My Mother’s Eyes

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My mother’s eyes were green, large and lovely. A deceptively pellucid shade, they veiled emotions and decades of repression that seeped out sideways or in a bite of temper. Her words followed me after every misstep, usually thickly passive-aggressive, and sometimes sharp, spits of criticism on wounding arrows. She lived neatly boxed into her restriction of pleasure and was set at three temperatures depending on her company: lukewarm and cordial, chilly and withdrawn, or scorched with frustration. We rarely saw her laugh, or even smile.

My desperation to please her when I was a child conformed me, fearfully following every unwritten rule within my family. I didn’t question authority, I ended my sentences with please and thank you, and I only ate what was deemed acceptable by my mother. No sugar, no fat, and no treats, although swigging diet soda at six years old was fine.

At age fourteen, I marveled at the mystery of how this narrow woman gave birth to me, with me being such an emotionally messy creature, plump and replete with sensitivity. Fed up but emotionally starving, I gained thirty pounds of silent fury in high school, a poetic wreck of self-destructive rebellion. 

It worked. She left me alone.

The power shift that took place when she wanted me back in early adulthood both thrilled and angered me. A bulk of childhood rejection still lingered in my body, but I also needed her. My aching fantasy refused to die, the craving of a warm female to look up to and emulate, a mama to hold me close and tell me how loved and special I was, just for being me. 

She was not that person, but she was trying. Smiles and laughter came more easily to her, softening her hard lines and creating fine ones around her eyes. During my visits, she emerged from her bedroom to inquire about my life, even asked me if I needed groceries to take back to my apartment.

My eyes were clear now, recognizing the way she lied about silly things and held onto them with a grip that refused release, even when disproved by my father. I saw the way she lived in denial of anything that scared or shamed her; I suppose it was her method of self-preservation. I deduced that she learned from her past mistakes, her way of making things up to me was to pretend like they never happened in the first place. I became two people, one who could rest in the slight circle of her mother’s arms, seeking momentary refuge in the hopeful bond she missed out on for so long. 

The other me couldn’t trust. So many years I watched my mother live vicariously through my sister, and soon she tried to do the same with me, now that I was free of the thick thighs that marred her view and the baby belly fat that spilled over my waistband. Rejecting her overtures revved me up when the old anger bubbled underneath, a mighty glimpse of the hurt and confusion in her eyes.

While I finally had a mother, I was the one teaching her things. I was the one learning how to properly communicate, trying to get healthy in my mind and body, buying her books to read and strategies to try to salvage her relationship with my father. In return, she depended on me, doted on me, took me shopping and exclaimed over the small jeans size I’d starved myself into. We talked for hours on the back patio, refilling stemless glasses with the bottomless box of wine.

I was almost secure in our relationship when it happened. Lifelong issues that lay partially healed between us finally scabbed over, unimportant in the context of urgency.

My sister called me that morning as I rushed to drink my coffee before work. “Mom has a bad headache and forgot how to write a Y,” she babbled. “It’s really weird.” 

“Mom has anxiety, even if she won’t admit it,” I shrugged. “I’m sure it’s nothing.”

It was glioblastoma, the doctor told us. Our mother had to undergo emergency brain surgery to remove the cancerous tumor. As she lay waiting in her hospital bed, I locked tear-filled eyes with hers as she pulled me down to comfort me. “I’m going to be fine,” she assured me. It was the last time I saw the mother I knew.

The doctors and nurses were kind enough, but we had to research everything ourselves to get the full, bleak picture. No one told us the prognosis directly, perhaps wanting to spare themselves the agony. Yes, they successfully removed the tumor, but glioblastoma continually grows back and invades the brain, spider-like and relentless. The average life expectancy of a person after being diagnosed with glioblastoma is two years. There is no cure, nothing proven to be effective in slowing or preventing the spread of the cancer.

Because our parents had finally messily divorced a year prior, it was up to me and my siblings to make decisions for her, choices that didn’t seem like choices at all. 

Was it even worth it for her to do chemo and radiation? Should we file for disability? She obviously wasn’t able to go back to work, so how would we pay her bills, her mortgage? Should we start physical therapy? We entered her in clinical trials that buoyed our false hopes, thinking perhaps our mother would be the exception, the one who survived this awful disease.

Who can be sure if it was the recurrence of the tumor, the chemo, or the radiation that chewed so ferociously at her brain, that pulverized and gobbled up her memories? In a mere matter of days, she transformed from a brisk and capable woman to someone I didn’t recognize. Her hair fell out in clumps and left her head naked and mottled, the shock reminding me of my reaction to Luke Skywalker’s removal of his father’s helmet in Return of the Jedi. 

With her spirit withering at the same rate as her bruised body, she became an innocent, child-like imposter. In my younger years, she wielded the silent treatment as punishment, a cruel and effective weapon to use on a child. In her illness, her silence was a helpless hunt for words, her formerly sharp brain a betrayal. 

My mother’s eyes, once so striking and complicated, were now huge against her bald head and horrifyingly vacant. I was ashamed of my reaction when I looked into them, one of fearful revulsion. 

And yet, there were sweet, funny moments. During one frightfully humorous afternoon, Mom crept out the front door while my sister showered and plodded as fast as she could to the corner drugstore. My sister rushed downstairs to the sight of Mom eating a bag of gummy worms on the couch, her newly purchased bright blue eyeshadow and pink frosted lip gloss smeared on her face. In her state, it was a miracle she’d run her errands and returned, pleased with herself and thankfully intact.

When we implored her to smoke marijuana to stimulate her appetite after chemo, she exhaled a puff of smoke and gave us an uncharacteristic peace sign. She ate the meals we made for her, finally allowing herself to ingest carbs and fat, sipping thick vanilla milkshakes and fries dusted with sea salt and dipped in ranch dressing. She became obsessed with costume jewelry, adorning herself with several gaudy beaded necklaces, swinging chandelier earrings, and ten multicolored rings every day. This was a woman who would only wear the tiniest gold studs in her ears, for fear of being tacky.

Our final goodbye was enveloped in stifling summer heat at the end of July. My mother suffered two seizures before being admitted to hospice and didn’t wake up again. My siblings and I gathered around her sleeping body, numbly greeting the extended family and friends that visited her bedside. 

She held on, the nurses marveling at her tenacious strength. They declared that she was not letting go quite yet. “She’s a fighter.” After three long days, her heart slowed. Her breathing shallowed. My mind and body continued to operate, sludge-like, barely registering emotion. 

When the nurses told us it was time, my siblings and I stayed the night to say our final goodbyes. I sat gingerly on the bed to touch her papery soft skin one last time. I held in what might have been a scream as numerous feelings presented themselves in a gut punch, some fizzy, some heavy, all unlabeled. 

A fluttering of lashes revealed the pale green orbs that had been hidden for days and we gasped. Slowly, she moved them to rest on each of us, starting with my sister, then my brother, and finally settling on me. Hers connected deeply with mine, so tender and brimming over with silent sentiments somehow not requiring verbalization before her breath finally stilled. 

Peace came for me in that moment. Not only because she was at long last liberated from her pain, but also because my mother’s eyes told me everything I’d ever longed for.

Both of us, finally free.

 
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Melissa struggled to choose between majoring in creative writing and psychology in college. As a practicing therapist for twenty years, she is now exploring her love of writing with renewed vigor. She is passionate about mental health awareness in every form, something she hopes is reflected in her pieces. Melissa lives in Flagstaff, Arizona with her husband and two children.

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