My Mother, the Send-Back Queen

Sara Davidson

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July, 27, 2021

I was reluctant, at first, when asked to be a guest on the podcast, Our Mothers Ourselves. Other guests had raved about their mothers’ inspiring qualities and unconditional love. My mother, Alice Davidson, however, was the quintessential Jewish mother—critical, dominant—who never seemed satisfied with what I did or who I was. She was complex: funny, high-spirited, and creative, and she was quick to become angry and hold a grudge. It was not until the end of her life that I was able to appreciate what I’d inherited from her: a love of story-telling, curiosity, and the confidence to aim high and not let any barriers stand in the way.

Before I’d listened to the podcast, my niece, Summer, sent me a clip of a standup comic, Sarge, doing a bit about Jewish mothers.  “Reminds me of Alice. Love her,” Summer wrote. I sent it to my daughter, Rachel, who said it was not a caricature. “It’s spot on.”

So. Alice was born in Los Angeles in 1914, named after Alice Roosevelt. Her father had traveled from Hungary to New York in 1904, but couldn’t find steady work there, so he went to San Francisco with no better outcome. As a last resort, he took the train to Los Angeles, where Sunset Blvd had just been opened. Because he’d learned the upholstery trade in his Hungarian village, he quickly found a job at Barker Brothers Furniture. He sent a telegram to his wife, whom he’d left in New York with their first daughter. “Sell everything you got and come to California.”

Alice’s dream, growing up, was to be an actress. She studied acting and English at UCLA, but graduated during the Depression, when the best job she could find was as a teacher. She learned from her parents to be frugal and search for bargains, so when we went shopping, we couldn’t just buy a dress I liked. We had to go to four stores to see if we could find a better price, or she’d write down the style number and call friends whose husbands worked in the rag trade to see if we could get it wholesale.

We called her the “send-back queen,” because we rarely had a meal in a restaurant where she didn’t send back food. She once sent back a plate of stuffed cabbage because, she told the waiter, “It’s not the way my mother made it.”

In summers we went to a resort, Highland Springs, which was similar to resorts for Jewish families in the Catskills. We’d have our family table and the first thing Alice asked when checking in was, “Who’s our waiter?”

If his name was Arnold, everyone in the dining hall would hear her calling, “Arnold! Arnold!” She told him, “I want my eggs over easy, not runny, my bacon crisp, not limp, my toast dark but not burned…” Halfway through the meal he’d be running in circles, sweating.

A friend who lives in St. Paul tells me Midwesterners don’t send food back. “They think it’s not polite.” I said I’d seen her husband send food back…. “That’s different,” she said. “He’s Jewish Midwestern.”

Alice was also an expert at returning merchandise, no matter what the expiration date was. Rachel recently texted the family, “You know you’re a Davidson when you make a formal complaint to McDonald’s and get a coupon for a free meal.”

I responded, “You know you’re a Davidson when you get a refund for a special order that was not refundable.”

All her life, Alice had a large circle of friends who adored her. She was entertaining, smart, and did hilarious imitations. I learned from her how to pace a story and use body language, and became equally good at imitations.

The Jewish mother typically rules the house; she dominates, and as I grew older, I chafed at being dominated. She was a fierce adversary, and if I did not agree with her or cave to her wishes, she’d stay boiling for days. I’d come home from school, open the back door, and I could feel the anger seeping through the house like a black fog. It was hard to breathe.

My younger sister, Terry, had a completely different relationship with Alice, who encouraged and protected her. When I was about eight, Alice had a “nervous breakdown” and started seeing a psychiatrist. She later told me she’d learned that she’d placed me in the role of her older sister, who was favored by their parents: “My sister had the largest bedroom, the best clothes, and first choice at everything.” Alice competed and fought with me as she’d fought with her sister. I would get straight A’s in school, but Alice would say, “You get A’s in school but F’s at home.” I was the smart one. Terry was the nice one.

Alice had no fear of standing up to or alienating people. When she was in the hospital for a surgery, her nurse had become frustrated and said, “You’re the worst patient.”

“And you’re the worst nurse,” Alice shot back.

She was a terrible driver, often slamming on the brakes or cutting people off. In her 60’s, she forgot to renew her license and had to take a driving test. Terry and I told her jokingly, “Mom, you won’t pass.” She was not amused. She took the test and when the examiner said she hadn’t passed, she asked, “When may I take it again?

“When do you want to?”

