Skip to main content

A Mother’s Day Reflection

With Mother’s Day here and the world bustling with cards, brunches, and busy schedules, I find myself reflecting on something a bit simpler: taking a moment to remember the person who helped shape my earliest sense of home.

Mauricette Elaine (Bontemps) Ball. My Mom.

We arrived in Cuba after leaving La Rochelle, France, in 1959—a transition whose enormity I only fully appreciate now. My mother, barely in her mid-twenties, stepped into Midwestern life with remarkable courage. Her smile could warm the coldest Illinois morning, and her hugs lingered long after she let go—quiet reminders that you were deeply loved.

Born February 16, 1934, the third of four children, she grew up in Nazi-occupied La Rochelle. As kids, we listened wide-eyed to stories of soldiers patrolling her streets and fear shadowing everyday life. Yet she carried none of that darkness forward. What endured was resilience and an unwavering devotion to family—qualities she carried across the Atlantic and planted firmly in Cuba, Illinois.

Everyone in town seemed to know her.

“Shirley, you know Marcie?” people would ask, as though she were a local celebrity.

“Yes, I saw the article in The Cuba Journal about her work at Gillams Orchard.”

She never sought attention, but her warmth, work ethic, and quiet strength made her unforgettable.

Dad spent more than 45 years working at the pottery in Abingdon, often leaving before sunrise. Mom matched that dedication at home. Her mornings began at 5:30, making breakfast for Dad before getting three energetic boys ready for school—waking us, making beds, laying out clothes, serving breakfast, cleaning the kitchen, and somehow keeping the entire household running smoothly.

Then, on December 19, 1965, my sister Michèle arrived, adding sweetness to our noisy chaos and expanding Mom’s role from managing three boys to lovingly guiding four children.

While we were at school, Mom cleaned houses in town to help support the family. Yet no matter how long her day had been, she was always home when we returned, dinner on the stove, and comfort filling the house.

She stayed home ironing, cleaning, preparing, caring—quietly making our house a refuge.

Mom wasn’t one for gossip or small talk. Her focus was always her family. Still, everyone recognized her kindness and dedication. On weekends at Grandma’s house, she slipped back into her La Rochelle training, giving Dad’s sisters perms at the kitchen table—her way of nurturing connection and community.

Cuba, Illinois, was the kind of town where:

  • Kids rode bicycles everywhere without fear.
  • Baseball games sprang up in neighborhood yards.
  • Her lilac bushes would bloom each spring, filling the yard with color and fragrance.
  • Memories of spring flowers returning each year made the whole town feel alive again.

Years later, we realized our little town resembled Mayberry—not in fiction, but in spirit: simple, kind, and deeply human.

Through it all, Mom and Dad created a home so steady and loving that even now, decades later, I can still feel it.

On this Mother’s Day, I’m reminded that life’s greatest gifts don’t come from stores, destinations, or grand experiences. They come from the people who gave us our foundation—the ones who made safety feel natural, loved without condition, and held the center when life shifted around them.

For me, that gift was my mother.

Her love became my North Star.

Her devotion shaped my compass.

Her courage and tenderness built my memories.

So this Mother’s Day, pause for a moment. Look inward. Revisit the memories that shaped you and the mothers, grandmothers, and caregivers who loved you long before you fully understood what that love meant.

For me, it will always lead back to Cuba, Illinois—and to the extraordinary French mother who transformed a small Midwestern town into the warmest home a child could ever know.

I’m Patrick Ball. Stay curious, stay grateful, and may your Mother’s Day glow with warmth, memory, and gratitude for the people who built your world.

Comments

Ron Ball said…
Truth in your story! Great READ !

Most Popular of All Time

Time Travel, Roving Mics, and Muscle Memory

In this episode, the 2026 Sinkankas Symposium. Let’s get one thing straight: I didn’t arrive in a DeLorean. No flux capacitor, no dramatic lightning strike—just a Saturday parking pass and a name badge. And yet, somewhere between the rotunda doors and the first handshake, it happened anyway. This past Saturday, April 25th, I was transported—effortlessly and completely—back in time at the 20th Annual Sinkankas Symposium on the GIA campus in Carlsbad. Walking into that magnificent main campus rotunda early with my colleagues, Paul Mattlin and Glenn Wargo, felt like wrapping myself in a familiar, gem-encrusted blanket. It was less a building, more a family living room where nobody ever really forgets your name. The halls were quiet (a rare and beautiful thing), and the soft echo of our footsteps on the polished floors sounded exactly as I remembered it. For a moment, it wasn’t 2026—it was April 1997, my first time walking onto the beautiful, brand-new GIA campus as Director of Alumni. Som...

Freedom 7 - 65th Anniversary

Podcast - Freedom 7; 65th Anniversary . "Man must rise above the Earth - to the top of the atmosphere and beyond - for only thus will he fully understand the world in which he lives." - Socrates, 500 B.C. May 5, 2026, marks the 65th anniversary of Freedom 7's launch. Commander Alan B. Shepard, Jr. became the first American in space. A 15-minute sub-orbital flight, a day for the history books; the entire world was watching. NASA and the world had witnessed many trial runs explode violently on the launch pad. The space program was in its infancy. Unlike today, there were far too many unknowns. This prompted me to pull out one of my favorite books from my office library,  Light This Candle , by Neal Thompson, copyright 2004. Light This Candle is a biography of Alan Shepard, Jr., you won't be able to put down. It's - "Story-telling at its best . . . every page is alive," says David Hartman, U.S Naval Institute. In the opening pages, you read endorsements fr...

Ode To Gemology

For over 80 years, students of gemology have struggled with spectrums, bewildered by birefringence, and simply plagued by pleochroism. The following sonnet is guaranteed to bring a smile to your face, a glow to your heart, and a simple reminder that students of life and gemology rediscover nature's gifts every day.  Ode to Gemology , by a GIA on-campus student. Dispersion, fire, adventurescence. Orient, sheen, or iridescence. Refractive index, high or low. The luster should indicate that, you know. Polarization, double or single. What to do now, they intermingle. Pleochroic colors you really should see. Was that only two, or actually three? Birefringence should help you a lot. Use your polarizer and watch the spot. Now, did it jump most on low or high? Sure, you can get it if you really try! Your liquids should be an aid, I think. Does it float, suspend, or slowly sink? Just use your imagination now. (He doesn't see me wiping my brow.) Solid inclusions or only bubbles? Huh, th...