March brings an array
of thoughts and emotions
about my mother. I have
poignant moments of
reflection, as it’s the
month she passed away.
But I also have
entertaining thoughts
that put a smile on my
face and a twinkle in my
eye.
Mother was a sports
fans from the word go;
she loved them all. But
her favorite was
definitely basketball,
and she had played the
game herself in high
school. From all
reports, she was really
quite good. With that in
mind, I guess it’s no
wonder she loved March
Madness!
We always spoke long
distance at least once a
week, and for the most
part Mother and I did
the visiting,
except in March.
That’s when Mother and
my husband, Jerry,
monopolized the calls.
Dad and I just kind of
sat there listening as
our eyes glazed over. I
mean, just how much can
be said about basketball
games?
Mom knew the
background on each
player regardless of
what college he
attended, as well as his
hometown, and the name
of the high school he
had played for. Rattling
off who would play next
if so and so won, as
well as the background
on the coaches, came as
easily as discussing
what she was fixing for
dinner. I never quite
understood when or where
she gathered this vast
amount of information,
and it never ceased to
amaze me.
Being a native
Kansan, and with their
usually exceptional
teams, mother loved
taunting Jerry about how
his Texas teams were, or
weren’t, playing. They
bantered back and forth
until I was sure the
phone lines were
smoking! Into her
eighties she could have
discussed basketball
with the likes of Bobby
Knight, and even
he would have
probably walked away
impressed.
Calling Dad on the
anniversary of Mother’s
death is a must, and the
call that first year was
a rough one. Thankfully,
by the second year he
had made tremendous
progress. After visiting
a while about various
things, I casually asked
him if he’d been
watching March Madness.
I mean - that had been a
major event in their
household! I just knew
he had been glued to the
tube.
"Oh, no," he
chuckled. "The only
reason I ever watched it
was because Mom wouldn’t
let me touch the remote
control during the month
of March!"
Well, who knew? I
assumed he enjoyed the
games, although he
clearly wasn’t the avid
fan Mother was. I had no
idea he really didn’t
give a hoot one way or
the other. All I could
do was stammer and
stutter, "You sure had
me fooled. I thought you
loved the tournament
too."
Then he added, "You
know, I’ve caught myself
doing the strangest
thing this week. By the
time Mom used to get up
in the mornings, I had
finished reading the
paper. During March
Madness I always laid
the sports page in her
chair so she could read
it while having her
coffee. I’ve found
myself folding it up and
reaching over to lay it
in her chair several
times the past few
days."
"Oh, Dad! Did that
make you feel sad?" I
questioned with a lump
in my throat.
"Well, not really,
but it did make me feel
kind of stupid! I’d done
it for so many years; I
guess it had become a
habit. I just shook my
head each time, and
wondered if I was
getting The
Alzheimer’s
already?" he joked. The
tone of his voice
assured me I need not
worry; he was handling
things just fine and
dandy. As a man with
deep faith in God, he
had adjusted quite well
knowing Mother had only
moved on to her heavenly
home.
As for me, I’m sure
an angel was playing her
own kind of game with
her surviving
sweetheart; reminding
him not to dwell on her
passing away in March,
but to reminisce about
the good times as well.
And for Mom, March
Madness was simply the
best of times!
Mother never attended
the playoffs in person,
but I know she now has a
seat at center court for
each and every game.
Then again, as an angel,
she probably just
hovers over
center court, for the
best view in the arena…