Little One Done
She seems so very small as I watch her make her way toward
those intimidating swinging doors. She’s
taller than me now, and would very much resent the way my inner clock can deny
the years that have passed.
Eyes bright as fire
Always wise beyond her years
She knows no fear
I am in awe of her strength, her air of confidence. She
has confessed to the front, but no one else needs to know. I reflect upon my
own days, the feeling of insecurity, never being good enough. I want so much
more for her.
She’s running home now
Barbie lunch box banging her side
Backpack…bigger than she is
Who knew that day, when I watched her from my window,
climbing those mighty steps for her first bus ride, that my life would never be
the same? The world, so much scarier than it was for me…now her burden to bear.
Bullies, young and old. Expectations, good and bad.
No longer under my wing only
She is free to see the world
Through the eyes of another
Other than her mother
As she grows to adult, I grow to human. Once the hero, my
flaws have been revealed. Over time, so shall more. Will our relationship
change? Will she judge me as critically as those who loved before? When does guardian turn to friend? When does protector turn to accomplice? Will
her dreams of exploring the world with me change?
It was a mommy and me day
Until her phone rang
Friends are more important
My heart breaks a little bit, and tries to be strong.
Never mind the lump in my throat nor the tear in my eye. It’s nothing personal.
I pick up, I drop off, and head to my mother’s with coffee.
Her hug is as firm as it always was
Her solace the balm for the sting
Her reassurance I will always be the mom
Validated in the concern in her eyes.
The night has fallen. My little one, out and about, after
dark…with boys. I watch the doors swing
wide, as her and her posse make their way to my car, still wearing their 3D
glasses. Their laughter encroaches upon the silence.
She is all smiles as she takes her place beside me
Her cheeks are flushed, her eyes electric
“Thanks Mom…that was awesome!”
So are you kiddo…so are you.
Anna Montgomery (@Chromatopia_LLC) is up for her dVersePoets debut today at MeetingTheBar. She's going to have us talking prose, poetry...and I'm guessing we'll be able to show her one heck of a welcome! See you at the pub!
Comments
This insight was truly profound.
Love,
Janie
As the mother of three adult children, I fell under the spell woven here. The loving, releasing, experiencing, enjoying... you touch gently on so many of the gifts of connectedness.
were you writing about me and my two brats ??
i have two girls 10 and 6...:))
what a gorgeous wonderful write ...
And this: "As she grows to adult, I grow to human." A fabulous truth.
thank you for sharing
really lovely writing!
♥
To look into mother-daughter stuff two-layers thick was rich -- made me think about my daughter and wonder.