10 Min Read, Family, grief, Mental Health, Parenting, Re-parenting, Relationships, Spirituality, The Mothers

I am Regina Lynette, granddaughter of Dorothy Lee.

Dorothy Lee Thomas was born on October 31, 1925. Iโ€™ve only ever heard her called Dorothy, so Iโ€™ve only ever called her Dorothy because no one ever corrected me. I wouldnโ€™t dare attempt anything southern like Mee-Maw, but I donโ€™t think anything modern like G-Momma is quite right either. I think I would have called her Grandmother should we have had a relationship. So, as of October 31, 2021, I call her Grandmother.

I feel somewhat lucky to have not made any memories of spending time with Dorothy Lee. It sounds illogical because I also feel tremendous loss from not knowing her. Here is the reason I find myself so lucky. Dorothy Leeโ€™s actions caused many people who knew her a lot of pain and confusion. Should I have known her in the natural during the first nine years of my life I might be stuck with terrible memories and anger and grief as well. But as I get to know her as an ancestor, I get to see the impossibility of Dorothy Lee and can love her from a spiritual place. I can love her from a place where sheโ€™s eternal.

The first big thing that happened to Dorothy Lee after she was born was that she lost her place as the baby of the family when her mother gave birth to her third daughter in not even as many years. Now Dorothy was the middle child of a trio of infant girls. Before she could begin to learn what that meant for her, and just as she made peace with the idea of sharing her parents with her sisters, she lost her baby sister. And no one helped her with her grief because no one believed a 19-month-old toddler knew to grieve her baby sister. And no one helped her with her grief because everyone else was grieving a 6-month-old baby. And no one ever believed Dorothy could possibly feel any residual pain of her own from losing her baby sister. But I know she did. She absolutely had to feel it. I have one memory from my life between birth and 36 months old. Itโ€™s probably more of a blend of multiple events morphed into one trauma โ€“ there are some connectors missing and mismatched details โ€“ but it was a memory of something that affected my behavior, shaped my attitudes, and kept me in a loop of abuse and misuse for twenty years before I asked my family if there was such a secret. I saw the pain on their faces and could see that they were reliving, to a degree, the painful event that they swore to secrecy because they believed I couldn’t possibly remember it. And I saw that in order to protect themselves they would have projected that pain on each other. Because the point of my inquiry was to know what was true so that I could begin to move forward and break the loop of abuse and misuse, I left them out of it and continued seeking help to navigate those painful memories. I maintain that my life would have been better if my pain had been considered at the time it happened and I had been taught how to move forward in life from that trauma. But, unlike Dorothy Lee, I was able to get good help years later of my own volition. Grandmother would have been comforted and encouraged by her family as a child through her grief of her baby sister rather than be left to her own toddler devices. And Grandmother would have told my mother to talk to me about what happened to me as a child rather than trying and failing to protect my feelings. Grandmother would have shown Mommy that she was leaving me to my own toddler devices to process and live through the terrible things that happened. Grandmother would have held me and my mother both as she talked to me โ€“ boldly speaking to a toddler about things that are too heavy for some adults to carry, empowering me along the way.

Within the first 36 months, Gina needed Grandmother.

The second big thing that happened to Dorothy was that her parents separated. I donโ€™t know the reason nor the length of time of separation โ€“ nothing was documented as a divorce at any time, but Dorothy, her sister and her mother were listed on one census record with her maternal grandparents while Dorothy, her sister and her father were listed on another with her fatherโ€™s auntie. This is also the year of a few family deaths, none more significant than Dorothyโ€™s mother. Dorothy was just 14 years old when she lost her mother. I know two things about losing your mother as a teenager. First, no one in the world can explain what it is like to be the baby girl of the family and to lose your mother just as you are becoming a lady unless it happened to you. Second, grief is just as unique as the person who is experiencing it and no two people grieve alike. Dorothy was going through a second loss that I know no one helped her through. Worst case scenario she was a burden to be ignored or passed off. Best case scenario, everyone was so busy making sure she was provided for and had care that no one had time to care for her. But Grandmother, who got the help she needed from losing her mother, was by my side when I lost mine. She was the voice, yet again, telling the family how to look out for me and how to get me back up to a place of functionality so that I wouldnโ€™t have to wait until I was an adult to get treatment for grief and trauma. Grandmother would hold me in her arms and let me sob in her chest until my head throbbed and I fell asleep from exhaustion. And then she would tell me that I was the strongest person she knew, that my tender-heart was the strongest part of me. She would say that it was beautiful that I was able to fall apart into her arms, having the courage to both feel and express my pain and to be able to trust her with my most vulnerable parts. I can feel Grandmotherโ€™s hands around my face, cupping the tears that fell from my chin and letting them roll down the insides of her wrists. Smiling through her own tears and wiping away my fresh tears with her thumbs, Grandmother would look into my eyes for my silent questions, and she would wait until she could see I got the answers from looking into her eyes.

Dorothy had a baby girl and got married as a teenager and her husband left four months later to serve in World War II. I donโ€™t have a lot of answers about that period of time and maybe thatโ€™s something that will be made clear at another time. But Grandmother is who I would have talked to about my teenage relationships and the one personโ€™s advice I would have trusted implicitly. Grandmother would tell me all about my biological grandfather, what the family thought of him, why she didnโ€™t get married until a month after my mother was born, what it was like for her husband to leave for war, and how the relationship ended. I would have made the same teenager decisions I made for the same reasons I made them, but I wouldnโ€™t have made myself sick with doubt and grief prolonging the closing season for those teenage relationships. Then I would have walked hand in hand with Grandmother in places where the grass was lush and green while she beamed at me with pride, knowing I was moving forward courageously, unconcerned that I would have all the relationships I needed along the way.

