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The Yellow Shirt
The baggy
yellow shirt had long sleeves, four extra-large pockets trimmed in black
thread still in decent shape, and snaps up the front. It was faded from
years of wear, but I found it in 1963 when I was home from college on
Christmas break, rummaging through bags of clothes Mom intended to give
away. "You're not taking that old thing, are you?" Mom said when
she saw me packing the yellow shirt. "I wore that when I was pregnant
with your brother in 1954!"
"It's just the thing to wear over my clothes during art class, Mom.
Thanks!" I slipped it into my suitcase before she could object. The
yellow shirt became a part of my college wardrobe.
I loved it. After graduation, I wore the shirt the day I moved into my new
apartment and on Saturday mornings when I cleaned.
The next year, I married. When I became pregnant, I wore the yellow shirt
during big-belly days. I missed Mom and the rest of my family, since we
were in Colorado and they were in Illinois. But that shirt helped. I
smiled, remembering that Mother had worn it when she was pregnant, 15
years earlier. That Christmas, mindful of the warm feelings the shirt had
given me, I patched
one elbow, wrapped it in holiday paper and sent it to Mom. When Mom wrote
to thank me for her "real" gifts, she said the yellow shirt was
lovely. She never mentioned it again.
The next year, my husband, daughter and I stopped at Mom and Dad's to pick
up some furniture. Days later, when we uncrated the kitchen table, I
noticed something yellow taped to its bottom. The shirt! And so the
pattern was set. On our next visit home, I secretly placed the shirt under
Mom and Dad's mattress. I don't know how long it took for her to find it,
but almost two years passed before I discovered it under the base of our
living-room floor lamp. The yellow shirt was just what I needed now while
refinishing furniture. The walnut stains added character.
In 1975 my husband and I divorced. With my three children, I prepared to
move back to Illinois. As I packed, a deep depression overtook me. I
wondered if I could make it on my own. I wondered if I would find a job. I
paged through the Bible, looking for comfort. In Ephesians, I read,
"So use every piece of God's armor to resist the enemy whenever he
attacks, and when it
is all over, you will be standing up." I tried to picture myself
wearing God's armor, but all I saw was the stained yellow shirt. Slowly,
it dawned on me. Wasn't my mother's love a piece of God's armor? My
courage was renewed. Unpacking in our new home, I knew I had to get the
shirt back to Mother. The next time I visited her, I tucked it in her
bottom dresser drawer.
Meanwhile, I found a good job at a radio station. A year later I
discovered the yellow shirt hidden in a rag bag in my cleaning closet.
Something new had been added. Embroidered in bright green across the
breast pocket were the words "I BELONG TO PAT." Not to be
outdone, I got out my own embroidery materials and added an apostrophe and
seven more letters. Now the shirt proudly proclaimed, "I BELONG TO
PAT'S MOTHER." But I didn't stop there. I zig-zagged all the frayed
seams, then had a friend mail the shirt in a fancy box to Mom from
Arlington, VA. We enclosed an official looking letter from "The
Institute for the Destitute," announcing that she was the recipient
of an award for good deeds. I would have given anything to see Mom's face
when she opened the box. But, of course, she never mentioned it.
Two years later, in 1978, I remarried. The day of our wedding, Harold and
I put our car in a friend's garage to avoid practical jokers. After the
wedding, while my husband drove us to our honeymoon suite, I reached for a
pillow in the car to rest my head. It felt lumpy. I unzipped the case and
found, wrapped in wedding paper, the yellow shirt. Inside a pocket was a
note: "Read John 14:27-29. I love you both, Mother."
That night I paged through the Bible in a hotel room and found the verses:
"I am leaving
you with a gift: peace of mind and heart. And the peace I give isn't
fragile like the peace the world gives. So don't be troubled or afraid.
Remember what I told you: I am going away, but I will come back to you
again. If you really love me, you will be very happy for me, for now I can
go to the Father, who is greater than I am. I have told you these things
before they happen so that when they do, you will believe in me."
The shirt was Mother's final gift. She had known for three months that she
had terminal Lou Gehrig's disease. Mother died the following year at age
57. I was tempted to send the yellow shirt with her to her grave. But I'm
glad I didn't, because it is a vivid reminder of the love-filled game she
and I played for 16 years. Besides, my older daughter is in college now,
majoring in art. And every art student needs a baggy yellow shirt with big
pockets.
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