Skip to main content

Last time~


I woke my son David for school for the last time ever yesterday. Not a big deal, really. I wouldn't have even thought of it if he hadn't reminded me that night, "Don't wake me tomorrow, Mom. I'm going in late for a final."

Then he added, "In fact, you won't have to wake me from now on."

And that's when it hit me. He's done with high school. Again, not a big deal, really. Except that it is.

He's my baby, this 6' 4" man.

Twenty-seven years ago, I managed my first born the best I could with my entry-level maternity skills. My second child, four years later, was easier, because I knew what to expect, and she was temperamentally calmer than her older brother. Then after the heartbreak of a miscarriage, there was David.

He was it, my last baby. I knew that, and that awareness made me savor every moment of his babyhood in a way I hadn't with the others.

I rocked him to sleep, and then continued rocking, feeling his warm weight on my shoulder, instead of plopping him in his crib to "get something done" as I'd done with the others. When we went for a walk, I didn't hurry him past the drain where he knelt to plop in pebbles into the water.

It wasn't that I loved him more, it was just that he was my last, and I knew how fleeting the time. I didn't hurry David on to the next step. I let him unfold like the leaves in spring, sometimes early, sometimes not.

Now he's my final fledgling. He's ready to fly, although not in the sense of escape. I'm ready to let him go, although not with any sense of urgency. This is unfolding as it should. I raised him to stand on his own two feet, find his own way in the world, and be productive in a way that matters to himself and others. He is my baby, but I didn't baby him.

I'm proud of David, of who he is, despite me and because of me. I played a role in directing him, but he is the one who made the choices about how to act. Soon he'll be the director, and I'll sit in the spectator seats.

I've sat there before. It isn't always easy. But I'm ready to applaud, and if I have to, I'll hiss and boo.

Comments

Bar L. said…
Hi Ruth! You just left a comment on my blog so I am here to visit yours. I completely agree, if I were blogging for money, it would loose the fun and I would start to resent it.

I'll be back to read you again!
Those are nice sentiments. There's a great deal of reflection in your writing and it's something I can very directly relate to.

To answer your question about my "Magazine Writing" blog, it's an assignment for Journalism 132 (Magazine Writing) at Sacramento State. You read what will probably be my last entry on that blog - it's days are numbered. My main blog The 25 Year Plan has been going strong for about 18 months. I post about many different topics, but there seems to be a definite slant towards introspection. The personal essay is perhaps my favorite genre.

Thanks for stopping by and commenting. I don't promote that blog at all - I don't mention it or link it anywhere. I get very few "random" visitors there. Please come visit me on my main blog, I post there three or more times per week.

Finally. as my friend Barbara (above me) said, I'll be back as well.

Mike
Heather said…
lovely post -- and congrats to you and to your son!
Anonymous said…
Hi Ruth--

I enjoyed this piece--it seems you and I are writing about variations on the same theme these days!
Ruth L.~ said…
Sarah,

My kids are a bit older than your Paul, but it feels like yesterday that I was shopping for the cup. Your essay made me laugh. It was funny, and brought back memories of me trying to "guestimate" cup size. All the cups seemed gigantic, when to me it seemed half a walnut shell would do the trick. :>)

Ruth~
Dawn said…
Wonderful, introspective, universal essays. Such beautiful writing.

I think our blogs are running parallel along the same subject lines.

Dawn

Popular posts from this blog

A Continuum: the sands of time...

Time is like a handful of sand, the tighter you grasp it, the faster it runs through your fingers. Anonymous My 20’s: That runner’s high! I love it! I feel like my feet are six inches above the pavement and I could just keep running and running forever. I stretch my runs longer and longer for pure pleasure until I just have to turn back--reluctantly. I’m empowered and kind of in awe of my energy. My 30s: My pregnancy decade. Three kids. I jog behind a stroller with the firstborn; walk with a toddler while pushing a stroller with the second born; walk slowly with my third, stopping so he can drop pebbles down the drain or pat the doggie.   I go on occasional walks or slow jogs on weekends or days when my husband is home with all three kids. But I often choose to nap. My 40s: My oldest babysits for thirty minutes so I can go out for a walk. I call it my “by-by walk.” “Mommy’s going for a by-by walk,” I say to soothe my youngest, who c...

For Alice~ She's home!!!!!!!

What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson Sometimes it's all about knowing that loved ones and friends stand behind you, knowing that support is there on the down days, the worry days, the days when you feel off-center, out of sync, bedraggled emotionally, and in pain, but knowing all the while that you're not alone. You're not alone... Alice is an online friend--she lives in Hawaii-- who belongs to the writer's workshop that I do. We've only "met" online, but those who have online friendships know that they can be just as strong as those in-person relationships. Alice was hit by a car while walking, and is in the rehab phase of things. She's working to regain mobility after a broken pelvis, a broken arm, and a broken nose. It's scary to realize how, in the blink of an eye, life can lurch and our plans for a time are displaced by survival and healing. We...

Cancer is the asshole~

Today was the first time in a long, long time that I’ve called Bruce an asshole—and the first time since his cancer diagnosis. How can you call some one with cancer an asshole? After all, cancer patients don’t feel good--they’re dealing with a deadly disease, there are all sorts of worries, frustrations, and side effects and changes to their bodies, quality of life issues... and all the other little quirky symptoms that I only find out about about when Bruce tells his nurse. I’m pretty patient and understanding by nature, and all the more so now when he vents the inevitable “ cancer anger ” a little (or a lot). Today he got impatient and snippy, frustrated that we couldn’t merge our iCalendars—he hates when technology goes awry. Who doesn't? For him, it's one more thing out of his control. He started to tell me what I’d done incorrectly in the attempt to merge, and kept cutting me off when I tried to show him what I did...which, by the way, was corre...