My mother, Christine Wendig, passed away a week ago today. And though I usually rankle at that phrase — “passed away” — it feels somewhat appropriate here. I note that sometimes death feels like watching someone drift farther and farther from shore, with you standing on the land, and them on the water, and ahead of them, a bank of fog. You know that at some point, they’ll float far enough away that they’ll enter the fogbank and be gone, but until that time comes, you keep talking to them, keep trying to make them laugh, keep giving them ways to be comfortable out on that raft of theirs. But every day they move closer to the fog, sometimes by a few inches, sometimes by a few feet. It was like that with Mom, watching her go. She was diagnosed with small cell stage 4 lung cancer on September 11th (another reason to hate that day), and died three, four weeks later. The disease swept in quick and the decline was fast, but enough where we still had time to visit with her and let her know we loved her, and with her letting us know we were loved in return. We thought this past Sunday would be the day, so a lot of people came by one last time to say their goodbyes — but, to our surprise, she held on. And when she passed on Monday, she did so with my sister and I present in the room, and nobody else. She drifted into the fog, and was gone, as peacefully as could be expected.
It’s hard.
I expect it will continue to be hard.
I keep wanting to call her and talk to her about it, which is as absurd an instinct as there is — “Hi, Mom, can you offer me advice for when my mother dies?” — but it is what it is, I guess. As if life was not complicated enough, we bought a new house in the hopes of being closer to her, and then in spectacular irony, she was diagnosed a couple weeks later. We settled two weeks ago, moved in last Friday, and by Monday, she was gone. She never saw the new house.
It’s hard, it’s hard, it’s so damn hard.
The grief is strange — it comes at unexpected times. A thing triggers the memory and you don’t expect it and next thing you know, you’re tearing up and feel like someone punched you in the middle. I wanted to call her the other day to ask how to clean something — just a stupid question, but I couldn’t, and the loss of that simple exchange gutted me for a moment, just ripped my middle out.
Her obituary is here, if that’s the sort of thing you care to read.
But I also think that obituaries are limited — there’s a format and not a lot of wiggle room.
So, a few more things about my mother that an obituary could not so easily contain:
When she was younger, her and my father were self-described “hellraisers.” They talked about racing motorcycles and jumping a ravine in a snowmobile. My mother used to shoot pennies out of the air like Annie Oakley. She more or less retired her hellraiser ways as she got older, though my father did not, as much. (It took him a lot longer to mellow out.)
She first put fantasy books into my hand — Narnia, then The Hobbit. She didn’t like that sort of thing, to be clear — but she thought I would, even young, and so that’s what she read to me early on. (We did not make it too far into the Narnia books, just two or three deep.) She was a reader and her love of reading passed along to me. (She often read those kind of thrillery type of books. If a book had the name ‘Robert Ludlum’ on it, she’d read it.) She was supportive of me being a writer (though first I wanted to be a cartoonist and she supported that, too, even going so far as getting me a copyright for my comic strip) all throughout my career, from snout to tail.
(She did love Star Wars, though.)
She liked to cook, but not so much to bake. One of my favorite things she made was apricot-glazed chicken. She would make that for me whenever I came home from college. Baking, she could do, and do well, but though she liked having recipes, she also seemed to handle the chaos of cooking better than the orderly operation of baking. (True for me, too.) My love of cooking comes from here. She was a fairly brave eater, too, with the exception of sushi. When it came time to talk about what things of hers we wanted, her recipes was chief among them for me. Precious recipes, kept on endless notecards. I’ll scan them, too, to have them, but the artifacts themselves are all their own.
She loved pierogies. If the menu had pierogies, she ordered the pierogies.
She was incredibly particular about the cleanliness of her home and the arrangement of things. My friends and I would play a game growing up where we would find a knick-knack on a shelf (for example: one of our many wooden ducks), and move it just so. Not even so dramatic as turning it all the way around, but maybe a 45 degree shift. Then we’d time how long it took her to notice. It was always alarmingly fast, as if she were a spider who noticed a vibration at the distant edges of her web.
