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A Mother’s Secretby Bob HostetlerIt
was the late 1960s, and my family was the poorest on the block in a solidly
middle-class neighborhood. My friends sported the latest fashions; I wore my
brothers’ hand-me-downs. Other homes on the block boasted fine furnishings
and color televisions; our carpets were threadbare and I was convinced our
black-and-white television was old enough to have broadcast John Cameron Swayze reporting the invention of the wheel.
Other families parked two cars in their garages; my father worked long hours
to keep our 1957 Ford Fairlane
running, and my mother rode the bus an hour each way to her job every day. Yet
for all our apparent poverty, we were the only family I knew that employed an
ironing lady and a cleaning woman. In the days before
permanent press, my father would take a basket of clothes (which Mom had
pre-dampened and rolled up) to a woman named Mers
every week. Mers was
a widow, and everyone called her “Mers.”
She even referred to herself that way—never “Mrs. Mers,”
just “Mers.”
She was a long-time member of the Salvation Army church we attended, and was
a central character in a drama that played itself out in our family every
week. We would drive far across town to Mers’ tenement
apartment, pick up the basket of “Why
do you do that?” one of us would ask. “She
missed a spot,” Mom would say. “But
you do this all the time,” her questioner would say. “Why do we pay Mers to iron for us if you’re just going to do
it over?” Mom
would sometimes blush from the implied reproach in our words. But she would
shrug or smile and say, “Mers
needs the money.” It
was the same with our cleaning lady. Another widow living on a limited
income, Mrs. Grubb came to our house every week. She was a cheerless woman
who seemed to approach every cleaning task as though we children had created
it solely to make her life miserable. She was wrong, of course; there were
other reasons. We paid for it, though. Mrs. Grubb left behind a wake of
streaked windows, sticky linoleum floors, and half-dusted surfaces every
Thursday. Every
Saturday, Mom would put me and my brothers to work correcting Mrs. Grubb’s
cleaning job. “Why
do you do that?” one of us would ask. “I
don’t want people to think we live in a pig sty,” she would answer. “But
we wouldn’t have to clean so much if we didn’t have a cleaning lady,” we
would say. “Why do you pay her to clean if you’re just going to make us do it
over a few days later?” Of
course, we knew what the answer would be. “Mrs. Grubb needs the money.” I
never understood that. My mom died when I was still a boy, and her
relationship with Mers and
Mrs. Grubb mystified me for years. Even as I matured into adulthood, I
occasionally reflected on my mother’s
quizzical behavior with a wry smile and a shake of the head. I always
suspected that there may have been more to her arrangements with Mers and Mrs. Grubb than I could understand at
the time, but I never quite got it. Until just recently. My
son arrived home from school one day and saw Tim, a friend of mine, painting
my home office. “Why
is he doing that?” my son asked when we were out of Tim’s earshot. I
shrugged. “Because I asked him to.” “But
you just painted the whole first floor last year, didn’t you?” The
words were out of my mouth before I knew it. “He needs the money,” I said. In
that moment, I heard not my own voice, but my mother’s. I remembered how
often she had used such words in reference to Mers and
Mrs. Grubb, and the light suddenly dawned in my mind and heart. I realized
then that, without me even suspecting it, my mother had taught me how to
“give to the needy [without letting] your left hand know what your right hand
is doing” (Matthew 6:3, 4, NIV), giving in secret so as to preserve the
dignity of those on the receiving end. My
heart swelled with pride as I realized that Mom had passed down her generous,
selfless spirit to me. And though Aaron didn’t understand at the time, I
hoped that I had planted in my son a seed that would reproduce in him the
gift my mother had given to me. Copyright © 2005, Bob Hostetler, use only with permission. |