Showing posts with label mother's day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mother's day. Show all posts

Sunday, May 10, 2026

We Celebrate Mother's Day

 Honoring mothers and motherhood

We celebrate Mother’s Day to honor the love, sacrifices, and influence of mothers, a tradition shaped by both ancient customs and the modern efforts of Anna Jarvis in the early 20th century.

Mother’s Day exists because societies across history have recognized the central role of mothers, but the holiday as we know it today began in the United States. Its modern form was created by Anna Jarvis, who organized the first official Mother’s Day service in 1908 to honor her own mother, Ann Reeves Jarvis, a community activist who worked to support families and promote public health. Jarvis then campaigned for a national holiday, and in 1914, President Woodrow Wilson officially established Mother’s Day on the second Sunday in May. 

Historical Roots:
Ancient traditions: Civilizations like the Greeks and Romans held festivals celebrating mother goddesses such as Rhea and Cybele, linking motherhood with fertility, life, and community. These early rituals helped shape the symbolic meaning of honoring mothers. 

Christian “Mothering Sunday”: 
In medieval Europe, people returned to their “mother church” on the fourth Sunday of Lent, which evolved into a day to honor mothers in Britain. Though distinct, this tradition influenced later celebrations. 

The Modern American Holiday
Ann Reeves Jarvis’s influence: Before the Civil War, she organized Mother’s Day Work Clubs to improve health and support families. After the war, her efforts helped reunite divided communities. 

Anna Jarvis’s mission: 
After her mother’s death in 1905, she sought to create a day of personal appreciation, emphasizing handwritten letters and heartfelt gestures rather than commercial gifts. The first official celebration took place in Grafton, West Virginia, in 1908. 
While the holiday has become commercialized—something Anna Jarvis herself later opposed—its core purpose remains: to acknowledge the profound impact mothers have on families and society.

National recognition: 
By 1914, the holiday had spread across the U.S., leading to Wilson’s proclamation establishing the second Sunday in May as Mother’s Day. 

Why We Celebrate Today

Mother’s Day is now a global celebration dedicated to:
Honoring mothers and motherhood
Recognizing maternal sacrifices and care
Strengthening family bonds
Expressing gratitude, whether through time together, letters, flowers, or simple acts of love.

Every mother is different

https://books2read.com/Bittersweet-Memories-by-Erika-M-Szabo

Not every mother is a happy housewife giving her children a warm home, security, and love. 

In this story, a mother is helplessly lost to addiction but tries to ensure a better life for her newborn daughter. Did she save her precious little girl? Yes, she saved her from a miserable life of an addict. However, life had sad and happy days stored for her. 

Moving from one foster home to another, her life was a revolving door of shattered hopes and disappointments.

As soon as she felt an emotional connection to anyone, the foster kid in her quickly pushed the feeling away. The last thing Elana wanted to do was to get close to someone she would probably never see again. The necessary emotional defense served her well throughout her unpredictable life.

Until she met Luca.

A short excerpt:

On that stormy Christmas Eve twenty-two years ago, a young woman trudged through the unforgivingly cold winds of downtown New York City with a bundle of rags held tightly to her chest. Glass beads of frozen tears clung to the exposed skin of her face. The woman, slightly dazed and clearly distraught, shuffled aimlessly through the snow that clotted the empty sidewalk.

She was uncertain how long she had been pushing her way through the whirling snow, but her raw cheeks were evidence of the stretch of time and the ferocity of the wind. To anyone driving by, she appeared to be just another homeless person: one of the city’s many untouchables caught in the fierce weather, trying to find shelter. They’d give her a callous look and go about their business.

The woman, guided by her numb feet, walked and walked until the dim light of a steeple shone through the flittering blankets of falling snowflakes. Slowly, she approached the steps leading up to the door and stopped.

“I’m so sorry,” she sobbed, lightly rocking the bundle of rags from side to side. “I’m alone, and I have nowhere to go. You’ll be better off without me.” Her soft crying was captured in the air as tufts of tiny ice beads—dissipating clouds of unfathomable despair. They would momentarily hover about her face like a thin mask before being swallowed up by the passing gusts of wind from the barren street.

Slowly, she knelt and set the bundle of rags carefully onto the cathedral step. With warm tears running cold as soon as they leaked down her trembling cheeks, she traced her footsteps back down the street and disappeared into the storm. Never to return.