One of her favorite phrases was, “Whatever, whatever.”
She went by “Chris” but apparently once went by “Tina.”
She had a love of small dogs. Her latest and last was an elder chihuahua named Mabel, who was a very poor example of a chihuahua in that she was quiet and friendly to nearly everyone and super chill, not yappy. Mabel was by our side when Mom passed. (My sister has her, now.)
She loved the Jersey Shore. Long Beach Island, in particular. In an act of Unrecommended Parenting That We Loved Anyway, she and her sister, my Aunt Mary, let my cousin and I drink wine coolers there. We were probably like, 12 years old — so, you know, don’t do that, obviously, but it was great and we loved it. (We never felt anything because wine coolers contain approximately four alcohol molecules in a bottle of wine-flavored soda.) It was at the shore that she bought me the first Chronicles of Prydain book, and also my first Garfield collection. I’d sit on the beach and read.
She became more progressive as the years went on, counter to how some get older and grow more conservative. Mostly she just seemed comfortable enough to let people live their lives however they wanted to, or had to, live them. She was disgusted by Trump, which, honestly, thank fucking god.
She was an accent sponge. Proximity to someone else’s accent had her picking it up in an hour or less. It never lasted, obviously — but she had no barrier against accents, they just, shoomp, became part of her for a little while, like a borrowed superpower.
When I went away to college, my mother and father separated — they loved each other, I think, but were ultimately too similar and knew exactly how to push one another’s buttons. A curious thing happened when I moved back after many years in NC — they got back together for a short time. And then we went on our first Mom-and-Dad family vacation since I was like, two years old (that early one, to Tampa, then Disneyworld). We went out to Colorado. It was a good trip. Strange to find that in my early 20s, but it happened, and it was nice. Not long after again they separated once more, and officially divorced — he wanted to move to Colorado, she didn’t. That was that.
She became a walking, talking menu of various diseases — Rheumatoid Arthritis, Osteoporosis, COPD, fatty liver disease, diverticulitis, probably a couple more that I’m forgetting. She almost died twice in the last decade — once when her liver tanked, and second when a bad cold almost wiped her out. The liver, she got back to relative normal by, of all things, drinking coffee. Amazing thing, coffee. An important thing we learned during this time was that, with the liver entanglement, she had to get off pretty much all her prescription drugs — and for many years, we wondered if mild dementia was setting in, because she’d occasionally seem loopy, or ask the same question multiple times. She got off the prescription drugs and clarity came rushing back. A weird blessing in disguise, that liver.
If you require a comparison to what I think she was like, especially as she got older, it’s Carrie Fisher, or General Leia — tough, but witty, and with an occasionally foul mouth. (One of the first times she met the woman who would one day be my wife she dropped the f-bomb, fuck yeah.) She was uncompromising but kind. Weary but still wonderful, especially in the presence of my son, to whom she became a great grandmother.
She wanted a humble end — a cremation, no funeral, no obituary, and we tried to oblige by her wishes, though obviously we felt the need to write an obit. She paid for everything ahead of time and got all her affairs in order: a kindness for us, a hardship for her. She settled on allowing us a small luncheon of family and friends.
She was a good Mom, and I’ll miss her every day.
I hope I was a good son to her.
Love you, Mom.
As noted in the obituary, in lieu of flowers or gifts, donations instead should go to Last Chance Ranch, a wonderful local shelter where my mother got Mabel. (Also where we got our two dogs, Loa and Snoobug.) You can donate here.
My mother on the day she got Mabel:
Barton Carter says:
Well shit. Now I’m sitting at my desk crying and trying not to make eye contact with anyone.
I am so very sorry. FWIW I’m sure you were a good son. A good son would sell their home and move just to be a bit closer to help out.
