Sunday, May 24, 2026

Birth Day Day For My May


I was out in the little garden area by the kitchen porch yesterday evening, getting some oregano and basil for what the triggerfish recipe I was using called "blistered tomato bruschetta" which is served atop the pan-seared fish when I suddenly noticed the gardenia you see in that picture. 
I literally and actually and truly gasped for perhaps the very first time in my life. I knew I had buds on the bush but suddenly, before my very eyes, one had opened. I was so happy! 

Rather Georgia O'Keeffe-like, don't you think? 
I put my nose in it and took a deep inhale. 
Yes. Gardenia. 
Now I've been saying that this would be the first year that bush ever bloomed but after doing a quick search of the blog, I see that it did indeed give me a blossom on July 4, 2023. 
Strange (and a little scary) that I didn't remember that but it's also strange that it bloomed in July and here this one is, blooming in May, which I see from the University of Florida Gardening Solutions website via the all-knowing Google, is the normal time for gardenias here to start blooming. Late May, early June, and then possibly on into the summer. 

I will be totally happy if it gives me even a few weeks of flowers. 
Here's a story I told on the post about that July gardenia: 

"When we lived in Winter Haven, when I was in high school, we had a huge gardenia bush in the yard that bloomed so prolifically. Every day I would pick one blossom and take it to school with me and give it to a friend of mine. I loved this boy tremendously, although not in a boyfriend way. And yet, somehow, it was incredibly romantic. And every day, he would carry that gardenia around with him so carefully that at the end of the day, it would be as white and perfect as it had been when I gave it to him. And gardenias are the most delicate of blooms. When he signed my yearbook, he said, "Thanks for all the gardenias."

And I truly believe that story is the reason I love gardenias so much. They remind me of that boy and how sweet he was, how delicately and carefully he carried that gardenia around with him all day long, never bruising it in the least. 
That was a gentle-man. 

So. I may have forgotten that gardenia bloom from three years ago but you know what I will never, ever forget? 
The morning my May Ellen was born. 

I have been writing about May's birth and about May herself for so many years, especially on her birthday. She was born at home, which at that time was a ten by fifty foot trailer a few miles down the road from where I am now. 
Here's a link to a post I wrote three years ago on her birthday.

There are plenty more of her birth stories woven into the tapestry of Blessourhearts. As there are of all of my children's birth stories. And grandchildren's birth stories. 
There's nothing I love more than a good birth story and I've been so incredibly fortunate to have been at quite a few good births, my own included although one of the very best things about being old is knowing that I will never, ever go through labor again. 
Still, I have not-infrequent dreams that I am pregnant and completely freaked out at the idea of having a baby at my age. Childbirth has been, without a doubt, the most profound experience of my life and it is no mystery as to why I would dream that. 

But today, it's May's story I am remembering and the way she was born just as the sun was coming up, how surrounded by love I was, how I felt when the midwives left me with clean sheets on the bed and me cozy in my clean nightgown, the house tidy, the laundry in the washer, this fresh new soul on my breast, in my arms, and having just been taught by that very baby that love is boundless. 
That there are no boundaries to it. 
And with every childbirth I've experienced, I felt the true meaning of rebirth, in that not only had I given birth, but that in doing so, I was instantly becoming an entirely different person, a mother to a human being who had never taken breath on this planet until that new life had been pushed out of my body. 
I would apologize for what probably sounds completely hyperbolic but for me, it isn't. And I am so grateful that I experienced that with each of my children. I don't think all mothers do and I'm not sure why I did. I have theories. 
I shall not go into them now but you know damn well that I have theories. 
Also, I'm just so very lucky. 

Here's one of my favorite pictures of May.

She is a pure glory, that one. I am so fortunate to have known her all her years, to be the mother of such a soul. 
She is light and she is love and she is the one and only May. 


I've posted this picture so many times and I have no idea when it was taken but it was a Christmas day at least fifteen years ago. I still had a younger woman's hair, a younger woman's face, which I no longer do although I still have the coat. 

But May? She has seemingly not changed at all. Her beauty is internal, external, eternal, and true. 

May, thank you for coming to me, even if it meant being born in an old, tiny trailer. You could not have been loved more if you'd been born in the Sistine Chapel. 

And even there, you would have out-shown the golden ceilings. 

And you still would. 

