This is my mama. On March 9, she went home to be with her Savior, Jesus Christ. I titled this post, "Temporary Separation" because that's exactly what this is.
"But we do not want you to be uninformed, brothers, about those who are asleep, that you may not grieve as others do who have no hope. For since we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so, through Jesus, God will bring with him those who have fallen asleep. For this we declare to you by a word from the Lord, that we who are alive, who are left until the coming of the Lord, will not precede those who have fallen asleep. For the Lord himself will descend from heaven with a cry of command, with the voice of an archangel, and with the sound of the trumpet of God. And the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive, who are left, will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we will always be with the Lord . . . " 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18
It's hard to write this post so I think I'll just share the eulogy I gave at her Celebration of Life Service along with some of my favorite pictures of her.
I'm sure we all have memories of mom. Memories of her as a
sister, as a neighbor or friend and for me as a mom.
Now those who knew mom knew some simple facts about her.
If I ask you her favorite color you would say ….. of course,
PINK. Whether it was picking clothing, jewelry, flowers or furniture—we knew
what she would pick. Even in recent years when her ability to communicate failed,
she would still always point to the pink option!
Mom loved to laugh. Whether it was watching some dumb TV
show or laughing by phone or in person with her sisters or neighbors or
accusing someone of cheating at Uno, she loved a good laugh.
(Mom dressed for a Halloween costume party!)
She loved to eat. Enough said. She hated to cook though. When
they invented hamburger helper she rejoiced.
And as each new version came out, we had them all.
Mom loved perfume. Even in recent years as we'd wheel
through the mall, a stop at the perfume counter was a necessity to spray on as
many different samples as possible.
She loved music. As a kid I remember from very early in the morning
until late in the day, Moody's radio
station WCRF blared from a radio and later a stereo in the living room. Most of
you know how she loved the Gaithers. In recent years when she had lost most of
her physical and mental abilities she would watch old reruns for hours
marveling at how good everyone looked, even those who had long ago passed away.
Mom offered her I love you’s and hugs freely which is a
treasure many don’t often get from their parent. She was generous with not only
her immediate family but her brothers, sisters, nieces, nephews and
grandchildren. She had a tender heart and hated to see any one in pain.
(Yes, that's me next to my mom on Easter Sunday. We always got new dresses, and white gloves. Dad always got mom and me a corsage to wear to church.)
Mom was a product of the 50's and good Hungarian upbringing
that shaped many of her opinions about proper attire and homemaking. Now mom
and I often butted heads because I didn’t share her penchant for things like
jewelry, a clean house and ….. lipstick. My own husband and kids may remember
her telling me to "Put on some lipstick…. You look dead." Before mom went to be
with the Lord, I was talking to my daughter Sarah on the phone. We were
reminiscing about mom when Sarah asked me, “Mom, are you wearing lipstick ??” Well
mom, today I’m wearing lipstick in honor of you.
(I found this dress the other day still in her closet in pristine condition. It's a real treasure!)
Mom was clean. I mean REALLY clean. There was a set schedule
for ironing days. (SHE ironed pillow cases. Mom, I DID iron mine for a FEW weeks after I got married….). There were
certain days for laundry, mopping floors, dusting and washing rugs. There was
the spring and fall cleaning which entailed washing all the walls, baseboards,
taking drapes to the cleaners and dusting the ceilings. You could always see
out of HER windows. You could safely eat
off of her floors. When she came to visit I would apologize for the condition
of MY house. She would shrug and say something about having little kids and
being busy…. Then she’d say "Where's your Pledge?"
(Mom and dad were married for 63 years!)
As a young wife of, as she would say, “a tall, thin, good
looking man”, I needed to fix myself up before he came home each day. I
remember as a little girl seeing her go into her room just before dad came home
where she would then powder her nose and yes, refresh that lipstick. To this
day (most days) I “freshen up” before Matt comes home mom just like you did.
After my first date with Matt, she told me in so many words
that he probably wouldn’t be back. 36 years later….and today he’s here to do
your funeral. So you weren’t right about some things. But you were right on
target about a lot of other things.
You were right that when teaching Sunday school, a snack for
the kids is essential.
You were right that my husband is tall, thin and good
looking.
You were right that once I had kids of my own I’d understand
sacrifice.
(That's mom holding me)
You were right to set an example of reading the Bible. I
remember every afternoon you would go into the spare room, sit in the rocker,
take out your Bible and have your devotions. You loved the Lord. You accepted
JESUS at the age of 28 with Pastor Simm. Because of this, you were confident that when your spirit left this body, you would
be with your Savior Jesus Christ.
You were right that a mother's love is unconditional. I
learned that from you. While we disagreed fiercely on much, I never doubted
your love.
(Holding our twin girls Sarah and Megan 26 years ago)
Even when you couldn’t often string two words together in recent
months, you would often shock me by ending
our phone conversations with “I love you!”
(Mom with our son Aaron 29 years ago)
You were right about your faith in Jesus. You were right
that because you placed your faith in him for salvation of sin as a young woman that today, you are dancing in heaven, with a perfectly clear, dementia-free mind and
arthritis-free body. So on what REALLY
mattered, you were right.
This last picture is one of my favorites: My "saucy" young mama with, as the caption on this photo read: "Ruth and Sailor"! We found several photos of mom and her sisters with "sailors" hahaha!
I opened this post with 1 Thessalonians 4:13-17 but left verse 18 for the end which says:
"Therefore encourage one another with these words."
I'm so thankful that I'll see mom again one day and it is indeed a TEMPORARY separation.
I love you mama.