October 7, 2019 — 11:23 AM
conniecockrell says:
My sincere condolences. My mom passed away Dec 31st, 2018, and I’m still going through those moments where I think, Oh. I should call mom and tell her about this new show. Or, you know, some other thing. But she’s gone. She lived with me her last three months, and I still pause outside what was her room to check on her. The weird, sudden tears at the picture of a chow-chow (her last and I think favorite dog), a cute house on my drive around town, all still happen. So I sympathize with your experience. Not sure when or even if it will end. But she’s in my thoughts, so in a way, with me always. And that, I think, is a good thing.
October 7, 2019 — 11:24 AM
Kathleen S. Allen says:
So sorry for your loss. Your mother sounded like a great person. 🙁
October 7, 2019 — 11:25 AM
Chicago t says:
I’m sorry for your loss. May her memory continue to be a source of inspiration and joy.
October 7, 2019 — 11:26 AM
Natalie says:
I’m so sorry, Chuck. Your mom sounds like she was awesome. I’m glad that she didn’t suffer.
My mom died when I was quite young and I still find myself wanting to share things with her. It’s a hole that never quite goes away, I think.
October 7, 2019 — 11:29 AM
ingridwalton says:
So we know where you get your foul-mouth from then 😉
So sorry to hear of your loss. An inevitable part of life. A bit cruel of our creator to make it so painful.
October 7, 2019 — 11:34 AM
Lucy says:
So very sorry for your loss. This is a beautiful and real tribute, and I’m sure she’d love it. My mom was also born in 1941 but passed away about 10 years ago now. (It’s shocking how that laundry list of ailments can be managed for years or even decades then all of a sudden, the crash comes in rush.) It does get easier, generally speaking, but that ghost grief is always lurking. I’ll be thinking of all of you.
October 7, 2019 — 11:35 AM
Paul says:
Sounds like she’s the reason you are who you are. That’s a pretty great forever gift.
October 7, 2019 — 11:36 AM
corrie71 says:
I am so sorry for your loss. Your mom sounds awesome! I’m sure she knew that she had an awesome son too.
October 7, 2019 — 11:40 AM
zdtype says:
I’m so sorry. Thank you so much for sharing these parts of what she was with us. Wishing peace on you and yours.
October 7, 2019 — 11:44 AM
Steve Fey says:
So sorry, Chuck. I’ve been through it with both parents. My problem with death is that it never gets better — once dead, always dead. Doesn’t seem fair. My father dies a couple weeks shy of my 27th birthday. I was 36 when I cried over him, because his death was unexpected. Grief is weird. ‘Course, I guess, so is life.
October 7, 2019 — 11:47 AM
J.F. Constantine says:
Dear Chuck, you are such a great writer and a funny person. Also, your politics are right on. 😉 Seems you come by all of that really honestly through your Mom. 🙂 Your writing on this blog frequently brightens for me a really crappy day at the day job. Looks like I can definitely thank your Mom for a lot of your wit. 🙂
I am so sorry to hear of your mother’s passing – for you and yours. I know how hard this is as I have traveled this road already. For her, I believe it’s the beginning of a bright adventure! I will add her name to my prayer list (it’s a Greek thing) and I will also remember you and your family in those prayers. I will also remember her by donating to the Last Chance Ranch – I’m a big animal rights proponent. Any group that saves animals is at the top of my list for sure, and doing that out of respect for your family just makes it better.
The days will be hard for a while. It does get better. You will still miss her, but it will be sweeter than it is now. You and your family are in my thoughts and prayers. Take care of yourselves, as I’m sure that’s what your mother would want most of all.
Warm regards, J.F. (Fotini) Constantine
October 7, 2019 — 11:47 AM
Carla says:
I’m so sorry for your loss but so happy you had such a wonderful and interesting person for a mother. She sounds amazing.
You kinda can’t write enough about a good parent: there’s too many intertwined experiences, complications and love mixed together. I miss my Mom, too.
Hoping you find peace and joy in your many memories of her.
