Day 216

The Perfect Cuff

Mom's Silver, Brass & Malachite Cuff

Mom's Silver, Brass & Malachite Cuff

I love this sweet cuff.  There is no designer that I recognize, but there is a stamp from Mexico. I have a strong feeling that this was purchased on her honeymoon to Mexico with my stepfather.  She loved this sort of thing.  Just this morning one of my dear friends asked about it.  It looks so in step with the rest of the jewelry I usually wear, and I really love it, makes me happy every time I put it on.

The stack I wore today

The stack I wore today


Day 197...

This little bird has flown

Tiny Gold Bird Stick Pin

Tiny Gold Bird Stick Pin

Oh this little pin.  Stick pin to be exact. This was something I found when I was home this summer, long after I thought there would be anything left of my mothers to still find.  I was surprised that something so tiny had shown up, but really, that's the point, it was so little, it sort of fell through the cracks. I have always written about how I enjoy those rare times when I can post a photo of my mother wearing a something that I have inherited, but in this case, the photo is far more bittersweet.

In the photo above, you can see the weariness in my mothers eyes, or at least I can.  This photo was taken by my mother's best friend, photographer Frances Cox.  My mother could always be herself in front of Frances, and even if she hadn't been able to, I think her condition may have been hard to hide.  In this photo my mother is struggling deeply, in the throws of chemical dependence.  What had started out as the good time 70's, was rapidly descending into a crippling addiction.  

It is never pleasant for me to write about that time in my mother's life, and yet, to gloss over it would feel so phony.  There is no perfect family, no perfect parent.  My mother fought tooth and nail for her sobriety when she finally sought help, and that eventually overshadowed those dark times.  

Actually, I cannot believe the fight in her, she never gave up.  She just could not win against an unwinnable disease. 

Currently it is 4;22 am, and I am doing all the things that people tell you not to do when you have insomnia, sitting up, staring at a computer screen.  Today, I lost this pin.  I was out shopping for work, carrying too much in my arms, and it slipped off my shirt.  The level of sadness I feel is way beyond what I believe is healthy for a little piece of costume jewelry. The lurch in my stomach realizing it was gone, the fear of it being trampled under someones foot, or swept up into the garbage.  "Little bird," my mother sometimes called me that.  I am so, so, sorry I lost you.  The pin is not you.  None of these items is you, and yet, losing one of them is breaking my heart.