At my mother-in-law's funeral I met one of my wife's cousins. He
was a very nice man and he kept in touch with his beloved aunt. When we met he
knew all about me.
"I heard you wrote a book. Mama Lupe told me all about
it." They called her Mama Lupe because, as the eldest daughter in an
enormous family, a great deal of mothering was delegated to her.
My background was so very, very different from my mother-in-law.
I had very little idea what, if anything, she understood about what I do. (It
was not always clear to me that my own parents understood much about what I do
either.) But apparently she got a lot more than I realized, and she was very
proud.
After Mama died, my wife found a shopping bag candy in her room, and candies in her mother's
handbag and the pockets of her clothes. My mother-in-law really should not have been eating bags of candy. Mama's sweet tooth was a well-established fact.
When my wife mentioned this to her sister who lived closer by, her sister
explained that Mama wasn't eating the candy herself. She was handing it out
when she went shopping.
Once, my sister-in-law reported, they were on a shopping trip
together and Mama had been giving candy to all of the greeters and stock clerks
and cashiers. As she was leaving a store, one worker jokingly called out,
"What, no candy for me?"
Mama was not moving so easily. But she bustled back to make sure
the store clerk got his dose of sweetness.
My mother-in-law was a force of nature. And if she had your
back, she had your back.
The first time I visited my wife's parents in LA, Mama went to
the kitchen to prepare dinner. This was a great honor; most of the cooking was
done by Nana at this point. But for the great guest (me) all the stops were
pulled out. Then I heard the banging. The future MamaGoof (FMG) explained to me,
"She is tenderizing the meat with a hammer. It's gonna be
good!"
And so it was.
But I also got the message. Be good to this woman and her
family, because she knows how to use a hammer.
We'd actually met some time before, at the FMG's
PhD graduation. It happened to be the day of death for Rebbe MenachemSchneerson, who some believed was the Messiah of the Jewish people (there's a
whole, whole lot of theology tied up in here.) Mama who monitored world affairs
from her couch knew everything going on the world and knowing I was Jewish
informed me, "Your Messiah died."
"I'd better get my instructions!" I joked and started
to get up from the breakfast table.
She
laughed, I'd passed a test. She was a devout Catholic herself, but more than
willing to be tolerant. But she was testing my character a little – fortunately
I passed.
Mama
was born in Guadalajara, one of 15, where her father was the
foreman on a ranch. At a young age she was married off to an older man who wanted her to clean
his hotel. She fled, made her way north and worked in the fields of central California for a few
years. (This was the 1950s, immigration wasn’t an issue). It was a hard life.
She worked as a housekeeper and as a seamstress. At the factory she became friends with
a woman who had a brother.
Together they had four children and she managed the house, pinching pennies so they could all
go to Catholic school (instead of LA public schools) where they all excelled (2
MDs, a PhD, and a dental hygienist – the American dream!) She was smart with
her money, but also generous.
She
loved being a grandmother. I mentioned how Mama cooked for me, but los ninos could have anything
their little hearts desired – cookies, candy, fries (she hadn't cooked since the steaks I mentioned above).
Her
husband and sister-in-law (Nana lived with them and they were like sisters) had
difficult declining years. I’ve written about it before, and I am sad just thinking about it. But, after Nana left us and Papa was placed in a home where
he got the care he needed, Mama seemed relaxed. We figured she was good for
another decade of telenovelas and visits.
Unfortunately,
that was not to be. My wife misses her Mama, the little Goofs miss their Abuelita, and I miss her too.
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