Hey K.,
I kind of know how you feel, I did get flowers 3 days before Sunday but no card on Sunday, it seemed just like any other day. This is his 2nd Mothers Day so I expected something. He did say Happy Mother's Day on Sunday but it ended there... ever since we have been going out we would either go to his parent's or my parent's for Mother's Day so I know he 'celebrates' the day.
I did all the normal mom stuff... got my daughter up, bathed her, dressed her and so on (I love doing this but it would have been nice if the hubby would have said relax I got it). It just put me in a bad mood... so on the way to my parent's I told him I was disappointed that he did not get me a card or a card from my daughter and that he sat and watched TV while I got my daughter bathed, dressed and fed.
I think he got the point because on the way home Sunday night he got me a dairy queen mom's day cake (which is yummy). I told him thanks. Hopefully next year will be better since we talked... I also looked up the history because my hubby brought up that it is just a made up holiday by the card industry. The holiday was actually rooted in a spiritual celebration of motherhood (Egypt, Europe)... it was a day where distant children came back to see mom and friends and family would lavish mom with cakes and flowers. Below is when it was officially made a holiday (note not started by the card industry).
US Government Adoption
In 1908 a U.S. Senator from Nebraska, Elmer Burkett, proposed making Mother's Day a national holiday at the request of the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA). The proposal was defeated, but by 1909 forty-six states were holding Mother's Day services as well as parts of Canada and Mexico.
Anna Jarvis quit working and devoted herself full time to the creation of Mother's Day, endlessly petitioning state governments, business leaders, women groups, churches and other institutions and organizations. She finally convinced the World's Sunday School Association to back her, a key influence over state legislators and congress. In 1912 West Virginia became the first state to officially recognize Mother's Day, and in 1914 Woodrow Wilson signed it into national observance, declaring the second Sunday in May as Mother's Day.