Happy Mother's Day
I'm posting a photograph of my mother at my wedding in 1964.
This was before we were enlightened about not wearing animal furs for fashion.
My poem is about Mom donning a mink stole this solitary day in her life.
A MINK FOR MOM
Mom had no interest in fashion—
At home, she wore a cotton housedress
with a bib-front apron over it
trimmed with a bit of rickrack or piping
Two work dresses were enough
one to wear, one to air on the clothesline
There was nothing fussy about her
She didn’t mind if her coat was a bit frayed
around the cuffs. It was warm
Didn’t care if her clothes
were up to the minute
if her hemlines were the right length
if her lipstick was a popular shade
or her hair, the latest style
Mom hardly ever got all dressed up
except on the rarest occasions
a New Year’s Eve, perhaps
when she would put on
her black dress and pumps
a rhinestone necklace and earrings
from the back of her bureau drawer
and to us, she looked like a queen
That’s when she and dad would go
with our neighbors, the Komorowskis
to Tammany Hall Bar in Secaucus
It was owned by Henry B. Krajewski
the pig farmer who repeatedly ran
for president, then governor, then senator
although he never won an election
They would have a rollicking
good time drinking Polish beer
and eating pierogis and kielbasy
and come home in the wee hours
with noisemakers, silly hats
and Krajewski’s latest campaign buttons
When I was planning my wedding
Mom did all she could to help
She worked part-time at Quackenbush’s
and was able to order the gown
of my dreams using her 20% discount
We selected my veil, my shoes
shopped for this, bought that
She made it all about me
but I wanted it to be about her, too
so we found a lovely blue gown
its bodice embellished with sequins
(I don’t think my mother had ever
worn a gown before
or anything with sequins)
Then we shopped for accessories
and waited for the big day
My fiancé had given me
a beautiful white fox stole to wear
on our November wedding day
then I learned his mother
planned to wear her mink
(This was in the ’60s
before animal activists picketed
and protested the wearing of furs)
I wanted my mom to look just as elegant
as my mother-in-law
so I rented a stole for her to wear
Unaccustomed to such luxuriousness
I could see she felt awkward
watched her squirm and fidget
unsure about what to do
wrapped up in all that finery
but I also knew she felt cherished
deeply, deeply cherished
I still have a photograph of her—
my mom, my queen
mother-of-the-bride…in mink!
Maude Carolan Pych
Hi Maude, I left a comment, but not sure if it went through.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful imagery and such a touching description of your lovely Mom and your relationship with her. It made me think of my own mother (my parents were Polish) and cry. 🌸
Thank you! Look forward to seeing you again soon.
Hugs,
Kathy R.
Hi Kathy, thank you for commenting. I understand how the poem touched your heart. One of my newest poems is, "Sometimes My Own Words Make Me Weep." I love memorializing my mother and others in poetry. The poems keep the memories alive.
ReplyDeleteThe June meeting of NJCWG will be the final meeting of the season. I'll have to miss it. It's the day of my grandson's graduation from high school." Love, Maude