I grew up believing that everyone had a roast with baked potatoes and a vegetable and rolls and coconut custard pie on Sunday. I couldn't imagine a world outside my own; I had no need or desire to. Such was my comfortable and sheltered childhood.

After an hour of Sunday school in a drafty Methodist church, we were home on Sundays; dad read the paper until the various sections covered the entire floor. Wide World of Sports warmed the TV in the background. My sister was somewhere in the house. The dog was sprawled on the landing (God help you if you were in a hurry up to the bathroom; she wasn't moving for you.) And mom was doing her thing with the dinner. Because we were home, she had an early start on the stuff that took a while to cook. And she cooked it and did the crossword or crocheted or folded laundry or whatever she wanted. It was Sunday.

As the years rolled by and the odd boy (they were definitely odd) would visit on a Sunday, mom led them in and led them out. If they came a different day, mom led them in and led them out. If we needed something to wear to go out with one of these beings, mom took care of that too. Something happening at school? There was mom. Getting married? There was mom. Need to mend, patch, or plug something? Call mom. Hard-boiling an egg? Mom... A baby? Mom.

Need to get home after a day with dad photographing graffiti? There's mom on the cell phone to remind us that duty calls. Need safety, sanity, and stability? Get mom.

The other day I was talking to a woman who asked me what I "did." Nowadays this question has nothing to do with being a mom, which is a sideshow to what many consider meaningful, money-making work. i hate that question and usually walk away from it.

The circumstances of the day precluded my walking away, and I told her how I earned cash. "Oh, good. It's important to have something for yourself that's just yours."

Blind greed, your name is Me, Myself, and-I-am-the-Universe.

Thanks to my mother and all those Sunday dinners she made, what I "do" is not a me thing but a mom thing.

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