Make Mother’s Day a meaningful day
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BARBARA DIAMOND
Sunday is Mother’s Day.
I am blessed with three super sons, two wonderful daughters-in-law
and seven grandchildren -- the best Mother’s Day presents I could
ever get.
Sadly, my mother was not equally blessed. She never saw her
grandchildren earn degrees, start on their careers or have children
of their own. She was six years younger than I am now when she died.
I regret that I left unsaid words that should have been said. Take
advantage of the time you have. Say what’s in your heart. “I love
you,” always works.
Here’s what some folks who don’t have the option would like to say
to their moms.
“We went through a lot of stuff, but now I would say to her, I
know you did the best you could,” said longtime Laguna resident
Barbara Painter.
Painter’s mother, Arline Baker, died in 1973. The Emerald Bay
resident was 64, younger than her younger daughter is now.
“I got my ‘suffer-for-your-opinion’ gene from my mother,” said
City Councilwoman Toni Iseman.
Iseman’s mother, Eileen Cecilia Catherine Croghan Iseman, was a
nurse and member of the League of Women Voters. The early activist
was the sixth of nine children.
She died in 1993, at age 86.
“I would tell her I was lucky to have had her that long,” said
Iseman
Signe Anderson was an old-fashioned mom, always cooking and
baking, said son Ken Anderson of North Laguna. She died in 1978 at
age 82.
“I still miss the fresh bread she baked twice a week and the
cinnamon rolls every Sunday,” Anderson said.
Village Laguna President Ginger Osborne’s mother, Helen Tredway,
was a world-class worrier. She died May 13, 2003.
“I think she worried herself to death,” said Osborne. “So I’d tell
her, we can take care of things.”
Phoebe Whipple died in 2002.
“Since I adopted my son a year ago, I appreciate my mom even
more,” said Laguna Beach native Liza Stewart. “I wish she was here
now so I could tell her.”
Mayor Cheryl Kinsman would lay her political career on the
shoulders of her mom.
“I’d tell her, I don’t believe I am mayor -- it’s all your fault,”
Kinsman said. “Then I’d tell her I miss her and my father. I miss her
advice. She was the best organizer I ever knew. She organized things
years ahead.
“Mom, I need a tune-up.”
Mary Mangels, who died in 2002, taught her daughter, Anita, to
roll with the punches.
“She said if anyone makes fun of my name, I should tell them it is
angels with an M,” said the Festival of Arts president. “I wish she
was still here so I could talk to her.”
Marianne Farmer died May 15, 2002, her life cut short by a traffic
accident.
“I’d tell my mother that I have been successful because of
everything she taught me,” said her daughter, banker Anne Morris.
Former Councilman Wayne Peterson was named his parents’
conservator seven years before his mother died. Near the end, she was
in a care facility.
“It was clear she was never coming home again,” said Peterson. “In
the fifth week that she was there, I visited her while my sisters
organized a sale of my parents’ belongings.
“She had been totally out of it for weeks, but all of sudden she
grabbed my arm -- she weighted 73 pounds at the time -- and said,
‘Honey, have I signed everything?’”
He assured her that she had. The next week Peterson’s mother asked
him if the sale had been held.
“I said, yes and it was wonderful,” Peterson said. “I told her
that all the tagged items under the bed would be delivered.”
She died at 1 p.m., that day.
Peterson said his mother didn’t know what her children had done,
but she did know what was supposed to be done. His doctor told him
that it is important to let a dying parent know it’s OK. They need
closure.
“I didn’t know that,” Peterson said. “Fortunately, I said the
right things.”
Words to live by.
MUSICAL CHAIRS
The Laguna Beach Chamber Music Festival brings to town world class
mentor musicians to work and perform with emerging artists -- and
gives the public a chance to observe the process.
“It is really confirming to have Laguna embrace this unique idea,”
said Cindy Prewitt, president of Laguna Beach Live!, a sponsor of the
April 18-25 festival with the Philharmonic Society of Orange County
and Laguna Beach Chamber Music Society.
Events included an opening reception, lectures, demonstrations,
coaching sessions, master classes and rehearsals, open to the public
and free. Tickets to concerts are $20 for adults, $10 for full-time students.
“A big thanks to Claes Andersen and Hotel Laguna for generously
donating rehearsal space for the musicians that could be open to the
public, housing for our mentor musician, Bruno Canino, and hosting
two very special festival benefit events,” Prewitt said.
The festival was founded by Andersen and the hotel; A. Gary
Anderson Foundation, Gary N. Babick; Joan Halvajian; Dave Anderson;
Sandra Howarth-Fox; K-Mozart; Lauren and Richard Packard; Teddie and
Mike Ray; Lesley and Roy Reeves; Winifred and Robert B. Smith; Yamaha
Piano, Prewitt and her husband Dr. Paul Prewitt; and the lodging
establishments of Laguna Beach.
Lodging establishments voluntarily upped their bed-tax to help
fund the arts that bring visitors to Laguna Beach, through the
Business Improvement District.
Local families housed the nine participating musicians, an
invaluable contribution to the success of the festival, Prewitt said.
Halvajian, Ellen and Ron Harris, Leonie and Jay Kramer, Judith and
Howard Jelinek, Pat and Ken Morgan, Andrea and Scott Reckard and Judy
and Paul Sochat hosted the members of the Orion Woods and Biava
Quartet.
Hosts Judy Jelinek and Lauren Packard also served on the Festival
Committee chaired by John Arnold and Halvajian.
On the committee: Diane Arnold, John Benecke, Eric Dries, Pamela
Madsen, Carol Reynolds, Dick Schwarzstein and Prewitt, all of Laguna;
Philharmonic Society staffer David Whitehill, Heather Goss, Alex
Maradudin and Nancy Posch.
Contributors included the Laguna Art Museum and Laguna College of
Art & Design, which promoted the festival and hosted free receptions.
The Laguna Playhouse served as the local box office and Yamaha
donated the use of pianos.
Business supporters included Nic Banda Designs; Bianchi Wines,
donated by Laguna resident Albert Paul; Laguna Beach Coastline Pilot;
jp Exposure, Prewitt’s daughter, Jenn’s company; Laguna Beach
Independent and the News-Post; and Sundried Tomato Cafe and Catering.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652, hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22;
call 494-4321 or fax 494-8979.
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