Friday, January 6, 2012

Never Too Old To Want Your Mother


I’ve been getting over a head cold and it’s made me realize even more the little something I’ve always known – the single thing I miss most from my move across the country is my mother.
Long before it became fashionable, Rosemarie was always a stay-at-home-mom. No matter what, she was always in the kitchen when my brother and I got home from school and when we were sick, she was the perfect nursemaid.   

There were times though when I didn’t want her care – especially when she was making me drink penicillin from one of my many bouts of strep throat (more on that later),yet,  I would have been lost without her. One time, I remember, that despite the intense flame that my throat had become and being unable to swallow, I still managed to scream as I hid under the kitchen table when she forced down the antibiotic. The doctor told her my tonsils would have to be removed and both my parents nixed that idea as they did not want to go anywhere near hospitals. Alas, it was a decision that would come back to haunt us all.


Once, I had an incredibly high fever and I screamed out in the middle of the night, “I can’t see! I’m blind! I can’t see!” And there my mother was, handing me a glass of water and aspirin that I clearly could make out  - but she laid that cold compress on my head and soothed me back to sleep.

“I’m sick,” I said once years later when I lived in Boston. And she gave me just the right amount of sympathy and was over at my apartment with food and orange juice. She stayed all day and watched television with me and yes, even cleaned my apartment.

Back then, the boys came and went in my life. Some with the hope of being forever, while others, I knew were just passing cars on a traffic free highway. But my mom was always there and when I moved in 1990, I somehow didn’t give it a second thought. She stood at the airport gate – back when people were allowed to accompany you to the boarding area - silent, shivering with tears she would not let flow in front of me and I got on board that United flight to a new life.

Along the way, there were more sore throats, more fevers and I called her every time – as if just hearing her voice would break the fever. And when I moved back ten years later for a short interim, she was over again whenever I felt under the weather. It was as if I’d never left and had never grown up. For a thirty something man, it was comforting and brought me back to when I would run home to find her at the top of the stairs.

In 2003, I left again – but this time, she was used to my never ending wanderlust.  And sometimes, I think I should have stayed just one year longer - for the night I woke up in the spring of 2004 unable to breathe was the scariest time of my life. I bolted upright in bed, gasping for air – my throat on fire.  I cried out only to be shocked by the muffled sound of my own voice. Somehow, I made it to the bathroom, looked at my throat to find one giant tonsil where there should have been two. I was alone – nobody to help me and I thought strangely, this will get better and stumbled back to bed, only to wake up shortly after with no air. What if I collapse here, I thought? There’s no one next to me to help and my mother can’t run in from the next room with a cold compress and healing touch. I strangely, drove myself to the Emergency Room and was admitted to the hospital with a temperature that spiked to 104 degrees as my body tried to fight this throat infection that trumped all those dating back to my youth.

My mother was on the phone every day with my friends – getting my progress reports as I couldn’t speak for several days and just hearing her voice put me at ease. And then, it was decided that that infection was the last straw. My tonsils had to come out at the ripe old age of 40. That summer, laid off from my job and still collecting benefits, I went into the hospital for the first time. It was cold in that operating room – and I missed my mother more than anything. The anesthesiologist asked me how many cocktails I wanted and before I answered two, I was awake in the recovery room looking at my friend Georgia– a woman who is my West Coast mom and best friend all rolled into one. She let my mom know my status every step of the way and that night, after I was discharged, she was in the next room – just like my mom was all those years ago. If I couldn’t have the real thing then I had the next best replacement.
Getting your tonsils out when your 40 is no picnic and the 20 pound two week weight loss was a bonus, though it was a shame that I was unfortunately unable to maintain it. 

But it was my mom’s voice over the phone and her cards that put me at ease. Even though I knew she couldn’t just hop on a plane by herself and get to me as quickly as she could when she was in the next room, it’s still comforting to give her a call these days to feel instantly better when I simply say,

“I’m sick.”
   



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