Teenage Regina needed Grandmother.

Dorothy had a boyfriend who was just as, if not more, significant than my biological grandfather in some ways. This boyfriend saw her talent, shared her talent, and made her an offer she wouldnโ€™t have refused. Her father stood in between her and this dream. I believe this act โ€“ one I am certain was made out of love and the best intentions โ€“ was the beginning of a horrible downfall provoking Dorothy to lash out, causing regrettable and significant harm to her loved ones. So, because I can know Dorothy as the Grandmother who sang in talent shows and with doo-wop groups, I can spend time with the Grandmother who tells me that I can have everything Iโ€™ve ever dreamed of and more. Grandmother calls me her โ€œpartnerโ€ – because she can see so much of herself in me. I am the one who drives her everywhere she needs to go while we sing every song on the radio at the top of our lungs together. We spend Saturdays together, sitting on the floor in a small room where her phonograph (that still works fine) is stored, listening to records. When itโ€™s my turn to choose songs, I select some vinyl that makes her smile and then choose some things from my iPhone that I know sheโ€™ll absolutely love to hate. Weโ€™ll sing together and Iโ€™ll read liner notes to her while we listen to music for hours exchanging fun facts about the musicians. And sheโ€™ll have a couple fingers of something brown and smooth while teasing me for preferring something pink with bubbles. When I see sheโ€™s getting sleepy, I begin to put away the records with the same care she taught me when I was very little. When weโ€™ve played our last song for the night, I walk her to her bed and tuck her in just before kissing her cheek. Grandmother knows I canโ€™t sing for shit but loves the way I sing with my whole heart. She laughs at me when I screech out the high notes and when I ask why sheโ€™s laughing, she tells me that she laughs when sheโ€™s happy.

Dorothy Lee wrote on the back of this photo that she was too flabby and that this was her real hair. She would write addresses and stories on the back of photos that she sent but never the date.

This is the Grandmother with whom I spent last Halloween. October 31, 1925 was Grandmotherโ€™s 96th birthday. She didnโ€™t grow up in a perfect world โ€“ life dealt its blows often leaving her heartbroken โ€“ but she lived with all of her needs met, whether physical, emotional, or spiritual. She tells stories of love and loved ones lost, of dreams deferred and changed, and how to find the beautiful things in a world of ugliness. She smiles at me with her eyes and her heart, knowing that she walked the path she did so that I would have someone holding my hand while I walked the path destined for me to walk. She is happy to do it because with everything I go through, she gets to advise me from a place of experience. When she recalls wondering why such terrible things happened to her when she was younger, it all makes sense when she sees me.   

I am Regina Lynette, granddaughter of Dorothy Lee.

15 Min Read, Family, Parenting, Re-parenting, Relationships, Robert Samuel Walker, Spirituality

I am Regina Lynette. I am a Baptist Christian. Probably.

I was raised in the Missionary Baptist Church. At eight years old I publicly made my confession, was water-baptized, received communion, and was offered the right hand of fellowship with membership into my childhood home church, from here on out to be called NNMBC. About nine years later that church split, letโ€™s just say over issues with follow-on leadership. I would spend the next year of my Christianity absorbing religious teachings with an unbelievable and relatively new zeal in a new church, from here on out to be called NBMBC. Later, I would start cautiously wandering away from what I was taught, testing ideas about my religion, and finding out some truths for myself.

Daddy was my trusted personal religious leader and when I had questions about anything regarding religion โ€“ ours and others โ€“ I trusted him to be completely honest in his responses. I would go to Daddy before anyone else because I knew that what he had to say would be based on experience or from his own research and education, and that he would refer me to texts that would support his answers. I also trusted him to honestly admit if he didnโ€™t know something and that he would do the research and get back to me or encourage me to do the research with him. Even though some of what he would say would fall in the category of dogma, his delivery was never dogmatic and always logical (despite religion or spirituality not being what I would define as logical). But then I went to college, and everything went to hell. Okay, everything didnโ€™t go to hell, and I canโ€™t even justify that level of melodrama here, so, I take it back. But college was the start of curiosity, circumstance, and independence taking me along a slightly different path than I ever imagined.

This is Regina wearing the suit that would become my “Communion Sunday” suit. How I never spilled grape juice on my all white was miraculous.

The first year of college, I partnered up with a new friend who matched my particular freshman demographic in my search for a church family in the town where I attended school. We were both female, away from home, and part of the 5% minority population of the university. One of the things that created a firmer bond early in our friendship was that we were both daughters of black Baptist preachers who needed to find a church to attend regularly while we were away from home, and we believed it should be a Baptist church. We were glad to be on this search together and found we wanted similar things from a church-home-away-from-home. Unfortunately and universally we found, beyond doctrine and styles of worship, that we didnโ€™t feel welcome in those churches. We were our best Baptist Christian selves and were snubbed by those who we expected to welcome us to the family and offer the right hand of fellowship. We dutifully stood as visitors, reciting the most relevant details of what I like to call our “Christian resumes”, offering ourselves to be cradled in the arms of the churches and we didnโ€™t find a place that felt like home as we hoped. After reporting back to our families our lack of success and the new routes we planned to take โ€“ seeking Christian churches of other denominations โ€“ neither of our families were particularly happy but they trusted us to make the right decision (which was simply joining a church). It wasnโ€™t terribly long after we started with this new plan that we landed at a charismatic church โ€“ House of God I believe was the official denomination. This church will be referred to as BHOG going forward.

