It’s almost here and I have to share this…..

For all of my friends who are approaching their childrens graduation from High School, with some level of sadness, I have to share this: 

The Boston Globe

BEVERLY BECKHAM

I was the sun, the kids my planets

By Beverly Beckham  |  August 27, 2006

I wasn’t wrong about their leaving. My husband kept telling me I was. That it wasn’t the end of the world when first one child, then another , and then the last packed their bags and left for college.But it was the end of something. “Can you pick me up, Mom?” “What’s for dinner?” “What do you think?”

I was the sun and they were the planets. And there was life on those planets, whirling, non stop plans and parties and friends coming and going, and ideas and dreams and the phone ringing and doors slamming.

And I got to beam down on them. To watch. To glow.

And then they were gone, one after the other.

“They’ll be back,” my husband said. And he was right. They came back. But he was wrong, too, because they came back for intervals — not for always, not planets anymore, making their predictable orbits, but unpredictable, like shooting stars.

Always is what you miss. Always knowing where they are. At school. At play practice. At a ballgame. At a friend’s. Always looking at the clock mid day and anticipating the door opening, the sigh, the smile, the laugh, the shrug. “How was school?” answered for years in too much detail. “And then he said . . . and then I said to him. . . .” Then hardly answered at all.

Always, knowing his friends.

Her favorite show.

What he had for breakfast.

What she wore to school.

What he thinks.

How she feels.

My friend Beth’s twin girls left for Roger Williams yesterday. They are her fourth and fifth children.

She’s been down this road three times before. You’d think it would get easier.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do without them,” she has said every day for months.

And I have said nothing, because, really, what is there to say?

A chapter ends. Another chapter begins. One door closes and another door opens. The best thing a parent can give their child is wings. I read all these things when my children left home and thought then what I think now: What do these words mean?

Eighteen years isn’t a chapter in anyone’s life. It’s a whole book, and that book is ending and what comes next is connected to, but different from, everything that has gone before.

Before was an infant, a toddler, a child, a teenager. Before was feeding and changing and teaching and comforting and guiding and disciplining, everything hands -on. Now?

Now the kids are young adults and on their own and the parents are on the periphery, and it’s not just a chapter change. It’s a sea change.

As for a door closing? Would that you could close a door and forget for even a minute your children and your love for them and your fear for them, too. And would that they occupied just a single room in your head. But they’re in every room in your head and in your heart.

As for the wings analogy? It’s sweet. But children are not birds. Parents don’t let them go and build another nest and have all new offspring next year.

Saying goodbye to your children and their childhood is much harder than all the pithy sayings make it seem. Because that’s what going to college is. It’s goodbye.

It’s not a death. And it’s not a tragedy.

But it’s not nothing, either.

To grow a child, a body changes. It needs more sleep. It rejects food it used to like. It expands and it adapts.

To let go of a child, a body changes, too. It sighs and it cries and it feels weightless and heavy at the same time.

The drive home alone without them is the worst. And the first few days. But then it gets better. The kids call, come home, bring their friends, and fill the house with their energy again.

Life does go on.

“Can you give me a ride to the mall?” “Mom, make him stop!” I don’t miss this part of parenting, playing chauffeur and referee. But I miss them, still, all these years later, the children they were, at the dinner table, beside me on the couch, talking on the phone, sleeping in their rooms, safe, home, mine.

The Boston Globe

4 Responses to “It’s almost here and I have to share this…..”

  1. Tara Says:

    Hi Terri,
    I couldnt wait to be a mom when I met my husband because I knew that he was the one. I am 24, and we have 2 girls Ryliane is 3 and Kailah is almost one. I found my self crying yesterday because Ryliane is transitioning from a car seat to a booster, that means shes growing up! I know that they are no where near graduating High School, but there are little milestones that parents do not realize until they get there. I now know what my mom means when she tells me to not take them for granted because they grow up fast and then “POOF” they are gone. Everyone goes through it when they have kids I guess its just part of the plan.
    Thanks, Tara

  2. Jill Says:

    Terri,
    Wow, it is so great to know that other mothers feel the same way. Sometimes I feel with the way this world is going, mothers like us are in the minority. May God Bless You and your family.

  3. Jackie Says:

    Terri:

    Yep, its a mother thing. It was the last night before taking my daughter to college. We were packing those last few things-trying to make them fit into the car and Steph called Billy (he was doing the night slot then) to say goodbye because she wouldn’t be able to listen to WBEE for a while. She asked him to play a song and he chose Wide Open Spaces - boy did we cry! I remember it like it was yesterday. That was 8 years ago and next week I’ll watch as she receives her Masters from St. John Fisher. I STILL CRY EVERY TIME I HEAR THAT SONG!!

  4. Pat Says:

    Ok Terry, I cry at everything and I’m sitting at my desk crying reading this. My baby graduates from high school in a few weeks and I find myself tearing up at the stupidest things–like the song “I Swear” because she used to sit in her car seat, put up her finger and say look mommy, I’m swearing every time that song played, and driving past the Greece Little League Fields and knowing that for the first time in 13 years she won’t be playing because she is too old (and at the same time the song “You’re Gonna Miss This” was on. Treasure each and every minute.

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