A mother's love and devotion to her children. |
It was not easy raising us three young boys, trying to sleep with a myriad of noise. She worked a job of most difficult labor, always depending on help from a neighbor. She lived at a time when women had few rights; her pay was low as she worked into the nights. I was only ten, my brothers were younger. She gave us a home; a life without hunger. She burned all kinds of wood as it got colder; the stove was stoked when the flames would smolder. To keep us warm, she closed rooms and heating vents; we were comfortable while she was intense. My Dad was killed trying to help a young lass; I heard a few details at the holy mass. I was so young, my brothers were younger still. Dad didn't have life insurance or a last will. Mom borrowed the money to bury her love; she spent every cent, cried to the one above. She worked hard, could never get a promotion; men at the factory caused the commotion. "We do not want a woman in charge of us!" She was qualified but didn't dare raise a fuss. Those days weren't kind to a woman like mother, instead it was a place to squelch and smother. The years have passed, my brothers and I are grown, our children are in college or on their own. Mother passed away of a dreaded disease. The factory closed, gathers dust in the breeze. |