Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts

Saturday, September 10, 2022

MOURNING BY PROXY: Some Thoughts About My Mother and the Queen

 

Two days ago, my brother Ron texted to tell me that Queen Elizabeth had died.  You may be wondering why my American brother felt moved to share this with his American sister.  Even more puzzling will be my confession that I felt emotional upon receiving this news.

 

         It’s not that The Queen loomed large in my life.  She did not.  I am a not a royalist, and I did not pay close attention to the British royals.  Oh, sure, I enjoyed gossip about her disfunctional family as much as the next person, but, really, what is royalty for in the twenty-first century?

 

         There is this, though -- the queen was a bit like furniture.  Let’s call her political furniture, a world leader who was always where we expected her to be, doing what we expected her to do.  She was the one unchanging political fact of the twentieth century.  So, it’s odd, even dislocating, that she is gone.  

 

         But I don’t think that is why my brother texted me, and it is not why I felt emotional upon hearing the news.  

 

It was all about my mother.

 

My mother, who was a Scot, loved the queen, and, while it is true that she would bristle if anyone in her adopted America mistook her Scottish accent for an English accent, she was proud to be British. And she did love the queen, spoke of her as if she knew her personally. So, given that they were on a first-name basis, I will here refer to the queen simply as Elizabeth.

 

My mother was born in Glasgow six years before Elizabeth’s birth in London. She left this life at age 93; Elizabeth made it to 96.  And, although their circumstances could not have been more different, both came of age during, and were shaped by, what my parents’ generation simply referred to as “the war.” (WWII)  

 

         My mother always spoke with admiration about Elizabeth’s father, who, after ascending the throne upon his brother’s abdication, stayed with his wife in London during The Blitz.  Elizabeth and her sister spent most of the war at Windsor Castle, 20 miles outside of London.  My mother and her sister, having little choice, remained in Glasgow, which was bombed during the Blitz.  

 

In 1940, when she was 20, my mother supported the war effort by joining The Women’s Forestry Service, doing what was then considered men’s work, while the men were off fighting.   





 

 

In 1944, when she was 18, Elizabeth joined the Auxiliary Territorial Service, the women’s branch of the British army, as an auto mechanic.  

 


 




 

            In 1943, when she was 23, my mother married my father.  She gave birth to her first child, eleven months later.  Two more children followed.  In 1947, when she was 21, Elizabeth married her prince.  Her first child was born a year later.  Three more children followed.

 

Elizabeth was still a princess when my parents left Scotland for the new world, and when the princess became queen a few years later, my mother proudly displayed her portrait, along with one of Prince Philip, on our living room wall.  So, although most of you probably picture Elizabeth as an old woman, the young queen was a fixture of my childhood. 

 



 

For all of her long life, my mother followed Elizabeth with great attention, speaking of her often and with affection, perhaps even a bit of wistfulness. I think the royal family was a link to the life she had reluctantly left behind when my father decided that the family should move -- first to Canada, and then to the U.S. 

 

         And, so, I am calling my emotion over the queen’s death mourning by proxy.  I am my mother’s proxy, feeling some of what I believe she would have felt.  (I am deeply grateful that she did not live to hear the news of Elizabeth’s passing.) Or maybe it is that the queen was a proxy for my mother.  As long as the queen was alive, my mother’s parallel life wasn’t quite over.   

 

         I don’t know if the monarchy will survive the queen’s passing, and I don’t much care.  I just know that two young women grew up and grew old, more-or-less in tandem, and the second of them has died.   

 

For this I mourn.  

 

 

            

 

Saturday, March 21, 2020

GRATITUDE RUNS: Counting My Blessings in an Uncertain Time

I think one of the most difficult things about this moment is the uncertainty.  You know the questions:  How bad will it be?  Will I get sick?  Will my loved ones/friends get sick?  How long will it last?

I have written before about my parents' experience in the UK during WWII, a time of great fear and uncertainty, a time when they were asking themselves:  Will we survive the bombing?  Can this rationing get any worse?  Will the Germans invade?  See: Joy in Dark Times.  I will not cover that ground again.  This, which I saw on Facebook, is a sufficient reminder that people have been through much worse:

      "To put things in perspective for those of us feeling a bit stir      crazy already--Anne Frank and 7 other people hid in a 450 sq. ft.   attic for 761 days, quietly trying to remain undiscovered to stay alive.  We can . . . spend a few weeks at home."

Today, I want to write about gratitude because gratitude is calming.  Gratitude puts things in perspective.

This morning, the words of a little song called Happiness Runs (what I could remember of them) have been running through my head.  With apologies to the lyricist, I am hereby changing happiness to gratitude:


     Gratitude runs in a circular motion
     Thought is like a little boat upon the sea
     Everybody is a part of everything anyway
     You can have everything if you let yourself be
If we did not already understand this, the pandemic is teaching us that we are, indeed, part of everything else.  Our actions affect the health and safety of others.  And, so, I am passing the time at this moment of isolation by listing below the people and things I am grateful for, in the hope that this list will trigger one of your own and help to calm our boats as we ride along on an unfamiliar sea,

Everyone in the healthcare field, all of whom are risking their health and facing shortages of supplies to keep us safe and well.

First responders, taxi, Uber, and Lyft drivers, who are taking risks to get people to their healthcare providers.

Governors and mayors, who picked up the slack before the federal government got around to taking this seriously, and who  continue to do their best to keep us safe.  

Researchers who are racing to find treatments and a vaccine.

Letter Carriers who continue to touch and carry our mail.

Truck drivers, shelf stockers, cashiers, and all those who are keeping us supplied with food.

Newspaper deliverers and all of those who continue to gather and report the news.

All those who are heeding the call to stay at home in the face of financial hardship.

My husband and my dog who are keeping me company.

Family and friends who are checking in on each other via:

                  Skype
                  Texts
                   Emails
                   Phone calls

I am grateful that we have all of these ways of being in touch at this time.

Good health - so far, so good

Sunshine

Spring!  So grateful this pandemic didn't hit us hard in the dead of winter.

Walks - They are free and safe.

My garden - Saving my sanity.

Birds, especially those singing outside my window and visiting my feeders.

Trees, especially the weeping cherry outside my home office window and the trees in the woods where I walk each day.



My home with its hot running water and central heating.

Music

My writing projects

Books, puzzles, and Netflix

I would love to see your gratitudes in the comments.  And, in 
closing, I would like to share a version of the Buddhist loving kindness meditation:

                    May we be well.
                    May we be free from suffering.
                    May we be comforted.
                    May we be at peace.