My mother was
born on December 14th 1918. One Saturday morning in early December 1961 my
7 year-old sister and I decided we needed to buy my mother a birthday present. We
asked my mom for some money to buy her a gift and she reluctantly gave us $3 or
$4. As luck would have it, my father had planned to do some Christmas shopping that day at Lazarus Department Store, located in downtown Columbus. With money
in hand, my sister and I went along.
At the Lazarus front doors, we kids split up from my dad,
promising to meet him later at some predetermined location. Over the next half
hour or so the two of us explored a number of different store departments in
search of the perfect birthday present for my mom. We looked at baseball
gloves, ballet slippers, even cheap cuckoo clocks, but we found nothing that we
both thought my mother would like. Then, like a miracle, my sister and I came
upon an approximately four foot-tall, electric Christmas candle made of
heavy-duty plastic. Down the side of the candle in big yellow letters was the
word NOEL. We just knew my mother
would love it.
We hid the candle in the garage until we could wrap it,
complete with stick-on bow. A few days later, on my mother’s birthday, we
presented her with our fabulous gift. To our utter shock, frustration surfaced upon
my mom’s face the instant the candle was wrestled free of the wrapping paper.
“This is not an appropriate gift for
someone’s birthday,” she grumbled. She then pushed it away as she shook her
head in agitation. I remember it like it was yesterday. My sister and I were crestfallen.
Over the years the candle became known as “Mom’s Birthday
Candle”. It was never referred to as “The Christmas Candle”, or “The Noel
Candle”. Never. The oversized candle with the light bulb inside the big, yellow,
plastic flame was simply “Mom’s Birthday Candle”. And every Christmas for almost
50 years it could be found brightening my Mom’s porch. Now and then over the
various holiday seasons my mother would journey outside to wipe off the candle
with a rag, or replace a burned-out light bulb. And if the weather turned
really foul, she would bring the candle inside to safety.
One December several years ago, a few months before my
mother died, I was carrying the candle through the living room, bound for the
front porch. Along the way I traveled by my mother as she relaxed in her
favorite chair. “Time to set-out your birthday candle,” I said casually.
“I remember the first time I saw that candle,” my mother
quietly stated. “I was angry.”
I stopped and turned towards her. “Yeah, I remember. Believe
me, I remember.”
“It wasn’t just that you bought me a big, plastic candle,
it’s that you used my money to buy it.”
“It was a dumb gift,” I admitted with a shrug and a grin.
“At first I thought it was the stupidest gift in the world,”
my mother remarked, “but I’ve received a lot of birthday presents in my life,
and the truth is, very few have come to mean more to me than that big candle. So
maybe, just maybe, it wasn’t such a stupid gift after all.”
Mom, wherever you are, I just want you to know; this holiday
season your birthday candle will be glowing.
1 comment:
Jim, that's a beautiful story. I'm so glad she told her that, and that you still burn her birthday candle. What an awesome heart warming story.
Gonna leave the link to one of my Christmas memories of my Mom. I've written memories in basic alphabetical form. I've not done one now for awhile...they were helpful right after she passed and for some time after that. I see I'm still missing a story/memory for the letters T U V X and Z. Hum, must give those letters some more thought.
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