“How about right now,” she said. “I’ve been driving for fifty years, I’m not going to go home and practice!”

When I was preparing for the podcast, I realized that in many ways, she’d been a good mother for a daughter who wanted to be a writer. She taught me to watch and listen to people closely, to look for funny or incongruous details, and to never accept a rejection. “Just go higher,” she said. If a clerk said no, she’d ask to speak to the manager, and if the manager said no, she’d call or write to the company president.

She raised me, by example, to be determined and to go to any length to fulfill an assignment. I loved modern dance, and when my class was preparing for a recital, the teacher asked us all to get white leotards for the performance. I called the nearest dance stores, but no one had a white leotard. This was long before the internet and all we had were ungainly phonebooks. Alice called every dance store in every phonebook in the county until she found a place that had a white leotard in my size. We drove more than an hour to reach the store, but at the next dance class, all 12 of the other students said they couldn’t find a white leotard. I was the only one whose mother had procured one.

When my parents grew older, I thought that if my mother died first, my father would be snapped up by one of the widows they knew. He was cheerful, generous, and could fix anything. But if my father died first, I worried, who would take on Alice?

As it happened, he died at 81, and one week later, Alice had a date with a man to go square dancing. I said, “Mom, Dad just died a week ago…”

She said, “I’m 75. What am I gonna wait for? Your father would have wanted me to keep dancing.”

She was never without a “boyfriend” (four died on her) up to her last day. The final one, a retired doctor, had been in a severe depression after his wife died and said that Alice had brought him back to life.

In her late 80’s, she began to develop Alzheimer’s, and had a radical personality change. She became sweet and gentle, quick to smile, and content with everything. The doctor I spoke with called her state “pleasantly demented.”  She lived completely in the moment and had no memory to compare anything with. When we moved her to a care home in Honolulu, she ate everything she was served, including an over cooked hamburger on a stale bun. She sent nothing back.

For the first time in my adult years, I could be with her without feeling constriction in my chest. So when Terry called from Hawaii to tell me she was slipping and if I wanted to see her, I should come, I rushed to the airport. Terry picked me up and we drove to the care home. I remember thinking she looked beautiful. Her face had a rosy color and her arm was bent up with her palm to her cheek, like a bird with a folded wing.

She did not open her eyes that day but the next, when a nurse came to bathe her with a warm sponge, her eyes snapped open. I put my face close to hers and said, “I’m here, Mom. I love you. I’m so happy to see you.” She stared back at me, and as the nurse continued bathing her, she kept her eyes locked on mine.

“You’ve been a wonderful mother,” I said. It’s okay to let go now. Terry and I are grown, we have children, and everyone is doing well. You can let go…let go into love.”

She pursed her lips, keeping her eyes on mine. “It’s a kiss!” Terry said. Then Alice closed her eyes, and the next day, she was gone.

Thank you, Alice.

Guests on Our Mothers, Ourselves are asked for one word that describes their mother. They’ve said things like “honest,” “loyal,” “protective,” “devoted.” The word I came up with was “a force.” What word would you choose to describe your mother? Please put it in a comment below.

Listen to Sara on Our Mothers Ourselves.

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  • David Newman says:

    My mom passed March 8th this year. A copy writer, 92, a 18 year lung cancer survivor – she always said give me more time and I’ll make it shorter. She wrote her own obit. Not one word but wanted to pass this short story about her to you:

    Manly for a girl

    Fishing the spit of land across from Hide-away beach. Six of us ( mom, two sons and grandson, daughter in-law and me) lined up casting into the water streaming in from the Gulf of Mexico, pulling in fish. Dad’s taking a break and is on the boat reading. My sister has come and gone.
    My mom at 86 can’t always lift the fish from the water, so on the beach with the hook set, she walks backward, pulling the fish onshore. She catches a lot of fish and this technique works well for her.
    Today, while standing in the water the sand shifted and she falls backwards into the water. My brother, bad back and all, tries to help her up. The guy walking the beach who we loaned a pole to asks what he can do.
    “Land the fish” my mom replies, wet, on her butt, but with fish firmly attached to her line. Now my brother’s wife hooks another fish which crosses my mom’s line.
    A minute or so later mom rights herself, looks down to see two landed fish tangle together, a whiting and jack. “Which is mine?” she asks.
    “The whiting, the keeper” I tell her as I am now there to place her prize in the cooler.
    “Good” she says. How she hears with her wet hearing aids is beyond me but she does. Drenched she keeps on fishing after a short trip to the boat to towel off.
    I texted that story to Jane and Adrian when we got home. Both have fished with us.
    Jane replied first. ” Great story – your mom is not made of sugar she won’t melt.”
    Adrian replies next ” Pretty manly for a girl” , reminding me of a forgotten exchange. He had with all the wisdom of a seven year old explained that fishing was a guy’s thing.
    “What about my mom? I asked. ” She fishes.”
    He replied that mom was ” Pretty manly for a girl.”
    That was 25 years ago.

