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[personal profile] constance
I've been kind of quiet lately because I've been working on a Mother's Day present for my sentimental mother. It is a homemade project, a biggish one, which I am calling "One Hundred Letters." I've bought a photo album, the kind with plastic pockets for photos, and in each pocket I will put one letter, a story of us. I think my mother will love it, but I am having a moment of crisis because I can't decide on something, and I want you to help me.

So these letters, they are memories and impressions of my childhood and adulthood from the daughter perspective of a mother-daughter relationship. I was lucky to have had a engaged and committed parents, so I have tons of stories--more than enough to make it to a hundred, no matter what--but I'm not sure whether to include good stories and uncomfortable ones, or only stick to the good ones.

Now, I'm not talking about traumas, or family skeletons. I know that a mother's day present is not the place to talk about the worst moments of either of our lives. And I wouldn't include anything uncomfortable that didn't have something of redeeming value in it; I'm only talking about the things that might not reflect one or another of us--or either of us--in the rosiest light. The time I threw a candle at my mother. The time she forgot my brother at a gas station (BEFORE YOU CALL THE POLICE THERE IS A GOOD EXPLANATION FOR THIS I PROMISE YOU).

So that's the crisis of indecision. Should I include the not-so-good stuff with the good? What do you think?

Date: 2005-05-06 02:16 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] laurelwood.livejournal.com
Like [livejournal.com profile] resonant8, I don't have the "mom with grown-up kids" insight, but looking at it from my limited 10 years' worth of experience, plus considering my own relationship with my mom, I'd say the uncomfortable ones have their place in the hundred. Sometimes, after all, those experiences can be looked back on with humor, and they all do have redeeming value, as you said, so I vote for including them.

That said, what a fabulous gift. It's a tremendous present that she'll treasure forever, and I applaud your creativity. Will she savor the letters, spacing them out over days, or will she blow through them all at once?

Also, I want to hear the gas station story sometime. You know, when you're not busy writing a hundred letters!

Date: 2005-05-06 12:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tofty.livejournal.com
My mother is the sort to savor, I think. She will read them slowly, so she can take them all in, and in order, because she never does things out of order.

One day, I shall tell you the gas station story. I warn you: though it contains no actual ill intent, it is not a story that reflects well on the passengers in that van (me, my mother, and my brother).

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