| Every year on my birthday, from the time I turned 12, one white gardenia
was delivered anonymously to me at my house. There was never a card or note,
and calls to the florist were in vain because the purchase was always made
in cash.
After a while, I stopped trying to discover the identity of the sender,
I just delighted in the beauty and heady perfume of that one magical,
perfect white flower nestled in folds of soft pink tissue paper.
But I never stopped imagining who the sender might be. Some of my happiest
moments were spent in day dreams about someone wonderful and exciting,
but too shy or eccentric to make known his or her identity. In my teen
years, it was fun to speculate that the sender might be a boy I had a
crush on, or even someone I didn't know who had noticed me..
My mother often contributed to my speculations, she's asked me if there
was someone for whom I had done a special kindness, who might be showing
appreciation anonymously. She reminded me of the times when I'd been riding
my bike and our neighbour drove up with her car full of groceries and
children.
I always helped her unload the car and made sure the children didn't run
into the road. Or maybe the mystery sender was the old man across the
street. I often retrieved his mail during the winter, so he wouldn't have
to venture down his icy steps.
My mother did her best to foster my imagination about the gardenia. She
wanted her children to be creative. She also wanted us to feel cherished
and loved, not just by her, but by the world at large.
When I was 17, a boy broke my heart. The night he called for the last
time, I cried myself to sleep. When I awoke in the morning, there was
a message scribbled on my mirror in red lipstick: "Heartily know,
when half-gods go, the gods arrive." I thought about the quotation
from Emerson for a long time, and I left it where my mother had written
it until my heart healed. When I finally went for the glass cleaner, my
mother knew that everything was all right again.
But there were some hurts that my mother couldn't heal. A month before
my high school graduation, my father died suddenly of a heart attack.
My feelings ranged from simple grief to abandonment, fear, distrust and
overwhelming anger that my dad was missing some of the most important
events in my life. I became completely uninterested in my upcoming graduation,
the senior-class play and the prom-events that I had worked on and looked
forward to. I even considered staying home to attend college instead of
going away as I had planned because it felt safer.
My mother, in the midst of her own grief, wouldn't hear of me missing
out on any of these things. The day before my father died, she and I had
gone shopping for a prom dress and had found a spectacular one - yards
and yards of dotted Swiss in red, white and blue. But it was the wrong
size, and when my father died the next day, I forgot all about the dress.
My mother didn't. The day before the prom, I found that dress waiting
for me - in the right size. It was draped majestically over the living
room sofa, presented to me artistically and lovingly. I may not have cared
about having a new dress, but my mother did.
She cared how we children felt about ourselves. She imbued us with a sense
of the magic in the world, and she gave us the ability to see beauty even
in the face of adversity.
In truth, my mother wanted her children to see themselves like the gardenia
* lovely, strong, perfect, with an aura of magic and perhaps a bit of
mystery.
My mother died when I was 22, only 10 days after I was married. That
was the year the gardenias stopped coming.
กก ~By Marsha Arons~
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