“MOTHER’S DAY”
As I have noted before, I was raised by a single mom, Mary Armour Stroupe, and we lived with my great-great aunt Bernice Higgins (I called her “Gran.”) My father abandoned my mother and me for another woman when I was an infant, and I never met him again until I was 23 – he never contacted me or ever came to see me.
Though we lived in a patriarchal world in Helena, Arkansas, my mother escaped much of it because she worked as a beautician at Ted’s Beauty Shop in downtown Helena at the other end of Porter Street, about a mile from our house. I don’t know how or when Mother started that job at Ted’s – she was there when my memories began. In my younger days, I thought that it was owned by a man named “Ted,” but Mother let me know that it was named after the woman who owned it – Ted Bostick. I can remember nothing else about Ted, but as I write this, I am just realizing that such female ownership reinforced the sense that beauty shops in the 1950’s were a woman’s domain, whether one was classified as white or Black. No males, except salesman, were to be found in those beauty shops.
Ted’s was located in the Cleburne Hotel, which had been opened in 1905 and named after Confederate General Patrick Cleburne. It had a colonial revival style with huge columns in the front, facing Cherry Street, the main downtown street. In its youth, it was quite a grand place, near the railroad depot for travelers to stay, housing barber and beauty shops and other stores. I would often stop by Ted’s Beauty Shop on my way home from school. It was a fascinating place to me – a woman’s world! All women beauty operators, and all kinds of white women there, getting their hair done, getting pampered, getting listened to, getting a chance to share their stories and local gossip, getting a chance to exhale and be accepted without the censoring or lustful eyes of men to put them in their places.
It was a refuge from patriarchy, even though they were often getting their hair done and having themselves made up for their men (and other women). When I would enter Ted’s, there was an intriguing set of smells wafting through the air, a mixture of perfume, shampoo, dyes, chemicals, hair spray, and cigarette smoke. As a young boy, the women there - both operators and customers – would fawn over me, and I loved the attention. Part of it was my relationship to Mother, and part of it was that in my childhood, I was still in my innocent youth, a young male fascinated by being allowed to enter this women’s world, not yet so tainted by the crushing patriarchy (and sexuality) that awaited them outside the confines of the beauty shop.
I remember when I was about 6 years old, waiting on our front porch for Mother to come home from work. We had no car, and she had to walk a mile home from Ted’s after being on her feet all day. I was waiting with great anticipation because I wanted her to play catch with me, to toss the baseball around with me. I remember feeling excited when I saw her - in her white beautician’s uniform and heavy white shoes - climb the big hill on Porter Street, now only about a block from our house. I would run up to her and say, “Mama, let’s play catch! I’ve been waiting a long time.” I do not ever remember her saying to me: “Nibs, I’m just too tired. Let’s do it another day.” My memory of her is that she always said “Yes, Nibs, let’s do that – let me change out of my uniform, and we’ll throw the ball around.”
I never realized what I was asking of her until I had my own kids – how tired she must have been, how stressed out she was with our tenuous financial situation, how she likely longed to sit down for a while and put her feet up. Later in her life, I asked her if she ever said “No” to me when I asked her to play catch right after work, and she said: “Of course – often I was just too tired.” I am intrigued that I do not remember those times – my memories are focused on the “Yes,” not the “No.”
And, that’s how I remember my mother – the one who stayed, the one who loved me, the one who gave me life. I know that some people have trouble with the idea of Mother’s Day – bad relations with their mothers, the sentimentalism and commercialization of Mother’s Day, those women unable to have children – but for me, it is an opportunity to say “Thank you” to my mother, to Gran, and to all the other women who provided mothering love to me. It is also a reminder that all of us, regardless of our gender identity, are called to share that mothering love with one another – comforting, enduring, challenging, nurturing. Let us be mothers one to the other.
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