October 7, 2019 — 11:48 AM
Victoria Kazarian says:
So sorry for your loss, Chuck. My mom passed away in April. I miss her terribly and in my mind a picture of who she was is constantly being painted, all the details slowly being filled in, till I begin to see the fullness of my loss. Grief is a wild thing and will have its way with you.
October 7, 2019 — 11:48 AM
Mary Ivy Noone says:
Chuck, I am so very sorry to hear about your mom’s passing. My mom died just over a year ago. I loved your water and fog image, my mom’s death was similar. I have said we were given the gift of a long goodbye. She sounds great and I’m glad you have such lovely fond memories, I do too.
Thinking of you and your family.
Mary Ivy Noone
October 7, 2019 — 11:51 AM
Lita says:
Thank you so much for sharing this, Chuck. Your wonderful mother gave the world a wonderful son.
October 7, 2019 — 11:54 AM
Penny Rosina says:
First of all, I’m so sorry for your loss. Secondly, my mom is 96 and drifting towards the fog bank while my brother and I continue to call to her from the shore. She has some dementia so there are good days and not so good days. But your description of this is perfect, watching them drift away. I found it oddly comforting, so thank you for that. I know what you are facing now, I will soon be facing as well. Thank you for this beautiful tribute to your mom. Much love to you.
October 7, 2019 — 11:56 AM
melorajohnson says:
I’m sorry to hear of your loss, Chuck. I hope your memories are a comfort, the ones you shared are certainly lovely.
October 7, 2019 — 11:57 AM
lwall6710 says:
nothing hurts worse than losing your mom, I’m so sorry for your loss.
October 7, 2019 — 12:00 PM
Michael C. Cordell says:
My sincere condolences, Chuck. You mom sounds like a fascinating person as well as a good mother.
October 7, 2019 — 12:03 PM
jmh says:
What a beautiful tribute to your mom, who sounds like a force to be reckoned with. When we lose our parents, no matter what our age, we feel like orphans.
I’m so sorry, my friend. I wish I lived closer so I could give you a hug and feed you.
October 7, 2019 — 12:07 PM
Ed Hamell says:
My condolences on your loss. My parents are both gone and I still feel it today. Be strong \. I’m sure your mother is in a better place
October 7, 2019 — 12:24 PM
K. Eason says:
So sorry, Chuck.
October 7, 2019 — 12:25 PM
Tim Gatewood says:
This was very touching. Thank you for sharing some small bits of your memory of your mom with us. Grief is a mofo. Hugs, dude.
October 7, 2019 — 12:34 PM
Y.I. Washington says:
I am so very sorry, Chuck. Your mom sounds like she was extraordinary. From what you’ve stated here about her, I think she would be very pleased with this stunning tribute.
October 7, 2019 — 12:36 PM
Tanya Stewart says:
Dear Chuck, I wish you all the love and strength you can hold on this new, soul-deepening journey you’re embarking on, and will be for days, weeks, months and years. Here’s part of my experience: About two weeks after my father had died, and I had gotten back from his out-of-state burial, I was changing radio channels at the performing arts bookstore where I worked. As I dialed through the various stations, words, sometimes single, sometimes more, would stand out—and they cohered into a single sentence: “This is the most amazing, wonderful trip I’ve ever been on.” What made me rock back on my haunches about this was that my dad had been a radio announcer, and the question that had been riding my mind was, “What is death like?” Twenty-three years closer to my own death, whenever that will be, I know that whatever I will experience, it’s going to be a wonderful trip.
October 7, 2019 — 12:39 PM
Ms Sue Clarke says:
I woke up to hear mice scratching in the ceiling above my bed the other night and my immediate thought was I’ll call Dad in the morning, he’ll know exactly what to do. My Dad was great at that kind of stuff, except my next thought was he’s no longer with us and hasn’t been for 7 years. I’m a 50 year old very capable woman married with 3 kids and yet every time a door handle falls off or the dishwasher floods I have to stop myself from picking up the phone and calling him. Same goes for confusing situations at work, my Dad always knew how to unpick and make sense of things, I miss having that person to talk. Some reflexes will never go and nor would you want them to.