  • Michael Zimmerman says:

    Sara,
    Terrific easy to read article. My mother was a polite midwestern lady who you would never suspect of being Jewish.
    Michael

  • Kate says:

    I think I had the Irish version of your mother, Sara. Catherine was fierce and protective and ever-so opionated. Hard-headed. Warm-hearted.

  • Devoted to God, not wanting any conflict, funny and loving.

    • You were blessed to have such a mother! Inspiring.

    • Sheila Thomson says:

      Curious. Raised a polite Midwesterner, in a family with a bent for learning, she has a restless spirit and undiagnosed ADD. She searched for meaning in psychology, religion, other cultures and New Age Spirituality. Dispersing her books this spring, the only thing she really left, the breadth and scope of interests and passions was astounding. Aesthetics were a bit beyond her ken, aside from nature and music. She was of my hippie ilk in spirit, if born in 1923 and many of my friends adored her. She was kind and known for dancing in the supermarket if the right song was wafting in the air.

      I adored your writing which captured a bit of that moment in American Jewish culture. My ex, Long Island raised and of secular Jewish backgrounds was the return king. We returned new cars, a refrigerator or two, and countless other items, as defect was easily spotted.

      May they both Rest In Peace.

  • Lyna Norberg says:

    Beautiful story, Sara. Thank you very much.

  • Bonnie says:

    I was terrified of my mother. She was actually my adoptive mother/aunt who I went to live with after the death of both parents. She could be extremely sweet and then in an instant switch to vicious. I never knew how she would react to anything. My adoptive dad was totally absent. He stayed away from home as much as possible and left my adoptive brother and I on our own with her. My brother stayed away from home as much as possible but I was not allowed the freedom he had because he “was a boy”. It was her way of controling me. I married young and had little contact with her. I would visit my dad at his job. When I was taking a psych class I recognized the symptoms: she had schizophrenia and was bi-polar. I learned that she had had a horrible childhood and was both physically and sexually abused by her father. Her mother also had mental health problems. After my dad retired they moved and she was eventually hospitalized for several months. Medications helped but she often stopped taking them. I visited occasionally but it was always a traumatic event as I never knew what she would do. I had become a competent adult with a college education and great job but she still terrified me. Eventually she developed dementia and seemed to crawl into herself. My brother and I visited a couple times a year but always together. On one visit she didn’t recognize either of us. She was very unkept as she refused to bathe or let my dad do anything for her. I was shocked as she had always been extremely clean and we joked you could drink the water out of the toilet bowl and feel safe. That night she had a stroke. When we got to the hospital I immediately asked for a social worker and stated that she could not go back home; my dad couldn’t take care of her (he was nearly 90). We were able to get her into a good nursing home with a dementia unit. She settled in well as she didn’t know where she was. After helping my dad clean the house and get himself organized we visited Mom one last time. She was lying in her bed staring into space. I leaned over and told her we had to go home but would be back again soon. She opened her eyes and looked into mine and said “I love you”. That was the first time I could remember her ever saying that. It was the last time I saw her as she died about two months later. It has taken me a long time to finally come to terms with our relationship. She had suffered as a child and I think at some level she wanted me to suffer too. While she was not a good mother she was a great grandmother and all of her grandchildren have good memories of her. I don’t think they really believe the stories my brother and I have told. I now know that she did the best she could with what she had to give. If anything, she taught me what kind of mother i didn’t want to be.