I didn’t know much about the charismatic churches at that time and had to be brought up to speed on the charismatic denominations. To shorten my learning curve, those who knew I grew up in Memphis likened House of God to the Church of God In Christ. I had been curious about the Church of God In Christ forever. In my ignorance, it was the only church that I would consider charismatic (even though I didnโ€™t get that vocabulary until I was an adult) and therefore stood alone as a strange but intriguing group of Christians. When I was growing up, Memphis was where their official leadership & headquarters was located and the place where they held a large annual conference. I knew it as โ€œthe saints coming to townโ€ or “the COGIC coming for conference”. I wouldnโ€™t understand that COGIC was an acronym for the Church of God In Christ until I was a little older so it sounded more like an affliction than an affiliation, and is partly why I seldom use the acronym today, even in writing. The other thing sparking my curiosity as a child about the Church of God In Christ was that Daddy and my siblings from his first wife were involved in that church for a period of time and something went terribly wrong because they spoke about the church with some unpleasantness that I don’t want to give a label. I know the story from a couple of points of view but each of them experienced it in their own way and I can’t articulate their feelings and don’t want to label them. But the point is I was always curious about the Church of God In Christ. And because the pastor of my NBMBC came from the Church of God In Christ I was exposed to certain influences that made for a more energetic style of worship than I had been accustomed.

As I said earlier, curiosity (about charismatic churches and styles of worship), circumstances (feeling terribly unwelcome in the local Baptist churches and incredibly valued in a charismatic church), and independence (more on my own than I wanted to be) led me to BHOG, ready to join under Watch Care. Watch Care was a way of joining a church under temporary circumstances โ€“ being away from home at college โ€“ so that weโ€™d have a spiritual leader, spiritual family, and could fulfill our Christian obligations and rituals for the duration of the temporary relocation. Thatโ€™s my own definition by the way, based on my experience at the time. The process of joining a church under Watch Care included presenting a letter from the pastor of your home church (NBMBC) to the Watch Care pastor (BHOG) and then finding out if you were โ€œacceptedโ€ which, as long as there was no issue regarding beliefs about baptism (water and immersion) and you came to an understanding of where your tithes were going, you would generally be โ€œacceptedโ€. What I was unprepared for was that my pastor (NBMBC) would outright refuse to write me a letter because, as he explained, heโ€™d spent time in the Church of God In Christ which to him was equivalent to BHOG and I had no clue what I was getting myself into. I found this a bit irrational and not only insufficient but also an unacceptable explanation, so I decided to go to Daddy. He was not my pastor, but he was the assistant pastor at NBMBC; the person who responded to my tugs on his heartstrings; and the person whose guidance, for me, would trump anyone else’s. I would explain all this to BHOG so that I would be โ€œacceptedโ€. Unfortunately it was one of the few times that Daddy hid behind a very weak excuse, refusing to write a letter because he wasnโ€™t officially my pastor. But I knew it was because he didnโ€™t support my choice of church. He did believe in order and that it was my pastorโ€™s place to write the letter, but if he’d felt differently about the church I’d chosen, he would have written the letter and that would have been the end of it. So, with no possibilities of getting a letter, I approached the BHOG pastor and before I could even start to explain that I couldnโ€™t get a letter, he told me that he never expected that I’d get a letter and that if I was still interested in joining his church, heโ€™d give me a modified version of the process which combined regular membership orientation with Watch Care orientation. And he was careful to explain to me that my tithes were expected to go to BHOG and not NBMBC.

This was the last Sunday that I attended BHOG This is on the steps of the new building they moved to just before I graduated college.

While in college I took two religious studies courses while having โ€œleftโ€ my home church and denomination for a โ€œnewโ€ church and denomination. It was so interesting learning academically about so many other religions and this was the first time I began to embrace all the Abrahamic religions and became unusually fascinated by the Wiccan studies. Iโ€™d determined that if I had been born with absolutely no religious belief set and sought out my own by studying them all, I probably would be Wiccan. It would be years, literally over a decade, before I would openly share that with Christians who felt invested in my religious path. It didnโ€™t go over well but at least I wasnโ€™t met with rescue efforts because by then I was certain that I was going to be a Christian for life.

Daddy got sick when I had about two years left in my college career. He was struggling with a cancer diagnosis, and he was nearly 80 years old. As the possibility of his death felt almost tangible, I took my prayer requests to my BHOG church family. I didnโ€™t feel I had a place at NBMBC anymore except on paper and my NBMBC pastor was in jail much of this time anyway. (Yes, Iโ€™m going to leave that right there for now and I canโ€™t promise Iโ€™ll revisit it with any significance.) And so my BHOG family supported me and prayed with me and believed with me for Daddyโ€™s healing. While I prayed for his healing, I also began grieving him. I had no doubt that God would hear my prayer, but I also didn’t want Daddy to suffer simply for the sake of my not wanting to let him go. After some time Daddy was effectually healed of the cancer but his body was a wreck from the treatment. Not to mention, as assistant pastor at NBMBC he took on the responsibility of managing the church in my pastorโ€™s absence. He fell into a vicious cycle of taking care of the church until he would get sick and be admitted to the hospital. Heโ€™d recover somewhat and head back to the church to start the cycle all over again. I was infuriated. All along I had begged my NBMBC pastor not to make Daddy the assistant pastor because he was in his 70s and to get some more preachers at the church. My NBMBC pastor was not in agreement with what I thought was quite logical โ€“ having someone who is twice your age be your second in command was impractical to say the least and stupid to say the most. Donโ€™t you want someone who can take on the torch after youโ€™re gone? And hadnโ€™t we as a church just struggled with the idea that my NNMBC pastor had to be “sat down” by the parishioners because he was too old and didnโ€™t want to let go of pastoring? I mean if you are of the opinion that there is such a thing as โ€œtoo oldโ€, why would anyone who was over 70 years old be in position to takeover the church? I appreciated that he regarded Daddy as a wise advisor โ€“ the only reason he gave me for his choice โ€“ but I disagreed that Daddy needed any responsibility for the actual running of the church. I digress, but only a bit. My experiences, disappointments, and other slights from NBMBC (along with the ones from NNMBC that I haven’t mentioned) began to change the way I viewed what it meant to be a Christian.

