It's 12:15 pm on a Wednesday and she's
asleep on the couch. Again. After two hours of this unconscious state, she
will send 42 texts about, well, hard to say. With great difficulty she will
then tear herself off of the couch, rearrange her tangled hair and within a
split second be "ready" for work. She will drive 15 minutes to
the mall to sell teensy strapless t-shirts and jeans for three hours to the
same demographic she has been texting.
It's day 47 in my daughter's high school senior
year.
This is the last year I get to watch her
sleep. “Hush
little baby don’t say a word, momma’s gonna buy you a mockingbird…” Well that explains a lot. I
should not have promised her a mockingbird for her silence. She now expects that mockingbird to
land in her lap. And why wouldn’t she? I have set her up for a life in which
she won’t cry out loud and gets rewarded for every little thing that disappoints her. The bird won't sing - here's a diamond ring. The ring won't shine - how about a diamond mine? And if that diamond mine runs dry, mama's gonna bake you an apple pie. I didn't know all the lyrics...so I made some up...a parenting style...make up what you don't know. As usual, I can trace
every act or inaction to my failure as a mother.
Why does she sleep so much though? It’s
almost ironic. 17 years ago trying to get her to sleep consumed my very
existence.
“Yes, she sleeps through the night and
takes three naps.” I proudly told my
friends, not mentioning that every time I peeked into her crib I prayed she was
still breathing. Always petrified I couldn’t keep her alive and well back then.
Now, I just want her to stay awake long enough to ask why she keeps falling
asleep.
I check to see if her chest is rising and
falling and whisper, “Sweetie, why are you so tired? Are you bored? On drugs? Scared?
You know, you can’t hide here forever.” Maybe she just has senior-itis and some
free time.
Although, last Thursday, when I asked her
to do…anything… at all, a mini-explosion occurred "You know, I
don’t think you appreciate the fact that I’m not doing drugs. I don’t sleep
around. I have nice friends and I’m a good person!” she said rather emphatically.
After an
uncomfortable silence she continued, “All we ever talk about anymore is
college!”
“Oh, my sweet girl, I am thrilled and relieved about
what you don’t do. Deeply. But, what are you doing? Are you scared? About
leaving? About going to college?” I replied.
“Yes!”
“Do you want stay home?”
“Yes!!!”
The thing is, I can see she’s scared. And
as much as no drugs, no sex, nice friends, good morals will get her very far in life, I know these
fabulous qualities aren’t enough by themselves in the long run.
Except that there was another school
shooting in Colorado today. So, I want to wrap her and her sister, into my
arms and tell them they are perfect just as they are. And protect them. From
depression and violence. And fear. I want to lock the front door. From the outside.
But, maybe this isn’t the moment for
protection. Maybe we are in the moment of lighting fires under butts to send an
educated, hard-working, morally strong woman out into the world. Maybe my fear
needs to stay silent in order to quell hers. For the moment, sleeping is her
only escape from the fear of growing up.
“Why am I standing over her forecasting her
aimless descent into a frivolous life?” I ask the ever-present dog. Thank God
we have a dog, frequently she is the only other living being who will listen to
me with her wise, unconditional, blank stare.
There just hasn't been enough time
in-between napping and texting to guide her into the kind, fearless, delightful
person she promises to be almost every day. Sadly, this is
not true. I've had 17 years of opportunity. What have I been doing? Oh, right. The laundry. And the dishes. It's the regret that's doing me in.
The memory of that first day I was left alone with a one year old and a one month old, comes careening around a corner of my brain, “Just pray we’ll all be alive when you get home from work.” I begged my husband as he dragged me clutching his left ankle out to his car. If we hadn’t been so broke, I wouldn’t have let him go.
The memory of that first day I was left alone with a one year old and a one month old, comes careening around a corner of my brain, “Just pray we’ll all be alive when you get home from work.” I begged my husband as he dragged me clutching his left ankle out to his car. If we hadn’t been so broke, I wouldn’t have let him go.
