Check out this week's recipe.
The more time I spend as a parent the more I appreciate my mother and the job she did raising my brother and me. I’ve had it easy. Her road was much tougher. She married at 21 and was widowed at 33. She was left with two boys, a house under construction, and an art degree. She scaled back the house plans, went back to school, got her Masters degree, taught private art lessons, and sold her art to friends, at art festivals, and in gift shops to keep us afloat in the first few years after his death.
My brother
was ten years old when our father died, I was six. He became the man of the
house. I became a constant challenge. Our mother played the dual role of mother
and father and never remarried. There were a couple of boyfriends along the way,
but nothing ever materialized as she dedicated her life to the raising of her
two children, so that’s what she did, and did well.
When she
was widowed and faced with the prospect of having to raise two boys, she knew that
she couldn't play football, and she didn't know how to hunt, but she figured
she could learn how to fish. So, she purchased a small plot of land up the
Pascagoula River on Johns Bayou in Vancleave, Mississippi. There had been
several generations of Hattiesburg families who had fish camps in that area. We
were the latecomers with the mobile home two blocks off the water. It was the
smartest move a widowed mother of two young boys could make. We spent our
summers down there and it was in those waters that my love for seafood was
born. We had a blast.
The fish camp
also served as a place that probably kept me from getting into even more
trouble earlier than I would have had I been at home on weekends. We lived on
an art teacher's salary, so my brother and I started working at early ages. He
had a paper route, and I mowed lawns. When he turned 15, he went to work for a
wrecker service and the newspaper. When I turned 15, I began working as a radio
station disc jockey. If we were going to have any spending money or a vehicle
to take us to work, we were going to have to pay for it. The three of us were a
working, happy family.
We were also
blessed with loving grandparents who stepped up to the plate and helped out,
often. My paternal grandmother and uncle helped pay school tuition early on and
my maternal grandmother and grandfather were there to help my mother with the
child rearing aspects. My grandfather was the primary male influence in my
life.
I was no
cakewalk. I was a wild teenager and created many challenges and stressful
nights for my mother until I got clean and sober at the age of 21. At that time,
I already knew I wanted to open a restaurant but had no clue as to how to do
such a thing. So, as she had done before me, I went back to school and got a
degree in hospitality management.
When I was
26, I opened my first restaurant. My mom begged me not to do it. “You'll ruin
the family name,” she said. I told her, “I don't think the family name was that
good to begin with.” and pressed on. In his will, my paternal grandfather left
a small plot of land in Perry County that I sold for $25,000. That was my stake
in opening that first restaurant. Despite my mother’s hesitancy early on she
became a quick fan and has told me on many occasions over the last 33 years
that she is proud of me and that my father would be proud of me, as well.
She taught
art for 50 years and retired when she was 80-years old. Fifteen years ago, she
came to us and told us she wanted to move from our childhood home into
something more manageable. After 10 years there, she came to my brother and me
and told us that she needed to be moved into an independent living facility. And
just two years ago, she told us it was time to move into assisted living.
The move
into assisted living didn't happen until last fall and was done in the middle
of a global pandemic which was not easy on several levels. Change is not easy
for anyone especially someone moving into assisted living.
The
lockdown was underway, and the lockdown was brutal, especially on elderly people
in independent an assisted living facilities. They were on almost complete
lockdown for 10 months. Solitude is not good at that stage of life. We were
able to see our mother on occasion but mostly through safely spaced outside visits
with an appointment. And even those appointments were limited.
On
Christmas Eve we brought her over to my house for a very small dinner and then
on Mother's Day we were able to take her to a quick lunch. For the last several
months she's been asking to go back to church. This past weekend she got that
wish.
I picked
her up early in the morning and we had breakfast together at my breakfast joint.
She ate well. With 45 minutes to spare before the church service started, I
figured we could ride around through our old neighborhoods and see what she
could remember. Her memory was keen and sharp that day. We drove by our old
house and talked about the neighbors who were still there and the neighbors who
were gone.
It was a
great neighborhood to grow up in. My father and many of his childhood contemporaries
bought lots together within blocks of each other and built homes and had children
all around the same time. It's unfortunate that he never lived to see the house
built and how great the neighborhood turned out. But I hope he somehow,
somewhere, takes solace that we had a very wonderful childhood and feel blessed
to have grown up in that place.
Then we
rode by the house we lived in before that, and then by my grandmother's house
where my father grew up. It was better than any medicine a doctor could prescribe.
She lit up as she remembered detail after detail. Her memory is not what it
used to be. But who's is? My brother and I are co-chairs of the Alzheimer's
Association of Mississippi it's a cause that is near and dear to our hearts.
She was
ecstatic about being back in the church that she’s been a member of for 67
years. A decade ago, she painted a series of crosses and donated them to the
church. After renovations that were undertaken during Covid, the church brought
them all together, displayed them on one wall, and placed a plaque next to them
in her honor. It was a great surprise for her, and she was happier than I seen
her in months.
As we sat
down just before the service started, she leaned over and whispered, “I feel
like I'm home.” I whispered back, “You are.”
Life moves
forward.
Onward.
Lentils
1 lb. Lentils
½ gallon Chicken stock
1 TB + 1 tsp Kosher salt
¼ cup Extra virgin olive oil
1 TB Fresh garlic, minced
1 cup Carrot, finely diced
Place dry lentils in a mesh strainer. Rinse under cold water for 2 minutes.
In a 3-quart stock pot over very low heat, combine rinsed lentils, stock and salt. Continue cooking over very low heat, stirring occasionally, until lentils are tender, but not mushy, about 30-45 minutes. Drain and spread out on a baking pan at room temperature. Discard any excess liquid.
In a large skillet, heat the oil over low heat. Add garlic and carrots and cook for 2 minutes, stirring frequently. Add the cooked lentils and stir frequently just until they are hot, about 3-5 minutes. Serve immediately. Finish each portion with extra virgin olive oil as desired.
Yield: 6-8 servings
6 comments:
Amen!
Robert,
Your great-uncle "Squint" St. John
was the Principal at Brooksville High School in the 1950s when I attend there.He had this "tic" of standing at the doorway of school bus entry door with his coin-gingling-hands stuffed deep down in his pocket of his khaki pants..never saying a word.But he could swing a bois d'arcy paddle with the best..until he met up with "Cotton" King... circa 1956.
Robert, your mom is a beautiful person.
Oh Robert, This is as good an article as you have written, thanks.
Loved that RSJ !
While I always enjoy your columns ... IMO, that was your best (to date).
Oh man I needed that read. My 62 year old mother has been in assisted living for almost 6 months fighting a terrible, nightmarish disease called Lewy Body Dementia. The few days where I am able to get her to "light up" are few and far between but those rare moments are so special. Reading about your mother's determination to provide a good life for her family and finding a way to make do no matter the circumstances reminds me of many of my mom's amazing attributes. I really enjoy reading your articles.
Post a Comment