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AARP Rewards Mother's Day Contest 2026!

Mother's Day is all about love, laughter... and the moments that make moms so special!

 

Share your Mother's Day tribute by hitting reply to this post - it can be funny, heartfelt or totally unique! Whether it's a funny memory, a simple thank you, or a life lesson she shared - we want to hear about it! 

 

Not only will you spread some joy, but you will also have a chance to win a special reward, because great stories deserve great prizes!

 

Need inspiration? Try one of these prompts to get you started!

  • The moment my mom totally saved the day for me...
  • If my mom had a superpower, it would be...
  • Something my mom/inspiring woman in my life told me was...

 

No purchase necessary to win!  Be sure your entry is your own original story!  Keep it kind, respectful and fun! Check out the official rules here: View Contest Rules

 

Play our new Mother's Day Mahjong Solitaire Game!

 

We also have Mother's Day egreeting cards in Rewards, you can view them here 

AARPTeri
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Well, there are 5 billion people on this planet and you're the perfect mom for me. What are the odds of that? - Young Sheldon

 

This quote from Young Sheldon sums up how I feel about my Mom. She was my best friend and I would chose her every time. She was and always wilk be the perfect Mom for me. 

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My mother passed in 1985, but I've always celebrated her, she was kind, loving, funny, and spicy. Oh, how I miss her, and wish she were here to help me with her grands!

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@AARPTeri wrote:

Mother's Day is all about love, laughter... and the moments that make moms so special!

 

Share your Mother's Day tribute by hitting reply to this post - it can be funny, heartfelt or totally unique! Whether it's a funny memory, a simple thank you, or a life lesson she shared - we want to hear about it! 

 

Not only will you spread some joy, but you will also have a chance to win a special reward, because great stories deserve great prizes!

 

Need inspiration? Try one of these prompts to get you started!

  • The moment my mom totally saved the day for me...
  • If my mom had a superpower, it would be...
  • Something my mom/inspiring woman in my life told me was...

 

No purchase necessary to win!  Be sure your entry is your own original story!  Keep it kind, respectful and fun! Check out the official rules here: View Contest Rules

 

Play our new Mother's Day Mahjong Solitaire Game!

 

We also have Mother's Day egreeting cards in Rewards, you can view them here 



Best Mom 

l lost my mom in 1998 but I have such fond memories of her. My 3 sisters and I have conversations about her and we break out in laughter. We miss her but the memories are forever. She was very talented, she was a seamstress, she crocheted and knit. I look at items she made years ago. I have a photo of a very beautiful red and white star quilt she made. However, my son is very tall and he told his grandmother that his feet hang out the covers on his bed. So, she made him a special quilt that was long enough to cover his feet. 

 

There are other stories that make me smile when I think about her. I lost my oldest daughter in October from Breast Cancer. I know that her grandma welcomed her to heaven.  

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I wish my Mom was still here I see other daughters not wanting to take care of their mother and it breaks my heart that they don't realize how fortunate they are to still have theirs  still here what I would give to just hug my Mom and make her smile And tell her how proud it is to be her daughter Happy Mother's Day to all

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My Mom was the best God fearing, God loving,family & friend loving person I ever knew.

Lost her in 92, cancer...๐Ÿ˜ก

And through it all she smiles

She taught me so much

Put it back where you got it

If you don't have anything good to say don't say nothing 

If you gonna do it, do it right the first time

Perfect practice makes perfect

Cleanliness is next to Godliness

Don't judge

Be kind you never know how someone feels or what they are going through

She was shy

Dark red hair, I once introduced her to my boyfriend at the time as my red headed stepmother, she just grinned and said Vivian, and looked at my BF and said no I'm not

She prayed fearlessly and seen the good in people

She helped people even thought we were not rich

She took the cards she was dealt and made good out of everything

She was the best

Rest high Angel mom

Contributor

And forgiveness is a must 

Don't lie  and steal

Contributor

My mother taught me the importance of perseverance. She said I should never give up if I did not succeed on my first attempt. I should simply try again! 