After Daddyโ€™s cancer was in remission and while he was sick from the treatment, I continued with my grieving. I felt he wouldnโ€™t be with me much longer โ€“ even though I still had ideas that heโ€™d at least see 90 โ€“ and I needed to be ready to let him go. The only problem with my acceptance that he was nearing the end of his life is that my BHOG family didnโ€™t listen to me and continued to pray for something I was no longer believing for or wanted. And my confidences were betrayed โ€“ with the best intentions of caring for me โ€“ so my trust in them faltered. Daddy died during my last semester of college and while my BHOG family cared for me during my grief more than any other spiritual family, I felt unseen and therefore, though it sounds extreme, no longer loved or safe. I remember being asked to stand at BHOG during the Sunday evening service held the same night I returned to college from having attended Daddyโ€™s funeral. I went because I didnโ€™t want to be alone with my grief and my religion was supposed to be the thing that held me up and strengthened me and would help me finish my college degree. My BHOG pastor said something about how impressive it was that I was at church because it said something about my commitment to the church โ€“ not being lazy or using my travel to bury my father as an excuse to not make it to church โ€“ and that was the end of my time at BHOG even though I would not officially leave until I graduated.

I’m not headed to church here, but I don’t have any post-college church pictures so, next best thing.

Just before I graduated college I began isolating myself from the church in general, beginning with intentionally not attending church regularly. I remember the first Sunday I purposely didnโ€™t go to church. I sat on my bed and read the newspaper and felt so free. I very specifically felt exactly free. People came by to check on me after service โ€“ because as I said I truly had a church family โ€“ and I was a bit defiant with some, testing their ministry to me. I remember one thing I thought truly trivial yet hypocritical was that in all the years I had heard โ€œcome as you areโ€ in every church, it apparently didnโ€™t apply to me and no one could even hear the contradiction in what they were telling me. What I heard was that based on what I call my religious resume, I was no longer in the category of folks who could just come as they were, and if I didnโ€™t attend church in my regular โ€œuniformโ€ (which at the time was a suit or dress, control top pantyhose, and heels) then I would be inappropriately dressed. Offering that I couldnโ€™t afford dry-cleaning was not met with an offer of financial help but with encouragement to just find a way. I maintained it should have been acceptable for me to wear jeans to church. All of these tiny contradictions and small hypocrisies, the prophe-lies* and the manipulations, and all the things that humans tend to do to anything they put their hands on all wrapped up into one big trauma, and it wore on the ties I had to the religion I was born into and loved โ€“ Missionary Baptist Christianity. Add to that the season of Rebel Gina which followed college graduation โ€“ my seemingly unpredictable, irrational and consistent anger along with a uniform of olive green and black โ€“ and I essentially walked away from the church. It is most important that I am clear that I walked away from the church (the building and the fellowship) โ€“ not my beliefs. While I agree that I am instructed not to forsake the fellowship, I maintain that I should be particular in choosing who is in the fellowship.

Tons of words again. Have we made this a three-parter? Probably.

I am Regina Lynette. I am a Baptist Christian. Probably.

*Prophe-lies, pronounced ‘prof-uh-lize’, is a lie, typically that serves another’s own agenda, that is shared under the cover of a prophecy.

10 Min Read, Donna Maria Thomas-Walker, Family, Parenting, Relationships, Robert Samuel Walker, Smart and Pretty, What's In A Name?

I am Regina Lynette, daughter of Donna Maria.

In the year 1889 in the perfect month on the perfect day, Peoria was born in Arkansas. Twenty years after her birth in 1909 in the perfect month on the perfect day, Peoria gave birth to Odetta in Arkansas. While Odetta was yet 16 years old, she gave birth to Dorothy Lee on October 31, 1925 in Memphis, Tennessee. Dorothy Lee was also 16 years old when she gave birth to her daughter, Donna Maria on September 16, 1942 in Memphis, Tennessee. And when Donna Maria was in her 33rd year of life, she gave birth to me on December 12 in Memphis, Tennessee. I am Regina Lynette, daughter of Donna Maria, daughter of Dorothy Lee, daughter of Odetta, daughter of Peoria.

Peoria Cox {circa 1889 โ€“ December 10, 1945}; Mothers unkown

My mother told me who this was when I was a child, but I regrettably do not recall what she said. For many reasons, I have made a guess that this is Peoria. I have no way to know if thatโ€™s accurate but until I get different information, the person in this photo represents Peoria, my motherโ€™s great grandmother.โ€


Peoria, who gave birth at 20 years old to Odetta, lost that girlchild a mere 31 years later to apoplexy due to interstitial nephritis. Peoria was presumably involved in her granddaughter, Dorothy Leeโ€™s, life until her own death on December 10, 1945, of cerebral hemorrhage due to unknown causes. Peoria outlived her daughter โ€“ my mother often said that losing a child was the worst pain in the world so I declare that Peoria survived the worst pain that life could dish out. Dorothy Lee, who lost her mother at 14, gave birth 2 years later without her mother. I declare that Dorothy Leeโ€™s losing her mother as a young teenager was something incredibly difficult because losing my own mother as a young teenager was incredibly difficult. Donna Maria was born without a grandmother. She was but 3 when her great-grandmother died โ€“ who we only presume was involved in her life. But Donna Maria outlived her mother, Dorothy, who died of cancer while Donna was 42 years old. I would not know Peoria existed until I was an adult and even then, she was only a name in a baby book and on a death certificate. I did not know that Odetta Cox existed until I was in college and at that time she was only a name in an email provided through my uncle from a distant cousin, a name in a baby book and a name on a death certificate. I knew of Dorothy Lee but never met her before her death when I was 8 years old. I lost my mother from a heart attack about 5 years later, 2 weeks after my 13th birthday.

