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Moving on
By Teresa K. Flatley
Remember
how we used to laugh when older parents talked
about that "empty nest" thing? Sure we'd miss
our kids when they got older and moved on. Yeah, right.
And we also miss getting up six times a night with a
colicky baby.
Well,
as I began packing and planning for my oldest son Dan
to go off to college, I felt what those parents warned
me about. Maybe even more (and this, for goodness sakes,
with an active 12-year-old still at home).
When
my children were little, wishing for a weekend...
heck, a day...or even just an hour to myself was a
routine daydream. Because so much time and energy goes
into the care of our children when they are young and
as they first begin to make their mark in the world,
every parent wishes for some downtime once in awhile.
Often
depleted of energy and patience, we can sum up our thoughts
with one heartfelt wish: Just let me sit with an umbrella
drink in front of me, somewhere, anywhere, alone, for
just five minutes, and not hear my name called, demands
being made or whining coming through the walls.
Be
careful what you ask for. You just might get it.
Things
have been pretty quiet at my house—something I
have always cherished—for awhile now and I'm not
sure I like it.
The quiet didn't happen overnight; it just happened
when I wasn't looking. Dan had been driving for two
years which means he had been enjoying his own life
for awhile. Although home was his base of operations,
he had friends and a schedule we found out about on
an as-needed basis.
That's
normal teenage stuff. We all get used to that, because
it happens so slowly we're not all that aware. But now
that I think about it, it's almost like a built-in weaning
process.
Towards
the end of high school comes the realization that this
was all just a warmup for days to come. In a short time,
these evanescent creatures will actually be going away
somewhere for large amounts of timeand without
us.
I'm
not a clinging vine by nature but I caught myself thinking
about turning into one. Could I really push him out
the door and hold on at the same time?
For
Dan and all the other children heading to college, work,
the armed forces or MTV's "Real World," moving
on is the right thing to do. There is no doubt in my
mind they have to go. There's no other way for them
to grow and become the mature contributing adults we
have been trying to raise since conception.
But
does it have to be so hard?
If I think back to when I was getting ready to go to
college, mostly what I remember are all the preparations
my mother and I made. What I don't remember noticing
is how she and my father were facing up to this life
change. Of course, my brother had made the break a couple
of years before, paving the way for me, as he must have
done in so many other unnoticed ways.
My
mother and I spent a lot of time together that summer
painting. For some inexplicable reason, I chose a pink
and purple theme for my first college dorm room. Everything
I took with me had to adhere to this strict color codethus
the painting.
When we left for college that first day, our big old
Bonneville was chock full of pink and purple tables,
hat stands and other necessary bric-a-brac to anchor
me in my new world.
I
was homesick a lot my first weeks at college, which
is telling because I was only ever an hour from home.
But to my mind, that was an eternity.
Dan
had an advantage because his school, like so many others,
planned a "wilderness" orientation for five
days prior to his having to officially show up at school.
He had a chance to get to know his fellow classmates
while they bonded and team built to their hearts' content.
He
has done fine on his own. I knew he would. It's me I'm
worried about.
Maybe
I should look into a wilderness excursion for mothers
of children who are moving on. A little bonding time.
A little team building. Say, a week or two in the Caribbean?
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