I wake on Mother’s Day, in true Irish Mammy style – wrecked with
guilt. I am missing out on a family mass and gathering of my mother's clan. I know that
she would have liked me there, but the 9.30am service in Co Louth would require a 7am start, on the morning after the clocks had moved forward. Besides, it is Mr Private’s birthday. It would have been unfair to ask him to make
the trek - This particular baptism of fire is a step too far for any Birthday
Boy.
It was also my first Mother’s Day without my children, as it
wasn’t ‘my weekend’. I was fine about it until the actual day and woke feeling a terrible a pang, missing the little critters terribly.
In the build up to Mr Private’s birthday, I get myself in a
heap about a gift for him. He’s been very
generous to me, so I want to get him something special. Option A is to buy something expensive. Option B, something thoughtful. I decide on Option B, something I make,
inspired by an earlier conversation we had.
I know that he will appreciate the effort. Besides, Option A brings me out in a sweat –
Let’s face it, men are hard to buy for at the best of times. When you don’t know someone that well, it’s trickier.
I'm still in the process of finding out important stuff, like what kind of chocolate he likes (no nuts, but yes to rock salt). I consider going through his wardrobe to
get ideas for a gift of clothes, but I’m afraid of being caught in the act by
him and appearing like a Bunny Boiler.
Yes, the handmade is easier in a sense, albeit 10 hours of work late at night. Before I present it, the familiar feeling of self-doubt
creeps in – there was no gift receipt with this one.
My son was with me when I buy a birthday card for Mr Private
days previously. I don’t think he notices
me browsing, as I am also buying a Mother’s Day card for my Mam, but he does. My children know about Mr Private, but haven’t
met him. My boy directs me to the cards
intended for male ‘friends’ – you know the ones - insipid watercolour paintings
of golfers, or a sail boat. He says, ‘these
would be good Mam, because he is JUST your friend’. I
agree. I purchase the blandest blue
checkered ‘On Your Birthday’ card in the shop and the child looks satisfied.
For Mr Private’s birthday, he wants to go to see Kerry V
Cavan in Breffni Park, in Cavan Town. He
had flagged this before we discovered that the clash of dates. I joke that there is nowhere else that a Meath woman want to be on
Mother’s Day? The only thing comfortable
about this encounter is the green and gold strip of the Kerry team, mirroring
the colours of the Royal County. For the
first time ever, I shout for Cavan, as the underdog and Mr Private, for his
home county of Kerry. Throughout the
match, memories of GAA matches with my father run through my mind. Hill 16, amid a sea of Dubs. Brian Stafford, cool as anything stepping
back to take a free. David Beggy,
running like lightening. Big lumps of
men like Joe Cassells and Liam Hayes.
Tanks of lads like Mick Lyons. ‘The
physical Meath team’, as Pat Spillane called them. What would Da have thought of me standing here today? 'Be the hokey'. I watch children now, in their county
colours, too wee to be able to see the match properly, only interested in going
to the tuck shop, and yet becoming alert every time the crowd cheers.
Like the family wedding I attended with Mr Private, it
probably seems ‘too soon’ to introduce him to my mother. But I had a longing to see her on Mother’s
Day, so we make a detour to home farm on our return journey. He slags me about really being from Cavan, given the proximity to the border, but as everyone knows, borders are more important, the closer you get to them. I tell him if I was a Cavan woman, that I wouldn't have splashed out on a e3 bet with him, on which team would win.
Mr Private changes his mind about not wanting
birthday cake when he sees my mother’s rather impressive home baking, complete
with an impromptu candle. On our route back to
Kildare, I point out house after house where my relations live, where I went to school and I tell stories about people who influenced my life, special teachers who helped shape the person that I have become.
I pick my children up at 8pm. They have Mother’s Day cards for me that they
made at their child minders on Thursday and manage to keep a secret until
then. I’m impressed as much by the
secret-keeping as I am with the hand crafted cards. When I had dropped off my children’s weekend
bags at their school the previous Friday afternoon, I had spotted another card
in my daughter’s hand, but she hid it from me.
I remind her now, asking if she made me a card at school. As soon as the words come out of my mouth,
the penny drops. The card isn’t for me
at all, it’s for her father’s girlfriend.
I want to kick myself. She over explains
that she had already made one for me and I reassure her, telling her that she
is a sweet girl and what a kind thought that was. More pangs of guilt for things being as they
are for my precious babies.
Their body clocks are confused with the change of time, but
I let them stay up late for extra special Mother’s Day cuddles on the couch. My Mam texts me later and gives Mr Private
the seal of approval. Feck, I may hold
onto him so, for another while anyway. Oh, and he loved his birthday present, genuinely. Good result all around (apart from the GAA match, which ended in a draw).