Acts of love
Posted by Tommy on November 05, 1998 at 08:36:51:
> A WHITE GARDENIA > by Marsha Aaron > > Every year on my birthday > from the time I turned 12, > a white gardenia > was delivered to my house. > No card or note > was ever attached to it, > and calls to the florist > were always in vain. > > After a while > I stopped trying to discover > the identity of the sender > and just delighted in the beauty > and heady perfume of that > one magical, perfect white flower > nestled in soft pink tissue paper. > > I never stopped imagining > who the anonymous sender might be, > and some of my happiest moments > were spent daydreaming about > someone wonderful and exciting > perhaps too shy to make > his or her identity known. > > My mother would contribute > to these imaginings. > > She would ask > if there were someone for whom > I had shown a special kindness, > a neighbor I may have helped > or the elderly man across the street > whose mail I picked up for him > so he wouldn't take the chance > of getting hurt on icy mornings. > > As a teen-ager, > I had more fun speculating > that it might be a boy I had a crush on > or one who had noticed me. > > When I was 17 > a boy broke my heart > and I cried myself asleep. > > When I awoke in the morning, > there was a message > written on my mirror in red lipstick. > > Kindly know > when half-gods go, > true gods will arrive. > > I read that message often > until my heart healed > and when I finally went > to get the glass cleaner, > my mother knew everything > was all right again. > > One month before > my high school graduation > my father died of a heart attack, > and I lost all interest in everything. > > My mother > in the midst of her own grief > would not let me miss the prom. > > The day before my father died > my mother and I had gone > shopping for a prom dress. > We found a spectacular one > with yards and yards of dotted swiss > in red white and blue > that made me feel like Scarlet O'Hara, > but it was the wrong size. > > When my father died > I forgot all about the dress. > > My mother did not. > > The day before the prom > I found the very same dress, > in the right size, > draped majestically > over the living room sofa. > It wasn't just delivered in a box, > but presented to me > beautifully, artistically, lovingly. > > I didn't care if I had a dress or not, > but my mother did. > > She wanted me to feel loved and lovable, > creative and imaginative, > imbued with a sense that > there was magic in the world > and beauty even in the face of adversity. > > She wanted me > and her other children > to see ourselves > much like the gardenia, > lovely, strong and perfect > with an aura of magic > and perhaps a bit of mystery. > > My mother died ten days > after I got married. > > I was 22 > and that was the year > the gardenias stopped coming.
[ Back to InfoLanka Jokes Page ]
|
|