Best wishes to you and yours
October 7, 2019 — 12:47 PM
Shelton Keys Dunning says:
The imagery of the fog…if I knew nothing else about her, or you, that would be enough. Love is a power unlike any other. Pain of loss just makes it all the more valuable to keep close and share. May the Force stay with you.
October 7, 2019 — 1:01 PM
Jacquie Biggar says:
I’m so very sorry for your family’s loss. She looks like a wonderful person {{hugs}}
October 7, 2019 — 1:36 PM
Mark Painter says:
I am very sorry for your loss, Chuck. Take good care of yourself.
October 7, 2019 — 1:48 PM
NettieSars says:
What a lovely tribute to your mum. It is always too early losing one’s mother. Take care of yourself
October 7, 2019 — 2:00 PM
M.A. Kropp says:
Very sorry for your loss. A parent is always a tough death to handle. I lost Dad in 2012 and I still find myself wanting to talk to him at times. My sympathy to you and your family.
October 7, 2019 — 2:04 PM
Wendy Morrell says:
Oh, Chuck. I am so very sorry to read this.
That photo of your mother and Mable. Oh my. Such happiness in both their eyes. What a kind woman.
Thinking of you. Hugs from New Zealand xo
October 7, 2019 — 2:18 PM
kmcorby says:
I’m so sorry for your loss. Losing your mother is never easy at any age.
My mom died four years ago, also of cancer. I didn’t grieve her in the way that I thought, in that I was sad, but I wasn’t destroyed. But I do think of her every single day — something she said, something we did, what she would think of something I see or do.
People whose mothers are still in their lives don’t know how lucky they are.
I hope your memories are a comfort to you as well.
October 7, 2019 — 2:19 PM
LAURIE WILL says:
So sorry for your loss, Chuck. My dad died eleven years ago and I think it took years before stopped thinking, “Oh, I should call and ask my dad about this.” Or, “I want to tell Dad about this.” I still think about him everyday. I can still see him sitting at the kitchen table in his pajamas with the fly swatter in his hand. Sometimes I still feel like if I rush over there I will see him.
October 7, 2019 — 2:48 PM
M.L. Humphrey says:
So sorry for your loss, but it sounds like she was a wonderful woman and you had a great time with her. And I can completely relate to that wanting to talk to her about how to handle losing her. It’s how I felt for years after I lost my dad.
October 7, 2019 — 2:54 PM
Shirley Runyon says:
HOLY CRAP DO I LOVES ME SOME ROBERT LUDLUM! I didn’t think I’d be into thrillers, but I was given a box of his books once, and now I own all of them. Toward the end, he wrote a fourth Bourne book where he & Carlos the Jackal were older, with joint pains & hurting his knee when he jumped off a wall & shit. They filmed that one, but I didn’t see it because the actor was very young & fit. He’s like Stephen King, whatever magic they infuse in their books is very, very hard to get right on film.
Also, you can NOT move anything of mine without me knowing it. You might think you put it back in the exact same place, but Ill still know, lol.
I think I’d have liked to party with your mom, I’m so sorry that you’re without her now. But your “don’t parent like this stories” give me hope that my own son will remember me this fondly. 🙂
October 7, 2019 — 3:00 PM
Sheri says:
Thoughts and prayers for you and your family, Chuck…and not the political kind of “thoughts and prayers.” The actual ones.
October 7, 2019 — 3:00 PM
Peter Hentges says:
A friend of mine opined wisely, “The thing about grief is that when it knocks, you’re always home.”
