Showing posts with label mother and daughter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mother and daughter. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Crayon Valens


Lisbeth and I made some crayon "valens" (Lis-ism) in my studio yesterday. Then Lis decided to make "a cut" from the colorful waxed paper, too...

She calls this cut "The Wedding One" and, "The Lips...." :^D
I LOVE LISBETH.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

How Is She?


My mother, Edna Simmons, with her grandchildren Andrew and Kaitlyn looking on as she holds her newest grandchild, Lisbeth, in November, 1981.
The first anniversary of my mother's death was last week. She was 88 years old when she died from complications from Alzheimer's. Mom moved into assisted living shortly after she was diagnosed with the disease in 2006, and my five siblings and I began our grieving process that summer as we worked together to clear out our childhood home. Alzheimer's is often referred to as "the long goodbye," and it is an apt description: we watched helplessly over those last five years as our mother progressively lost large expanses of memory and the capacity to do the things that had given her so much joy in her rich and busy life: knitting, sewing, baking, dancing, tending her house and yard, caring for her beloved cat Arabella, taking photographs, hosting the mammoth family gatherings for her six children and their spouses and her nineteen grandchildren and eventually their growing families. In her last year she still recognized my brothers and sisters and I as family, but she couldn't say our names, and the grandchildren and great grandchildren had become a big indistinguishable blur. I cherish the times she would pat my hand, and tell me in her low and broken voice, "You're a good girl."
Words did not come easily, and attempts to speak were often just garbled phrases, sputtered out with long pauses of frustration and sighs of exasperation. After these attempts to speak, Mom would fall back in her chair, her eyes closed with exhaustion from the effort. So we would sing to Mom, and tell her lots of stories. When we tapped into her long term memory and recounted tales from her girlhood, she'd smile, and nod with recognition, and perhaps even add a word or two. But when we would tell her, "Mom! You were married in the Spring of 1944 to a wonderful man named George, and you had six children together! Their names are Steven, Deborah, Kenneth, Martha, Susan, and Amy, " she'd scrunch her brow in puzzlement, and ask us, "How do you know these things?"
On one of my last visits to see my mother in the nursing home, I was talking to my sister about Lisbeth, and in a rare moment of clarity, Mom looked me straight in the eyes, and asked, "How is she?"
I am moved to tears each time I think of this: that my mother could "mother" me one last time with her concern, and that Lisbeth's story was so deeply etched in Mom's ravaged brain (or "left in her brain," to quote Lisbeth...) that she could rise up out of the murky swamp of Alzheimer's and connect with me about Lisbeth, for those precious few seconds...
simply slays me.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Letting Go

Kathe Kollwitz

Lisbeth is emotionally so very young and she is an adult. She has her own support system, her own higher power, her own life. I have to be careful to take care of myself, to have a large part of my life be separate from Lisbeth's, the same as it is with my four other adult children. I must constantly determine where and when I am needed and step back and let go when I'm not. Easy? Noooooo..............

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Unbroken Circle

I found this old photo of me taken by my father in the fall of 1969, when I was fifteen. I am in my basement in Warwick, RI, working on a mandala for my 10th grade art class. I think it's the only one I ever designed. Both of my daughters, Kaitlyn and Lisbeth, make mandalas now. Ah, the circle of Life. What goes around, comes around...

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Happy Mother's Day!

An old friend of mine sent me this today ~ it's Lisbeth's birth announcement, hand drawn and colored by me, many moons ago. My friend was cleaning out her flooded basement and found this in a box of old letters. What a nice surprise! Happy Mother's Day!

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Letter from Lisbeth

Lisbeth is down with seizures again. I thought I would post a letter that she composed recently:

I really just got hurt on my toes from the seizure thing. Hurt my toes - that's really bad how they're hurting now. Worse hurting of it. I had to tell my Daddy. Daddy knows what to do for the daughter. All the other guys in the family knowing about it, too. And Karen (helper) would need to know about this. When I do see her I tell her it. She be helping me back. When it's Thursday, that's the day I be taking Little Milkweed to the doctor, really are. Kate (helper) couldn't believe this, how it got really bad. Every helper couldn't. How much I hurt the toe with the seizure thing, worse way. My brothers couldn't believe it. Grampa Miller couldn't believe it either. Mmmmmmhmmmmmm. Older Jen (helper) couldn't believe it either.

All by,
Lisbeth Miller

Sunday, April 18, 2010

A Sweet Tribute

I received such a lovely note today from a woman named Jo who lives in the UK and who recently purchased one of Lisbeth's beautiful tee shirts. She writes so thoughtfully about receiving her new shirt here on her blog, Caim and Coracle.

Thankyou, Jo!

xox Martha & Lisbeth