So often Black women are denied full access to our
suffering. We are taught to suppress and bury it so that we can be
of service to others, as if attending to the fullness of our own human
experience is a vice.
Our strength suffocates us. If anything,
her yelps of pain today are a sign of just how frequently she concealed
her hurt in the past. Then she could grin and bear it. Now
she must rely on us to help relieve the sharp stabbing sensation
in her abdomen where the cancer is spreading.
Fourteen and a half years later, I can still remember how sweet
that birthday cake tasted. Sweetness is a trait that I have come
to associate with sickness. Pills crushed in applesauce. Nutritional
shakes consumed when nausea will not allow solid food
to digest. The only things Mama wants to eat these days are ice
cream and jelly beans.
As a child, her sweet tooth earned her the nickname Cookie.
In my family, the granting of nicknames is a sacred business.
They can often be more predictive of the course of a person’s
life journey than the name on their birth certificate. The story
goes that, as a toddler, Aunt Doll would often keep my mama
and her cousin Mae while their mothers were working. As Aunt
Doll rolled out the dough for morning biscuits, Mama would
stand up on a chair near the counter, helping spread the flour
then pinching off tiny pieces of the dough and sticking them in
her mouth. At a young age, she learned that the delicious parts
of life do not come without preparation and work. To this day,
thanks to Aunt Dolly, more people call Mama Cookie than her
given name Christine.
We brought Mama home from the hospital for the last time
on February 23, four days before her sixty-third birthday. That
morning the doctors had said there was nothing they could do
to stop the fluid from building on her lungs, so Mama demanded
we bring her home. Black mothers are willful creatures.
Stand in their way and there is usually hell to pay. Her decision
was not a surrender, but a declaration of independence. No
more poison being pumped into her body once a week. No more
doctors probing or nurses poking. No more hospital rooms. She
decided that her God, her body, and her desire to live would
guide the path ahead of her. She has been in the front room
ever since.
I’d never felt the full weight of what it means to be an only child
before these past few months. The night Mama began hospice
care I’d dreamt that our family home had been moved off of its
foundation. Like a dollhouse, the rooms remained intact. The
daily routines of life continued. Yet, the illusion of privacy was
shattered as the most intimate parts of our lives were exposed
and laid bare for public consumption. I awoke, knowing in my
gut that everything had changed. My mom is the solid ground
upon which our family unit was built. Her body is now telling her
that it can no longer hold the heaviness alone.
With deep gratitude, I have seen my family and community show
up for us. Her first week home things looked bleak. She moved
in and out of responsiveness and the hospice nurse told us to
prepare for the worst. Within forty-eight hours, my chosen and
biological family flew in from around the country to accompany
us. Those who could not come sent care packages, kind notes,
and made phone calls just to check in. Granny comes to stay for
weeks on end to take care of her baby girl. She gets very little
sleep when she is here and refuses to sleep anywhere but on the
couch beside Mama’s bed.
When the rooms are empty and I am alone with my thoughts,
exhaustion sets in. This is the first time since I left home for
college that I have lived with my parents for an extended period
of time. When I am weak, my humanity starts to show and I
long for my life back. I want to drink wine with my roommate
and plot our paths to take the world by storm. I want to go on
dates with my fiancé and do the mundane daily tasks that will
be the cornerstone of our life together. I want to make plans
with my friends that I can actually keep. Most of all, I want
to call my mom and tell her all the silly things about my day.
I want her to be healthy and well. I want things to be normal
again.
When I snap out of it, I remember that this image of normalcy
is a fantasy. Mama has been sick for half of my life. Until now,
it has been easy to ignore that reality. We flourished as a family
unit because of her determination to beat cancer by living. As
my play auntie Deborah says, “She teaches us how to fight.” Her
friends tell stories of her showing up to help them plan events
minutes after completing a chemo treatment. During the yearly
moves that became a hallmark of my twenties, she was always
right there with me—Chicago, Nashville, New York, and Washington,
D.C.— helping me pick out furniture and art to make
each temporary home my own.
I have no doubt that my mama will fight until the day her and
her God agree it is time for her to join the ancestors. Sometimes
that fight will be physical and at other times it will be spiritual.
This one thing I know to be true: I am blessed to have a mother
who loves me and whom I love. That is a gift I will never take for
granted. It is a gift worth the price of placing everything else in
my life on hold to accompany her at this stage of her journey.
So, until the time comes for us to say our final goodbye, I will lay
beside her sharing secrets, eating jelly beans, and being present
for her as she has always been present for me.
* *
She died on Mother’s Day eve at 9:32 a.m. The sun was pouring
through the lace curtains surrounding the big picture window,
illuminating her chocolate skin as it always had. Granny had
stepped out of the room to take a telephone call. It was just
Mama and me. I put my head on her chest so that I could hear
her heartbeat. The nurse told me that hearing was one of the last
senses to go. So, during the pauses between her last few labored
breaths, I whispered “I love you” into her ear. She took in one
last gasp of air and the beating stopped.
