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love loss and what i wore

09.22.09 at 1:16 pm in life, love, family

Kind of Blue
By Rosie O'Donnell

The truth is, I have no fashion sense—never did. For many years, I blamed this on my mom’s death. Then again, I blame pretty much everything on that—my weight, my addiction to television, my inability to spell.
In my fantasy world, had my mother lived, I would be thin. I would be extremely well dressed and I would never need spell-check. I would know what went with what, and everything I tried on would fit. Mom and I would shop together at the places that moms and daughters go—a department store, an outlet mall, the flea market. I would wear a lot of tasteful makeup, too. And I’d know how to pick out a bag—a purse, a pocketbook, whatever. It could all be so different. My mom and I would lunch someplace while shopping. It would be at a café where we would have salad and like it. We’d laugh about how great our lives turned out and make plans for all the things we were still going to do.
But that is all a dream, because my mother did not live. She died when she was younger than I am today.
The fact is that no item of clothing has ever moved me in any way—except one. After my mom died, all her clothes were removed from the house while my dad took his five motherless children to Belfast, Ireland. It was 1973. I guess he thought we could best recover from the trauma of her death by living in a war zone. The IRA was nowhere near as scary as what had just happened to our lives. When we returned, we found her side of the closet barren. The last of her was gone.
In 1981 or 1982, my dad got remarried to a lovely woman. She was a schoolteacher named Mary May. After the wedding, she moved in. That first morning she was there, I was eating breakfast with a few of my siblings when my new stepmom walked down the stairs and into the kitchen. She was wearing a long mauve velour three-quarter-sleeve zip bathrobe with a thick vertical white stripe down the center surrounding the zipper. No one said a word. We all looked at one another as Mary happily made her way to the stove to put on the kettle.
My mother had had the same exact bathrobe—in blue. Electric blue. What are the chances of that, really? The unspoken rule in my house was that my mom’s name was never mentioned after her death. But that morning, I knew the rule was about to be broken. My siblings silently left the kitchen. I was alone with Mary. Sensitive to the fact that this was her first day as a married woman, I was unsure of how to phrase it.
“Ummm,” I said. Always a great way to start. “Ummmm…Mary. My mom had that same bathrobe in blue.”
“Oh,” she said and nodded.
And that robe disappeared. Gone. Never to be seen again. Sent away to the same place my mother’s clothes went, I assume. No one ever mentioned it.
To this day, that bathrobe is the only piece of clothing I can actually see in my mind. I have no visuals of prom dresses or favorite sweaters or shoes I couldn’t live without. Clothes are just something I use for cover, leaving room for one electric blue memory.


school daze

09.09.09 at 2:36 pm in home, love, family

first day of school
such memories
summer is always too short
my kids way 2 big

vivi told me last night
i should try to act like the other moms
at the school assembly
which i think - i did

and a whole day now
kid free
work starts soon for me
which is good

i am doing nora ephrons new play
love loss and what i wore
previews start 9.21
rehearsals next week

on stage with tyne daly
dreams do come true
over and over again
wild really

the radio show is coming together
studio being built
staff hired
ideas worked through

all new - all exciting
life
one never knows
what is just around the corner

carry on all
in peace
she screamed
xx



AMEN MR PRESIDENT

09.07.09 at 4:45 pm in family

 



saying goodbye

08.30.09 at 1:00 am in life, in the news, love, family


funeral tone
the uniquely quivering voice
fights to hold on
as water rises to breach the levee inside

too personal for television
the tiny tremble renders me weak
caroline kennedy
amazing grace - she

in 96 - a month into my daytime show
my assistant stuck her head in
"senator ted kennedy and his sister eunice
r on their way over "

it felt like a movie
a surreal dream
y i asked her
"they were doing the today show and wanted to stop by"

i had ten minutes to get ready
it was 8 20 am
parker was asleep in the crib
there at 30 rock

the kennedys
i do not remember my life without them
featured prominently
irish royalty

june 1968 - i was six years old
i remember watching the funeral on tv
my mother crying
she never cried in front of us

my mother
if only had she lived to see this moment
and in he walked - with the classic smile
he took me in his arms

a big irish family hello
welcoming warm familiar
he asked about my childhood
told me about his

parker woke up
and the senator held him
we said good bye
promised to keep in touch

we met many times
after that first day
each time he greeted me like a friend
he truly was a huge hearted lion

after jfk jr died - i sent him a note
a month later got one back
full of inspiration and comfort
for me

thats the man i will always remember
who took time out
to tend to the feelings of those in pain
in the midst of his own

he was able to lift us
2 remind us 2 help each other
to carry on
to believe

i believed in him
ted kennedy
the one who got to stay
and raise all those kennedy kids

in his brothers place
holding that family together
through unbearable sorrow and genuine joy
for decades

with humble gratitude
amen













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