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Ellen Goodman: Some Things Do Not Pass

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Posted on Dec 6, 2006

By Ellen Goodman

BOSTON—Long, long ago, I wrote a column describing my mother this way: “My mother is someone who will listen to your problems until you are bored with them.”

Reader’s Digest wanted to use it, and a fact-checker called me for my mother’s telephone number. She actually wanted to ask my mother whether it was true.

I told this tale for years as a funny story about fact-checkers. But now, of course, I know it was really a story about my mother. About Edith Weinstein Holtz, who died last month at age 92, just two days after Thanksgiving, on what would have been the 70th anniversary of her wedding.

It had been a long, long time since my mother was able to listen to my problems. Dementia, that terrible thief, stole her memory and then her personality, one piece at a time. Obituaries rarely list dementia as a cause of death. But she was a victim of its burglary until, at last, she let go of food, of fear, of need, of life.

My mother, born before suffrage, before World War I and World War II, before the feminine mystique and feminism, taught me everything I know of family values.

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She taught me that family came first. She taught me to make cheesecake and keep peace. She taught me that a real home was a place where you were welcome for Sunday brunch and conversation. She taught me to accept your children’s life choices without criticism and with confidence in their judgment. She taught me patience—although I am afraid I never passed the finals in that class.

When my sister and I went to the funeral home, the director asked us how to list her occupation.  Together, we said, “homemaker.’’ Making a home was all she ever wanted to do. My mother, beautiful and vulnerable, also taught us—not on purpose—the risk of having love as your only job.

When my father died, she was only 50. She didn’t worry about how to live without this vital, funny, loving center of her life because, I found out later, she didn’t think she would survive a year. She lived 42 more years.

I think my mother regarded “independence’’ as a synonym for “loneliness.’’ She tried to create a second life. She tried school. She tried a job or two. She tried another marriage. Nothing really worked. But over these years she was also the one who nourished her granddaughters and nephews with peppermints and attention. She listened to their problems until they were bored with them.

Old age is not for sissies. My mother’s long slow terrible decline lasted over a decade. There was the television she could no longer work and then the telephone. There were the small spiral notebooks whose pages were covered with names from a past she struggled to retain. One page listed her favorite movie star: Cary Grant. Another listed my father’s best friend: Lou Novins.

In the last year, what mattered to my mother? The $3 faux pearl stud earrings, final artifacts of her femininity, bought by the dozen and lost by the dozen. The boxes of chocolate and the family photos. My mother never lost the taste for chocolate, nor did she lose the smile with which she welcomed her family.

We were gathered for Thanksgiving weekend when she died. That would have mattered to her. It mattered to us. Together, we were able to rewind the tape to the days when our mother, aunt, grandmother, sister was our listener.

There is little that is harder in life than watching the slow disappearance of someone you love. Dementia is a contagious disease that spreads its suffering to anyone within the range of love. Millions of families have caught it. Ours is just one. And yet here, too, she taught us more than simply how to bear a burden.

Not long before her death, my daughter and I took my 3-year-old grandson to visit. We outfitted him with a bag of doughnuts to pass out to my mother and everyone on her floor. Though she no longer knew his name, she watched him with joy.

The next morning at a breakfast table covered with cereal and Play-Doh, he looked up and asked me, “Grandma, is your mommy going to die soon?’’

Taken aback, I answered, “I’m afraid she is, Logan.’’ He thought for a moment and said, “But, Grandma, then you won’t have any mommy.’’

After the silence filled only with my tears, this little, little boy turned and said, “Grandma, when I grow up, I’ll be your daddy.’‘

So my mother’s gift for family, my mother’s talent for empathy, was passed down from one generation to the next and the next. It is her abiding legacy.
   
Ellen Goodman’s e-mail address is ellengoodman(at symbol)globe.com.


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By Dot O'Donnell, December 12, 2006 at 8:55 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

My mother succumbed to this disease two years ago next week, and at the same age.

It fell to me to decide whether or not to sign the Do Not Resuscitate order.  After watching this disease claim more & more of her for over a decade, and knowing of her deep devotion to her faith, there was only one decision to make.  And although I knew it was the right one, it weighed heavily on me.

And then something magical happened.  At least, so I believe.

Arriving at the cemetary I approached the casket where the priest was waiting.  He looked at me and said, “She’s shining all over you.”

I turned from him to look at the casket and saw a single petal from one of the arrangements fall slowly to the ground.

I got your message Mom.

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By Arun Chatterjee, December 10, 2006 at 2:38 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Ellen,
I believe in what you mentioned. People are living lonely life without feeling empathy or compassion. Life filled with giving love is the only real lived. Your mother is an example of one of the perfect human beings. She did make a difference when she was here and will keep on making.

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By connie, December 9, 2006 at 4:34 am Link to this comment
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My 88 yr old dad has dementia and it has been heartbreaking to watch his slow decline. Your column made it easier to live with this and to understand that I am not alone. Thanks so much

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By kath cantarella, December 8, 2006 at 3:23 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

Ellen, my last comment was clumsy and did not express how this piece touched me. This is a beautiful evocation of your mother (and yourself) and it made my heart ache. I had vowed not to post here anymore (as a stickybeak interloper from overseas) but i wanted to tell you that i think only a person with a great fund of empathy for the woman who was your Mum could have written such a moving piece. I guess you are your Mama’s daughter. Thankyou for this precious glimpse into your life and heart.
Family values have been touted as reasons for all sorts of ugly compulsion and control, but in truth there’s just one family value: families stick by you, especially when the chips are down, when the game is lost, and even when the narrative gets boring (God forbid). Like you, I have a beautiful mother. She’s post-feminism, and post her religious faith, but she’s Edith, too. We are lucky girls, you and I.

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By kath cantarella, December 7, 2006 at 11:25 pm Link to this comment
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She’s still here, Edith…uh, i mean Ellen.

It’s a pity one can’t teach talent.

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By John in Bear, December 7, 2006 at 2:46 pm Link to this comment
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I read this today, the sixth anniversary of the day my father died.  Truly, today I understand empathy.  Thank you, Ellen Goodman for finding and expressing beauty at such a sad event.  Your tale is all about something I have held on to for many years - Don’t cry because it’s over, smile because it happened.

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By richard wolstein, December 7, 2006 at 2:10 pm Link to this comment
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I am a regular reader of your columns and always find them very wise. The tribute to your mother brought tears to the eyes of this 61 year old fairly tough guy and I appreciate your wisdom even more now.

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By D. Carswell, December 7, 2006 at 1:31 pm Link to this comment
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Dear Ms. Goodman:

You kept her to age 92, and honoured her life beautifully. How fortunate you and she were to have each other. To see her spirit live on in your family is a gift of grace. Thank you for sharing with us.

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By Marsha Griffith, December 7, 2006 at 10:47 am Link to this comment
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I knew I loved Ellen Goodman before I read this essay about her mother, now I just love her even more.  Thank you so much for sharing.

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