Just one mind you.
When i found myself in Paris recently for some meetings, i could not resist being only 8 hours from my New Jersey family. I surprised my mom with French chocolates on my way back to Doha on Valentine’s Day. A great sentence to be fortunate enough to write.
She was happy. Then quickly her face became thoughtful. She pondered, “I didn’t know you were coming so i didn’t have time to compile the list of the things I want you to do for me.” I told her not to worry, that I would be around for a few days so she had time to consider and get back to me.
That night she messaged to me and my sister, once she had thought of how she could best spend her task credit with a daughter who was only available for a few days. Her message popped in “Can you pierce my left ear which closed up during Covid?”
There are a lot of reasons why this is a comical request; most of these i don’t have to explain. But there are a couple i should explain, Firstly, I always wanted pierced ears and probably spent the first 12 years of my life fantasizing about them and begging for them. It was a hard NO until i was 12. Reasons for this had to do with decorum, class, and not wanting me to look “tacky” or, dare i say too Italian. She never used the word “ethnic” but it was implied. Propper, waspy youngters of the time waited until their teens to have pierced ears. I think it also had to do with it being a lifetime commitment to change something about your body and thoughts about the age of consent. So after that, i probably spent the next few years self-peircing whatever i felt like at the time. I thought nothing of whipping out a needle in my dorm room and adding some adornment.
So, when this type of “Covid Closure” occurred, my mother knew exactly who she wanted to ask for help.
Another reason this is so funny is because when I was 14 and my ears were long pierced, I recruited my 10 year old sister, who had not reached the age deemed appropriate or the implied age of consent, along with our babysitter, B. – who was 18 and could sign the paper at the piercing pagoda – to get my sister’s ears pierced. I’m fairly certain it was all me that wanted it- not my poor younger sister -and that i orchestrated a minor coup on Mom’s power that day. Something about the irrevocable nature of ear piercing, which could seem innocent, was a strong statement against parental controls. We chose tasteful ruby studs, my sister’s birthstone, and she was very proud and happy. But we really got the wrath of mom for that maneuver and the poor babysitter had no idea what a minefield she was stepping into.
It was with this context and history that I went back to the Piercing Pagoda in the mall this week to “advance” it. The Piercing Pagoda in the mall is the last place you would find my mother, but it was our option. I learned where we could park with an accessible placard, how to get a wheelchair, how many steps to get to the pagoda kiosk, and spoke to the extremely unenthusiastic and bitter woman behind the counter about bringing my 80 year old mother in for a piercing on the following day. It was doable.
Still, after the past few years of living mostly like a shut-in, when the day came, Mom was reluctant to go. “I want you to do it.” She put a plastic back on her shoulder and told me “In case I bleed.” I agreed to at least see if it was an easy poke through to find the old hole. No such luck. She was already wincing although begging me to stab through her ear. “Use a push pin! ” she directed. The trip to the Pagoda was definitely required.
“I haven’t been here since taking you girls to see Santa Clause,” she pronounced from her walker seat when we reached the entrance to the mall. She’s not really a mall person, but more of a QVC VIP. But all in all, it was a great outing, and a beautiful and delightful Pagoda employee professionally performed the deed with a real piercing gun, sterile equipment, and painless successful results.
When it was over i asked if Mom if would like to do or see anything else now that we were in the mall. “NO. I want to get out of here as fast as we can before we get shot.”
On the way home, she wanted stamps from the post office. On a parking hunch, I positioned her Mercedes at the prime parking spot, and the occupying car decided to depart just in time for us to glide in. “You live right!” my mother exclaimed in her sometimes-southern drawl. I had never heard her use this phrase. I realized this was her way of telling me she was grateful, that she approved of me, that she appreciated me, that she thought i might finally be who or where she believed i ought to be. You – Live – Right. It held in three words some of the most sincere kindness i’d experienced in our long lives together.
In the post office, i was unsuccessful in finding the stamps she wanted. “I only want the roll. The plain flags on the roll,” was her directive as she insisted on doling out the cash for them. The postman didn’t have them. I bought sheets of love stamps with kittens and puppies. Subversive, but i knew she’d tolerate it. Back in the car, she thanked me, and we drove on.
































