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Well, parenthood is sometimes bittersweet. We knew that, right? If we had any doubts, surely that first month of morning sickness all day long should have gotten the message across. *sigh* I remember the day my eldest son's umbilicus fell off. I cried and cried. I sensed that it was the first of many, many steps away from me and away from the place where I could protect him. My MiL and husband both thought i was nuts when they asked why I was crying and I said "Because he'll grow up too fast and one day he'll leave home forever." "Pshaw, they said, he's six days old. Don't be silly." Well, I swear to you that was only a few weeks ago ... well, ok, it was 16 years and 9 months ago... but the day has come. As many of you know from my postings here, life with my eldest, my bane and my joy, has been anything but rosy for the last few years. He's been in and out of trouble with the law, he's run away from home a number of times just because he wanted " a vacation". Now he's up on felony charges and as of the 19th of May, he may be in prison for a year or more. All the turmoil aside, it's a bittersweet moment for us. He moved out a week ago yesterday into his very own place. It's not much of a place 9in fact, human habitation may be skirting the law) but he's not got much of a budget. It's actually a tool shed filled with years' accumulation of "stuff, old tools, old clothes, even a wood burning stove - though the chimney's on the floor several feet away. Nonetheless, my resourceful, imaginative child has gathered cast offs, scrubbed until his hands were rough and red, and turned this unheated, windowless space into an almost charming little home. Since the place has no running water, he has a collection of soda bottles filled fresh every day from the taps at the main house. I went over there yesterday to bring him an old sofa from our home, and his pride as he showed me every nook and cranny was radiant. He looked like a cross between the five year old who proudly showed me his first gold start from kindergarten and the handsome young man who was his brand new father so few yeas ago. It broke my heart. But the sadness at his going and the pride at his growing were joined by other emotions. I'm envious, too, of his new beginnings. I remember so well the exhilaration of my own beginnings. The joy and pride at my own very first apartment. I envy him, too, the simplicy of his new lifestyle. I remember well the uncomplicated ways, the exquisite joys of a life stripped to its essentials. It reminds me of the way his father and I lived back when he was a baby. I'm fearful, too. he's shown a serious lack of judgement. What more will he find with even less of his parents supervision? ...or will this new home, this insignia of his 'adulthood', inspire in him a responsibility he never showed before? That's how it worked for me, and yet I know that to be a rare reaction. It's hard to keep the tears from my eyes today, and yesterday, and probably for a number of tomorrows to come. I knew this was coming. I had just hoped it would take longer to arrive.
4 responses total.
Wow! That is complicated. I wish him--and you- luck. Thanks for a well-told story. <hug>
We parent-types like to think of ourselves as teaching our children how to be independent. But sometimes I think the lesson and the roles get reversed.
i'm truly sorry to hear about this, mta. hugs.
Thanks, Void, Kami. As Mary says, if we've done our job as parents and taught our kids to be independent, they turn the tables on us and teach us to let go. It's sad, but it's how its supposed to be. And I'm just as proud and happy for him as I am sad and wistful for the little boy who's passing is thus marked. I still get teary from time to time and his antics as a toddler have come to mind very readily lately, but I'm feeling much better.
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