One Last Time
Thursday, December 31st, 2009Note: Ruth Scott, a mother of five, grandmother of ten, devoted wife, author, and one of the original Writing Mamas, passed away unexpectedly, but peacefully, in her sleep on December 28, 2009. Ruth will be greatly missed. The Writing Mamas Salon will seem smaller without her wisdom, sage advice, quirky humor, and generous heart. She was dearly loved. In her memory, we are publishing one of her pieces about motherhood and life. You may read all of her work by going into the search field and entering her name, Ruth Scott. While you have moved on, Ruth, your words will live on. You have left many footprints and touched even more souls. You will be fondly remembed. Always.
–Dawn Yun, founder, The Writing Mamas
Here is Ruth’s piece on motherhood and life:
At thirty-nine, I had cancer. The type I had could have been fatal as there was little known at that time compared to current treatments. I found the tumor myself, a lump in the groin, and asked that it be biopsied as the doctors did not think it to be a problem.
When it proved to be cancer, radical surgical procedures were performed. I experienced a very special event during the week before surgery. I was walking down the street in Mill Valley holding the hands of my four-year old daughter, Ann, and my seven-year old daughter, Alison.
In their other hands they each held an ice cream cone. I remember extreme awareness of my surroundings as I thought to myself, “If this is all there is then I am blessed.” At that moment I saw every leaf on the tree before me as individual, unique, and important, yet interconnected to the whole. I’ve never forgotten that moment. I later heard someone describe a similar feeling that they had experienced with psychedelic, acid-type drugs.
I could understand why they would want to have this experience again. Life with cancer had given me a blessing. I felt centered, free to be in the moment.
Twenty years later I had my second cancer. One of my thinking processes at these times was to accept death, and try to learn its lessons. I wrote, “Thoughts of death bring sweet return, when from them more of life we’ve learned.”
If you do not live you have little use for this lesson, but there is always the chance that you will have time to practice what you have learned. I admit that I have learned many more things than I have been able to put into practice. I believe it was Goethe who wrote, “A seeker of truth is a student of death.”
I believe this is true.
I created a game, a habit, of looking at or experiencing things as if it were, “For the Last Time.”
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We go through life learning new things, doing them for the first time. First we learn to see. Our eyes do not focus so vision must be practiced and learned, and it really is exciting if only we could remember. You can watch a child take his first step and see the joy and excitement it brings. We may record his first spoken word.
There is a different excitement and joy that comes from doing things and seeing things for the lasttime. There is a sense of appreciation and thankfulness, a gratitude for having the experience that a “first” cannot compete with on the same terms.
To watch my grandchild take her first step is magnified and appreciated for perhaps I will never again experience that moment when a child launches herself into the bi-pedal upright stance. I savor the moment as I do all the times in the last few years that I have skied down the perfect slope on a clear winter day for the last time. You see, I can still ski, I just can’t fall so I’m sure I should quit while I’m up, but I go back to relish the last time.
This summer I jumped off the Scott’s jumping cliff on Long Lake below Mt. Elwell, again, for the “last time.” The height scares the grandchildren; the cold of the lake challenges me, but it’s there and the “last time” makes it seem easier, not so cold. “I won’t have to do this again,” I say, and I jump. My grandchildren may return at seventy five and remember, saying, “Well, Grandmom did it, so can I.”
Perhaps, I’ll inspire from the grave what I could not inspire in life.
I climb again to my favorite pine that grows high on a rock over Big Bear Lake. It is alone, and one cannot see any soil around its trunk, only rock. Year after year this pine is still there, facing winter storms, the cold, and the weight of wind and snow, and still it survives, bonsai, and beautiful. I come back every year for the “last time” receiving comfort and strength. “If you can make it, I can make it,” I say to this tree, my friend and inspiration.
I can walk through Mill Valley for the last time and it’s amazing what I see and review and I am renewed. It is enough to have had each experience and if it is the last of the last times I am fortunate to have appreciated each moment in time.
First times you can only have once; last times you can experience over and over again.
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This essay has stayed with me since I first read it years ago; I’ll continue to carry it in my heart. Rest in peace, Ruth. You certainly lived with peace. Thank you.
Ruth’s voice will be missed!
I can hear Ruth’s wonderfully lyrical voice while reading this. I’m struck by her words, “I remember extreme awareness of my surroundings as I thought to myself, “If this is all there is then I am blessed.”
Ruth was blessed and we were all blessed to have known her.
I’m overwhelmed with sadness at Ruth’s sudden passing but still it’s true that she’s left so much of herself behind with her loved ones and with us, her fellow mothers who write. her stories, whether verbal or written, always enlightened and inspired and because she put some of them down on paper we have them — and a piece of her — with us always.
Ruth made such a crystal, gorgeous comment on an essay i wrote about sitting on the shoulders of my father as a child, my hair in pigtails… i think it shares her spirit in every way: RUTH: “All such memories can teach us is how important such moments will be to our children. Now that I am older I hear about such memories from my adult children and also from my grandchildren who tell me “Mom told me about the time you…………… Do write your Dad.” And i did. We’ll miss you, Ruth.
I sadly only met Ruth once but this piece of writing by her is so moving and very well written. It has inspired me. She was obviously a wonderful person and is already greatly missed by everyone. But that is the good thing about the written word – it lives on even when we have moved on
We miss Ruth
I am glad she made it to our Year End gathering. It was great to see her full of ideas and dreams and stories.
I am so touched by this essay- what an amazing soul. It is truly inspiring. I’m going to try to take up her practice of ‘Last Times’- savoring moments- what a way to define a life well-lived.
She also said : “Death is not so great a price to pay for having lived.” I love your writing group ! And you all for love of her.
Heidi,
Thank you for stopping by & sharing Ruth’s wisdom with us. Her uplifting outlook on life is missed by many.