But Mom also explained I should learn a lesson from the โ€œItsy Bitsy Spiderโ€ (who went up the water spout)! She said the reason why the Itsy Bitsy Spider was successful on his second attempt was because he checked out the weather conditions first! He waited until the skies were clear before he attempted a second time. Thus, the Itsy Bitsy Spider was successful because he was smart! So, Mom not only encouraged me to persevere like the Itsy Bitsy Spider, but to be a โ€œSmart Itsy Bitsy Spider!โ€ She said I should learn from my mistakes by doing my research and making adjustments. Only then, will I be successful as I persevere towards achieving my personal goals!

 

Contributor

     I will be 70 years old this October and I still miss my mother a lot.  She was a great cook, she was nurturing and love, and momma didn't take no mess.  She passed away when I was 12 year old and to this day, I feel that loss deeply.  I thank her for what she taught me in the little time we had together.  When people complement me on being a good mother or being a nurturing parent or even being a a good cook, I have only my mother to thank.  She worked hard raising us and I think she would be proud of all her children because she did her best to instill great morals in all her children.  Georgia Mae Pittman, you are loved and missed and will never be forgotten.  Love your daughter L. Diana Robinson

Contributor

A few years ago my sister was supposed to watch my 2 yr old  for me and didn't show up so I called my mom because my surgery was scheduled. No sooner did I hang up and she was at my door ! I love her more than she knows

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Happy Mother's day in Heaven to my mom Barbara who died in1986, 5 days before her 40th birthday and my daughter Ashley who died 3 1/2 weeks after her 28th birthday. My kids never got a chance to meet their grandmother, but I hope the best sides of me connect them to her.

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My mom passed away a little over a year ago. I am married to a man with 6 children & I am almost 50 years old. My husband & I just celebrated our 7th wedding anniversary. I lived with my mom up until I was married. My dad passed away 30 years ago so my mom had been widowed for quite a long time. There was never a reason for me to move away from home. If I had moved away I would have been at my mom's house a lot anyway, just for the company & the food. My mom was a great cook. Cooking came natural to her. Unfortunately I did not inherit that talent. After I got married, I visited my mom at least once a week because I knew she was in her house alone after I moved out. Out of me & my siblings (2), I spent the most time with my mom. That once a week became my refuge, my sanctuary. I would have things that bothered me throughout the week & I could unload those on my mom & she would help by being a listening ear. I felt comfortable talking to her about my issues & she generally had good advice that I valued. Since she has been gone this last year, I haven't had that same listening ear. It may not be able to be replaced. My husband is great & so helpful, but he's not my mom. 

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MAY 10TH WILL BE MY 5TH MOTHERS DAY WITHOUT MY SON

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My biological mom died when I was Five. But the one thing I remember was a promise she asked of me on her death bed, she asked me to promise her that I'd never drink and I am now 54yrs old and have kept that promise to her. 

Newbie

A few years before my mother passed, I brought her from Beijing (my hometown) to New York, the life I had built far away. Her memory was already fading, and I was learning to care for her while quietly grieving the changes. 

 

At the mental health clinic where I worked, I introduced her to my colleagues and translated for her. She stood straight, a soft smile on her face: "I have four children - my eldest daughter is a teacher, my eldest son is an engineer, my younger son is a doctor."

 

My boss asked gently, "What about Hong - what does she do?" She paused, and in one breath: "She is my daughter."   

 

I took great pride in that because I was never what I did, but who I am to her!

 

On this day, 62 years ago, she gave me life and the greatest identity I will ever carry: her daughter!

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Ok, you win! In tears over here. It must be the onions! Oh, I am not cutting onions! Simply a blessed moment!

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My mother passed away 2 years ago at 96. She had a tough, difficult life but was always smiling through it all. Raised as a child in Kansas, her family moved to Texas after the dust bowl. She was married three times and was widowed three times. I was 5 years old when my father passed in 1953. She managed to raise five children mostly by herself. She was strict but fair. Iโ€™ll never forget some of her culinary failures, such as ring a ding dressing and chicken liver pizza. Sadly, she spent the last years of her life in a nursing home.

