I lost my Mom Saturday morning, April 3, 2021. She had been ill for a few years. She was not only Mom, but a teacher, book-reader, writer, editor, watching TV game shows, and loved to shop!
The past five days since her passing have been rough for me,
my Dad, and my sister. We not only lost our Mom, but also a friend,
someone who listened, understood, helpful, special, witty, and fun. We loved
her very, very much.
When I was starting the second semester in the fall of 2005
as a student in Houston Community College after going through a rough beginning
in the first semester, I learned how to keep going. I took a course in
Commercial Music Forum from Joe LoCascio who became one of my mentors and
teacher to go from filmmaking to Jazz Studies. The course of Commercial Music
Forum was that you had to write five concert reviews.
And that was where the light bulb lit up inside my head. I
have been writing reviews since 2008. If it wasn’t for both Joe and my Mom, I
don’t know what I would be doing right now. Since starting my blogsite, Music from the Other Side of the Room, and
then writing for Echoes and Dust, and
a 2-year ride with The Progressive
Aspect, my Mom was always supportive for me to follow my dream in writing.
I know that she would want me to continue writing. And I’m
following that dream to keep going.
I remember when the late great film critic Roger Ebert
dedicated a special to his partner Gene Siskel from the Chicago Tribune who
passed away in 1999 entitled Remembering
Gene Siskel for the TV show Siskel
& Ebert. In the final segment of the tribute, Roger talked about Gene
asking the final question to either an actor or a director, “What do you know
for sure?”
Okay Mom, what do I know for sure about you, well you were
one of the smartest, polite, amazing, and funny person I got to know and an
amazing editor. To quote Ebert, It was almost impossible to tell you
anything you already didn’t know. Whether you were watching a movie marathon of
the Harry Potter series, Bette Davis, Casablanca, the Lord of the Rings trilogy, or watching either Jeopardy or Wheel of Fortune when
it come on in the afternoon and evening.
And I know for sure that going to movies as a family seeing The Birdcage or Mel Brooks’ Robin Hood: Men in Tights, it was an
amazing time to go. Seeing some R-rated movies like South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut was an extra bonus!
And I know for sure that a book you finished reading whether
it was good or bad, your spirit was still high. I know it’s going to be a long
and winding road without you, being here, but your spirit and your legacy will
never die. Thank you Mom for being a part of our lives. And God bless.
No comments:
Post a Comment