in the same ballpark. Marion Jones, is certainly showing heroic qualities of late, I hope she continues to inspire, but there have to be many more female heroes out there.

As I was listening to music, Gloria Estefan , and Mellissa Etheridge came to mind. They are close, but not quite fitting my definition of a female hero. This was getting tough, I could see what the problem is. Female heroes do not get the publicity, and recognition their male counterparts do. Being a man, I was hard pressed to come up with a female hero.

I moved my thoughts closer to home, and it came to me who real female heroes are! Real female heroes are my Wife, Daughters, Mother, Mother in law, Aunts, and Sister’s In Law. Real female heroes are all the women in my life who climb out of bed every day and make sure my world stays stable and everything flows [mostly] the way it should. They are the women who do most of the housework, out of the house work, and clean up after the rest of us!

If it were up to men to remember holidays, birthdays, weddings, and other important dates, well, it just would not happen. Women take care of these dates, and orchestrate these events mostly flawlessly. All we men do is show up and be sociable for a few hours. Even NASA found that shuttle and other missions run better with a woman on the crew. Before women were part of the space shuttle crews, men were men and when the shuttle would land after a mission, they looked and smelled like it, as did the shuttle itself. Having a women on board changes all that, just a woman’s being there!

My search for female heroes is over. For real female heroes, I do not need to turn on the television and watch a Wonder Woman rerun to see a female hero. I only need to look as far as the women in my life. These women often without thanks raised me, fed me, cleaned me, and cleaned up after me. They gave me birthday parties, fixed my hurts, and stood by as I did boy, and later man things in my life. Women keep the calendar of life. They mange the world in gentle measures, rarely receiving credit for their effort!

I now understand why I had difficulty finding real female heroes in my world. Why was it not apparent before, these female heroes? Like so many things seemingly hidden from view, all I had to do was take my blinders off, and there they are, always standing right next to me!

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