This Sunday mother's throughout the country will be honored
in many and various ways. Toddlers and preschool children will cheerfully drag
their mothers to their favorite fast food places and older children will escort
them, with great decorum, to restaurants with actual dinnerware. The majority
of children will serve their mothers breakfast in bed, a calamitous tradition
that refuses to die. Adult children with children of their own will have greater
reverence for their mothers, graced with understanding and empathy. Mothers
will righteously accept the presents, cards, flowers and candy, and promises of
exemplary behavior in the future. She has always and will continue to deserve
the esteem bestowed upon her by her family on this one honored day of each
year.
Motherhood, while fulfilling in ways too numerous to
mention, has never been easy. Today it is even more difficult due to the
diverse roles played by the 21th century mother. Some mothers are the sole
support of the family; others work to supplement insufficient incomes, while many
choose to balance a career with caretaking — all monumental achievements. Some
households with dual incomes have learned to share the ongoing chores of home
maintenance and child care, but it usually falls to the mother to be the
primary nurturer, manager, coordinator and ‘gopher’. In spite of reports on
‘burnout’ among working mothers, and ‘latchkey’ kids left alone too much, many
American women are proving themselves capable of being both mother and working
woman, placing the emphasis on quality versus quantity time with their children.
However, a small percentage of women have elected to forgo
their careers, reasoning that careers can be resumed, but child-rearing is a onetime
occupation. Due to the trend toward women bearing children later in life, some
women have worked and established careers for 10 or 15 years before having
children. The skills they've attained are often utilized in creating home
enterprises and small businesses, allowing them time with their children.
Unlike Father's Day, which was erratic in its installment, Mother’s
Day was accepted with enthusiasm. In May of 1907, Anna M. Jarvis of
Philadelphia was inspired by the idea that at least once a year children should
pay tribute to their mothers. She organized a special Mothers church service
and the concept quickly spread to other churches. By 1911, the observance was
widespread, including every state in the union, plus Canada, Mexico, South
America, Africa, China, Japan and several islands. Leaflets proposing certain
exercises were printed In 10 different languages and distributed to various
countries. What the leaflets said in part was: “A day that has shown that it
has heart and living interest for all classes, races, creeds, native and
foreign-born, high and low, rich and poor, scoffer and churchmen, man, women
and child, is Mother’s Day, observed on the second Sunday of May. The common
possession of the living world is a mother . . . .”
A Mother's Day International Association was incorporated in
December of 1912 to promote a greater observance of the day. The following May,
the House of Representatives unanimously adopted a resolution calling upon all
government officials to wear a white carnation in celebration of Mother's Day.
In 1914, Congress designated Mother's Day as an official holiday and asked
Pres. Woodrow Wilson to display the national flag on all public buildings. On
May 9, the president issued a proclamation asking the people to follow suit and
display flags on their homes as ‘a public expression of our love and reverence
for the mothers of the country’. The wearing of white carnations on Mother's
Day was modified to distinguish living mothers from those deceased. White
flowers were worn by the motherless and red flowers by children with living
mothers. Gift-giving by children became popular, especially homemade gifts and
cards. One gift in great demand for Mother's Day was the reproduction of
Whistler’s portrait of his mother, the most famous mother portrait of the
times.
Ever since Eve rocked the cradle that begat civilization, mothers
held an almost mystical place in society. Research shows that even the caveman,
while chauvinistic to the nth degree, cherished and protected his mate, knowing
instinctively that without her the clan would become extinct. The cave woman was
healer, food gatherer, herbalist and fur-skinner, as well as mother. The custom
of holding festivals to honor motherhood dates back to
the ancient Greeks who worshiped Cybele, mother of the gods. Rome adopted the
tradition around 250 BC and celebrated the festival of Hilaria on the Ides of
March. The festivities lasted three days and included rites in woods and caves,
significantly different from modern celebrations.
Today's mother has exhibited proficiency in job skills,
self-reliance, and creativity while continuing to supply the cohesive element
that binds the family unit. Possibly the only thing that a mother cannot be is
a father. On this Mother's Day, as children and fathers lavishly pile gifts and
admiration upon her, the mother is reminded of the importance of her role. When
beset with trials and stress that would devastate the average person, the
mother does her job and does it well; because it is a most rewarding occupation
with no mandatory retirement. The benefits of loving and molding young minds
far outweigh the tribulations of guiding children from infancy to adulthood.
Abraham Lincoln said it best: “All that I am, or hope to be, I owe to my
mother."
Happy Mother's Day, Micki! <3
ReplyDeleteThanks, Bette and back to you!!
ReplyDeleteI hope you have a great Mother's Day Micki
ReplyDeleteThanks, Brian, so nice of you to say so.
ReplyDelete