Odetta (Cox) Thomas {circa 1909 โ€“ March 24, 1940}; Daughter of Peoria Cox

I am not certain that this photo is my great-grandmother but based on a relatively reasonable deduction, I think this is Odetta.


My maternal ancestry can be traced back to the Bamileke (a corruption of the name) People of Cameroon and this has been guaranteed accurate from Odetta. Where did that heritage die out? Did Peoria โ€“ who is not guaranteed by our DNA testing to be from the Bamileke People of Cameroon – pass down any traditions, rituals or recipes to Odetta? Dorothy didnโ€™t live her entire childhood with Peoria and Odetta so would she even have been passed down anything of her maternal line? Was our heritage completely wiped out by the ins and outs of slavery leaving Dorothy, her mother and her grandmother to have little to pass on? I donโ€™t know. Iโ€™m left to put pieces together from birthdates, death certificates, and general world history. Peoria was born a free woman but her mother would have likely been born a slave and then freed by the time Odetta was born. I have no details for Peoriaโ€™s motherโ€™s history โ€“ not even Peoriaโ€™s maiden name. I am happy to know my mothersโ€™ names from my great-great grandmother. But I know very little about their gardens because 2 weeks after my 13th birthday, they were all gone.

How simple a thing it seems to me that to know ourselves as we are, we must know our mothersโ€™ names.

Alice Walker, O Magazine, May 2003

โ€œMamaโ€™s baby, daddyโ€™s maybeโ€ was not the prevalent pattern in my family. Hardy Cox was in his daughter, Odettaโ€™s, life. Rodney Thomas cared for his daughters after Odetta’s death as well as my mother, his granddaughter, and her children. While I donโ€™t know the story behind Warren Terryโ€™s absence in Donnaโ€™s life beyond the time he enlisted in the army during World War II, he was married to her mother and his family is mentioned as a part of her young life. And I was Robert Walker’s Daddyโ€™s Girl, identifying more with his side of the family than my motherโ€™s. In fact, most of what I know to be true and passed down in my family is from the men. Iโ€™m grateful for these men because I can attribute a lot of positive things from their influence. However, I really miss not knowing my maternal tribe.

Dorothy Lee Thomas {October 31, 1925 โ€“ May 15, 1985}; daughter of Odetta (Cox) Thomas, daughter of Peoria Cox

This is a photo of Dorothy from high school. I have more recent photographs of her but she wrote notes on the backs of them stating that she looked horrible and was ill (or convalescing).


A few years ago I felt particularly lost and was looking to find myself in my family. Since I was nothing like my siblings and not a lot like my mother (other than sometimes my eyes and sometimes my smile), I looked to my fatherโ€™s family. I didnโ€™t find my face (other than my happiest smile), my body, nor my personality in any of them. Much later I caught a glimpse of myself (personality) in my motherโ€™s brother and I realized that I hadnโ€™t looked to find myself in my mothersโ€™ gardens. Iโ€™ve decided to use the photos in this entry to represent these mothers in my sacred space and I constantly look for myself in their eyes and faces and hands and hair.

Our mothers are our first homes, and thatโ€™s why weโ€™re always trying to return to them.

Michele Filgate, What My Mother and I Donโ€™t Talk About (Simon & Schuster, 2019)

One good thing about the deceased is that the rest of the generations to come have a chance to only know the best of that person. I donโ€™t mean that the bad goes away or that you shouldnโ€™t know the full history of a person โ€“ generational curses, ancestral rituals, as well as their life stories. I mean that when I tell stories about my parents, I tell the hard parts through a filter of both understanding and acceptance. Iโ€™ve had to forgive them for all of their mistakes. Iโ€™d begun the forgiveness process with Daddy before he died, thankfully, but I didnโ€™t realize I had to forgive my mother until she had been gone several years (and family secrets were revealed). I have tried to understand Dorothy as well when I hear hard things about her, often trying to guess what might have happened to her to cause poor behaviors. When my sisterโ€™s children indulge me and let me walk them around Memphis telling tales of our history, itโ€™s โ€œmy parents met in this lobby and it was love at first sightโ€ rather than โ€œmy Daddy was married and 24 years older than my Mommy when they started their affairโ€. Neither version is a secret and while both are true, one is more fun to talk about to the ones who didnโ€™t know them.

Donna Maria (Terry/Thomas) Walker {September 16, 1942 โ€“ December 26, 1989}; daughter of Dorothy Lee, daughter of Odetta, daughter of Peoria

Mommyโ€™s parents married a couple months after she was born and her maiden name on her birth certificate is Thomas (Dorothyโ€™s maiden name). However, I found a doodle from either Dorothy or Mommy that had Terry (Donnaโ€™s father) as her last name โ€“ kind of the way you doodle your own name with your crushโ€™s last name in your school notebooks.


So, while unfortunately I do not know of any remaining family who can share stories about my generations of mothers, I do get to put the pieces together guessing the best outcomes and I can channel my own femininity from common Bamileke/Cameroonian ancestral rituals and fill in the gaps with pieces of myself.

Regina Lynette Walker; daughter of Donna Maria, daughter of Dorothy Lee, daughter of Odetta, daughter of Peoria

I am Regina Lynette, daughter of Donna Maria, daughter of Dorothy Lee, daughter of Odetta, daughter of Peoria.

10 Min Read, Donna Maria Thomas-Walker, Family, grief, Holidays, Mental Health, Parenting, Relationships, Robert Samuel Walker

I hate Motherโ€™s Day.