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My mom is almost 93 still lives alone keeping her own house so clean I know you could safely โ€œeat off the floorsโ€ she says thereโ€™s no secret to her longevity but I remember her exercising to Jack LaLane every day of my childhood. She also did the gardening in her bikini where we lived in So Cal. We never had โ€œjunk foodโ€ in our house- a bowl of fresh fruit was always up for grabs for snacks and every meal was home cooked. Oh did I mention she was a nurseโ€ฆ one of the founding members of the IV team at her hospital and one of the first nurses in CA certified to place PICC lines. Raised 4 kids to be productive citizens and we didnโ€™t necessarily make it easy for her!!! THANKS MOM!!!

Newbie

My mom had the best laugh ever. She would throw back her head, her face would light up and out would come the most genuine laugh that could be heard all over. My mom died over 20 years ago. But the memory of her smile and her laugh is in my heart forever. 

Contributor

My mother has always been a wonderful example of faith and service. Best wishes for a Happy Mother's Day. 

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My mother was always ready. When I joined the pep squad in high school, she not only sewed my uniform, but became the seamstress to the whole squad! When I needed a last minute recipe to save the day on a budget, she was there with the perfect idea! When I just needed a hug and and smile she was there. My mom passed away many years ago, but will always remain in my heart and my home. Sometimes when I am baking her favorite lemon meringue pie, I hear her saying "don't let the meringue brown too much", we actually liked it a little darker than the store, that way we knew it was home made!.

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If my mother had a superpower, it would have been persistence. Her light used to shine so bright. Her laugh was the kind that came straight from the gut and did not stop far beyond stomach pains from laughing so hard. My mom lost some of her sunshine when she married my stepdad when I was 5. Their child together became the golden child of the family, and my stepdad proceeded to isolate my mother and I from everyone she/we had ever known, and we moved out of state to chase the stepdads dream. Mom served and worshipped her husband for 20 more years until he finally left her because she didnโ€™t want to join him as a member of a swingers club. For all those years, mom hung on tight, because she thought she was doing the correct thing. Unfortunately, she abandoned me in the process of serving her husband all of her energy and effort. My younger half sister has always been the princess. I discovered alcohol as a teen and it became my comfort. For another 20 years. In the 20th year of my toxic relationship with alcohol, mom told me that she had cancer. All my anger at her, my whole reason for toxifying myself, was no longer the emotion that drove me. Now it was compassion. I got sober. I went to her city to be with her and to try to heal us. I stayed sober and we healed for 15 more years after that. My mom persisted through 15 years of battling cancer. I wasnโ€™t done healing with her. I still have things I wanted to tell her, to apologize for, to share. She died in the hospital last Christmas. This is going to be the first Motherโ€™s Day without my mother. I donโ€™t know how Iโ€™m going to spend it. Maybe Iโ€™ll spend it in the garden she left behind last fall. I can at least keep her alive through the life that she left us in the yard. Her plants are all coming back. Theyโ€™re persistent, just like mom was. Is. 

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An Unforgotten Promise

You know those memes that people post about missing their mom โ€“ those โ€œgone too soonโ€ and โ€œforever in my heartโ€?  When I read those I donโ€™t think of my mother . . . I think of my grandmother.  My grandmother raised us โ€“ my 3 siblings and me โ€“ and kept us together.  She did what my mother could not. 

She was asked to come help out after my oldest brother was born, and she stayed until my youngest sister moved out.  Actually, when my sister left she took our grandma with her.  As you may have surmised already, my family was not a close knit bunch of loveable people.  My mother was a drunk โ€“ thereโ€™s no easy way to say that.  She ran out on us more times than I can count โ€“ sometimes for days, sometimes for months at a time.  She was the worst kind of drunk โ€“ the mean, cruel kind . . . the weepy kind that lashed out and cut others with her words.  She wasnโ€™t always a drunk โ€“ that started when I was just a little girl barely able to tie my own shoes, and after my sister was born.  It came on the heels of a nasty divorce, and my mother went down the rabbit hole, leaving 4 little kids to survive the best they could.  And we did survive โ€“ because my grandma answered the call for help, we survived.

