I have a pink piece of cardstock with a large stylishly drawn heart on it, that sits on my bedroom dresser. Below the heart are the words, “Woman, you are a good mom. I like you.” It was my Mother’s Day gift this past year from my daughter…child number 2. She was 19 when she made this picture for me. It makes me smile a lot and sometimes laugh out loud when I see it.
My daughter affectionately calls me, “Woman.” She told me that was what Jesus called his mother, so that should make it all right (seeJohn 2:4). I don’t mind her calling me “woman”…I rather like it…because it is a term of endearment…a strange term of endearment…but a term of endearment all the same.
My other children don’t call me “Woman.” They call me names such as “Mom,” “Momma,” “Mother,” “Mommy,” etc. Daughter gets a little miffed if one of her brothers calls me, “Woman.”
“Hey,” she will say to the transgressing brother, “That’s what I call her.”
That’s usually the end of the conversation and the bothersome brother trying to infringe upon her affectionate name for me will go back to calling me, “Mom.”
Child number 2 is our only daughter this side of heaven. We have a wonderful relationship…so I think as the mom…or should I say, the “woman.” We have always been close; it’s been that way since she has been in the world. We seem to understand each other. We enjoy one another…though she says I’m weird, but, I am comfortable with my weirdness, so that’s ok.
Tomorrow, “daughter” turns 20. 20-years-old…really?! So this evening I’m remembering details from a Thursday evening 20 years ago. It would turn into a frightening night with me requiring an emergency Cesarean to see “daughter” safely into the world. I remember her daddy’s first words to me when I awoke in the recovery room, “She has hair and she is beautiful.”
I had been concerned that our baby girl might be bald like her brother before her for the first year of life. When I met her face to face I had to agree with her daddy, she was beautiful…and she was ours.
“Daughter” has taught me so much in her 20 years. I am blessed to know her; to be close to her. She inspires me with her perseverance and acceptance of life’s difficulties…they don’t get her down…she just works all the harder to achieve.
Tomorrow, I will go see “daughter” and take her to lunch and I’m sure we’ll laugh just a little bit and she will probably call me, “Woman,” at some point during the day and I will smile on the inside and maybe on the outside too.