After the death of my long-time partner five years ago I was amazed and fascinated by the things that would crush me with grief. Some of them made sense, like cleaning out her closet or making her favorite meal. Others were random and bizarre: Katy Perry’s song “Roar” turned me into a sobbing puddle. I had to listen to it on repeat for days to inoculate myself against it appearing randomly on the radio and I’ll still get choked up when it comes by.
All of this is to say that this is weird territory, so take it easy on yourself and take all the time you need.
May the memory of your mother be a blessing.
October 7, 2019 — 3:17 PM
lynncrandallwriter says:
When my mother was dying and then passed, words that comforted me a teeny tiny bit came from a book my mom asked me to read, The Summer of the Great Grandmother, by Madeleine L’Engle: “I don’t know how to tell you good bye, I only know to say I love you, Mom.” I’m sorry for your great loss.
October 7, 2019 — 3:18 PM
Ian Brown says:
I’m so sorry, Chuck. Condolences and <3s
She sounds wonderful.
October 7, 2019 — 3:30 PM
Tracy Collie says:
Beautiful post. Mom would be proud. And you’re right– it’s hard, it’s hard, it’s so damn hard. I get these reprieves then it hits hard and fast and guttural. I walk into her house and call out “Hi, Mom!” and I want desperately to hear her reply back. I sit, I sob, I remember. It’s only been a week and I miss her so much!!
October 7, 2019 — 3:41 PM
judytaylor2013 says:
Thank you for that beautiful post. You have eloquently described an experience that many of us will someday share, if we haven’t already. You didn’t have to do it, you could have taken some time off, no one would have been the wiser, but by sharing this story, including your humor, you have helped everyone who follows you. And by the way, I was not surprised at the way you described your mom, clearly she lives in you still. Take care of your family and thanks again for sharing.
October 7, 2019 — 3:52 PM
Denise McInerney says:
Chuck, I’m so very sorry you’ve lost your mom. My deepest condolences to you. I lost mine seven years ago, and I’ve thought of her every single day since, wishing I could ask her a question or share something with her–especially the latter. She was my best friend. But I also remember her with a smile now, and think of her with more a sense of joy than sadness. This may sound weird, but I felt her presence very strongly for several days after she passed, until one day when I was in the shower (I warned you this was weird) I told her that I missed her but I was going to be fine and that it was okay for her to go be with my father, who’d died five years earlier. And she did. Mind you, I still talk to my mom all the time. But the deep pain of her passing has mellowed into what feels more like a wistfulness whenever I want to share something with her. Your imagery of drifting across the water into a bank of fog is utterly profound, and something I’ll always remember. Thank you for being such a wonderful son to your mom. Sending big hugs to you.
October 7, 2019 — 4:02 PM
jscoble says:
Goddamn it. You got me tearing up. I’m so sorry, Chuck. But yeah, I’m pretty sure you done good by her.
October 7, 2019 — 4:12 PM
Danette Butcher says:
Thank you for sharing your heart, your grief, and your mother. My deepest condolences. I’m sure I would have loved her.
October 7, 2019 — 4:15 PM
Awkwardly Alive says:
Oh Chuck, I’m so sorry for your loss. I know it sounds weird, and I hope you’re not offended by this unasked for offering, but I have found the podcast “Griefcast” to be incredibly helpful in my own dealings with loss. It’s comedians talking about those they’ve lost and about the weirdness of grief. It’s not always funny and not always sad, but almost always comforting.
October 7, 2019 — 4:37 PM
Tracy Abell says:
I’m very sorry for your loss, Chuck. Thank you for sharing all those delightful details about her life. Shooting pennies out of the sky. Wow.
October 7, 2019 — 5:16 PM
Alejandro De La Garza says:
Please accept my condolences on your mother’s passing, Chuck.
October 7, 2019 — 5:23 PM
Laurie Bell says:
What glorious memories. I am so so sorry for your loss, Chuck.
October 7, 2019 — 5:30 PM
Katherine Turner says:
I am so sorry for your loss. It sounds like she was a was an incredible woman.
October 7, 2019 — 6:47 PM