The Authentic Side Of Mothers: Reflections on Mothers on Mother’s Day

With Mother’s Day here, let us all make time to reflect on the value that our mothers had on our lives. Even if you feel she may not have given you what you wanted, she gave you what you needed. How are you expressing gratitude for, or gratitude to, your mother today?

Here’s some reflections about my mother.

I suppose it goes without saying that I wouldn’t be here today if it weren’t for my mother, Joyce Irvine. But I also would not be who I am today were it not for my mother. The vital impact she had on me as a mentor, teacher, guide, and healer came from the strength of something that lay beyond all those roles.

Soon after Joyce’s untimely death in 1999, my sister and I were leaning out her condominium and discovered a worn-out box on the upper shelf of one of her closets. Curious to see what might be inside, we opened it to find hundreds of tattered letters. As we sat and started poring through them, we soon realized that these were piles of love letters written to Joyce by her young husband, Ted Harling, from the cockpit of a Lancaster Bomber over a war-torn Europe where he served as a flight lieutenant during World War II. Within the pile there was also a group of letters that were Joyce’s letters to Ted.

A deep and sincere appreciation along with a resounding sadness swept over me as we read these letters. We realized that many of those long missives written by an exposed, loving, romantic, and anguished young war bride were actually returned to her unopened after Ted was killed in action, leaving her a two-year-old daughter to raise with no father.

There are myriad ways that a mother can impact her son or daughter’s life, and something very profound happened to me the day I read my mother’s love letters. I started to see that beyond the traditional concept of “mother” is a real woman with genuine emotions, passion, pain, and pleasure. We expect our mothers to be the stable rock in our lives and amidst our expectations we somehow miss the authentic humanness that lies below the surface of what we know as our “mother.”

It seems strange that I didn’t see this vulnerable side of my mother while she was alive. I was blind to most of her romantic side, her fearful side, her imperfect side. I also know that in her need to be a “strong” and “good” mother, she wasn’t willing to expose these aspects of her personality. As for my part, I know that when she was alive I spent more energy reacting to her instead of valuing her. Now that our personalities don’t block us, I am able to appreciate her with a renewed level of respect, love, and gratitude. Having survived the death of two husbands, the Great Depression, World War II, being a single parent for many years, and pioneering a career at a time when mothers were expected to stay at home, my mother was perhaps the most courageous woman I have ever known. It has taken me many years to appreciate the strength of her audacious, compassionate spirit. She was a tremendous inspiration to me.

What I offer are three lessons from these insights:

1. Let us recognize the inner lives of our mothers. May we realize with a deeper sense of appreciation, not just the things that our mothers “did” or “do” for us or to us, but also who this woman is and was: a real human being with a real history, real needs, real dreams, real emotions, and real values. This is what we need to value most about our mothers.

2. For mothers, it is okay at times to expose your real feelings, to be more vulnerable with your children and not be afraid to show more aspects of who you are as a person. Your children need to see this side of their mother. How can we possibly help our children deal effectively with the traumas of life if we shelter them by hiding our vulnerable side from them? They need to see us facing life honestly as they must learn to do the same.

3. For those of you who are mothers, you don’t have to be perfect. You just have to be more fully human. As you come to know yourself and share this self with those you love, you will offer your children a gift of inspiration. And who knows: one day they may unwrap this gift. For those of you who are mothers, my hope is that as you take some time out of your busy lives to tune in and attend to the humanness of the “real,” authentic self that lives beyond the roles, responsibilities, and expectations that come with being a mother, you will discover more appreciation and compassion for yourself.

I conclude with a tribute to my mother by passing along some of her amazing wisdom I discovered in her journal, months after her death:

“Every parent, no matter how hard they try, will be both a blessing and a curse to their children. My hope is that my children will appreciate the ‘blessing,’ if not immediately then later in life, and perhaps more importantly that they will take the ‘curse’ and, like an oyster irritated by a grain of sand, over time use it as a catalyst to build layers of character and understanding—thus producing a pearl. —Joyce Irvine

I got it Mom. Happy Mother’s Day to mothers everywhere.

 

Leadership, Feminine Power, Love, and Christmas

I’ve been away the past few weeks, and just realized that my last entry was a reaction to the Tiger Woods state-of-affairs, so I thought it would be better to leave something more thought-provoking to reflect on over the holidays. Last night we saw the movie, BLINDSIDE. It was a wonderful story that beautifully illustrated  the transformative power of the feminine. This is story about an intuitive, compassionate, persistent mother who completely altered the life of a young boy from the ghetto. The mother, played by Sandra Bullock, did what his male coaches and teachers couldn’t. If you are committed to influence others in ways that meet the changing landscape of today’s world, observe the way this mother transformed a life. I teach leaders across this country that leadership is is largely a matter of love. Leadership involves caring about people, not manipulating them. The mother in this movie reminded us that no plant ever grew faster because a gardener demanded or threatened it to do so. Plants grow only when the conditions are right and they receive proper care. Creating the best environment for plants and for people requires continual attention and investment. It is the feminine energy in all of us that bring us back to this truth.

Since this is the season of love, there is an opportunity to attune to compassion and sensitivity – the natural “beingness” of our nature. May we all take a few moments over the holidays to s-l-o-w d-o-w-n and learn some something about the power of love, the power of intuition, the power of trust in the capacity of the human spirit. Women, and their capacity to feel and tune in to their surroundings can be a powerful inspiration. I once heard a four-year-old say, “love is what’s in the room with you when you stop opening presents and listen.”

May peace be with you all this holiday season as we develop and express our innate capacity to influence the world with greater love, compassion, acceptance, and trust.