Sunday, March 25, 2012

Matryoshka Dolls


"All children are brilliant, beautiful and take after their Grandmother"

---

A very true statement!  I am very much like my mother who in return was very much like her mother; the three of us were like a set of Matryoshka Dolls.  


My grandmother was born and raised in Brooklyn, NY.  A true New Yorker indeed, however after raising her family in New York the time came to move to New Jersey to be with her family as they had moved a few years prior and most of all she wanted to be with her grandchildren. She took pride in her grandchildren and spoiled us rotten, yet set us straight when were misbehaving.  She spent as much time as she could with John-Paul, Paul Andrew and myself and we have some pretty amazing memories of our time with her.  


I remember every Friday night my grandmother along with my mother took John-Paul and I to the Deptford mall, every week no question about it. It was always a fun time as mama always spoiled us kids and I remember my mother saying "stop spoiling them, they have enough." Mama simply looked at my mother and said, "When you have grandchildren of your own you may do the same and the beauty of a woman in my position is that I get to enjoy them and give them back to you at the end of the day." After shopping around at the mall we would always stop for ice cream at TCBY in the mall, it became tradition. I however did not like TCBY, so I would sit there in a snit as my mother was like, just try it. Mama rescued me every week and said "come on Danielle; let's get you something else in the food court that you will enjoy." I skipped away holding mama's hand and always looking back and sticking my tongue out at my mother as if to say "HA."  

It was a Friday afternoon and John-Paul and I just got home from school and mama was there.  She sat John-Paul and I down to let us know that she and papa were taking us to Disneyworld that summer. We were so excited!! As school ended for the year we were getting ready and counting the days, however it was no surprise That Paul Krug Sr. would back out as he had more important things to do than to spend time with 'two brats' he would never call his grandchildren. Mama was heartbroken, but my mother turned her frown upside down and said "I’ll go, it will be wonderful time." It was indeed a wonderful time, although things started out shaky. A simple two hour flight seemed to last two days to mama and my mother as I sat with mama on the plane with a double ear infection and my were ears popping all over during flight and I screamed the whole way as everyone on the plane just starred at my grandmother as she rocked me a tried to calm me down. Mama was not disturbed by the stares and comments of the other passengers and she screamed to them "she has a double ear infection and is in pain and if I could give all of you the same ear infections I would, just to see how you like it." The stares and comments quickly ended, mama was a sharp shooter and did not let anyone get in her way. Meanwhile, my mother had the pleasure of minding my brother as he sat there throwing up repeatedly as my mother screamed to the flight attendant "we need another bag and for Christ sake just bring me a stack and stop bringing me one at a time, I’ll give the remainder back after the flight, I promise." Another sharp shooter and a woman who let nothing or no one get in her way. Despite the flight, the rest of our vacation was amazing and indeed wonderful.

The following year, mama was blessed with another grandchild, Paul Andrew Krug. He joined the grandchildren clan and we had so fun with mama as we all continued to be spoiled and loved. I was happy because Paul Andrew was a boy and I was still the only girl and mama's princess. Two years later, Aunt Maryann was expecting another child, I prayed day and night saying, "Please let Aunt Maryann have another boy, please let Aunt Maryann have another boy, please let Aunt Maryann have another boy, etc." Indeed on December 28th a baby boy was born, Michael Steven Krug and I was still the only granddaughter and princess.

Two months later I was excited as Michael's Christening was the following Saturday and I would get to see the family and have a great time as usual. Yet that Sunday before and I remember it very well, mama was sick and in the hospital. That Sunday night my mommy came into the room where John-Paul and I were watching cartoons and I said "do we have to go to school tomorrow? Can we take off to go and see mama, please?" My real motive was not to have to go to school, but I thought throwing mama's name in the mix would help my case. My mother sadly replied, "No, mama passed away and is in heaven now, no school tomorrow or the rest of the week." My tiny heart broke and I would have rather gone to school over that. That Saturday Michael was never christened, it was on hold as we all had a funeral to attend. It was a very sad day for all of us. I remember sitting in the church pew as a little kid and thinking "why did she leave me? I was her princess." I never understood and perhaps never will.

As time moved on and us kids grew up and I remember Michael saying that "mama sounded like an amazing woman and I am sorry I never got to know her better."

She was indeed wonderful and I felt his pain, but my mother to the rescue, took care of all her nephews as her own, just like mama did to her grandchildren. Yet as she did that I still saw the glimmer of sadness in my mother's eyes everyday of her life. She lost her mother and for over nineteen years had to live with that and it broke her heart every day. I remember talking with my mother as I expressed my own sadness at the loss, but I truly did not know what that pain was like. I said to her, "We were taught and raised right and it’s you and me forever kid and I want to have you here as long as forever, I love you so much." She smiled and said "It absolutely is us 'kids' and I would never wish the loss of a mother on my worst enemy, what a tragedy and she was so young at 63 years old, can you imagine? It is simply not fair” I simply replied, "No I can never imagine, nor do I ever want too."

I wonder if my mother is eating her own words now "what a tragedy and she was so young at 63 years old, can you imagine? It is simply not fair."  

Indeed life is unfair and that was a lesson mama taught me, even at an early age.  She also taught me to make the best of every situation as there is nothing that could not be resolved.  It may take some work and patience, but everything always seems to work out with the right attitude and efforts.  My mother taught me the same.  

A loss is never easy to define, so many "whys."  However, as my grandmother taught me - every situation must be made the best of no matter what.  Despite my many moments of nervous breakdowns over the loss of both mama and my mother I am pulling full effort to make the best of what has transpired.  You see I could sit here and cry and curse the world, but what good would that do?  Mama taught me better than that.  While sadness can creep in I am learning to soak it in when appropriate and the rest of the time is spent honoring a life well lived.  It could be as simple of making a right decision and following advice that mama gave me years ago and knowing that she is smiling from heaven because of it.  

So this Friday - February 24, 2012 will be the 20th anniversary that mama passed away and instead of dwelling in my grief I will take a spin around the Deptford mall just like we always did every Friday with mama and as an added bonus, I will spend my father's money just as my mother always did ;-)  I will remember two very special ladies all in one shot, haha!  

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