“No soul that aspires can ever fail
to rise,
no heart that loves can ever be
abandoned.”
Annie Besant
Thirty five years ago, on August 8th
1978, a
very beautiful soul passed away. My loving mother had fought her
cancer with
courage, faith and radiant smiles but at forty-three, when she
took her last
breath upon this earth, the heart of our family stopped beating.
It
was her love, as keeper of the flame, that warmed our home. Her
smiling eyes
had held a reassuring light that I thought would never go out, her
laughter was
as sweet as the trill of a lark’s song. My mother was the light
that illumined
our happy path through childhood, her kisses of faith encouraged
us to never
give up hope and her loving embrace was like being sheltered from
the fiercest
of storms.
The
1970s was to be a decade of happiness and sorrow for my family as
we came
closer to the changes looming over a darkening horizon. At the
time, though, I
never knew a storm was brewing because my mother was so positive,
so full of
life and good cheer that we kept doing the things we always did
together –
drawing on lazy weekends in the comfort of our kitchen, decorating
pages of my
school books.
Love and Art – her legacy
Mum
had shown me her beautiful sketches in the school books she had
kept as
mementos of her teenage years in Madrid. She was only too happy to
illustrate
to her budding artist shadow, how to use her fine artistry
techniques.
As
her eager apprentice, I learned the art of shading with colour
pencils, how to
work with nib and ink, and caught her love for creating delicate
illustrations
but her sketches were always so much finer than my heavy-handed
drawings.
“Precioso
(beautiful),”
she said with a proud twinkle in her eye when I presented her
with the most recent decorated page.
Nothing stays the same
But,
by the time I was fifteen, the onset of a mysterious loss of sight
prompted my
parents to seek a medical diagnosis. After visiting fifteen
ophthalmologists
and being persuaded to undergo tedious tests during a prolonged
stay in
hospital, my parents were eventually dealt the shocking blow –
their daughter
had an incurable eye disease, Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP). All my
young dreams of
becoming an artist like my mother, vanished.
It
was not the time for drawing but a time for resourcing. I had to
adopt new
skills in order to function in a sighted classroom. By Year 10 I
was using
hand-held magnifiers to read textbooks and a tape recorder
accompanied me to
various lessons. I copied the classroom notes using large pads of
writing paper
with dark black texta pen in order to make them legible. In the
evenings, I
spent hours meticulously re-writing the same work as neatly as
possible into my
homework book for marking the next day.
Sometimes,
my
mother sat by my side and coloured in those parts of my work I
couldn’t see,
adding her artistic flair to brighten up the pages as well as
lighten our
hearts.
Then came the Question...
I
remember coming home from secondary school one day when mum
presented me with a
huge sketch pad. “Look inside,” she smiled, “I’ve been busy all
day creating a
surprise for you.”
As
I turned the pages as cautiously as if opening a precious archive,
a series of
rectangular boxes with purple circles in different spacings,
caught my eye.
“It’s
the Braille alphabet,” said my mother in a proud tone. “I’ve
copied out all the
letters in large format so you can see to learn them.”
I
was more taken by the beautiful symmetry of her work, the precise
lines, the
exact gaps between the boxes, the fullness of the circles in their
correct
formations, more than I could accept the concept of learning
Braille.
Looking
back now, I realise that the truth was, I wasn’t ready to accept
how different
my needs were. I could not embrace this reality, even with my
mother’s effort
to hold my hand and walk the path of change with me.
Bell and Piluca on an Ocean Liner |
As
a young teenager looking toward a future, having the Braille
alphabet tucked
into my school bag was rejected and instead, I took a course in
touch-typing
with my peers at school.
Fortunately,
the
typewriter became a dear friend to take notes and it has served me
well all
throughout my life for writing personal journals, story books for
my children,
and in later years, adapting to using a computer to create
zillions of pages
for blogs and short stories.
I
am sure my mother would forgive my earlier refusal to learn the
art of Braille
if she could see the images I endeavour to bring alive through the
written
word. Whereas once my mother and I shared the pleasures of a
visual art form,
today, I honour her memory in the words I feel inspired to write.
My
mother’s legacy of love and art also lives on – in reflections I
see within my
children’s eyes, in the creative hands of my daughters Claire and
Sharon, in
the teaching desire of my son, Russell, and in the recent
handiwork of my aspiring
teenage carpenter, Michael.
But
one heart keeps mum’s flame alight more than any other – her
beloved husband,
Brian, and I thank my father for reminding me that today, it has
been a total
of 12,803 days and 8 leap years since mum’s passing.
As
I searched for a meaningful quote to end this story, an amazing
‘coincidence’
occurred.
Looking
through my file of quotations, I selected the following verse and
then I set
off to visit my father to share the evening with him. We sat
together preparing
for a few minutes of silence in front of Mum’s altar and after
lighting a
candle he unfurled a small poster.
“I found this in an old trunk yesterday,” he said, “I’m not sure where it came from. But I think it is most fitting for the occasion.”
He read the first two words –
and I knew my
mother was near. It was the very quote I had chosen to use, from
the hundreds
of verses in my collection. With
a broad
smile on my face and eyes alight, we spoke the last words in
unison . The flame
of the scented candle flickered as these words warmed our
hearts...
“Time is –
Too slow for those who wait
too swift for those who fear
too long for those who grieve
too short for those who rejoice
but for those who love
time is Eternity.”
From a sundial inscription
2 comments:
Absolutely beautiful. A touching, heart-warming story that is so worth sharing. Thank you for taking the time to describe the memories of your mother so beautifully.
I love how you interweave your language. I had no idea you wrote "zillions" of articles. Research time!
Hi Amanda, Your kind words were a ray of sunshine for me today and I truly appreciate your comments on three of my stories. It is so rewarding to know that what comes from the heart can bring pleasure to the lives of others...Many thanks, do visit again, and join me in keeping the world in touch...Maribel
Post a Comment