 

It was never supposed to be a permanent arrangement.  My mom had called her, crying, needing her mother, and my grandma answered that call in the way most mothers would.  She put all her things in storage in her eldest daughterโ€™s basement and traveled a thousand miles to help her youngest child in her time of deep despair and uncertainty.  She never imagined her temporary stay would last over 25 years. And because she stayed, she lost all her belongings, as unbeknownst to my grandma, her eldest daughter had slowly sold off all her belongings and treasures.  I remember the day we went to retrieve her things from my aunt - and finding nothing left of the life she left behind. I remember the look on my grandmaโ€™s face when we left my auntโ€™s house.  Everything she had once possessed was gone, and that meant that my grandma was left with only the few items she had actually brought with her years before โ€“ just a small cluster of items that all fit in a one small box that she could carry on the train, and her memories of her past life.

 

My grandma shared many of those memories with me over the years.  She had a way of telling a story that grabbed your attention and held it there to the very end of the tale.  As we grew up my siblings cared less and less about those stories โ€“ we each were trying to survive our circumstances and stories didnโ€™t seem all that important to my brothers and sister.  They did to me, however, so while my siblings never had time to sit and listen to such tales of a bygone era, I made the time.  I listened.  It was this detail of my childhood that made me the unofficial keeper of the oral family history.  Iโ€™ve most likely forgotten more than I remember now, and I had no idea at the time of who exactly I was supposed to pass these stories onto, but I listened nonetheless. 

 

The world moved on and the stories faded โ€“ not because they werenโ€™t great stories, but because life never seems to grant just the right time to retrieve them and tell them to the next generation.  This is one of those stories - one that never really had a chance to be retrieved until today . . . and thatโ€™s because today I found my grandmaโ€™s silverware.

Remember that small box that held my grandmaโ€™s few belongings that she carried onto the train?  In that box was the silverware her mother, Carolina, had given her when she married in 1922.  Carolina had gotten the silverware from her mother.  It was a full set of Roger Brotherโ€™s 1847 silverware, the old colony pattern. Years earlier, my mother had moved away and had gotten married in a civil ceremony.  She never had the chance to pass on her silverware to her own daughter. For my grandmother, this trip to be with her daughter was her chance to do just that - pass on her motherโ€™s silverware, in the tradition started by her own mother.  I never knew any of this about our daily silverware growing up.  For my siblings and me it was just silverware โ€“ it was kept in the silverware drawer and used daily. 

Time marched on.

 

I had been on my own for many years when I got the call from my grandma that my mom had thrown out the silverware.  From what I could make out, between the sobs and heavy sighs, was that a fight had erupted and to punish my grandmother for arguing, my mother took the silverware and threw it all in the trash can in front of her.  She threatened her not to remove it โ€“ it was trash . . . she was tired of having that old stuff โ€“ and she would not allow my grandma to retrieve it.  She warned her . . .

I was in my early twenties and lived about 20 miles away.  My grandmother, still living with my mother in order to protect my still underage sister, was beside herself.  My sister wasnโ€™t home.  My grandma was in her 80s, mostly blind and partially crippled, and was shaken and in tears.  I had never known that woman to cry.  She had always been a strong, fierce woman โ€“ possessing a courage that only women who have fought their entire lives have.  That woman never cried โ€“ not that any of us ever saw, anyway.  She never showed weakness.  She had stood up to danger more times in her life than could be counted โ€“ including the danger her own daughter displayed that day.  She was the fiercest woman I had ever known.  Now I heard her voice on the phone โ€“ I heard the despair and the pain.  She was too old and frail now to stand up to her daughter as she had in the past . . . and my mother knew it.  I raced over to the house, not knowing what fresh hell I would be walking into, but prepared to do whatever I needed to . . . calling on a courage that is only seen in women who have fought their entire lives โ€“ a courage my grandma would truly recognize.

When I arrived, my mother was in her bedroom and her door was closed.  My grandmother was in her own bedroom, sitting hunched over on the side of her bed, her huge hands trembling. My heart broke seeing her that way. This was not something I had ever witnessed โ€“ my grandma had been crying.  I went immediately to the kitchen, and as quietly as I could, dumped the trash on the floor.  As I lifted the waste basket I could see a silver handle here and a rounded spoon end there, and got busy pulling them free from the real trash. I hurried.  As I found each piece I tossed it into a paper grocery bag.  I did this quickly. I did this quietly.  I then cleaned up my mess, put the waste can back where it was, and then smuggled the stolen treasure down the hall, past my motherโ€™s room, and into the sanctuary of my grandmaโ€™s room.  Make no mistake โ€“ I did smuggle it โ€“ I actually held my breath as I tiptoed past my motherโ€™s bedroom, lest she hear me and all hell break loose.    

