Monday, October 6, 2014

Mom by Gillian


Most of us are, of course, via nature and nurture, to a lesser or greater degree a product of our parents. I can easily identify many things; good, bad, and ugly, that I got from mine. On the whole, though, I think what a received from my dad was of a simpler, less complex nature, than the traits I received from Mom.  My father was essentially an uncomplicated man. My mother was not an uncomplicated woman, although she put on a good act. Probably most people who knew her, especially the many children she taught and their parents, found her to be a warm, patient, conscientious, motherly woman with a good sense of humor. She was all those things; but a whole lot more that she never presented to the world, or to me, though eventually I caught at least an occasional glimpse of what went on below that smooth veneer.

So its little surprise that for the first forty-odd years of my life I found it relatively easy to hide the real, gay, me, from the world and to a huge extent from myself, and play a very convincing part. I learned those skills from Mom. Not that my mother was a lesbian, at least as far as I can ever know, though in fact how can I ever know? I cant, but I just dont sense it, and I believe I would. Her issue was her son and daughter who both died before I was born. She never once talked about it; not to me nor to anyone as far as I know. She buried her tragedy deep and set about developing a shell, never to be broken.

At least I eventually broke free of mine. My mother never did. I learned the truth from my aunt. OK Mum, (which is what I actually called her, not the more American Mom) you didnt tell me your secret and I didnt tell you mine. Na na na na naaa na!

So I guess that leaves us even in our dysfunction.

I always felt that there was something. Something missing. I cant really express what I felt, or why, it was simply a childs intuition. And now, after all these years, I wonder if a mothers intuition told Mum that there was something, something indefinable, missing in me, in who I was, and in my communication with her.

Somehow, despite our chaotic psyches, Mum and I were close and I always knew I was loved unconditionally, by both her and my dad. They both also had a great sense of humor. Mum loved to giggle. I loved to make her giggle. It was all part of the very complex hidden relationship in which I knew it was up to me to heal her wounds, though I only knew of them subliminally, and make her happy. It was up to me to make her laugh. So in this way she helped me develop my own humor and we laughed a lot together. My dads humor was completely different from Mums, and I am fortunate enough to have a wonderful mixture of both, but he would look on fondly in puzzled silence while Mum and I giggled helplessly over something in which he could find little humor.

Mum was, as were many people but especially women, I think, back then, very concerned with appearances. I dont know if any of you ever watched Keeping Up Appearances on PBS, but the show always reminds me of my mother, although she was a much nicer person that Hyacinth Bucket! Mum had a bad case of dont do it in the street and scare the horses. I could wear that tattered old sweater I loved so much in the house, but I couldnt venture outside in it, and if there was a knock on the door, I had to bolt upstairs and hide or change clothes before I came back down. My dad didnt have to wear his tie in the house but had to put it on in a rush if anyone came to visit, and he had to wear it outside even if he was gardening. Someone might see him without it! I, on the other hand, dont give a tinkers curse about what anyone thinks of the way I dress, or come to that the way I live, or anything about me. That, I think, is greatly a generational thing, but in my bones I feel that a lot of it is purely a reaction to Mums obsession with what will people think? On the other hand, of course, it did take me the first half of my life to come out of that bloody closet, so I cannot have been as freewheeling as Id like to believe.

My mothers other obsession was with her weight. She did seem to gain weight easily, though she never ate very much and only drank once a year, on Christmas Eve. It was always some kind of home-made wine: pretty strong stuff. After a couple of glasses she was bright red in the face and invariably stated in rather slurred words, how strange it was that although she only drank once a year, it never had any effect on her! Oh Mum, ever in denial! She was never obese, just pleasingly plump in a motherly kind of way.

But my dad and I could never convince her of that. These days I think its much easier to get a good feel for just how overweight, fat, or obese, you are, and how you look. With endless photographs of ourselves easily available we can compare ourselves with others only too often. In the days of only occasional snapshots, my mother constantly needed assurance.

Oh dear! Mum would exclaim, eyeing a woman of roughly her age bulging out of her clothes, Im not as fat as that am I?

Well that was an easy answer in the negative, whatever the truth. But worse, she would sometimes ask that classic unanswerable question, Im not as fat as I used to be, am I?

Just try to get that answer right!

I struggle to stay well clear of denial, because Mum relied so heavily on it. She would cry, not shedding a quiet tear but sobbing uncontrollably, over things with no direct relation to her; miners dying down coal pits, a race horse with a broken leg having to be shot, the death of King George V1. A therapist friend explained to me, many years later, that this was a classic example of transferred grief, my mother being way too terrified of facing her own grief, while needing to release it in some other way.

Poor Mum. She lived in the wrong time and the wrong place. Her children died in 1940 in a war torn Britain where people died every day and you just sucked it up and soldiered on. These days she would have had the benefit of therapy and support groups and various spiritual teachings to ease her way. Of course you never recover from the death of one child let alone two, but she would have had a lot of help in dealing with her heartbreak.

On rare occasions I catch myself glancing uneasily at an overweight woman and wondering if I am in fact more or less fat than she is.  I panic. Oh God, Im becoming my mother! Eckhart Tolle and I try to keep me grounded in reality and dealing with my own self, leaving Mum to rest in peace. I am what I am and whether all or any of it comes from Mum and Dad hardly matters.  I recently accepted that my struggle to keep the weight off is little to do with heredity and a whole lot more about beer.


© Dec 2013

About the Author 


I was born and raised in England. After graduation from college there, I moved to the U.S. and, having discovered Colorado, never left. I have lived in the Denver-Boulder area since 1965, working for 30 years at IBM. I married, raised four stepchildren, then got divorced after finally, in my forties, accepting myself as a lesbian. I have now been with my wonderful partner Betsy for 25 years.

No comments:

Post a Comment