- Sunday, May 12, 2013

ANALYSIS/OPINION:

Growing up in Marion County, S.C., in the 1960s, I could not at the time appreciate the incredible wonders of my mother. She never thought she would marry and in her 30s was living at home with her father, Armstrong Howard. My father, James Williams, had been married to Theola Livingston and had four children.

In giving birth to the fourth child, Theola died while in labor. This was January 1957, and my father desperately needed a wife to raise those four children and bring stability to the household while he worked the family farm. He knew my mother through her good name and sterling reputation. It was no secret that she was a virgin, and during those days that was something that ladies coveted and cherished.

As customary then, my father went to my grandfather and made it clear to him that he was in a desperate situation and was in need of a wife. Grandpa Howard said to my mother: “Thelma, I’m not gonna be with you always and someday you’re gonna get old and regret not having children and a family of your own.” Then, having never known each other, dated, kissed or even hugged, they were married one month later in 1957.

My mother, Thelma Williams, was thrust into an inherited family of four and eventually had eight children of her own, two of them stillborn. She loved the first four as if they were her own and struggled mightily to provide a loving, nurturing and stable household for our family.

Stories like these would be unfathomable today, laughable, but those are the things that our mothers were made of. They saw marriage and responsibility to their children as a duty and a calling: a labor of love. My mother made many sacrifices in the early years of that marriage, never being able to afford the nicer things of life, having to do patchwork and makeshift work to assemble something that looked like a home, and often sacrificing herself and her own personal desires for commitment to her family as my father developed and built the Williams farm. My mother’s favorite refrain was, “Lord, just let my last days be my best days.”

Well, according to the calendar, it’s Mother’s Day again. I’ve written about this subject consistently for the past 22 years. Oftentimes at my home, I invite elderly ladies from the church over for Saturday brunch.

Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II was recently hospitalized and my family kept her in our prayers. When she was released from the hospital and continued her business at the age of 87, we fell in love with her all over again. My connection was that she and my mother were born in the same year and one week apart. And like Elizabeth, my mother has never worn pants, always wears a hat in public and always elevates the dress code wherever she goes. Mom knows how to put those threads together.

I also find myself always wanting to give a senior person a hand or give up my seat. I’ve never met a senior citizen I couldn’t talk to and I finally figured out why: because my sensitivity and dedication to my own mother as she grows old has made me more sensitive and caring toward those in their jubilee years. Every Thursday on our syndicated radio show, Dr. Thelma Reese and Dr. Barbara Fleisher (both in their late 70s) join me for a weekly one-hour broadcast titled “Elder Chicks.” The show is popular because it keeps us updated on the latest trends, care and activities of our beloved senior-citizen community.

My mother, who turned 87 on April 9, is sweet and adorable and is in much more need of her children than ever before. Yes, she gives the impression that she’s still tough and independent, but the simple things remind me that she’s getting older and that I need to enjoy every waking moment with her.

Knowing that we all have a limited time on this Earth, I make each day and moment count with my mother and other mothers who have mentored me along the way. Every morning for the past 15 years without interruption, at 5:30 a.m. I call my mother and it’s as if she’s hearing from me for the first time. She just had her annual physical and her doctor informed her that she’s in the best health he has seen in many years. My sister, brothers and nephew are always by her side when she’s having her regular doctor and laboratory visits. They have made it clear that they will always be by her side in the moments of her health care. Her response, “I sure appreciate it.” We all went to Myrtle Beach, S.C., this Mother’s Day weekend to celebrate that holiday as well as her recent 87th birthday.

The sadness of all of this is that so many sons and daughters these days go through life never understanding what it means to really have loved and been loved unconditionally by the progenitors of our society. The Bible’s definition of love could not have described a mother’s love for her children more poignantly.

My siblings and I never have to wonder where our blessing lies in life because just hearing her gentle voice or seeing her caring face is a reminder of all the love we’ve received. In my lifetime, I have seen five of the original seven wonders of the world: the Taj Mahal, the Pyramids, the ruins of the Parthenon, the Great Wall of China, and what’s left of the hanging gardens of Babylon. Those are incredible and magnificent creations, but I’ve concluded that the greatest wonder of them all is a mother’s love.

• Read Armstrong Williams, author of the new book “Reawakening Virtues.” Join him from 4 to 5 a.m. and 6 to 7 p.m. daily on Sirius/XM Power 128. Become a fan on Facebook and follow him on Twitter.

• Armstrong Williams can be reached at 125939@example.com.

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