When he walked back in at the end of the
day he found all three of us upright and laughing. “I’m relieved,” he said. “Alive, standing
up, and laughing at the end of the day was more than I expected.” This set the
bar for the rest of their childhood. Upright, alive, and laughing…a gracious
way to live. But, has it been enough?
There is less than a year to be alive and
laughing together at the end of the day.
Yesterday, when she came home from school she
announced, “I’m going to the prom for the special needs kids! I’m so excited!” She
glowed. It’s the happiest I’ve seen her in a long time.
“I am in awe of how you love these
kids. Please never lose your tender heart.”
“Okay Mom.” She replies with thinly veiled
sarcasm, covered up in that sparkling smile.
The expression on her face when she talks
of these special kids is beyond gut wrenching. Her tender spirit is vulnerable
here. Maybe she should stay on the couch. It’s safer than what lies on the
other side of the door.
“I can probably borrow Taylor’s red dress
from homecoming to wear. Oh, and Taylor, Evan, Anthony and Katie are coming
over to watch Elf tonight. Okay?” She is still beaming.
“Okay. That sounds like fun. I’m gonna miss
those guys when you’re gone.” I can’t bear the thought of the silence you
will leave behind.
She is so much more than I ever believed
would come from me. It's a good thing we had her father around. Maybe we've been a good combination in child rearing. Mostly, it's Grace.
Can she survive on what she's yet to learn
in half days of high school, afternoons on the couch and evenings selling
clothes at the mall? I guess I survived doing almost exactly that. Just not the
survival I dreamed of when I was asleep on the couch in high school, or the
life I envisioned for her when she smiled at me the first time.
Beautiful young woman, face smashed into
the side of the couch cushion, displaying the one, adorable dimpled cheek she
arrived with. From her apocalyptic bedroom, I retrieve her well-loved, yet barely
recognizable stuffed monkey, and tuck it gently under her arm.
As I watch her innocence sleeping
peacefully on the couch, I ponder the best way to get her up. Smoke alarm?
Change all the clocks to 6:00 AM and then gently bellow “YOU’RE LATE! ” (I really want to do this one....)
Maybe I should be nice and just pull the
couch cushions on to the floor and start vacuuming near her head when she and
the cushions hit the ground?
I’m wasting more time than she is by
standing here staring at her. I wish I had spent more time sitting next to her
than standing over her. This is ridiculous. I will be the good mother who does not let her precious daughter stay
coddled in the coziness of her embrace. I will force her to grow up and relinquish
childhood gracefully. I will bring about a good, strong person who is ready to
live a good life. I will absolutely…wake her up.
I will absolutely say:
“Wake up! You are sleeping
away your life and if you don't get up now, you’ll be here forever!"
But, I don't say it out loud. I tickle her instead and there is an explosion from the couch. Hair heading in every possible direction, glaring, with eyebrows furrowed, she hands me the stuffed monkey with an eye roll. Muttering “goodness gracious” under her breath, she slides into her flip-flops, grabs her phone and on her way out of the door texts me "I love you Mom." And drives to the mall. Well, at least she’s up.
But, I don't say it out loud. I tickle her instead and there is an explosion from the couch. Hair heading in every possible direction, glaring, with eyebrows furrowed, she hands me the stuffed monkey with an eye roll. Muttering “goodness gracious” under her breath, she slides into her flip-flops, grabs her phone and on her way out of the door texts me "I love you Mom." And drives to the mall. Well, at least she’s up.
In the silence left behind, I text back, “I’ll
miss you. I love you too.”
For both of us, to be known in this moment
and still loved, is enough for now. I have less than a year left to say
something else. Out loud. I remain petrified that I won’t be able to keep her
alive and well. Even though I know, deep in my soul, she is going to be just
fine. In fact, I know she is going to make a sparkling difference somewhere in
this world…when she is brave enough to wake up and walk out of the door that I will unlock, on her
own.
Next year will be the last year for her
little sister. Another last year to survive. How? How to let go of childhood?
The childhood I hope I gave them that prepared them for life.
I pick up her monkey and lay down on the
couch.
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