 

I sat on the bed and opened the bag to show her โ€“ the silverware lay in a jumbled pile in the bottom.  She couldnโ€™t see them very well but she heard the jangle of metal on metal and I could see her shoulders relax.  She wouldnโ€™t take the bag from me.  Instead she had me open one of her drawers and retrieve a few itemsโ€ฆ. A blue decorative bottle, a few ceramic figurines, and a small pile of papers tied with a ribbonโ€ฆ her beloved possessions of a past life โ€“ the scraps of history โ€“ family history โ€“ that once fit in a box that was carried onto a train.

 

I sat with her only a short while afterward, keeping an ear toward the door listening for sounds of movements from down the hall.  I listened intently as she told me a short tale about each item and then hurriedly sent me on my way. She too, feared the beast would awake before I could make my escape. But I did escape . . . and my mother never knew I had rescued the silverware.

 

As I drove home that day I ran each tale through my mind, wanting so desperately to remember every word โ€“ and course I didnโ€™tโ€ฆ I remember the big things and overall tales, but not the wonderful details she had given me - those were clouded by the stress of the day.  And I thought about what she had asked of me as I sat on that old worn out mattress, she made me promise to pass that silverware down to my first-born child.  I didnโ€™t have any children . . . yet.  I promised her I would.

 

So, thatโ€™s the backstory.  My grandma passed away in 1983.  My first born โ€“ a beautiful son โ€“ was born just 2 months before she died.  She was almost completely blind by then, only able to distinguish light from dark. And yet, when I placed my newborn son in her arms she looked down at his face and exclaimed he was the most beautiful child she had ever seen.   She died a short time later and I scattered her ashes on her husbandโ€™s grave โ€“ it was my 24th birthday. 

Life moved on as life always does, and the silverware was put away โ€“ it had come to be a treasure and not just eating utensils, and regardless of the number of moves or the events of my life, I always knew that one day I would pass that silverware onto my first-born child.  Unfortunately, when we moved the last time in 2006, I had packed quickly and not as organized as I usually would.  We were on a deadline to get back to Virginia from Arizona and packing was chaotic.  For decades I had always known where the silverware was โ€“ but after we moved back to Virginia, I couldnโ€™t find it and feared the worst โ€“ had I somehow lost it? 

 

It was now September of 2020 and I had looked for that silverware for 14 years and 2 months.  On this day in 2020, I found it.  Years of looking and looking and digging through all the storage boxes to no avail had taken its toll on me. I had 14 years of wondering, โ€œWhere did it go?โ€   My oldest son has a home of his own now - and it was time to pass it on, so where the hell was it?  Years of digging and depression at not finding it โ€“ years of wondering if I would be able to keep that promise I made to my grandma almost 40 years ago . . . The disappearance of the silverware has haunted me.

Then one day, in September of 202, I felt the need to dig again โ€“ and headed down to the shop on our property that we used for storage.  A building filled from floor to ceiling of past adventures and memories and trash โ€“ a hodgepodge of crap needing sorting and eliminating.  I had a need to look . . . My husband, Tom, decided to go with me to help.  We started in a back room and looked through numerous boxes, then went to another room and searched some more.  We were in the front room, carefully squeezing through mountains of boxes, shifting them around, opening them up one by one, and not finding the much sought after treasure.  I glanced downward and noticed a box at Tomโ€™s feet โ€“ a plastic box.  I only put important things in plastic boxes . . .  Tom was standing in a corner surrounded by boxes on three sides.  I asked him if he could get to the plastic one on the floor by his feet.  He moved the large boxes off of it and open the cover.  There amongst old papers was a blue-felt box. OMG!  Could it be?  Tom lifted the out the blue felt box smiling. I recognized it immediately โ€“ I knew he held that treasure I had been in search of and I snatched it immediately from him and pulled it into my chest, hugging it as the tears started streaming down my face.  I cried for my grandma.  I cried for my promise.  I cried tears of sadness and gratefulness, and joy, and pain.  I could barely catch my breath.  It hit me hard and without warning โ€“ 14 years of worry, of remorse and guilt for having lost such a precious item โ€“ it all came pouring forth.  I looked up โ€“ Tom was still smiling, his hand raised for a high-five that I had left hanging there . . . he waited patiently for me to return that high-five.  I finally did.

