
MOM'S LAST CALL
I guess I could say it all started late in 1992.
After serving for six years in the Marine Corps, I was due to get discharged at the end of December, 1992. My plans for my life after military service were to go to school, get my degree, and try to make a life for myself. First things first though, I needed to go back home and see my mom and dad again.
Dad was doing ok, but
mom wasn't doing good at all. She had been in
and out of the hospital on nearly a regular basis
for several years now, with respiratory and heart
problems, and during the later parts of 1992 I
had been home on leave several times because of
mom's illness.
I had been stationed in Hawaii
the last four years of my service, and when you
get ready to get out, they send you to California
to complete your processing.
The night before I
was to get discharged, I can say, I lived it up.
The next morning I got stopped, and spent the
morning in jail for a DUI. After I got released,
I went and got my final paper work and then went
back up to my house that I was staying in in Los
Angeles until my scheduled court appointment
nearly a month and a half away.
It was about two
weeks later that I got a call from my father
telling me I needed to come home now, as mom was
in the hospital again, and wasn't expected to
make it. A quick trip to the courthouse and an
explanation of my situation had me on my way the
next day for the drive home.
I got home on the
23rd of January, 1993. Mom had been in the
hospital for three days now. Much work had to be
done as the family needed to be contacted and
services and such needed to be arranged. Within
only two days, every member from my family was
there. That first night I was home I went to see
mom, and she didn't look good. She could look at
me, and acknowledge me, but couldn't talk or move
much. I could see the pain in her eyes.
The
afternoon of the fourth day, me and my family
went to see mom together, giving her the one wish
that she had asked for before her death. That
was to see all six of her children together for
the very first time. She got her wish.
Later
that night my sister Beth went back to the
hospital and said that mom looked so much more
comfortable and at peace. She was able to write
a word on a small white board the hospital had
given her before she fell asleep for the night.
That word was "rsst". We all knew that
was "rest". Beth had said to us later after she
returned, that she knew mom had left that night.
At about 4 o'clock the next morning, we got a call from the hospital that mom was fading fast. I held her hand until it was all over, and she was pronounced dead at 8:00 that morning. This was the 25th of January. As all things like this go, the family grieved and mourned about her passing, then everybody began the journey home. As for me, I stayed home with dad, as it was still about a month before I started school, and he needed me there. I got a temporary job to put some cash in my pocket, then headed to school at the end of February.
I got moved into my new
apartment and found a new job. Once I got my
phone hooked up, I made all the usual calls to
let everybody know where I was at, and that
everything was going ok for me. My schedule was
tough, but I managed. I went to school from 7 in
the morning to noon, and worked from 3 in the
afternoon to midnight, five days a week. I never
got many messages, and was surprised at the ones
I did get. I came home one night to find several
on my machine, most of them were from family just
saying hi. After listening to them, I deleted
them all. I stayed up for a while longer
watching TV, and got ready to go to bed for the
night. The next day was Saturday, so I could
sleep in if I wanted too.
Out of pure habit,
every time I would walk into my kitchen, I would
look at my answering machine to check for
messages. I think I got that way just because I
never got many calls. I did just that, and got a
drink of water. Once again, on leaving the
kitchen, I looked at the machine, but this time
something was different. According to the
machine, there were eight messages on the tape.
This was odd because I had gotten no calls, I was
sitting next to the phone the whole time, and it
was only about a minute since I had looked at it
on the way into the kitchen. I thought that
maybe something was wrong with the machine, so I
pushed play just out of curiosity. What I heard
next scared the hell out of me. There was a low
mumbling voice on the tape, each message about 15
seconds long. I had no clue as to how this could
have happened, so I played them over and over
again. After several times, a stark realization
came to me. It was a woman's voice, and sounded
like someone who wanted to talk, but just
couldn't form the words. It was then that I
realized that it was my mother's voice on the
tape. She had sounded like that when I had seen
her in the hospital before she died. I was so
freaked out by the whole thing I called my sister
to tell her about it. She just listened quietly
for me to tell her what had happened, then told
me that something had happened to her as well.
She was also up watching TV, and her daughter was laying on the floor between her and the TV. She noticed something in the kitchen of her house, and when she turned to look, she saw mom walk through the living room, between her and her daughter, and disappear. She said she had looked at her and smiled. When I asked her just when this happened, she told me about 10 minutes before I called! That means that both events happened at exactly the same time!
It took me a long time to get over that night. I never got any weird messages again, and my sister never saw mom again either. All I can say is that mom wanted to check up on us one last time before she left for good.
Submitted From: Mark Goulette, North California, USA

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