With a Little Love and Some Tenderness: A Letter of Light for Becky Greer
With a Little Love and Some Tenderness: A Letter of Light for Becky Greer
With a little love and some tenderness.
That’s what it takes, isn’t it?
Not just to raise children, but to shape them. To steady them. To leave something behind that lasts longer than the moment itself.
We talk a lot about our mothers when we talk about who we become. And rightfully so. But there are other women, too. The ones who stand beside them. The ones who show up in the background, in the in-between, in the everyday moments that don’t seem big at the time. The ones who fill in the gaps, step into ordinary days, and leave fingerprints all over a childhood without ever needing credit for it.
You were one of those women for me.
I remember you as light. Summer. Baseball somewhere in the distance. Music playing with the windows down. That kind of 90s joy that felt easy and full and alive. You had the most beautiful smile, the kind that made everything feel a little more fun, a little more possible. You were creative in ways that stuck. I still think about the way you wrapped birthday presents in newspaper comics, like even the outside of the gift deserved to be part of the magic.
But what stays with me most is the way you cared.
I had long, thick hair, and brushing it was always a battle. Tears, frustration, the whole thing. And I can still see you sitting down with my mom, calm and sure, saying, “Liz, you’re doing it wrong,” then showing her how to start at the bottom and work her way up. Taking something overwhelming and turning it into something gentle.
I think about you almost every time I brush my daughter’s hair.
That small moment didn’t stay small. It kept going. From you, to my mom, to me, and now to her.
That’s how you helped shape me. Not in some loud, obvious way. But in the quiet kind of way that actually lasts.
I have this vivid memory I can almost still see so clearly. Like a safe place in my mind I often wander…
My mom was in the hospital. It was a hard season. My brother and I stayed with different families, trying to keep some sense of normal. But I remember begging to stay at your house. I just wanted to be there. With you. With my brother. In that space that felt safe and fun and full of life.
And they let me!
I remember Mickey Mouse pancakes in the morning. I remember you brushing my hair, gentle and patient. I remember sitting in the living room watching the Ewok movie, just feeling… okay. Taken care of. Like everything was going to be alright, safe and steady in a way that settled deep emotionally and stayed with me.
That kind of tenderness doesn’t fade.
It follows you.
It shows up later when you’re making pancakes for your own kids, when you’re brushing their hair, when you’re trying to create that same feeling of comfort and steadiness for them.
You gave that kind of care without making it a big thing.
You just lived it.
Every Christmas, like clockwork. That peanut butter fudge that didn’t stand a chance in our house. My dad and I would practically race to it, hover over it like it was gold, knowing it wouldn’t last more than a day or two. It was that good. And now, not every year but close to it, I make it too. Somewhere along the way, it became part of my rhythm. Something I carry forward without even thinking about why. Something that reminds me of you and that time and that feeling.
The same way I make Mickey Mouse pancakes for my kids from time to time.
The same way I brush my daughter’s hair.
The feeling of pure joy and nostalgia I get when I wrap my kids birthday presents.
The way… because of you our family ended up with weenie dogs. Our very first one traced back to your house! It’s funny how something like that can become a such a huge part of your life, like a thread that keeps weaving through the years.
How often even the smallest things are the ones that last the longest.
And somewhere in the middle of all that, you took us to our first real concert. Dishwalla, The Refreshments, and Chalk Farm.
I didn’t know it then, but that night unlocked something in me. A love for music that would go on to shape who I was becoming.
A rhythm I’ve been following ever since.
You were an incredible boy mom. Strong, fun, creative, full of life. But you were also something more than that. You were part of the village that helped raise us. Part of the constellation of women who shaped the way I see the world, the way I care for my own children, the way I move through memory and meaning now.
I don’t know if people always realize the impact they have when they’re just being themselves.
But I do.
And I carry it with me.
You left behind patterns.
Ways of loving. Ways of showing up. Ways of making a child feel seen, safe, and at home.
I don’t think those things ever really disappear.
They just keep moving forward, showing up in new places, in new hands, in new generations.
So thank you.
For the love you gave so easily. For the tenderness you carried into ordinary moments and made them matter. For the joy, the creativity, the steadiness, and the care.
With a little love and some tenderness.
That’s what you gave.
It never left.
It’s still moving.
It just keeps spiraling outward, finding its way into the lives it touches next.
RESUME THE RHYTHM:
DRIFT THROUGH A CONSTELLATION OF MEMORY
Searching For Stars







