My mother liked to be acknowledged on Mother's Day, but she
bristled at the thought of money being spent on her. No gifts, a card was fine.
Flowers (unless picked from one's garden) were too extravagant.
When I got a job and became self-sufficient, I sent her flowers on Mother's Day
and her birthday. "They're beautiful, honey, but you shouldn't have."
And she meant it. I don't think she was ever able to enjoy them, she was so
worried about how much the flowers--and the delivery--had cost me. After a
while, I stopped sending her flowers, because they made her so uncomfortable.
My mother died before unlimited domestic calling was a common feature
of most cell and landline plans. Back then, long-distance phone calls, with the
charges escalating by the minute, made her nervous. As soon as she heard my
voice on the line, she'd squeal, "Oh Sharon, how nice to talk to you.
Thanks for calling." And sometimes she'd hang up before I had a chance to
tell her the reason for my call.
Only the direst of emergencies warranted a long-distance telephone
call. When my grandmother died, my mother wrote a letter to give me the news.
(To her credit, she splurged on a special-edition, handwritten letter and thus
an extra stamp; she didn't save that piece of information for the monthly
family newsletter.) Still, I almost missed the funeral. My brother did miss the
funeral, because he had a less-flexible work schedule than I and he didn't work
for an airline that gave him free flight benefits.
When I moved to Los Angeles from Houston and drove with a friend
across the desert in my semi-reliable 1976 Subaru, my parents wanted
reassurance that I had arrived safely. "But don't waste money on a
long-distance call," Mom instructed. "Tell the operator you want to
make a person-to-person collect call to Sharon. When I answer and the operator
asks for Sharon, I'll tell her Sharon isn't here. That will be our code. We'll
know you arrived safely, and you won't have to pay for a long-distance
call."
I inherited frugality from my mother, but I hope mine is less
extreme.
My mother's attitude about long-distance calls changed a little
when my brother got a job at Bell Labs. One of his employment perks was
reduced-rate long-distance service; I think the company gave him an allotment
of free minutes. Gradually, he convinced our mother that it wasn't breaking the
bank for him to have a relaxed long-distance phone conversation with her.
I often wonder what my mother would do now that most cell phone
plans offer unlimited domestic calling. Would she ever get used to it? Unfortunately,
I'll never get to find out.
What endearing quirks does/did your mother have to
save money? I'd love to hear your comments.
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