Happy Mother's Day!
A problem among humans is a tendency to expect every holiday to be wonderfully the same every year if we perform the same family rituals every year with precision. That expectation is just not realistic. Life happens and we learn as we age to bend and adapt to the seasons of our lives.
Sometimes it's helpful to buck up and get ourselves in a celebratory mood and other times it's just as helpful to let a holiday pass with little fanfare. Every person is different.
My husband and I are about to be married 30 years and we've been together almost 32. That's a lot of water under the bridge. We've been through some pretty traumatic times during those years. Some we've healed from together and others we are still working on.
My husband lost his mother last May 1 and was devastated. She had been ill, but her death was unexpected. He doesn't "do" feelings. I grew up in a family that did. It's painful to have him shut down from me emotionally and retreat into himself, but that is his style. That doesn't mean that I don't call him out on occasion when enough is enough. There are times when we all need professional help to get us through the really bad times either from a spiritual leader, a pharmaceutical or a therapist. That's why they exist.
I lost my father to cancer in 1995 two days before Thanksgiving. My mother's health has been especially poor this last year, and I don't look forward to her passing. For me right now, the issue aside from not having her around is acknowledging that my time will some day run out, too. I guess that's part and parcel of what we call a "mid-life crisis".
I have a cache of dreams and plans that I've built over the years and not acted upon or fulfilled. Time will run out, and I had better revise that list and get started on "doing" instead of "fixing to do". Death and serious illness can serve as a big wake-up call.
But life is what happens when you're busy making plans. You'll find the comfort that you need with time and grace. Listen to your soul and give yourself permission to do what you need to do. For me, that includes crying in front of the children and telling my husband what I think of his inappropriate behavior (even if "sometimes" I'm the one behaving inappropriately). Hey! We're human. We have feelings. We make mistakes. We forgive each other and make allowances for each other's good and bad behavior.
Above all: Celebrate life and acknowledge life's passages. Birth and death are part of the circle of life. I found as I mature I've come to a much richer understanding of that cycle, but the ultimate understanding will not come until I, too, have made that passage.
I'm not in a hurry to get there. I've still got too much to learn and to do right here.