A Gift for Mom! 🤍

Forty-nine years.
Almost half a century.
For many, that’s a lifetime.
That’s how long they were married.

Losing my dad wasn’t just the loss of a partner.
It was the loss of rhythm.
Of routine.
Of the quiet comfort that only comes from a life built together, brick by brick, moment by moment, over decades.

It was the loss of her forever friend.
Someone to bicker with over the remote control and lunch menu.
Someone to share evening chai with matching mugs and mismatched opinions.

The silence he left behind pulls stronger than gravity itself.

But she still chooses to stand.
To walk.
To go on.

Not because it’s easy.
But because she’s always believed in purpose.

A lifelong teacher.
A beloved principal.
An academic. She’s found her way back to what gives her meaning, in educating children.

She’s volunteering. Giving back to society.
Teaching and reading to young kids, enriching young hearts while immersing herself in a deeper spiritual journey.

And she’s doing it all in a brand-new country.
New streets. New culture. New customs. New friends.
She’s making lesson plans and learning how to navigate Zoom.
She’s asking her grandchildren how to save PDFs.
She’s even Googling how to use AI.

She doesn’t keep going because the pain is gone.
She keeps going despite the immense pain.

And in doing so, she’s become a quiet source of light, for her kids, for her grandchildren, for her family, and for everyone lucky enough to witness her story.

My mom reminds us that grief and grace can live in the same heart.
That pain and purpose can walk hand-in-hand.
That service can bring healing.

She is strength.
She is resilience.
She is inspiration.
She is my mom.

Originally published on the author’s Facebook page

So God Made a Grandmother book by Leslie Means

If you liked this, you'll love our book, SO GOD MADE A GRANDMA

Order Now!

Pallavi Srivastava

Pallavi Srivastava is a published writer and the author of the book, Mom Jam—a heartfelt space where poetry meets the raw, unfiltered moments of motherhood. A mother, creator, and lifelong curator of life’s details, she writes with a blend of humor, vulnerability, and deep emotional truth.

A Good Mom is the Greatest Gift I’ve Ever Been Given

In: Grown Children, Motherhood
Mother's Day thank you mom www.herviewfromhome.com

As a kid, I always thought Mother’s Day was kind of stupid. After all, you have a birthday. Why did we need a special holiday to honor you being our mom? Now, my feelings about Mother’s Day are still a bit ambivalent, but it’s mainly because the holiday just seems so trivial stacked up against the legacy of motherhood. It doesn’t feel like enough. How can I boil down a lifetime of gratitude and love into a card and some flowers, maybe even a nice brunch? I can’t, and that’s never been more clear since becoming a mom myself. Nothing...

Keep Reading

“Wear It Anyway, You Never Know When You’ll Get Another Chance.”

In: Cancer, Friendship, Living
Two women holding up dresses, color photo

“It’s way too fancy,” I told my husband. “I’d be overdressed.” My new outfit was a beauty—white and lacy, perfect for a summer cocktail party, but too much for a school function on a Tuesday evening. In the back of my head, though, I heard my friend’s voice. Wear it anyway. You never know when you’ll get another chance. The last time I saw Shalean, I was bloated from chemo drugs, and both of us wondered if it would be the last time we’d see each other. My prognosis was bad: triple negative breast cancer, already spread to my lymph...

Keep Reading

6 Coping Strategies For the Extra-Stressed Sandwich Generation

In: Grown Children
Grandma and granddaughter

While the nation discusses what will become of the children this fall, others wonder what will become of their grandparents. As a member of the sandwich generation caring for small children as well as aging parents, the crisis of elder care weighs much heavier than the back-to-school debate. When COVID-19 abruptly shut down our lives, my mother was 72-and-a-half years old and had been spiraling deeper into dementia for more than 11 years. The situation had gotten to a point where my father needed more help, so in addition to the saintly woman who came to cook and clean for...

Keep Reading