Then they grew to not-always-beguiling toddlers; unique, demanding, wonderful. They stained their clothes with busy and
curious fingers, dipped in all manner of things, to find out how the world
worked. They were delightful; they were exasperating; they caught at my heart; they tried my patience. They were sheer hard work but in the midst of
the toil they shared the unripe essence of themselves with me and I was
blessed. They slept, and with that
slumbering, poised in innocence and beauty, they let me catch my breath. Sometimes now, my arms ache to hold them as
babies again.
Summers came and went; still they
grew, pulling me headlong into parenthood.
Bikes, barbie dolls, cubby houses, books at bedtime, homework and
sleep-overs; braided hair and ballet
lessons. Gap-toothed grins and butterfly
kisses; they printed themselves on my
heart with indelible ink and I’ll never be the same. All the while, they waited with energetic impatience for
each new experience. They were living,
complex stories being written on a beautiful parchment of change.
Inevitable time marched them into adolescence. They became changelings; an all-at-once mix of child and grown-up,
held in their metamorphosis by awkward grace and boisterous confidence. They still bore childhood’s sweet traces, but
their adult self dawned in self-conscious adolescent posturing. They disassociated themselves from childish
ways, at once with painful regret and joyful eagerness; they could still touch childhood’s
consciousness, but listened with straining senses, for the adult song which
could not be silenced.
My lovely son, Ben, who, against the odds, taught himself to be a steadfast, loving, dependable man, died when he was 27. My girls remain, like precious gems in a sea of sorrow. My girls are thirty-somethings now with babies of their own.
To me, they are like fine sturdy ships poised to set sail across a deep
and unknown sea. They have chosen their
life paths and I must let them go; they
must dance their own joy; fall against
their own life’s hard rain, make their own choices. But my love and prayers will always go with
them. Homecomings and safe harbours will
always be theirs. They have their
anchors in the deep, still waters of Christian faith. We are closer in different and enduring ways. I must let them go and yet they will always
stay in that exquisitely unique place which is a mother’s heart. I can never let them go.
(This is the intellectual property of Susan Starr. Please do not use it without permission)
Wonderful Susan, I have tears streaming down my cheeks as I bring to mind those days when my children were babies. Beautifully written as always. X
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