A few minutes later, a priest of the church stepped out onto the front steps. “Good Lord! It’s cold tonight,” Father Brown, a tall, middle aged man murmured while tossing his long scarf over his shoulder. He shoved his boney hands into the pockets of his long coat and took a moment to silently view the whitewashed buildings with awe. They stood like monolithic snowdrifts, rows of naked windows gleaming with ice, like the eyes of a frozen spider.

Father Brown was on his way to a homeless shelter across town to help with the preparation of Christmas Day dinner. Having no family of his own, it brought him more joy to be surrounded by those in need than to be cooped up in the church all night watching old movies on the ancient black and white TV set in his bedroom. Though he rather enjoyed Jimmy Stewart’s performance in the classic film It’s a Wonderful Life, he’d seen the movie at least fifty times by now, and serving the unfortunate souls would be a better use of his time. The smiles on their faces, as warm and inviting as the turkey and mashed potatoes he was lucky enough to serve, was more than he ever could have asked for on this holiest of days. Pulling his hand out of his jacket to check his wristwatch, he realized that if he wanted to catch the late bus to the shelter, he’d have to get a move on.

Hurrying down the church steps, he nearly stumbled. He looked down and saw the bundle of rags resting on the bottom step. At first thought to be trash, the priest sidestepped to walk around the heap of clothing when, suddenly, he heard a weak moan emanating from the bundle of rags, muffled by the layers. Curiously kneeling to get a better look, he nearly screamed when the rags began to shiver and move at his touch.

That’s when he realized something living was wrapped up inside. Fearing the worst, he quickly scooped up the bundle and brought it into the protective walls of the cathedral. Clutching the rag bundle to his chest, he made his way to the nearest pew and slowly set it down, whispering a prayer. Under the glow of various lit candles and assisted by the borrowed white light of the full moon leaking through the stained windows, the priest quickly undid the bundle of cloths.

Lying inside the cocoon of dirty rags was a newborn baby. Still pruned, with dried blood covering her skin and matted hair, her blue eyes rolled listlessly, and dry lips slightly parted to expose purple gums and a swollen tongue.

“Sweet Mother Mary!” Father Brown gasped, reflexively tracing the holy symbol of the cross on his body as he raced his way back to his office. Once inside, his shaking hands grasped the phone on his desk and dialed 9-1-1.

“Yes, I need an ambulance sent to St. Patrick’s Cathedral immediately,” the priest begged, cold sweat breaking out across his forehead. “I have a dying newborn here. Please, hurry!” Abruptly ending the call, he raced back out to the pew and held the baby in his arms. It hurt his soul to look at the child, shriveled and clinging to life, but he forced his eyes to meet hers.

“Don’t worry, little one,” he said, cradling the dying baby tightly in his arms to keep her warm. “God is watching over you now.”

The ambulance arrived at the church not ten minutes later, and the newborn was immediately rushed to a local hospital. The baby was at the brink of death. She was severely dehydrated, and hypothermia had set in, making her breathing shallow and heartbeat slow.

Unable to trace the parents or relatives of the baby, the hospital contacted child services and arranged for the little girl to be placed in foster care, once she was in better health.

Under the watchful care of doctors and nurses, after fighting a series of infections and neonatal abstinence syndrome because of the drugs she was exposed to in the womb, she slowly recovered. The nurses adored the tiny baby and held her in their arms, cooing to her as much as their busy schedule allowed. By the hospital rules her name was Baby Girl, but the nurses named her Elana.

She was cleared by the hospital a little more than three months later and was assigned a social worker and given an official name: Elana Smith.

Erika M Szabo is known for her diverse range of writings, which span historical fantasymagical realismcozy mysteries, sweet romance, and children's literature. Her writing style is both expressive and insightful, transporting readers into the depths of the characters' emotions.

Sunday, May 13, 2018

MOTHER'S DAY

Today we celebrate Mother's Day

The history of Mother's Day celebration

The modern holiday of Mother's Day was first celebrated in 1908, when Anna Jarvis held a memorial for her mother at St Andrew's Methodist Church in Grafton, West Virginia. St Andrew's Methodist Church now holds the International Mother's Day Shrine. Her campaign to make Mother's Day a recognized holiday in the United States began in 1905, the year her mother, Ann Reeves Jarvis, died. Ann Jarvis had been a peace activist who cared for wounded soldiers on both sides of the American Civil War, and created Mother's Day Work Clubs to address public health issues. Anna Jarvis wanted to honor her mother by continuing the work she started and to set aside a day to honor all mothers because she believed a mother is "the person who has done more for you than anyone in the world"
Although Jarvis was successful in founding Mother's Day, she became resentful of the commercialization of the holiday. By the early 1920s, Hallmark Cards and other companies had started selling Mother's Day cards. Jarvis believed that the companies had misinterpreted and exploited the idea of Mother's Day, and that the emphasis of the holiday was on sentiment, not profit.