My grandmaโ€™s silverware.  Passed on from generation to generation.  I would not be the one to break that chain after all. There was an overwhelming peace that came with that realization. Of course, it was not a full set โ€“ some pieces were lost growing up to simple things like making mud pies as a child, and some pieces were missing because one of my brothers pawned a few for money to buy drugs, but I had every piece that had been thrown in the trash that awful day so very long ago. 

 

I donโ€™t have much to pass on to my children that has any meaningful family history โ€“ just a few small items and some old silverware.  Items that once fit in a small box, carried on a train by a woman who once answered the call for help.  A woman whose courage I admired greatly.  A woman who gave up her entire life in order that my siblings and I might survive the chaotic and cruel world of our childhood.  A woman who lived long enough to know that her one remaining possession in this world that held any value to her would be passed on to another generation, 37 years later, through her oldest grand-daughter, and that I would tell the story to my oldest son.

My grandma had a way of telling a story that grabbed your attention and held it there to the very end of the tale.  I hope I have made her proud in the telling of my own story โ€“ albeit, a continuation of hers โ€“ but one that also began with a call for help.

 

My grandma.  She truly is โ€œforever in my heartโ€.

 

Liz Becker 

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  • My mom was a modern woman before her time. She was a teacher, independent, politically active and giving and helping all who she could.
  • She brought all that to this country after giving up her career and the status that she had in her country to follow my father to the US and to raise us all here.
  • Despite all the hardships and struggles she was the one that without knowing the language and the system managed to buy our first house and then a second one using rental from the first subsidize the second mortgage.
  • She didn't work in this country but she knew how to save and yet not deprive us of anything. She also taught each and every one of us how to do all of the household chores no matter whether we were male or female. There is so much more I could say but it would take a lot more space. She was born in 1929 but raised my brothers and sisters and myself to be independent to be able to care for ourselves and do all of the household chores as well as to work and study. All six of us graduated from college. She was an amazing woman!
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My mother was a intelligent,  loving, strong,  and caring wife,  mother,  grandmother and great grandmother.   She excelled at everthing she did. She was my mother and my best friend.  She loved to sing and could pray with so much power that the entire congregation would be moved to tears. 

She passed away in 2011, but the memories are etched in our hearts ๐Ÿ’• 

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โค๏ธ๐Ÿ’•๐ŸŽ‰

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My Mother inspired me to work hard (as she was a full-time working mom) and always made time with love and laughter alongside wonderful memories.

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Being a single mom for 31 years and so proud of my accomplishments! Both my kids are artists and very intelligent I'm such a proud mother and if my mother was here she'd be even prouder!

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I miss my mom so much. I suffered from a painful condition which started in my early 30's. My mom was there to help with the kids and do anything I needed. She was very upset that I was suffering so much. My mom passed away about 6 years ago. After she died, I started to feel much better. It's like she asked for some divine influence and it was granted. It was such a major difference and at the same time, I can't ignore it. Thank you mom for helping me 

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Hi! 
my mom,  became my angel on my shoulder after a grueling battle with pancreatic cancer.  Through it all, she Kept smiling.  Her wisdom and wit, inner and outer Beauty shines as bright now as ever.  Thank you M.a.M.  For your everlasting love.   

my folks, teachers.  Music:  anyone can master music with the proper attitude.  โ€˜It is the rests between the notesโ€ where the magic resides.  On that note:  we have vaccines for polio, Mmr,  please please please help keep these dis eases Dead. Thank a tribute today to DAngelo, Tania. Maria ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡ท, N Mr. David Sanborn (polio survivor). N Ylysses ๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฎ soccer football great. Blessings to u and yours! ๐Ÿซถ๐Ÿผ๐Ÿ™๐ŸคŸ๐Ÿ’‹

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