Danielle Hall (left) and her sister Gabrielle remember their mother who died of breast cancer in 2003, and the last Thanksgiving meal they shared with her as a family.
Originally aired November 16, 2007, on NPR’s Morning Edition.
Danielle Hall (left) and her sister Gabrielle remember their mother who died of breast cancer in 2003, and the last Thanksgiving meal they shared with her as a family.
Originally aired November 16, 2007, on NPR’s Morning Edition.
Danielle Hall (DH) and Gabrielle Hall (GH)
DH: I am Danielle Hall.
GH: I am Gabrielle Hall.
DH: And today we’re gonna talk about our mom.
GH: Mom was amazing.
DH: She was determined and strong and intense and good at everything she did, more than anybody else’s mom that I knew.
GH: She’s still better than everybody else’s mom we know.
DH: Like the time that she sent me that poem about if you’re having a bad day bake a cake and if it’s still bad put on a red dress. And after the first time that she’d been in the hospital, I went out and bought a red skirt.
GH: I read that and gave her a pair of red shoes and she would wear her red shoes to the chemotherapy. And she’d tell everybody there that you can’t have a bad day if you’re wearing red shoes.
DH: I just wish that I could remember her healthy.
GH: Yeah. I have pictures of our last Thanksgiving, of mom in her pajamas.
DH: At the head of the table.
GH: With an IV pole. She’d had cancer at that point for 14 years.
DH: And she had been able to eat and she hadn’t been eating for days.
GH: And it was the last meal she had.
DH: We had 10 days after that.
GH: Everyone knew she was dying — and that really kind of shifted our whole perspective of Thanksgiving, that we really had stuff to be thankful about, that we had mom.
DH: The last time I saw her I had been telling her that we were gonna be okay. That you were gonna be okay. And we would take care of everybody but she had done everything she could to teach us and love us and raise us and it was time for her to let go, that we loved her and she’d always be with us.
GH: That makes Thanksgiving really special that we’re spending it together. And before we eat, we will go around and say what we are thankful for — and it’s not something minor. And Thanksgiving’s a good time for us to remember.
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