She seemed at peace when she died. Her face had an eerie calm
about it. Her mouth was slightly ajar, but the muscles in her
face were relaxed. Someone suggested that we open the window
so that her spirit could be free to return to God. When I
was little, I told Mama that the beams of sunlight that peak
through the clouds on a perfect day were escalators ascending
to heaven. The thickness of her presence in the house in the
days that followed made me think that she was in no hurry to
make her way up that rotating staircase just yet. I think she
knew how much we needed to feel close to her. Granny went
home the day after she passed to spend some time alone with
her sorrow before the funeral. Daddy was too immobilized by
heartbreak to do anything but keep himself busy and clean the
house. It was left to me to make the arrangements for our celebration
of Mama’s life.
The days following the death of a loved one are a chaotic dance
of making plans and managing expectations. Decisions must be
made quickly and with authority, lest they become the casualty
to an unending stream of unsolicited feedback. The boldness
with which people freely express their opinions to the bereaved
is astounding. It is inevitable that the voices of those who were
least heard in the final days speak the loudest; their performance
of grief is the most theatrical. I took many long drives the
week after Mama’s death so that I could shout at the top of my
lungs what I could not utter in the face of family members and
well-meaning church folk.
When I decided to preach her eulogy, there were whispers.
They were divided into two camps. Those who were genuinely
worried about my well-being and those who simply thought I
was not capable of doing it. As a clergywoman, one of the first
things you learn is how to sniff out the putrid stench of sexism
from the pews. Most often, it attempts to coat itself in flowery
language and sweet gestures of false concern. In the case of
Mama’s eulogy their words sounded something like:
“You wouldn’t want to be too emotional and take
the focus off of your mom.”
“Are you sure that you are strong enough? I don’t
know if you are strong enough and there is no
shame in that.”
“You and your mom were so close, so why don’t
you let one of the [male] preachers speak words of
comfort over you?”
The message behind their coded words was clear: “Leave this
task to the men, little girl.” Despite the resistance, I had the
sense that delivering Mama’s eulogy would be one of the most
important things I would do in my life. It was. Here is what I
said:
I had the opportunity to walk alongside my
mom these past three months, in the final
stretch of her journey. It was the greatest gift of
my life. In the process, the words of Stuart Scott
have echoed in my mind, “You beat cancer by
how you live.”
My mama lived with grace, resilience, and
courage, and in the process taught us all how to
fight. I am because she was. Like so many Black
women, her back was strong from carrying so
much weight and so many people. It is a reality
I both lament and celebrate—a bittersweet reminder
that for some women strength is not an
option, but it is a necessity for our survival.
And what of God? What of the promise of the
afterlife? I must confess that Christian tropes
about her being in a better place provide minimal
comfort in this moment. I have no doubt
they are true. I can feel her presence even as
her spirit has transitioned into its next phase. I
know she is surrounded by the love of the saints
who have preceded her in death. I am sure that
Uncle Phil, Aunt Doll, and Auntie Belinda are
helping her into her long white robe. I’d like to
think that my dear friend Josephine is excitedly
showing her around heaven. Yet, the words of
my tradition in which I find the greatest comfort
are these two: Jesus wept. It is a reminder
that my savior mourns alongside those who
mourn; that grief and lament are part of the
process.
I will miss my mom every day of my life. I will
miss the contours of her face, the creases of
her smile, and the furrow of her brow when she
was displeased. I will miss her laugh, which was
neither polite nor restrained, but bold and loud.
I will miss her cube steaks and gravy. I will miss
her phone greeting of “Hi, My Baby.” I will miss
the excitement of her voice when she found a
deal on sale. I will miss standing next to her in
worship as she uttered the tongues of angels
and unapologetically worshipped her God. I
will miss sharing secrets. I will miss her smell,
which I find myself searching for in blankets
that adorned her hospice bed.
I am hurting. It is a pain that pierces the very
depths of my self-understanding because I have
not known a world without her. Yet, in my hurt
I also rejoice, for she is no longer in pain. I feel
grateful for friends, family, and community that
surround me, lift me up, and love me hard.
Be at rest, my mama. It is time for God to enjoy
you.
* *
Today, beloved, I am still searching for peace that alludes me.
There are so many conversations that I wish that I’d summoned
the courage to initiate in those last few months. Lingering
questions about Mama’s own journey into womanhood, lessons
she learned along the way, or things that she regretted. Instead,
I spent my time feeling—feeling overwhelmed, feeling confused,
feeling my heart break and remake itself over and over again.
Even as time propels me forward, the past keeps pulling me
back. When I close my eyes, I can see her last few breaths. I feel
her last heartbeat.
In her 1993 Nobel Prize acceptance speech, the great Toni
Morrison reminded us that, “We die. That may be the meaning
of life.”
I have found that death is a misunderstood teacher. Her methods
are harsh and definitive. Yet, as the years have transpired, I have
found her to be one of the most consistent and compassionate
instructors of my life. Her lessons have taught me how to value
life and not to hold onto it too tightly.
So as you continue down the road of grief, remember that the
path you are treading is one that is unique to you. Nobody can
tell you how long it will be or the shape it will take. What I do
know is that, if you are open, it can and will transform you for
the better.
Love,
Cookie’s Baby Girl
“To My Beloveds: Letters on Faith, Race, Loss, and Radical Hope” by the Rev. Jennifer Bailey is available now from Chalice Press.