Years and years ago my mother planted daffodils along one side of our house. Today as I passed the floral section at the grocery store, I spied a few potted plants of daffodils. I smelled their heavenly scent. It’s moments like these when I feel a spirit visit as though my mother is calling to me, “Hello! I love you! Enjoy your beautiful day.”

My mom was one of those selfless, incredible women who gave one hundred percent to her family. I have a few extra special memories of her when I was young. Unfortunately, I was an extremely sick child due to having spinal meningitis when I was two and a half. Once she set up a lawn chair in the hallway so I could get to the bathroom asap. I also remember being a very fussy eater and running away once with a can of food I did not want her to prepare. She chased me around the house, and hollered, “Wait til your father gets home.” This was a very dark comment because my dad was hot-tempered and impatient.

When I was in second grade, my mother became completely paralyzed overnight. Suddenly, a vibrant, generous spirit could no longer walk, talk, or feed herself. She did not lose any of her mental facilities. We learned how to communicate through facial expressions, asking tons of questions, and using an alphabet board that she used to spell out words.

It still mystifies me how things can change so quickly. She was in the Iowa City hospital for close to a year, and spent some time at Mayo. They decided she had multiple sclerosis. Obviously things changed for my family. That pivotal moment in my life, I believe impacted not only my behavior but also my personality. I believe that if my mother had been well and healthy throughout her lifetime, I would have been a kinder, wiser, more patient person. Instead, I turned out to be impulsive, a bit stubborn and at times unhinged.

I can’t change my past, but I will always cherish the beauty of daffodils and the love and strength my mother shared through her gentle nursing and by surviving the best she could while being paralyzed.

Mom and Dad
Mom, her image was painted onto a plate.
Barb Edler Avatar

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7 responses to “Daffodils and Mom”

  1. Rita K. Avatar
    Rita K.

    Barb, Your honesty and ability to see the good, along with the hardships is inspiring. Thanks for sharing.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. edifiedlistener Avatar

    You capture how firmly your mother is anchored in your memory in this slice, particularly through the opening lines about the daffodils. Your candor is admirable in describing what must have been a tremendously difficult set of circumstances to process as a young child.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Glenda Funk Avatar

    Barb,
    This is an exquisitely constructed post that reveals so much about you. I suspect I’m only beginning to get to know you, and I think yours is a life that needs to be a book. For you it’s your mom who was so ill, but for me it’s my father. It’s uncanny how you write about your mom’s illness and its impact on your personality because I’ve often felt the same about my father’s illness. It made me hard, and I’ve spent years trying to soften the edges. Wish I’d worked on thst much sooner.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. kimhaynesjohnson Avatar

    Barb, I’m in awe of how you feel your mother’s presence when she speaks to you in the unexpected places – – the grocery store, through flowers. When you most need it. Nature has a way of doing that – birds, trees, flowers, shrubs, breezes, windchimes, clouds, sunsets…..oh, the joy of messages from our loved ones. This is a beautiful moment, and I am so glad you shared it. Sounds like it might be time to plant a daffodil bed near your window.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Denise Krebs Avatar
    Denise Krebs

    Barb, this is a precious glimpse into more about your dear mama, and how she and her illness shaped you. That MS came to your mom so quickly and with such debilitating symptoms saddens me. You didn’t get the chance that many of us did to watch the symptoms come gradually. (I had a dear aunt with multiple sclerosis.) Your words of honesty and the love for your mom really comes through in this post.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Maureen Young Ingram Avatar

    Barb, what a sad turn of events, to have your mother become so very, very ill so suddenly. In that photo of your father and mother, I first thought that she was a child – her body looks so diminutive…incredibly frail and small. We can only know what we live; everything else is fiction, really. You are blessed to have such sweet memories of her kind spirit – and those daffodils. I want to order you bulbs and fill your yard! Thank you for sharing these dear and precious memories.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Barb Edler Avatar

      Thank you, Maureen!

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