Erika M Szabo
 
My best memories of my mother are when she told me stories. She sat on the couch and I put my head on her lap. She stroked my hair and told me her endless stories about her childhood, family, and everyday life. She never preached at me how to become a good person, I learned compassion, love, acceptance, and respect from her actions and stories. Thank you, mom!

The only time I didn't like her when she made me wear the "bow" and fancy dresses to make me look like a girlish girl. I always preferred the simplest clothes possible and destroyed her fancy dresses the first chance I got so I could get back to my favorite outfit, shorts, and t-shirts. Sorry, mom, I know you loved those ruffled dresses and enormous bows and sorry for making you angry when I "accidentally" ripped the dresses to shreds or "accidentally" fell into the muddy puddles. Love you, mom!

Eulogy for My Mom: 
Mary Prudden-Bonadonna

September 15, 1915 - March 17, 2001

Joe Bonadonna

Mom and I - circa 1954

Mom - circa 1935



Happy Mother's Day!
Navonia Thomas, mother to Toi Thomas
My mom and I are very different in many ways, yet we do have a lot in common. I love science fiction and fantasy, but she does not. I'm a bookworm, and while she does appreciate a good book, she doesn't have the same passion for reading as I do. I love to swim and she's terrified of the water. I love to cook and, even, bake from scratch when  I have the resources. My mom can cook, but she doesn't like to; she leaves that up to my dad. My mom is a math whiz, and though I'm not bad at math, I'm not great at it either. My mom can sew anything, even couture. I can sew pillows and hemlines. My mother has an amazing singing voice and I'm tone deaf. I'm an animal lover, but my mom isn't much of an animal person. I'm a bit of a techie and my mom fights with every machine she encounters (except her smartphone).

The things my mother and I have in common- we both love movies (though not always the same kinds). We both have a passion for family, desire to help others, have similar voices, share similar facial features, love each other dearly (she's my biggest fan), and cling to our beliefs. Being the techie that I am, I made a video a few years back to show my mother how much I miss her when we are apart. Check it out.


My Wonderful Mom
Ruth de Jauregui

Mom, Dad and that's me!
My mom is still a bustling, busy woman who cooks for events and local organizations, works part time at the schools, an active member of Eastern Star and is crazy busy with her great-grandkids. (My sister's grandkids, mine live in California.)

She never learned to swim (getting thrown off the dock, rescued by her brothers, and thrown off again will cause a lifelong fear of water) but took us all swimming at the river. 

Me, my granddaughter and Mom. 
She's a Master Preserver with the county extension office and teaches classes in canning and food preservation to the locals. She also sews, keeps track of our genealogy and collects stamps. 


She is so supportive of all of us, in all of our endeavors. She reads our stories, even if they aren't in her preferred genres. I dunno though, she called Bitter "cute." Luckily Bitter is a fictional character or she'd take offense LOL. 

Seriously, my mom is the best!








Reflections on Mother's Day

It took me a while to figure out just how to word this post.  This is not one of those holidays that we celebrated. It was just another day. The relationship I  had with my mother was odd, from the beginning. I know she did her best with what she had, and I don't fault her at all. I regret there wasn't a closeness that a mother has with her child.  There were very few photos of us together-- one when I was a baby, another at my high school graduation. 

 circa 1954

She was born in Missouri, had a 6th grade education, and in her late teens, ran away from home with her older brother and younger sister "to see the world." They wound up in Montana, of all places.
Because of her lack of education, she was naive on so many levels. Yet, as I said, she did the best she could with what she had. She took in ironing and did babysitting during my high school years to make ends meet. She was personable--people liked her. She was honest and dependable and a very hard worker.

circa 1955

Because of her naivete, I basically raised myself from the 6th grade through high school. I'm so thankful for the substitute "moms" I had who taught me about religion, boys, cooking, and so many other life skills.

