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A Mother's Love
by John J. Dwyer
- I have honored my father in this
space, and now I shall honor my mother. For I do not understand her
kind of love.
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It is the love that raised two small
boys whose father had died too young, with no male Christian
relative or friend who could be emulated.
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This love forsook its own dreams and
built into mine, forsook its own hopes for love and tried to teach
me where I should find it and the man I should be when I did. This
love was at all of my baseball games, bringing water—for both
teams—even when the two-parent tandems of the other players
were absent.
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This love, its human body broken by
decades of excruciating, crippling arthritis (one doctor told her,
“you’re tougher’n an ole boot”), taught me
not to give up when I was down, not to quit when it hurt or was
bleeding, to, in fact, as her hero Winston Churchill so eloquently
said, “Never, never, never, never, never give up.”
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This love was the iron that held our
entire extended family together until strokes and heart attacks
beset her and left the rascals to fend for themselves. And fend
they did, some of them forsaking her when she could no longer serve
them in the way they wished her to do.
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This love believed in a son who had
to wear corrective orthopedic shoes and was told never to expect to
run track. By his senior year, he was named one of the 500 best
high school basketball players in the country.
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This love believed in another son
who hardly ever spoke, and said of him, “still waters run
deep.” He grew up to head a fine family with (at latest
count) two wonderful children, serve on his church’s world
missions committee, and minister to her like Jesus asked the Apostle
John to do for His own mother at the cross.
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This love taught me to kneel by my
bed each night and pray.
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It was the love that survived the
staggering death of her own dear sister and best friend at age 25
during child birth, the loss of the “the love of her life”
when he was 35 and she had a two-year-old son and a six-week-old
son, and a second marriage to a man who was repeatedly unfaithful to
her and cleaned out most of her life savings before he managed to
leave. This love survived them all, and yet the statement I most
remember hearing from her all through my life was, “there but
for the grace of God go I.”
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No, there is one other statement I
have heard her say more often. Rather, a thought, finding different
forms at different times. “Be kind to those less fortunate
than you.”
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And so it was that this love,
always, my whole life, taught me to stand up for what I believed in
when I knew it was right, no matter how much it cost me, and this
love that stood up for me and believed in me, even when I was not
worthy to be believed in. Which stood up for me when that second
“father” crushed my young spirit into powder.
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Indeed, it was the love of a middle
child who wished silently for the love of her own mother that never
came—even as my whole life I remember my mother always being
drawn to old people, sick people, and little people. In other
words, the people who could not make it without help and who could
never pay her back for any of hers.
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It was this love that spent a
lifetime telling me, without ever once saying it in words, that I
would never lack for love and care as she had.
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If you see her now, it will be with
a cane or wheel chair. Her hair is white, her body battered, and it
is hard for her to make it to church—thought without fail she
is up at 6:30 a.m. on Sunday to hear our pastor, Skip Ryan, on WRR
radio.
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But her countenance is bright, her
humor and intellect undimmed, her wisdom still penetrating, and she
is never happier than when holding one of her little grandchildren
in her arms.
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I can think of many lines that might
serve as her epitaph. One keeps coming to mind, words she has
sometimes said. “I’ll always be happy if I can have the
old home movies of my babies with me.”
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I don’t understand that kind
of love.
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Where else can you find her? In the
final 22 verses of the Old Testament book of Proverbs.
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- “Charm is deceitful,
and beauty is passing: but a woman who fears the Lord, she shall be
praised.”
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