Essay: Like mother, like daughter

Essay: Like mother, like daughter

A daughter reflects on notable events in her mother's life and appreciates the worth of a mother's work.
Updated:
2009-10-21 22:07
Published:
2003-10-08 00:00
By 
Maggie Dwyer

The making of a mother

Our mother leans down to kiss her daughters goodnight. Her cheeks are sweet with the scents of powder and rouge. Where are you going? we cry. In our cries she hears a slightly indignant tone. Where is she going without us? It must be a weekend when her father is visiting and watching over the household. She has a date with Dad.

Young love
She cherishes the first valentine he gave her. Their courtship was a simple one. He was a close friend of her brother's, and they met at one of the dances that were held in local homes in the final years of the Great Depression. Both families were members of St. Patrick's Church at Kinkora, Ont. Their grandparents and great-grandparents, early settlers from Cork and Kerry, were buried side by side in the cemetery and memorialized in stained-glass windows given to the church in their honour.

Their marriage banns were read out here, but they didn't hear them. Following the local custom, they had slipped away to attend Mass in a neighbouring parish, avoiding the initial reaction from the crush of well-wishers. It was as if they had eloped. Their friends and neighbours held a wedding shower for them at the church hall and wrote a loving letter of good wishes. They married in September 1940, after the harvest was in and my mother was free to leave her widowed father and brothers.

We always shared
Their deep and enduring love was the inspiration and foundation for their partnership in marriage and family life. We didn't always have much, she says, but we always shared. Their early married years were spent in northern Ontario at Kirkland Lake, where my father sold magazine subscriptions. Mom contracted a serious illness there and lost her first pregnancy. It would be five years before my older sister was born. Long awaited and happily welcomed.

Their next move was south to Waterloo, where he worked as a machinist during wartime and she as a clerk in a jewelry store. After a few months she gave up this job, which she enjoyed, at Dad's request -- women did not work outside the home unless economics required it. She stayed at home from then on.

Best for young feet
Several pairs of white high-top leather shoes are lined up in a precise row. It is late in the evening, and Mom has finished polishing them. The thin, chalky smell of the polish hangs in the kitchen air. This is the last on her long list of daily duties. It is after eight in the evening, and her little girls are upstairs in bed. The house is quiet, and she will sit down with her husband now, to read the newspaper and listen to the radio. My mother says she had all of us in these shoes to the age of six, in keeping with the wisdom of her day concerning what was best for young feet.

In those years, homemaking and caring for children were labour-intensive -- think of the meals, the laundry and ironing, the cleaning. Six daughters born within 10 years and the birth of the youngest celebrated with the gift of a fur coat for their mother. My sisters and I grew up in a house where the linen was fresh, the meals made from scratch, the furniture gleaming, our hair curled in ringlets and our little white shoes polished.

The true value of her work
There was laughter, music and kindness. We accepted it all in the selfish way of children. She knew the true value of her work. If we forgot to compliment her on yet another delicious meal, we were reminded. She would quietly say, "Well, I guess that tomorrow night, I'll put a bale of hay in the middle of the table....” We'd hurry to make amends and pour her tea.

On a warm afternoon in a long summer season of canning, Mom is efficiently quartering pears. I am breaking a clove into quarters and inhaling its pungent scent while I listen to a story about how she and her mother and sister managed the cooking for a threshing crew of 20 men.

She excelled in domestic arts
A woman's work on the family farm was essential, respected within the family. The work and roles of men and women were distinct and separate but complementary and accorded equal value. Women looked after the house but were not permitted inside the barn. Mom recalls that her father allowed women to come to the door but no farther. She tells us with pleasure that on days when her mother had to go to town, which meant Stratford, "She wouldn't have the buggy out of the drive before I started to bake." She was 10 when she began, and her pastry has always been light. She excelled in the domestic arts, and this excellence was the reason Dad gained 40 pounds in their first year together.

Mom has many stories and sayings about women and kitchens, recipes and providing hospitality. One of my favourites, on the occasion of unexpected dinner guests: if you haven't got much to put out, use your best tablecloth. In our house the cloth was white damask and the dishes were her mother's.

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Essay: Like mother, like daughter

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  • Eileen wrote:

    Nov 21, 2003

    2009-09-22 10:47 AM

    Not a very insightful article. Bland and poorly written. Glosses over the struggle of women's oppression and focuses instead on the so-called charms of domestic bliss. The most contentious line of all is the one that states, "The work and roles of men and women were distinct and separate but complementary and accorded equal value". This is a highly contradictory statement that is far from true. Women's work in the home has never been accorded equal value with that of men's. In terms of economics, Western society places value only on work that earns a salary. Following this logic, women's work in the domestic sphere will only be granted equal value in today's economy when the women performing these duties are paid for the value of their work. The day when women are paid a fair salary to stay at home and care for children is far from becoming reality. Until then, women's work in the home will continue to be taken for granted. There is little comfort to be found in articles such as this, which attempt to paint a rosy picture of what is truly an overlooked and undervalued part of our society’s economy.
  • Paraska wrote:

    Feb 13, 2004

    2009-09-22 10:48 AM

    I loved the article! Thank you! I could so relate to it, as I must be of the same generation as the writer. I too looked at my mom with the same eyes when I was younger. I now have 2 daughters of my own along with 2 sons. My daughters are 21 and 18 and we are very close. I am so blessed and grateful for that. We appreciate each other's company, thoughts and ideas and I value their input so much. They keep me young. We talk about everything and they are such good people. They worry for their future, but I don't. This artcle brought me back to when I waas a young mom and I wonder if my daughters will struggle as we did in the 70's making our choices. But I will be there for them, as I will understand better than my own mom did. Thank you.
  • lucie wrote:

    May 10, 2004

    2009-09-22 10:51 AM

    it's very good to hear the gratitude you hold for your mother. Life is short and often we forget to thank the givers of life, mothers, the proper appreciation they deserve. For years my mother cooked, cleaned, and nurtured her children, she was a stay home mom with 9 children on the farm and she worked long days to keep us well. It never ceases to amaze me the amount of wisdom my mother has. Yes she is still alive after 9 children, and yes she still cooks great meals and makes bread and sews and cleans and babysits and advises and ...... the list could go on and on .... yes my mother my hero was a tough bird and i thank her for teaching me everything she has taught me. never give up and yes your ears are golden for all the troubles you've heard. For all mom's who are mom's I salute you for i am a mom too a single mom at that and i am proud of my child who is a teenager and is the apple of my eye. Thanks ladies for reminding me of the simple but rewarding job mothering is HAPPY MOTHERS DAY
  • patraicia parsons wrote:

    May 04, 2009

    2009-11-18 3:00 PM

    Don't forget about mothers and sons!
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