    • Thanks,
      Bonnie for sharing your story. What a harrowing experience to go through. I’m in awe that you were able to make a different, better life, after surviving that. Kudos, and many wartm wishes, Sara

  • Oy, Sarale,

    Your Alice was my mother, Estelle, with some sprinklings of my father, Jack. I laughed and cried my way through the essay. Interestingly, my mother also became a loving, accepting person in her many years of dementia, and I had an experience of having all my issues with her wiped clean, like writing on a white board, before she died. That was a real blessing. Thanks for sharing and let’s get together soon. After this piece of yours, I feel like we’re really mishpuchah! The bottom line is, I miss you.

    xxoo,

    Ren

  • Elizabeth Cox says:

    Oh Sara, of all your blog posts, this is my favorite. My Mom wasn’t Jewish, but was a Sender Backer, too. She was adored by me, her only child, and all three grandkids. Thank you for making me laugh out loud and bringing tears of joy to my eyes. Bless you!

  • Christine Herrera says:

    I would say Manuela was a force but frustrated as well. My mother was super intelligent with gift for math. She could calculate interest rates in her head for her loan shark business. My mother was frustrated because she was not academically educated but had she obtained an education, she would have been a titan in the business world. Her frustration would manifest into rage, because I was born in the USA and I was not business minded as she was. I was not her, I am quick to smile, I find joy in the little things. Consequently I found myself a survivor of domestic violence because I was seeking approval, I never found in my mother.

    • Thanks, Christine, for your story. So poignant, and touching. Somehow, we all (mostly) survive our mothers, however they be. My kids are now dealing with what it was like for them to have me as their mom.

  • Arielle says:

    Thank you fo a delightful story about your Mother. I love that she had boyfriends until the end of her life! Thanks to my mothers chutzpah i never knew there was a glass ceiling for women. She built a large international business in the 60’s and 70’s and demonstrated for my sister and I that we could do anything we set our minds to. I never saw her without lipstick until she was past 75, at 88 she still insists on coloring her hair even though I am fully gray.When you have a Jewish mother its both a blessing and a curse.

    • Thanks, Arielle, for your lovely message about your Mom. I don’t hear the “curse” part in your story, but the blessings are evident in the woman you are.
      great to connect with you. Sara

  • Colin says:

    Hi Sarah,

    I continue to absolutely love your writing. Perhaps you could help write a screenplay about my father (chinese hawaiian) who played baseball in hawaii and when he we going to college at UC Berkeley he joined a hawaiian team (called the Japanese Hawaiians) toured 42 states, played against hall of famers black players not yet allowed in the big leagues; racism and other issues.

    Married life I’m still learning and getting adjusted after being single for most of my life. Hows your live life continuing?

    Aloha,

    Colin Fong

    PS I was on the new Doogie Kamealoha series hasn’t aired yet; doubling the world champion “air guitarist” doing a highfall. Perhaps it’ll air the upcoming season.

  • ChaCha says:

    Compassionate intelligence sums up my mom

  • John patrick Grace says:

    We should probably all read MyMother, Myself, by Nancy Friday.

  • Scott Smith says:

    Hi Sara, I just loved this article!! You’re such an amazing writer!!! And every point in this touched me dearly.

  • Robert Caldwell says:

    What a beautiful story. Thank you for sharing this.

  • Lea M Delson says:

    Dear Sara,

    What a beautiful, beautiful piece of writing. You describe your mother, the “force” so well, and it is also such a beautiful story of reconciliation and a beautiful account of a life ending.

    One question, perhaps this could be another piece: do you know what in your mother’s background, growing up, family of origin, and personality made her into the “force” she was? Being a force was not what women were trained to be in her era, although many definitely were.

    Warmly,

    Lea D.

    • I’ve been pondering that myself, Lea. Because her father, my grandfather, was the king of the house, and her mother was low in self confidence and rarely asserted hertself. I guess she adopted her father’s role, more than her own mother. Thanks for your comments.

  • Jane says:

    I am Terry’s friend sbd had many wonderful hours talking with Alice. She had an interesting life snd i feel so blessed to have had time with her! Thank you for this. Story!

  • Marian Thier says:

    As usual, entertaining, insightful and personal. Excellent writing too. Thanks

  • Joseph Drew says:

    What a beautiful paean (or tribute, or analysis) to your mother.
    Plus, you write so well — it’s penetrating.
    Joe Drew

  • Victoria Paterno says:

    My husband’s mother gives your mother a run for her money as the Send Back Queen. Once she burned a roast and tried to make him return it to the grocery store for a refund!

  • Dawn Kimble says:

    My mother was a worrier; she was critical; she was a singer and a court reporter; and she was determined that her daughters would have what she didn’t have growing up.

    Sara, Sarge is hilarious! Thank you for sharing him with us. And thank you for writing about your mom and your relationship with her.

