WE CALLED HER "MAMMY"
When I first came to live in England I noticed how
unusual that was. Here, it’s "Mum". There is something chirpy and matey about "Mum", even a touch of humour. "Mammy" sounds too much like breast-feeding.
Waving a placard that says "Hello Mum" at the television cameras is fun, but "Hello Mammy!" you wouldn’t dare. But that’s what we called her, my mother. Mammy she was to all eight of us. All the other mothers around were "Mammies" too. It’s the way we were back then. I don’t know what the present generation says, I can’t recall. I do recall however coming face to face with the reality behind, "Mammy". That comes easily into focus even now.
unusual that was. Here, it’s "Mum". There is something chirpy and matey about "Mum", even a touch of humour. "Mammy" sounds too much like breast-feeding.
Waving a placard that says "Hello Mum" at the television cameras is fun, but "Hello Mammy!" you wouldn’t dare. But that’s what we called her, my mother. Mammy she was to all eight of us. All the other mothers around were "Mammies" too. It’s the way we were back then. I don’t know what the present generation says, I can’t recall. I do recall however coming face to face with the reality behind, "Mammy". That comes easily into focus even now.
I
was thirty six years of age and my mother was not well. I was sitting
there just "being with her" as they say, in her bedroom, the same
bedroom it had always been. Here she had retreated to "say her prayers"
when the sound and fury of family life got on her nerves a bit. My
sister, a busy woman in those days with children of her own, handed me a
bowl of milk pudding, semolina I think. "Help Mammy with that, will
you?" she said and left. I did, immediately, without thinking. But I had
only just begun to help her with the first spoonful when the power of
what was happening struck home.
I was spoon-feeding my mother in the same room, on the exact same big brass bed where thirty-six years previously she had given birth to me. I suddenly felt quite overcome. Foolish? Maybe, but it was and remains the most difficult thing I have ever done for another human being.
I was spoon-feeding my mother in the same room, on the exact same big brass bed where thirty-six years previously she had given birth to me. I suddenly felt quite overcome. Foolish? Maybe, but it was and remains the most difficult thing I have ever done for another human being.
She dribbled, or was it my hand; what’s the difference? I took her
face flannel and wiped her chin, then offered another spoonful. No big
deal really! But all the while I was thinking of a Thursday afternoon
in August thirty six years before, my father working away from home and
the kindly old Nurse Gogarty helping my mother, "Mammy," through the
pain and the sweat and the blood to bring me into the world. And it had
all happened right here on this same bed, this same big brass bed. And
now she needed me, the labour of that long-gone August day.
I should have loved it for I’m made that way. Ask any of my family and they’ll tell you how I’m a great one for seeing meanings in things, latent significances in dates and places. I should have loved it, but I didn’t, I did not enjoy one moment of it. And the reason I did not enjoy it is quite simple; she did.
I should have loved it for I’m made that way. Ask any of my family and they’ll tell you how I’m a great one for seeing meanings in things, latent significances in dates and places. I should have loved it, but I didn’t, I did not enjoy one moment of it. And the reason I did not enjoy it is quite simple; she did.
There was I, her son, the priest, complete with breviary, black suit
and a mind full of theology. There was I the "Man of God" at the place
of my conception and birth faced by the work of my Creator as it was
before ever my learning coloured things in and taught me how to name
them. This was no page in a book, no nice prayerful thought, this was
life plain and simple and if God is at the heart of life then maybe Life
is God’s maiden name.
Could she sense that I felt out of my depth, out of my depth in the very circumstances where I should have felt most at home? I don’t know. Nor should I know for this was her moment as well as mine, her side of the experience. She laughed, not a laugh you could hear, but still one that lit up in her eyes and for a moment at least brought back that same old flicker about her mouth.
Could she sense that I felt out of my depth, out of my depth in the very circumstances where I should have felt most at home? I don’t know. Nor should I know for this was her moment as well as mine, her side of the experience. She laughed, not a laugh you could hear, but still one that lit up in her eyes and for a moment at least brought back that same old flicker about her mouth.
As that smile appeared, an old awareness
gripped me again. Here was a real human being, separate from me. Not
just "Mammy," but someone with her own story and her own "take" on life.
Here was a local girl who had done her growing up in the same place I
had done mine, except earlier. Here was a young woman who had caught my
father’s eye and in their furious courtship had set the tongues of the
neighbourhood wagging. Here was the widow who had bravely faced very
difficult years. Here was Angela.
She has her own grave now. Long ago I thought of putting her maiden name on the stone, but convention won. I had thought about it however for it seemed a truer witness to her self-hood.
After all, growing up, getting married, having the eight of us, that and lots more, is her story, distinct, and individual. "What I do is me, for this I came" – so the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins. True enough; and what our "doing" means to others, the relationship it puts in place, even how, in the end, they choose to name us, that is their story.
After all, growing up, getting married, having the eight of us, that and lots more, is her story, distinct, and individual. "What I do is me, for this I came" – so the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins. True enough; and what our "doing" means to others, the relationship it puts in place, even how, in the end, they choose to name us, that is their story.
Wow! What a beautifully reflective, thoughtful and at the same time challenging reflection. There is a great tenderness in that reflection and as we are approaching Mothering Sunday, whether our Mothers are still with or at peace with their Creator, we owe them such a debt of gratitude. I particularly liked the fact that you saw "the big picture" about your Mammy. I was also touched, as I am by my own mothers "quiet" approach to prayer. No great show, no looking for admiration, just a humble stealing away to speak with the Lord. Thank you for sharing this very personal and beautiful reflection. Happy Mothers Day to all our Mums/Mammys be they on earth or in heaven
ReplyDeleteMum is now in a care home, with dementia. I have had to adjust what I consider a good time with her, now. My ability to do that varies. Is it now just a case of being grateful for small mercies?
ReplyDeleteMy mother was a great woman of prayer and patience. Her care of my infirm father was testimony of her love for him and her commitment to the promises she made to him all those years ago. He died peacefully in the matrimonial bed, sadly she, on a toilet all alone in the Victoria Hospital.
ReplyDeleteAn excellent article, I thoroughly enjoyed it and it made me think a lot deeper. A different light was shed on things. I am a great grandmother and enjoy your blog. Keep up the good work.
ReplyDeletePrecious moments with those we love near the end.
ReplyDeleteI love it that you use pictures for meditation and inspiration. One of my favourites is the painting of the faces of Peter and John running to the tomb in the early morning light, with the look of disbelief and despair giving way to 'dare I hope... was it actually true.... all He said.... three days....?'
ReplyDelete