As a child Motherโ€™s Day was not a huge deal to me specifically. It was always hot that Sunday. I would usually have a new shorts ensemble. I donโ€™t think it was a โ€œring curlsโ€ event but I canโ€™t really remember and for some reason I canโ€™t find a single photograph from Motherโ€™s Day. And as a motherless child with a dream of parenting deferred, it was hell and now it’s just unpleasant. But I remain slightly melodramatic and declare I hate Mother’s Day.

At my church โ€“ the place where I was baptized and a member until my last year of high school, Motherโ€™s Day events happened for my family mostly on the Sunday and Saturday before. We still attended whatever rehearsal or practice or meeting that was scheduled even though we werenโ€™t going to be in town on that Sunday. And at the end of either the Sunday before Motherโ€™s Day or on that Saturday just before the day, weโ€™d go to the ladies with the trays of corsages โ€“ carnations made from tissues โ€“ in red and white. I canโ€™t be certain, and it doesnโ€™t seem quite right, but in my mind the ladies were selling these faux carnations. We received 3 โ€“ white for Daddy and red for me and Mommy. Remembering this transaction means this memory happened only a couple years but they were obviously poignant years. It was after Grandmommy died and before Dorothy died. (Mommyโ€™s mother was always identified by her first name instead of any version of Grand Mother.)

And for a period of time, I remember the 3 carnations โ€“ one white and 2 red โ€“ carried a little bit of pride and a little bit of sadness. I was sad that Daddy had to wear a white carnation, but he seemed to wear it proudly. And I took on that emotion and carried it as if it were my own. I was sad that Mommy wore a red flower and as she pinned it on her left side sheโ€™d always say, โ€œI donโ€™t know if my mother is dead or alive so I will wear red. I hope sheโ€™s still alive.โ€ She was sad, but hopeful to some degree and I took on that emotion, added it to Daddyโ€™s, and carried it as if it were my own. And then she pinned my red flower on my left side, and I was proud. My mommy was still alive, and I saw her every day and I knew for sure that she loved me. I chose to put my feelings in my back pocket, carrying my parents’ emotions as an expression of loyalty. Even though she received the tissue carnations from the church ladies, we usually wore a different faux flower, a pretty one that Mommy bought, to go to Mississippi.

If my memories are accurate, we went to Corinth and Rienzi in Mississippi โ€“ the place Daddy always called home โ€“ every Motherโ€™s Day until I graduated high school. I donโ€™t remember the years before Grandmommyโ€™s death vividly โ€“ just little flashes of only her like when she saved me from a grasshopper and would have to call me out to come and greet her because I was too shy to just jump in and hug her when we got to her trailer on my uncleโ€™s land. Iโ€™d hang outside the door or against a wall, maybe hiding behind Daddyโ€™s leg until she asked about me.

We dressed in our Sunday best, I remember Daddy wearing his clergy collar and I felt like it made him royalty for a Sunday. Weโ€™d get into the car and drive toward the country. We would make one stop before heading to church โ€“ the church I always believed my entire family for generations belonged, even though truthfully I donโ€™t know for sure how many generations before my fatherโ€™s attended that church.  Weโ€™d stop where Grandmommy was buried, beside the grandfather I never knew and Daddy would go alone. Then we were off to Mount Pleasant Missionary Baptist Church. On the way to finding a seat weโ€™d speak to everyone โ€“ I told you I felt like Daddy was royalty that day, greeting all of the parishioners who seemed so excited to see him. I determined after all those greetings that we were related to no less than half of the congregants. Daddy preached the sermon. My aunties and cousins sang in the choir. My uncle was a deacon and usually led devotion. After the service was over we spoke to the people we missed or who arrived late. This is when I tried to figure out how I was going to ride to my uncleโ€™s house with my uncle. Most of the time that meant finding his wife, my auntie, because she always just told me I was going with them. There was no asking permission and no risk of hearing โ€œnoโ€. Uncle would always call me his โ€œpretty little nieceโ€ when we greeted and for some reason my braids and shoes didnโ€™t feel so tight anymore. Weโ€™d head to my uncleโ€™s house where Iโ€™d change into my shorts ensemble to play with my cousins. Sometimes we ate at my auntieโ€™s house in Corinth and sometimes she came to my uncleโ€™s house in Rienzi. The fried chicken – Grandmommyโ€™s recipe – was the star of the meal for me. After filling up on dinner and getting to have sodas โ€“ pops โ€“ without permission (carbonated water irritated my system so they were off limits) I spent the rest of the day playing with my cousins. Weโ€™d return to the city (Memphis), and weโ€™d do it all again in one yearโ€™s time. Nothing about that day meant Motherโ€™s Day to me. It might as well have been called Mississippi Day.

When I was 6 or 7 years old, Dorothy surfaced. She was dying of cancer and the family who had been estranged to Mommy for what seemed my entire life were calling her to California. After what felt like an eternity of Mommy sitting at her motherโ€™s bedside, she came back home to me. But Dorothy took another turn without Mommy with her, was refusing to obey some doctorโ€™s order โ€“ like eat or something โ€“ and was calling for Mommy to return to her. I wanted to go but she was going for an indefinite period of time and I had school. Dorothy died a few days after she returned to California and it ended up being about 2 weeks from the time she returned to California, Dorothy died and was cremated, and Mommy returned home to me. The next 4 or 5 Motherโ€™s Days, mommy wore a white flower. Even though she seemed sad, she also seemed relieved to a degree. She would shed a couple tears, but I think just knowing for certain whether Dorothy was dead or alive was enough. I also think whatever happened in Dorothyโ€™s last days allowed Mommy some closure if not a repair of over 40 years of a challenging mother-daughter relationship and she could more easily wear that white flower.

