Memories for mom
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Young Chang
So many cooking stories, so many laughs.
Liver and onions once a month. Hot dogs slathered in apple sauce and
peanuts and cheese. Heavenly Hash -- potatoes, ground meat,
Worcestershire sauce, water and soy sauce -- all served over de-crusted
sourdough bread because that’s how Edna Padrick, an inventive cook and an
even more inventive mom, wanted it.
Everyone cackles remembering this. Peggy and Irene Engard of Costa
Mesa sit on either side of 87-year-old Padrick, fingers laced through
their mother’s. The three have the same smile, the same laugh.
Like giggly friends at a slumber party, as women who have together
weathered a rotation of husbands and tears and divorces and death, they
remember how Padrick would cut the crust off the sourdough bread with
scissors designated just for food.
There were others -- paper scissors, fabric scissors, kitchen scissors
-- and no-one would dare misuse a pair while growing up.
Today, there are still at least ten different pairs of scissorsat
Padrick’s Santa Ana home. Her grown-up daughters have come over to visit,
as they usually do to swim (Padrick loves to swim) and take care of their
mother. She suffers from severe dementia and is in the beginning stages
of Alzheimer’s.
“Sometimes she asks, ‘Of what value is my life?”’ said Peggy Engard.
“She was so devastated by losing her [driver’s] license, and she feels
like she’s so dependent, and everything she wants to do she has to ask
somebody . . . but she’s a good listener. That’s what I tell her. ‘Mom,
what would [people] do without you and your good listening ear?”’
This Mother’s Day, the dutiful daughters want to make sure their
mother knows she is someone they celebrate.
Engard, 59, wrote a letter to the Daily Pilot last month about Padrick
and how much she loves her. Padrick didn’t know of this. Engard started
reading the letter to her this week but stopped, passing it to sister
Irene because the lump in her throat wouldn’t go away.
Padrick cried. She laughed at mentions of how she’s “stubborn and has
very strong opinions” and gives “head butts” if she disagrees. She
laughed even louder at the mention of her “unbridled laughter” and how
Peggy Engard inherited it too.
Padrick remembers almost all of the references to the past -- both in
the letter she’s hearing and in the photo album on her lap -- despite the
onset of Alzheimer’s. There’s a bulletin board in her home with pictures
of all four of her daughters -- including Dorothy Sabino of Washington
and Lorraine Boyd of Kansas -- and other family members, to help Padrick
remember who’s who. But she needs little help when it comes to
remembering happy days.
Like summer meals consisting of just watermelons. Or just corn, just
banana splits, the lone artichoke.
“I thought that was great,” Peggy Engard said. “And she always fixed
our lunches. She’d figure out different kinds of sandwiches to have and
different ways to cut the sandwiches. It was never just diagonal.”
Credit this to Padrick’s artistic sense. She won many awards for her
paintings and graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Cal
State Long Beach when she was 65.
The youthful mother even painted portraits of each of her daughters.
Irene Engard’s is clear -- the face is discernible, it’s your typical
portrait. The one of Peggy Engard is abstract. Titled “Adolescence,” the
scene shows layers of clouds and colors.
Padrick erupts into a laugh again at how she interpreted her
then-teenage daughter.
And then there were the teacher dinners, where every year Padrick
would invite each of her daughters’ teachers to dine with the family and
get acquainted. Peggy Engard, a teacher in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District, says this is probably what inspired her to do what she
does.
“And she would say I don’t care if you just get C’s,” Irene Engard,
54, said. “I never got rewarded for good grades.”
Which, ironically, explains why both her local daughters graduated at
the top of their classes.
Padrick had some other quirky traditions. She would tape dimes to
windows and floors tempting her children to clean. She would stock the
house with brown sugar or honey but never with white sugar. She was
always honest, for better or for worse.
“And we got talked to,” Irene Engard laughed. “I woulda taken a
spanking any day, ‘cause the words stick with you.”
In the middle of all this memory-lane strolling, Padrick interrupts
the emotions and points to her green living room table. It’s a slab of
polyester resin hardened and resting on four hollow plastic cylinders for
legs.
She likes the legs. She says that’s where the art is -- here the
intrigue lies.
“I made this table, but notice: all of its beauty is underneath,”
Padrick said.
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