Becky's Room - by, Millie P. Lorenz
by, Millie P. Lorenz©copyright, all rights reserved
Becky's room became an imaginary gift, but it is a gift that truly exists today and will for many years to come. It is a gift to me as well as to my grandchildren. I cannot tell you that it was a planned gift, it just was. Love surrounds Becky's room by day and night; a memory of a beautiful person exists within the room and in the hearts of all who enter there. As you read this story, it is my hope that you, too, one day may be blessed with a 'Becky's Room'.
When I was six years of age, I lost my Father to cancer. We were given a Stepfather in the years to come who raised us with much love and gentleness. His name was Tony but we called him Dad; he held the responsibility of raising the children in our blended family as a privilege. He possessed a gentle soul and a heart that gave me a love that I carry in my heart for him today, nineteen years after having lost him to Cancer and Alzheimer's disease.
My Mother, Becky, walked with courage through out her life; her children and grandchildren were a priority through all of her years. Life became difficult for her after Dad passed away but yet she kept his memory alive within all of our family, including her grandchildren.
When I look back, I cannot tell you of the day I first realized that she had grown older, her journey of footsteps an effort in themselves. Mom had once driven the 300 miles to visit me and my two sons, Darren and Ryan; she now relies on a member of our family to travel the three hundred mile journey there and back to visit with us.
The stairs to Becky's room have become harder for her to climb and the once short hallway to her room has become a distance to be measured; but once there, she is home in Becky's room.
Becky's room actually started as my youngest son Ryan's room; just a plain room with white walls, comforter disheveled on the bed, new movie release posters taped to the walls. Then came the day my oldest son Darren became independent and moved out of his bedroom which was located downstairs. He was moving away from home on his journey to independence, leaving Ryan elated at the thought of taking over his big brother's room. Darren felt such joy; he was growing up and away from me and I grieved for the loss of the child within him who had filled our home with laughter and joy and life; yet I felt joy in knowing that he had a world ahead of him and a heart filled with dreams.
Ryan went on with his task of creating Ryan's room downstairs and a part of me grieved for Darren as I repeatedly set his dinner plate at the table for nearly a week after he left. With tears in my eyes, discovering what I had done, I would quickly return the plate to the cupboard. I wondered how long I would miss him; I wondered if a mother ever adjusts to her children growing up; I prayed that he would find happiness in whatever path he followed in his life.
I was faced with the empty, drab bedroom upstairs with discolored white walls and the thought that someday both of my sons would be gone from home. It was from somewhere deep within the heaviness of my heart where the thought that the plain upstairs room could be a guest room was born 'A gift for Becky, my mother', even though she would rarely be able to use it.
I purchased a beautiful pink satin comforter set for the old antique bed. The window displayed white lace curtains with pink satin tiebacks. And on the newly painted plain white walls, I hung pictures of my grandparents, her mother and father, as well as a picture of my grandfather as a young man. I was determined that copies of old pictures from her childhood would surround her with love.
On the old chest of drawers, I placed an antiqued oval frame holding the picture of Mom and Dad I had held dear for many years. The glass reflected Mom and Dad dressed in Klondike attire; the picture taken months before Dad was hospitalized. In my heart, I felt that Mom would not only have her parents surrounding her but she would have Dad's memory close to her as well. My intent was to make her feel welcome and at home in a room in my home, her room. In looking back I now realize how Mom carried Dad in her heart; a picture was never necessary.
Part two of 'Becky's Room' Follows Below:







