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Looking back at photos of Christmases past. An action shot of my youngest boy, testing out his new hula hoop. I can see my mother’s feet. She’s sitting in her chair, watching what must’ve felt like the magic of the day unfolding before her very eyes. And, it was magic. For a while her pain had subsided, her knees didn’t hurt, and she simply enjoyed her small, nucleus, family as we unwrapped the wonders laid out before us. Her shoes, the ones she deemed the most comfortable, were yellow and black little tennies. I called them her bumblebee shoes. And, there they are in the bottom left corner of these last three photos. Now, she’s gone. Somewhere, around the corner, we say. To the other side, we say. But, she’s always near, we say. And, as I think of her now, I imagine her as a drawing, a cartoon, like something that Bill Watterson might have drawn up. Bumblebee shoes, looking a little bit like dinner rolls, (That’s how Schultz described Watterson’s drawing of Calvin’s feet.) her capri jeans, showing her little birdie-like ankles, and her comfy, orange Kool-aid Man shirt. (I still have it.) She’s still a bit wobbly, unsteady on her feet, but she’s doing okay. So am I. (Angela too.) So’s Pops. So are her grandkids. We miss her. And, this Christmas is different, that’s for sure. But, she walks into my thoughts, coming from the kitchen of my memories, carrying a cup of coffee or a plate of something wonderful for me to taste. And, she’s always wearing her bumblebee shoes. *** -JBClaywell ©P&ZPublications 2018
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Dec 25, 2018
Dec 25, 2018 at 10:31 AM UTC
Bumblebee Shoes
Looking back at photos of Christmases past. An action shot of my youngest boy, testing out his new hula hoop. I can see my mother’s feet. She’s sitting in her chair, watching what must’ve felt like the magic of the day unfolding before her very eyes. And, it was magic. For a while her pain had subsided, her knees didn’t hurt, and she simply enjoyed her small, nucleus, family as we unwrapped the wonders laid out before us. Her shoes, the ones she deemed the most comfortable, were yellow and black little tennies. I called them her bumblebee shoes. And, there they are in the bottom left corner of these last three photos. Now, she’s gone. Somewhere, around the corner, we say. To the other side, we say. But, she’s always near, we say. And, as I think of her now, I imagine her as a drawing, a cartoon, like something that Bill Watterson might have drawn up. Bumblebee shoes, looking a little bit like dinner rolls, (That’s how Schultz described Watterson’s drawing of Calvin’s feet.) her capri jeans, showing her little birdie-like ankles, and her comfy, orange Kool-aid Man shirt. (I still have it.) She’s still a bit wobbly, unsteady on her feet, but she’s doing okay. So am I. (Angela too.) So’s Pops. So are her grandkids. We miss her. And, this Christmas is different, that’s for sure. But, she walks into my thoughts, coming from the kitchen of my memories, carrying a cup of coffee or a plate of something wonderful for me to taste. And, she’s always wearing her bumblebee shoes. *** -JBClaywell ©P&ZPublications 2018
Merry Christmas, Ma!
jay-claywell
Written by
Dec 25, 2018
Dec 25, 2018 at 10:31 AM UTC
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