So, today, I celebrate the greatest blessing of all...being a mom to two of the most incredible young men. 

circa 2013

The Strongest Woman I know
Rebecca Tran
Rtranbooks.net

My mom and me

My mom and I didn't always have the best relationship. When I was younger I couldn't understand why she did some of the things she did. Mom was always busy and didn't have a lot of time for us.  She was the main bread-winner on and off for years. She took care of the bills and made sure the house was clean. 
Me and my girls

Now that I'm older I find myself in a similar situation. I realize how hard my mom worked to provide for the family, keep us organized and running smoothly. It wasn't an easy task at all. We had super busy schedules and she never missed a game or school function. I look back now and wonder howshe did it. 

Without my mom these last couple years and in the years to come I'd never survive. At 65 she watches my two girls four days a week which is a full-time job. She's also close friend. I call her literally in the middle of the night just to hear her voice. 

I still don't know how she does it all. Whenever I need inspiration for tough heroines I think of my mom. She's the strongest woman I know. I love you mom. Happy Mother's Day.

COMMENTS

demetria rogers

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Hello, I am Demetria Rogers. After being in relationship with my husband for years, he broke up with me. I did everything within my reach to bring him back but all was in vain, I wanted him back so badly because of the love I had for him, I begged him with everything, I made promises but he refused. I explained my problem to my friend and she suggested that I should rather contact a spell caster that could help me cast a spell to bring him back , I had no choice than to try it. I messaged the spell caster, and he assured me there was no problem and that everything will be okay before three days. He cast the spell and surprisingly on the second day, my husband called me. I was so surprised, I answered the call and all he said was that he was so sorry for everything that had happened He wanted me to return to him. He also said he loved me so much. I was so happy and went to him that was how we started living together happily again. The spell casters email is : babayamideshrine@gmail.com You can email him if you need his assistance in your relationship or any other Case.

Doctor Yamide could help you with the following:

1) Love Spells

2) Lost Love Spells

3) Divorce Spells

4) Marriage Spells

5) Binding Spell.

6) Breakup Spells

7) Banish a past Lover

8.) You want to be promoted in your office/ Lottery spell

9) want to satisfy your lover

Contact this great man if you are having any problem for a lasting solution through babayamideshrine@gmail.com
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Chris Weigand

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Wow great stories, makes me regret not writing one of my own. Thank you all for sharing yours.
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Grace Au

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today we salute our mothers on this special day of mothering and counting our blessings through our children.
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Toi Thomas

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
I really enjoyed writing about my mom, but most of all, I appreciated being able to see the affections of others. It's a reality check and one of those things that lets us know that we are more alike than we are different.
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Toi Thomas via Google+

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today we celebrate Mother's Day with a tribute to our moms.
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Cindy Smith via Google+

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Cindy Smith

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<3
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Ruth de Jauregui via Google+

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Our Author Gang honors our mothers today, with snippets of memories and lots of love.
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Ruth de Jauregui

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Love all the Moms!
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Lorraine Carey

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
What a beautiful tribute to mothers. Well done here. You guys are something else. I shed a few tears.
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+Lorraine Carey We're happy that you're joining us Lorraine
 
+Erika M Szabo It is going to be a real pleasure.

Erika M Szabo via Google+

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Happy Mother's Day!
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Erika M Szabo

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Beautiful tributes to mothers and memories!
Joe that's a lovely eulogy. She must have been a great person and loving mother, and I bet she's still leaving you hairpins on the carpet :)
Toi, your love for your mom shines through every word and I love the video you made for her. I bet she was bawling her eyes out watching it :)
Ruth, no wonder your mom was afraid of water! My mom preserved every piece of fruit and pickled every vegetable too that we didn't eat fresh. The kitchen table was loaded with jars all summer and the pantry shelves lined with jars :)
Grace I'm so sorry you didn't experience the bond with your mom, but it sounds like you have a deep connection with your sons.
Rebecca it sounds like your mom is an amazing person and mother?!
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What a lovely experience.

Nikki McDonagh

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
What lovely posts. Happy Mother's Day.
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Joe Bonadonna via Google+

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Happy Mother's Day!!! Today on A Small Gang of Authors, we pay honor to our mothers, and share some memories with you.
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Joe Bonadonna

8 months ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Lovely tributes to our Mothers. Beautiful, gang. Beautiful. Happy Mother's Day!