I had the honour of reading this at my Memere's funeral on December 7, 2013 as part of the Eulogy.
Memere was the kindest, sweetest, gentlest person I know.
Memere was the kindest, sweetest, gentlest person I know.
As the oldest granddaughter, I got to spend a lot of time
helping with little ones. There’s a whole slough of them around my little sister Bonnie’s
age. Memere was the master at quieting a
crying baby or a screaming toddler. She
would distract them with a calm quiet voice, “Oh goodness, what’s this over
here, look at this” and suddenly a photograph or a mirror or a book made the
baby forget mommy wasn’t in the room or made the toddler forget they were
having a tantrum. A true role model, I
never saw her angry or speak harshly to anyone - although she did raise my Dad, so I'm guessing she may have raised her voice on occasion - She had never-ending patience,
and was always calm and capable no matter what task she took on.
We all have memories of spending time with Memere in the
kitchen – Tourtiere, flapper pie, pate chinois, making snow taffy, Sucre a Creme - in the little blue glass dish with a handle - baking bread – and after kneading you always
end by poking the sign of the cross in the dough before you cover with a tea towel, Always cookies in the blue
cookie jar, and always a pie in the cupboard when you reached for a plate. I remember her garden was always brimming
with raspberries to pick and peas to be shelled, and I remember the tummyaches from eating too many of the
raspberries or too many of the peas.
I have older memories too. One
of my oldest memories is of being potty trained. My Dad remembers pulling into the yard, and she had me hanging over the edge of porch railing, telling me to feel the cool breeze, or in the bathroom she would turn on the tap a
little bit and tell me to listen to the sound of the running water. To this day I can’t drive by a waterfall
without wondering where the nearest washroom is.
But she didn't just potty train us. Memere was always teaching without you knowing you were learning. When I was a little girl – only 3 or 4 years old? - she would let me help her in the store they had in St. Denis. How to put the prices on the items, how to count money. She even had a dish of money next to the till, so if I wanted something I had to ‘buy’ it with money from the dish – my bar six or Cuban lunch or little icy cup in the foil cup. She showed me how to use the old wringer washer, and how to make salad dressing – mayonnaise, vinegar, salt and pepper, always in the little blue plastic mug with a handle and she'd let me stir it with a fork. Memere never made you feel like you were too little to help or too little to try things, or that she didn't have time for you.
But she didn't just potty train us. Memere was always teaching without you knowing you were learning. When I was a little girl – only 3 or 4 years old? - she would let me help her in the store they had in St. Denis. How to put the prices on the items, how to count money. She even had a dish of money next to the till, so if I wanted something I had to ‘buy’ it with money from the dish – my bar six or Cuban lunch or little icy cup in the foil cup. She showed me how to use the old wringer washer, and how to make salad dressing – mayonnaise, vinegar, salt and pepper, always in the little blue plastic mug with a handle and she'd let me stir it with a fork. Memere never made you feel like you were too little to help or too little to try things, or that she didn't have time for you.
Somehow she managed to make all of her grandchildren feel
special, when you visited her you never felt like just 1 of 19, you were 1 of 1
for that time you with her. As a
teenager, watching soap operas with her on a visit, she would fill me in with a
hushed voice “You know, he’s sleeping with her, but married to the other one...” So out of character for her, but she loved her
soaps! Her sharing that with me made me
feel special. Even at age 40, visiting in the nursing home,
she not only knew exactly who I was but even gave me heck “You never come from
Regina to visit me”. It made me feel
like I mattered, like I was special. She
remembered that I was the one who lived in Regina, she cared that I hadn’t
been there in a while, just as she cared about every single one of her children, grandchildren and great
grandchildren.
Janelle posted a picture of Memere holding baby Michael, and it reminded me of countless
similar pictures of her holding babies, but especially of one I took of her
holding her first great-grandchild, my little Kristin, 21 years ago, and also one
of her holding little me many more years ago, always with the baby in the left
arm, the right hand ready to smooth a shirt, wipe a tear, tickle a belly,
stroke a cheek. That’s what I remember
most, Memere’s love for the little ones.
They were all a joy to her, each and every special one.
But none of us are as special as she was.
Rest in Peace Memere Aline.
Rest in Peace Memere Aline.