Barbara Diamond Gail Scott Michael felt like...
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Barbara Diamond
Gail Scott Michael felt like an orphan until her mother was dying.
“My childhood was very painful, and it took years to heal the
wounds, but by living through my mother’s death process and her
actual death, I learned to truly accept her, forgive her and love her
deeply,” Michael said.
Michael’s book “I am a Thousand Winds that Blow” chronicles how
she reconciled the mother she wanted with the mother she had. The
book was written here two weeks after her mother’s death and took
only 10 hours to get on paper a lifetime of grievances and the
ultimate resolution.
“The main theme is the relationship between mother and daughter,”
Michael said.
The Laguna Beach author and her mother, Alyce Jane Ouelette
Hendricks, were estranged for most of Michael’s adult life. She
hardly saw her father after her mother left him when Michael was 10.
Hendricks was not well-educated and, after the separation from her
husband, worked long hours as a waitress to support her family of
four children. The job sapped her strength, and she suffered from
exhaustion and depression that kept her in her room for hours,
sometimes days, on end.
When her mother took to her bed or was away at work, Michael was
the de facto head of the family, which included a younger sister and
brother and an older sister whose mental age never got beyond 10.
Michael fled her Massachusetts home and family at 21, overwhelmed
by the burdens she had shouldered since childhood.
She left home before that epiphany experienced by most adult
children when they finally accept their parents as people. The last
year and particularly the last week of Hendricks’ life showed Michael
a woman she had never known.
“I saw her through the eyes of others that loved her and I saw her
for the very first time as the mother I had always yearned for,”
Michael said. “Everyone wants to be loved by his or her own parent.
Now I felt I truly was. So I am left with this incredible,
life-changing realization. I no longer feel like an orphan.”
Michael said she hopes her book will help people who are grieving
the loss of a parent or are preparing themselves for the loss.
“There are so many gifts we are given during this time, if we
could only be open to seeing them,” Michael said.
Michael’s distressed childhood left its marks. She suffered bouts
of depression and feelings of inadequacy, despite career successes.
Commitment made her claustrophobic. She changed jobs numerous times
and married twice.
Neither of her husbands are mentioned by name in the book. The
second marriage lasted less than a year. The first marriage produced
the love of her life, her son, Troy, and she remains on good terms
with his father.
The book is a ramble through the minefields of dysfunctional
family relations and Michael’s personal responses. She sought the
peace she craved in studies of Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, Zen,
Taoism, Confucianism, T’ai Chi Ch’uan and the teachings of Ascended
Masters, self-realization and channeled Ramtha and Mafu.
These studies have led Michael to believe that when people die,
they are actually being born into an afterlife from which they came
originally.
“We are returning home after we have learned the lessons of love
and compassion and whatever our contract with the divine is, for our
time spent here on earth,” Michael said.
It was the diagnosis of Hendricks’ lung cancer that opened the
path of reconciliation and acceptance between mother and daughter,
and subsequently between mother and son, who also were estranged.
Only the youngest daughter, Lisa, had stayed close, geographically
and emotionally, to Hendricks. She was the recipient of the kind of
love and nurturing Michael craved from her mother.
“During the last year of her life, my mother made peace with
herself and her loved ones,” said Michael.
As her mother approached death, the family removed what Michael
refers to as “ego masks,” which protected them and shaped how they
dealt with one another. With the masks gone, Michael discovered her
mother’s simple life was a fulfilling one, a life to which Michael
had been blind.
She had never before seen the woman loved and respected by other
family members, friends and co-workers until they rallied around her
death bed.
“As she lay dying, she changed everyone’s tears into laughter,”
Michael said. “She had us belly laughing throughout the whole ordeal.
She chose to pass over with laughter and loved ones surrounding her.
She had no time for tears or sorrows.
“My mother’s life was very simple and meager by today’s standards,
but she lived it like a queen.”
The title of the book comes from a poem her mother had tucked in
with the crossword puzzles she loved.
“Do not stand on my grave and weep
I am not there; I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow.
I am the diamonds that glint in the snow.
I am the sunlight in a ripened grain.
I am the gentle autumn’s rain.
When you awaken in the morning’s hush,
I am the soft, uplifting rush
of quiet birds in circled flight.
I am the soft stars that shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry.
I am not there.
I did not die.”
Michael’s 116-page, soft-cover book is available at
www.cedarfort.com or by mail from distributor Cedar Fort, 925 North
Main St., Springfield, Utah 84663 for $10.95 per copy, plus $3.49 for
shipping and handling. Add 99 cents for each additional copy. The
book also is available at all bookstores by special order and at
Barnes and Noble. Michael will be signing copies of the book Feb. 26
at the bookstore in Aliso Viejo.
For more information, visit gail-michael.com.
* BARBARA DIAMOND is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at 494-4321.
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