The third part of a trilogy is supposed to be the best. Yeah, right.
I
saved the third entry in the trilogy about my mother for after Mother's
Day. Somehow, it seemed appropriate because now we'll talk about her
when I knew her. The previous two posts were about her life before her
marriage and my brother and I coming into the picture.
Sophia
Pawlak married Leon Kleylein on April 15, 1944 in Ft. Lauderdale,
Florida. There don't seem to be any wedding pictures that are identified
as such, but here's one where Mom has a hibiscus flower in her hair and
my father has one of those short 1940's ties on. (Hmmm, I wonder if
they'll come back?) Anyway, This could be it for all I know. Just for
fun, let's say it is - OK, here's their wedding picture! They seem
happy.Here's
another one where they seem happy. I like this one because it's so
well worn that I presume they liked it as well. My father is wearing his
auto mechanic's uniform and Mom is wearing the type of house dress that I
remember her wearing all the time. That insignia on my father's shirt
LOOKS like the old Amoco logo before they went red white and blue, but I
can't quite make it out. Maybe I should use that special software that
the cop shows have that clarifies an image even when there are NO PIXELS
available. Oh, wait, there isn't any such software.

Here she is with my brother Dave in January of 1946. Look how handsome my brother is, my mother can't believe her eyes.
As
I mentioned before, my mother was a maid all her life. She worked at
the Holiday House on Biscayne Boulevard and NW 117 St. in Miami and at
the LuRu Motel at Biscayne and NW 145 St. operated by Lou and Ruth Bruno
(LuRu). Interestingly, the back of the Holiday House property was on
the Dixie Highway (East Dixie - see previous posts) and the LuRu was
situated right on what was once the Dixie Highway and the Florida East
Coast railway ran behind it. She could walk to the Holiday House, but
she had to take a bus to the LuRu and when we moved to Carol City, it
was a long trip.
And
then, here she is three years later with me at five months. She looks
like she's been through the ringer, but I guess that's what happens when
you have a ten pound baby.
As much as she loved my brother and
me, I think she had a special love for my daughter Leah. The family
never had more than two nickels to rub together, but Mom would have
given everything she had to Leah with no hesitation.
I'm sorry
Mom never got to meet Heather since Heather wasn't born until a year and
a half after she died. I'm sorrier still that Heather didn't have the
opportunity to meet her grandmother Kleylein. Imagine how hard it must
be to miss memories you never had.
My
mother was a good mother. Our clothes were clean, there was always
enough food and neither my brother nor I ended up in prison for any
considerable length of time. Sure, my parents smoked and drank beer, but
so did everyone in those days, there wasn't any television to numb our
brains. My brother and I learned how to work and you can blame it on
genetics or culture, I don't care, it worked out for me.
Thanks, Mom.
4 comments:
-
well, that was a fitting conclusion. I'm all misty now.
Thanks Dad! -
I was a real chunk when I was a baby wasn't I? Great picture of mom with Leah!
-
She dearly loved Leah. I can still see her face light up when we met her at the bus stop and drove her the rest of the way home to visit for a bit. She laughed a lot during those visits.
-
I can't get over how BIG you are in that picture Dad. You were only 5 months and look like a one year old.
This was a really nice post. I would have loved to have met her.
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