  • Nancy Federman says:

    I remember your Mother but not as you described her!

  • Marta Vago says:

    “Survivor” is the best word to describe my mother. How she managed to live through two world wars, the Holocaust, communism, escaping from Hungary as a refugee in 1956, and starting all over again in the U.S. without speaking a word of English is beyond me. Was she a wonderful mother? No. Would I have done any better under the same circumstances? No. She did the best she could and I will always be grateful for that.

  • Beautiful story many of us can relate to
    Thank you Sarah for sharing!

  • Carol Kassner says:

    Sara, Thanks for telling your story about your mother. I’m so glad you enjoyed her final years as she quieted down and was more loving. At the same time, you wisely discovered what gifts you received from her. My mother also declined with dementia and died in 2005 on Mother’s Day. It was fitting for her as she loved her role of being a mother and she had a gentle death. She, too, was spirited and accomplished – a gifted musician and teacher. I wished every child could have her as their first piano teacher as she taught them to love playing. She was highly creative and deeply spiritual. In many ways, she was my guide for music and spirituality. She skipped two grades because she was so smart and graduated from high school at the age of 16. She went to a teacher’s college where you became certified in two years, so she started her career at age 18 and was the same age as many of her students. I treasure her and miss her very much.

  • Hilary Grant says:

    I have to use three words to describe my mother — “piss and vinegar” 🙂

    Great blog! 🙂

  • Bernice Greene says:

    I love your stories and your story telling gift. Thank you for keeping me on your email list.

    Bernice Zuckerman Greene

  • Mike Marieb says:

    Even getting all A’s couldn’t bring your mother to compliment you, eh?. Barbra Streisand said years ago that her mother never praised her directly, but would tell others how proud she was of Babs. Of Course that’s no substitute for hearing it directly from her mother.

    Also, I agree with your mother dating shortly after your dad passed. When my mother died. my father started dating a few months later. My youngest sibling , a girl, shamed my father by saying it was wrong to date less than a year after our mother died. It worked—he immediately stopped dating. It was none of my sister’s business to dictate when our father was allowed to start dating. The hoice should have been his.

  • cma says:

    My mom was tenacious and courageous. Lewey body dementia in her last years allowed her to be vulnerable and laugh more.

  • Sara, while my mother was Jewish, she did not fit the stereotype. She was principled, compassionate and supportive of me and my brother, raising us (with my dad) without stereotypical roles. She went from being a first grade teacher to one of the first full time professors at Harvard. She always taught me to follow my heart and I would be happy. She was right.

  • Zoe Rabinowitz says:

    Thank you for your beautiful and heartfelt memories and deep knowings. Oh how I understand and know.
    Big Love and Blessings.

  • Glenda says:

    Lovely story about a strong and interesting woman. Thanks

  • Touchingly told.
    I also had a “challenging” Jewish mother; I like the way you framed her so her strong characteristics showed up and not just the more difficult ones.
    Strong mothers create strong daughters.
    Thank you,
    Marlowe

  • Dee Dee Norman says:

    What a beautiful tribute and heartwarming story. Thank you for sharing Alice.

  • Miles Blount says:

    Well Sara, you have done it again! I was very moved by you email. Even on the other side I am still very connected to my mother. Thank you.

  • Carole Poston says:

    I inherited Alice’s send back gene. I once returned some ski pants that had never been worn but were 12 years old.

  • She sent nothing back.
    For the first time in my adult years, I could be with her without feeling constriction in my chest.

  • Jennifer says:

    Quiet Explorer

  • Thank you. Your profile was long enough and specific enough that I felt I got a good sense of Alice – better than any i got meeting her in real life. I especially appreciate the humor, the storytelling, the imitations – and the boyfriends. I don’t think I often looked for or imagined those traits in my mom or the mothers of my friends.

    • Thanks, Terrence. I wasn’t interested in the parents of any of my friends. Some of them, I’m sure, would have had interesting experiences to share. But we were focused on the now, the unfolding years, and we had, as you rememer a “generation gap.” xx

  • Linda Martian says:

    I didn’t watch The Sopranos when it was first broadcast, so this has been my first viewing of it. Livia Soprano, Tony’s mother, is the closest I can come to a comparison. My sister, who is 75 to my 64, concurs.

  • Jean (Krasnansky) Thompson says:

    Oh cry. Misty eyed. I’m so happy you got to your mom for the kiss. WOW. That’s love.