Two weeks after my 13th birthday, I lost my own mother. That first Sunday going to Mississippi the only assertion of my own rights (as opposed to unspoken rules) was to wear a white corsage, one that chose and found beautiful, and I wore a white dress. Even though I had been sitting alone at church services for about 5 months, that Sunday felt particularly lonely. And it was the last time I would wear a white flower. The main reason was because that white flower served no purpose to me and all it did was made me angry. But the secondary reason was because people โ€“ I think Daddy was one of them โ€“ told me to wear a red flower because I had a step-monster the next year. I hated the entire system of red and white flowers and determined to leave Motherโ€™s Day on the calendar as simply the 2nd Sunday of May and Mississippi Day. Who the hell thought I was supposed to replace my white flower with a red one because of a step-monster? Did no one see that it meant replacing my mother and dismissing that she ever existed? Why didnโ€™t anyone think of at least saying I should wear 2 flowers to represent both women? I wouldn’t have but at least they wouldn’t be suggesting that I erase my mother completely and embrace the monster that my father married in her place.

I tried to pass on some love for Motherโ€™s Day to the other โ€œmothersโ€ in my life. I tried to come up with something to honor Sissy because she was a mother. I always made sure to tell Ms. Bell because she loved me with a motherโ€™s heart and hand, but she was gone I believe just about two years after my mother. But it soon felt that acknowledging other mothers meant dismissing my mother further. It highlighted her absence and was painful. I would be in my 20s before I realized I needed help for my grief and I was going to have to find it for myself โ€“ professional help. Until then whenever I remembered Mommy, I felt the exact same trauma and pain that I felt the moment I found her. Once I had been alive longer than I had had her in my life, I determined the pain should have lessened over the years and that it was a problem.

After finding more peace with the loss of my mother and dealing with the associated trauma, I still found I hated Motherโ€™s Day. For at least a week prior, everyone from the checkout counters in stores to the man who detailed my car, wished me a Happy Motherโ€™s Day. And people who knew I wasnโ€™t a mother came up with a list of reasons I should still be recognized as a mother โ€“ aunties and sisters and nearly all women were recognized as a mother for Motherโ€™s Day. And in addition to highlighting the fact that Mommy was gone, I was reminded that years were ticking by that I imagined I would have had my own kids. And then Iโ€™d approached the age where Iโ€™d decided that I would give up on biological children and began grieving my children who didnโ€™t exist and a dream Iโ€™d had since I was 11 years old. So, I started staying indoors on Motherโ€™s Day avoiding social media, heartsick.

What happens to a dream deferred? Hope deferred makes the heart sick, But when desire is fulfilled, it is a tree of life. (Langston Hughes, Harlem plus Proverbs 13:12 AMP)

The only joy I find is knowing that my niece and nephew make sure to celebrate and honor Sissy. I hate carnations and sometimes have peonies in a vase on the day for myself โ€“ my favorite flower. I celebrate Mommyโ€™s birthday as Motherโ€™s Day, my Motherโ€™s Day, instead of the 2nd Sunday of May with cupcakes and champagne and tulips โ€“ her favorite flower – when I can find them (her birthday is in fall). And I wish the mothers in my family a Happy Motherโ€™s Day on the Monday after.

I hate Motherโ€™s Day.

5 Min Read, Parenting, Relationships, Robert Samuel Walker, Spirituality, What's In A Name?

Runaway Spirit or Wandering Spirit?

I once walked away from Christianity as I knew it. I didnโ€™t exactly denounce Christ as my savior, but I let go of every single thing except the fact that I accepted Jesus Christ as my Lord and savior and was therefore saved โ€“ my anchor point of remaining a Christian. I joked (because it was uncomfortable to talk about) that I was going AWOL from the Army of the Lord. I wanted, no needed, to let go of everything and get down to the basics. I stripped away everything that felt limiting and tried everything I found curious. I wanted to learn for myself what it meant to be a Christian because my teachers and preachers had taken Christianity and packaged it in manipulation and contradictory philosophies bound with illogical rules that were not Biblical. This action didnโ€™t please Daddy, although he wasnโ€™t around for the peak of my departure. He was around when I started questioning things and even challenging him on things. Most often he responded to me calmly, matter-of-fact-ly (I did that on purpose), and honestly. Occasionally he reacted from past traumas from past experiences with “church-folk”. But never did he use Christianity or our Baptist beliefs as a weapon or a tool to sway me in any direction. So when my questions turned to a need to physically explore, he told me it was okay. He said that I have a wandering spirit and though he didnโ€™t say it explicitly, he believed that because Christianity, specifically Missionary Baptist was the truth and the way that I would return.

At the peak of my departure from Christianity as I knew it, I had a couple of close friends who were โ€œchurch friendsโ€. Our friendship was based on living according to Christian principles and almost served an explicit purpose of keeping each other on the straight and narrow. While I knew they were very pious, I didnโ€™t learn the nature of our friendship until it ended, you know 20/20. When I was exposed to the leaders and preachers that they followed and called anointed, I began to see more of the hypocritical and manipulative tactics used against parishioners and their ignorance and this caused fissures in the friendships. I was told that I have a runaway spirit โ€“ among other demonic spirits that had supposedly overcome me.

Senior year of college, standing in front of the church I belonged to at the time. A friend is cut out of the picture.
Dear friend, if you remember being in this photo, it’s nothing personal but I just needed to be a solo picture and I didn’t find another.

