From autumn |
Ah, daughters.
My oldest called me this morning, in tears. Her baby went to kindergarten today.
As I was driving to the studio, I thought about that.
Maybe I told you this before.
I can't remember. Senior moment, maybe.
But I had my three girls about 7 years apart.
So by the time the youngest left home for college, 31 years had elapsed since the first one was born.
That's a lifetime of having kids at home.
I didn't know there was anything else.
And isn't that the way it is, though?
When your children are growing up, your whole life is wrapped around them. What they eat, what they do, how they are, their school, their friends, their sports, their vacations.........they are you. On a daily basis.
I never thought about life without them foremost in my brain. I never even imagined it.
But here it is.
They are all grown up, with families of their own, and they are no longer the focus of my life.
As dearly as I love them, and as crazily as I love the grandchildren they have given me, they have lives SEPARATE from mine.
OMG.
From autumn |
Don't get me wrong. I talk to them all the time. I see them a lot. I know (for the most part) what they think, how they feel, what makes them happy.
But it is so different, now that they are responsible for themselves. And I am not.
I know I am rambling here. But it boggles my mind.
I am rumbling around in the fridge for something to eat. My mother is standing in the doorway. She says, "I've got smoked turkey."
I answer, "Mom, I haven't eaten turkey, or meat, in over a year."
"Yeah, but it's smoked," she says.
AY YI YI.
My mother has turned into my child. Only I have way less control over her than I did my own children.
Some place between Ava going to kindergarten, and my 85 year old mother trying to feed me turkey, there's a message.
I just don't have any idea what it is.
The message is "IT'S SMOKED". So it must be good.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Hilary.
The message is love. It comes in all shapes and sizes and sometimes it has that hickory smoke flavor!!
ReplyDeleteShe's never stopped being a caregiver, even if she misses your clues. This is a harsh stage in life, when the tables are turned and you're in the middle. Always a caregiver.
ReplyDeleteWhat a thought-provoking post...well said, clearly & simply explained.
ReplyDeleteBest of all? "AY YI YI"
Laughter cures/heals/soothes just about everything!
Beautiful daughters...
There's a saw (Sprichwort):
ReplyDelete"Mütter tragen ihre Kinder durch den Morgen, Kinder ihre Mütter durch den Abend."
Mothers carry their chirldren trough teh morning, children their mothers throug the evening"
I come to know, that mothers when they are old (and sick) needs us like children do, but they ever think it is reversed.
They think turkey ist tasty an healthy :)
Gruß Silvia
Botheration! There are many misspellings :(
ReplyDelete