Today is my Mom's birthday. Were she still here, she'd be 97 years old. She was the second child born to a man with dual citizenship (American and Swedish), who was a net mender and waterman, and the first born daughter of people who were generations long Chincoteaguers, with the exception of the Danish grandfather. Mom was a born and raised Teaguer, but was always in love with the Old West of America.
We always spoke on her birthday, wherever I was located... England, Colorado, Florida. We were speaking on the telephone, and both of us were watching the launch of the space shuttle Challenger, when it exploded. We had no words to convey our feelings of loss to each other.... Mom was always there for me. She did worry a lot of my friends, because she wore bifocals, and, if she was near a person, she had a tendency to "look down her nose" at people, so she could see them clearly. A lot of my friends thought that she was showing dislike, and I had to explain that she was just trying to see them clearly...
We had great adventures together. Dad had always said he was taking her to England to see the Crown jewels when he retired. Well, Dad died before he could retire, so Mom and I went to look at the Crown jewels together. We rented a car and drove through England, visiting Newmarket, the home of English horse racing. We saw plays, went to Windsor Castle, went to the Royal Mews and saw the Gold Coach, and thoroughly enjoyed ourselves in book stores and shops. We went to FanFare in Nashville, Tennessee, and Mom got to meet Loretta Lynn, while I got a kiss from Marty Robbins; and we went to the Grand Ole Opry and Opryland Park. I also took her horse racing in Delaware, where she had a blast. My sister Kathy took her to Alaska, and on several cruises.
Unfortunately, a stroke, followed by Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease, dulled her interest in outside things. She stopped reading, but loved to watch old movies and television shows. She never ceased in her love of Raymond Burr's portrayal of Perry Mason. She would slip from the present to the past in a heartbeat, and it was, occasionally, difficult to follow her time periods...
She passed away in her sleep, during an afternoon nap, a few months before she would turn 81... It was the same way that Dad went, peacefully, in sleep in mid-afternoon. I hope I go that way, too.
I love you, Mom!!!
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