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Sunday, May 11, 2008
Jackie Gingrich Cushman :: Townhall.com Columnist
Letters from a Not So Perfect Mother
by Jackie Gingrich Cushman
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Mother’s Day was first celebrated in 1908 in Grafton, W. Va., and Philadelphia, Pa. Anna Jarvis was the driving force behind the creation of Mother’s Day, driven by the desire to honor her deceased mother. After Jarvis waged a two-year letter-writing campaign, Congress designated the second Sunday in May as Mother’s day in 1914.

There are more than 82 million mothers in the United States. Mothers with children under the age of 18 represent 46 percent of them, or almost 38 million mothers. Wow, that’s a lot of mothers. I became one of those mothers eight and half years ago.

Since then, Mother’s Day has gained additional meaning for me. First, it was a day for my husband to thank me for mothering our child. More recently, it has become a day for our children to express their love for me. It is a day of great anticipation and excitement.

The daily activities of mothering have changed, now that both of my children are in grammar school. While they were infants and toddlers, my mothering focused on taking care of them physically, bathing and dressing them, putting on their shoes. My mothering has transitioned to offering them emotional support, providing structure and discipline.

This past week has been filled with a flurry of activity in preparation for the end of the school year. It seems as if the events and activities increase exponentially when the end is in sight. Possibly it is a plan by the teachers, school administrators and after-school coaches to wean us mothers from the school year, when our children are gone for 7 hours a day, and prepare us for summer, when they never leave our side. But I am just hoping that I make it to summer.

So far this week, I have missed Robert, my kindergartner, taking cards in for his teachers (he took them in two days late). Maggie, my second-grade daughter, took in flowers for her teacher two days early. I totally missed out on Maggie’s ballet observation day this week, (though, in my defense, I had just attended her recital two weeks prior), and forgot about providing snacks to the kindergarten class, (thank goodness they had extra on hand), but sent in a supply for Friday.

Still, I was not a total failure. This same week, I attended a lunch at school, watched a French performance, went to field day opening activities, read aloud to the class, purchased shorts logoed with the school mascot for the children to wear for field day, turned in the paperwork to enroll my children in classes for next year and washed their logoed school clothes overnight so they could wear them for the second consecutive day of field day. Maggie is taking in a second flower for her teacher on the correct day, but it did come out a vase of flowers that was in our home. Continued...

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About The Author
Jackie Cushman is a freelance writer who lives in Atlanta, Georgia. Her column also runs later in the week in the Northside Neighbor.
 
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liz
"You've been like a mother to me", sent by your youngest son. That is hilarious! Also precious. Something you'll always remember, enjoy a laugh when you think about it.

I have a school-made card my only son presented to his Dad for Father's Day.

"Thank you for the food and the bought house".

This "little boy" is now forty-four, an electrical engineer, and as practical-minded today as the day he wrote those words.

Kids are great!

Mother's Day, Father's Day, etc.
Do we really need these "special days"? For wise, loving and attentive parents whose children love and respect them, mother's and father's day is every day.

Am I foolish to think about the pain young children suffer on these "made-up" yearly events...those who have lost their mom or dad?

Adult children can also feel the pain of no longer having a Dad to send a card to...or to present with a gift.

Then there are the adult children who simply don't relate to their parent at all...never bother with them throughout the year.

If they feel obliged to send a card or gift on Mother's and/or Father's Day, it is meaningless to their parent.

I have a loving relationship with all my adult children and grandchildren...all year long. I don't need some special day that someone else "thought up".

As expected, it was some silly woman. (I am NOT describing every woman as silly, BTW)
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