Happy Mother’s Day to all the wonderful moms out there. Here is some Mother’s Day food for thought I wrote down four years ago.
The roots of the holiday trace back to the Civil War. Julia Ward who wrote the lyrics to “The Battle Hymn of the Republic” started a campaign in Boston for a mother’s day that celebrated peace and protested war. Meanwhile in West Virginia, Ann Jarvis, who had spent years helping poor mothers, formed a committee to foster friendship between mothers from the North and the South. After Ann’s death, her daughter Anna Jarvis decided to continue her quest for a national day for moms.
Anna’s efforts were rewarded in 1914 when President Woodrow Wilson set aside the second Sunday in May as a nationwide holiday. Businesses immediately seized the opportunity to sell flowers, candies, and cards. Anna Jarvis felt the commercialization was detracting from the spirit of Mothers’ Day and began staging boycotts of the holiday she created. Jarvis eventually used her last dollar in the unsuccessful fight. She died broke and blind at the age of 84 in a sanitarium. Evidence indicates that persons connected with the floral and greeting card industries paid the bills to keep her in the sanitarium.
Trivia
Because one of the first utterances babies make is a “ma” sound, most languages around the world use that sound as the basis for their word for “mother. The Mandarin word for “mom” is “mama”, the Icelandic word is “mamma” and the Vietnamese word is “me”.
Most countries set aside an annual mother’s day and some have unique traditions. For example, mothers in Serbia are tied up with rope or ribbon until they give sweets and gifts to their children.
47% of moms think that fathers should buy the mother of their kids a gift while only 6% of dads agree.
Cheating websites such as Ashley claim that on the day after Mother’s Day there is a dramatic increase in mothers signing up. Could it be because of the gift disconnect?
On average, people spend $196 on Mother’s Day compared to $133 on Father’s Day.
When landline telephones were the norm, Mother’s Day was the busiest day of the year for long distance calls. Father’s Day set the record each year for number of collect calls.
Each of those sweaters that helped make Mr. Rogers famous were hand-knit by his mother.
Hugh Hefner went to his father for a loan to finance a magazine that would become Playboy. His public accountant father refused because he thought it was a bad investment. Hefner’s mother grabbed Hugh before he left the house and gave him $1,000 to kick-off his venture.
Some Bad Muthas
Most mothers I know are wonderful women and perform feats I cannot even imagine. However, history and fiction are rife with examples of horrible moms. A list of real-life worst mothers includes murderers, Kardashians or even worse- the mother of Honey Boo Boo. Here are my awards for the worst fictional moms (apologies to Mrs. Robinson who missed the cut):
Bronze Medal: Betty Draper from “Mad Men” – Betty is also winner of the coveted “Worst mom with whom to spend a pandemic” award. The ultra- self-centered housewife, brilliantly played by January Jones, perpetually ignores her children. When her son complained that he was bored, Betty responded “Go bang your head against a wall. Only boring people are bored.” Betty gets a mulligan for being married to a serial cheater but she is still a dreadful human being.
Silver Medal: Livia Soprano of “The Sopranos”- One of the most miserable characters in TV history, played superbly by Nancy Marchand. I’m sure many moms have thought about putting out hits on their sons but Livia actually ordered one.
Gold Medal: Eleanor Shaw Iselin from “The Manchurian Candidate (1962) – Angela Lansbury plays the sadistic, creepy puppet master of both her politician husband and her tragic war-hero son.
Special Lifetime Achievement Citation – Norma Bates from Psycho – She certainly did a number on her cross-dressing serial killer son.
Happy Mother’s Day and have a great weekend.
If you enjoyed this blog please consider ordering a copy of my new book, “Get Smarter-Be Amazed”. “Mother’s Day Ramblings is one of 100 stories contained in the compendium.
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