All The Love...Mama








36 comments:

  1. What a lovely tribute to a very nice person! Happy birthday May.

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    1. I think it still astonishes me that I have brought these amazing humans to the world. And each one was born exactly the way they still are, just in baby form. I'll never quite get over that.

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  2. I wish May many happy returns of the day.

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  3. Happy birthday to the beautiful May flower. I love these photos. I never appreciated how much she looks like you. (Lucky woman!) Am I right?

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    1. Yeah. She looks more like me than any of the other children for sure although there was a stage of Jessie's life when she was quite young that she looked like me. And I can't see myself in any of the grandchildren but dammit! I know I'm in there somewhere!

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    2. You are present in every single one of them!

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    3. I hope it's my sense of humor and not my eyesight.

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  4. Wishes that May has a great celebration of her birth, and it continues all year! Your motherly love is so warm and deep and well-expressed here today, I'm in awe. And I also loved the gardenia story too! One of my very favorite flowers, and I so much preferred wearing them rather than orchids for proms in school.

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    1. Gardenias are a very special sort of flower, aren't they? They have STRONG personalities, I think. They may look and actually be delicate but they are not wimpy.
      I believe May had a good birthday and we had a good lunch today. It was sweet.

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  5. She looks like you. And her middle name is Ellen?! I did not know that. Ellen is my middle name too. I have a theory that everyone name Ellen, it's their middle name but then I met one woman who said it was her first name.

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    1. Yes. The midwife who delivered her was named Ellen. After she was born and I named her, her dad's mother told me that her mother had been named Ellen and that HER mother had been May. So. Meant to be, I guess.

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  6. Such a beautiful letter to your daughter. The love pours from your heart to your birth day girl.

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    1. I am never satisfied with the way the words come out right when I talk about my kids. Or grandkids. But I sure do try.

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  7. The Gardenia and a beautiful Girl - what a good post.

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  8. Happy Birthday, May!
    My oldest son was born at 9:27 am on 5/24/1979. I will never forget how happy I was and how much love I felt right away. He's been a fabulous son all of these years.

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    1. May was born in '78 so same day, one year apart. Pretty cool!
      There is nothing that feels like that time when a baby has been born and is safe in our arms, is there?

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  9. I wrote a really profound comment about childbirth and parenting (ha! like I know!) and then somehow it disappeared into the ether. It's probably just as well.

    I looked back at your gardenia post from 2023 and I see that I already told you we had gardenias outside our house when I was growing up, which is what I was going to say again. So now I don't have to, except that I already did.

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    1. Aw, man. I wish I could have read that comment. I would love to hear your profound thoughts on childbirth and parenting and I'm being completely honest.
      I think a lot of people had and probably still have gardenias in their yards in Florida.

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  10. You were such a lovely mother! Of course you have wonderful children and grandchildren. I love May the most, but don't tell.

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    1. Okay. I won't tell. You sweet thing.
      I can't tell you how happy it makes me to see you here in my comments again, Joanne. I have thought of you daily.

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  11. The gardenia is lovely, as is the story. Hopefully May (your mini-me) had a lovely day! You wrote a beautiful birthday tribute to her. -Nicol

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    1. I like to write about my kids and their births on their birthdays. That's the day I got to meet them and that they got to meet me.
      A grand and lovely beginning.

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  12. all your *children* are gorgeous and so loved but May is the one that most physically resembles YOU, I think. I have always had a soft spot in my heart for her :-). Happy Birthday May!
    Susan M.

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    1. PS....Now August reminds me so much of May...more than any of your other grands....all arms, legs, long lanky limbs like a young frisky colt.....
      Susan M

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    2. Ah, but if you saw pictures of Glen when he was August's age you would truly see where the long lankiness comes from.
      Everyone has a soft spot in their heart for May. She is beloved by many.

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  13. Cheers to May! Wishing you all the very best on your special day and every day.

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  14. Gardenias seem like a good birthday flower for May! Happy birthday to her!

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    1. And yet I took her a magnolia today! I only have that one gardenia at the moment and it is past its prime but I have quite a few magnolia blossoms.

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  15. Happy happy birthday to May! I remember her gorgeous writing and wish she'd do that again (or let me read it if she is!)

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  16. I can see why that is one of your Fav Pixs of May, so Joyful, she has beautiful Hair and a radiant Smile.

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Tell me, sweeties. Tell me what you think.