With every passing Mother’s
Day, moms everywhere are given the chance to reflect on upon one of the most
important events to happen in their lives – Who will win the Mother Competition
this year?
Anyone who has spent serious
time in a rural church knows exactly what I’m talking about. When I was a kid, each Mother’s Day, the
conscientious pastor would visit his local flower shop and purchase three
single carnations, each tied with a ribbon bow, to present to the lucky
winners. Youngest Mother? Carnation.
(In later years, it became politically correct to turn this award into
Mother with the Youngest Baby because no one wanted to present 14-year-old
Jennifer with an award for having a kid.)
Oldest Mother? Carnation. Mother with the Most Children? Carnation.
My family was so poor we
couldn’t pay attention. We didn’t have
nice cars, a nice house, nice clothes, or nice shoes, but there was something
we had in abundance, and that was kids.
We had little to be proud of, but we rocked at the Mother Competition
because our mom won the carnation for Mother with the Most Children every.
single. year.
Determining the winner is
always an event. First all mothers stand
up, and the pastor begins to winnow out the losers mothers who have one
child, two children, three children, and so on.
Singly and in groups, mothers have to sit down because they chose to not
fully fill their respective quivers.
Finally, there is one mother standing (that would be our mother), and
the pastor would say something along the lines of, “Mrs. Patsy, six kids does
it again this year!” and our mother would proudly walk down the aisle and claim
her prize.
Those were good days for us
kids. We’d done our duty to our mother,
and by golly, we all felt like we had a little stake in that carnation. Nothing smelled sweeter or was more enjoyed
than that single flower, stuck into an old mason jar of water.
Sometimes there were
scares. A new mother might show up and
steal someone’s glory. Nobody forgot the
year that Mrs. Gilley had her thunder stolen for Mother with the Youngest Baby
when a complete stranger turned up at church on Mother’s Day with a baby two
days younger than little Gracie. It was
just Plain Wrong, and we all suspected the offending mom had planned her fraud
with cunning akin to that of Satan himself at the fall of Adam and Eve. One year a family came walking down the aisle
with a bevy of children, and we were sweating as we counted… one, two, three,
four… five! Five kids. We scoffed at five kids.
The practice fell out of
fashion as we got older. There were
mutters that the annual Mother Competition caused hard feelings in the church,
and the award carnations gave way to carnations for every mom. Sore losers is what I say. By the time we were grown up, moved away, and
attending churches of our own, every woman got a carnation whether she had even
ever had a child.
Imagine my chagrin when, on
that particular Mother’s Day Sunday, I was talking with my mom about her new
church, and she told me carnations had been given out in the traditional
Mother’s Competition. I asked her if
she’d won one (knowing full well she had), and she told me the sad news that it
was for the mother that had the most children PRESENT at church that day, and
the award had gone to Mrs. Anderson with her paltry four children.
That would never do. The next year, in a covert operation that
would have made the FBI envious, I made certain every single one of my siblings
showed up at my parent’s church. As we
trickled in, first she was surprised, and then she cried, and we were all so
happy knowing that not only was our momma happy to have all her chicks once
again under the protective cover of her wings, but Mrs. Anderson could suck
it. Once again that Sunday, mom walked
up proud and claimed her rightful carnation.
I may or may not have thumbed my nose at Mrs. Anderson’s oldest
child. Sure she was only twelve, but she
knew EXACTLY what I meant by it.
We went back year after
year. My younger brother, Josh, never
darkened a church door any other day of the year, but he was by golly there on
Mother’s Day. It took all of us. Mrs. Anderson had rallied and squeezed out
another offspring, and we couldn’t stand to tie her for first place.
Finally, one year my mother
told us that she wasn’t attending church on Mother’s Day. Our family had grown so large with
grandchildren that she couldn’t cook for everyone in the time she had after
church and needed to stay home to make the meal. Our new tradition came to be all the girls
coming over early and spending the morning helping to cook, and a sweet new
tradition for Mother’s Day was born.
This past Sunday, as I was
reflecting back on the Mother Competition, I asked my mom if she wouldn’t like
to go to church, have us all attend with her, and win the carnation again for
old times sake.
Then she said words that
rocked my world.
“No,” she said. “I don’t want to do that. It always embarrassed me to win that
carnation.”
Whaaaaaaaaaaat?!? I couldn’t have been more surprised if she’d
told me she’d once been a short-order cook who rode with the Hell’s Angels and
had first invented the Hot Pocket as a handy ‘meal on wheels’ that could be
held in one hand.
My world has been shaken this
week. Everything I knew to be true about
life is a lie. I have five
children. I could have stopped after two
if I’d known the Mother Competition is an EMBARRASSMENT and not a sought-after
prize.
What other long-held misconceptions
do I have? The next thing I know, she’ll
be saying something else ridiculous like drinking alcohol won’t send me to
Hell.
12 comments:
Just playing around with the comments section- trying to get it all figured out.
Eve - Loved this blog! Keep 'em comin' !!
How hilarious! I love this article! My mom had a mere 4 kids and we were always outdone by Mrs. Decker and her 6 kids! I wanted to win that flower for my mom so bad!!
You have a way with words, my friend. Gifted you are! Loved it!
Thank you, Dottie! I plan to! And also thank you for helping me figure out the comments section. Lol!
Mrs. Decker!!! *shaking fist in air*
But for real, Lori, maybe that was all she had to look forward to each year. The only rewards for six kids. 😂
Thank you you, Amy! I'm so glad you liked it!
Loved your article. I always felt a little cheated on Mother's Day by the Mom with more children than me with a blended family. Shame on me.
Lol, I have felt the same way! I "only" had 5 children and one lady at our church had 8 with her blended family. I learned how to play that game though... When they announced that all of your children that lived in your household, blood or not, can be counted, I proudly include my 5 kids, 2 step-sons, 6 foster kids, and 2 foreign-exchange students we have had over the past few years. FIFTEEN TOTAL! Ha, beat that lady with 8 kids! ;-)
Goodness...I am still working on this comment section. Just know, I have said many uplifting comments and meant all of them. Maybe this will post...
Now that I finally can do it, let me say...You brought back so many memories. My mother won this many times too. She had 6 kids (not to mention the "adopted" cousins). Thanks for bringing these memories back to life. I can't wait for your next post! :)
Post a Comment