Wandering Spirit was a compliment and Runaway Spirit was an insult. Well, maybe Wandering Spirit wasnโ€™t intended exactly as a compliment but it was something that my father saw in me and accepted, allowing me to choose to embrace it if I wanted. Is that really true? Yep. Runaway Spirit was a term to encourage me to get back on track, whatever that was, and it felt derogatory and manipulative. Is that really true? Eh…

Iโ€™ve only shared one situation here in which I was called a Wandering Spirit by my father and a Runaway Spirit by others but both of those identifiers have a long list of items behind them. And my behavior has been both Wandering and Runaway at times. When I learn that something Iโ€™ve always believed is true is flawed in some way, I need to test it for myself. I need to get to the root of the truth, the unadulterated truth, the pure truth, and I need to be right โ€“ not insisting that people agree with me no matter what but to know the thing that is true and right. When something is no longer serving me I let it go โ€“ sometimes quickly, sometimes slowly, but always completely. When a person is crushing my spirit or rejects the parts of me that they donโ€™t particularly like or understand, I remove them from the closest parts of my spirit, my soul, my heart. And anything that gives me bad vibes โ€“ a space or a person โ€“ is something I leave quickly. If I wander and donโ€™t return to the thing I wandered off from, have I runaway?

College years again, at a collegiate Christian conference. Again, a friend is cut out of the picture.
Dear friend, we took a lot of college + church photos together. And I didn’t find any of me alone. Nothing personal.

Runaway spirit is an identifier, placed on me by limiting and closed minded people, probably with what they believe to be good intentions. Iโ€™ve left it behind.

As a little girl Mommy would always tell me to stay with her whenever we entered a store. If my big brother or sister was with us I would beg to go with them. Sometimes she let me but often she insisted I stay by her side. I think that every single time we entered any of the stores we entered during all 13 years I had her in my life that I managed to get lost in that store to some degree. Eventually I mastered the return quickly enough to not cause too much trouble but it all depended on what caught my eye and prompted me to wander off. Sissy has told me that often she turns to say something to me when weโ€™re walking and suddenly Iโ€™m not there. And there have been plenty of times that Iโ€™ve had to stand still and be found in a store, like I did three weeks ago. As an adult Iโ€™ve truly felt like telling a stranger that I lost my sister in a store so I can get some help. But itโ€™s always because Iโ€™ve needed to know more about something Iโ€™ve seen. And I always return to the original purpose of our outing.

Runaway Spirit or Wandering Spirit?

Iam Regina Lynette. I am a Wandering Spirit.

3 Min Read, Donna Maria Thomas-Walker, Parenting, Relationships, Robert Samuel Walker

The Elevator Story

My parents met on my motherโ€™s first day of work for the Lincoln American Life Insurance Company in Memphis, Tennessee, somewhere around 1965. The story of their first meeting โ€“ literally the first time they laid eyes on each other and spoke to one another โ€“ has a little bit of fame in my family. Eyebrows raise, smiles slide across faces, sometimes thereโ€™s a little side-eye or maybe a little sneer whenever The Elevator Story is mentioned. I am fuzzy on details and the order of events but basically, there was some flirting โ€“ Daddy was being a little mannish and Mommy was being a little fast โ€“ and then we jump to a courtship, marriage, and the pleasant surprise that was me.

For me, my parentsโ€™ meet-cute is the height of romance. And I cannot tell you how happy I am that the building where they met has been declared an Historical Landmark and they have preserved the look of the elevator lobby. I feel like I get to go back to the moment in history where I first became a possibility whenever I want! For others, my parentsโ€™ meeting was not so much romantic as it was destructive.

My mother was the first Black woman hired in a professional position at Lincoln American. My father already worked there, but in a professional role. My father saw her in the lobby on her first day and got into the elevator with her. Some of the flirting involved my mother declaring that all the handsome men are already married when she noticed his wedding ring. I remember what my fatherโ€™s response was to that but whatever it was, a relationship started pretty quickly between the two and the idea of his already being married became an inconvenience to deal with many years later.

My parents worked together in the same building and saw each other on weekdays. They started spending lunch hours together and they were so in love they didnโ€™t need food โ€“ they literally made out on a bench for their lunch hour somewhere around Court Square park. They wrote letters to each other that my father kept in a box that I was never allowed to see.

My father was diagnosed with colon cancer sometime during their on-again-off-again courtship. This marked a crossroads in my parentsโ€™ lives and is one of the milestones that affected their familiesโ€™ lives. The short of it is that mommy was concerned for her man and wanted to be with him and take care of him while my fatherโ€™s wife and children believed this was a time for family, of which she was not.

Somewhere in this mix other people became concerned when they knew my parents were pursuing a serious romantic relationship which was no secret to anyone after this event. My motherโ€™s grandfather thought he was a dirty old man. Maybe because my father was closer in age to my great-grandfather than to my mother. Maybe because he was married with grown children, the oldest very close in age to my mother. My fatherโ€™s church had reservations about his ministry, particularly with his choice to recuperate at home with my mother. Some of my fatherโ€™s nephews and brothers were disappointed but were able to come around to his side very quickly.

But getting back to the fairy-tale, they had so much love between them that they shared a special hug and the love overflowed into a baby. Daddy had to get divorced and married pretty quickly. And on May 27, 1976, my mother went to work Donna Maria Thomas and returned from lunch as Donna Maria Walker. They went to the courthouse on their lunch hour and got married. They moved into a little red house in Whitehaven and had a little baby girl.

Iโ€™ve always believed my parents were soulmates. A lot of people think I feel that way because they were my parents. And several people cite the unhappy days of their marriage as proof they werenโ€™t really in love. But I was there for the little things. Itโ€™s sometimes in the way a person says your name โ€“ thatโ€™s often the first time I realize when someone is in love. Itโ€™s always in the eyes โ€“ even when you are so pissed that you donโ€™t want to look at them, when you lock eyes with your forever person, for a moment nothing else matters. And when you have so much love that it pours over and makes a baby, you spend time pointing out the things in that baby that belong to the both of you, admiring what your love has made. I believe that with therapy and patience everyone would have believed that they were truly meant to be just as I do.