2 days ago
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Guest Post: Letter To Grace
Lindsey from A Design So Vast agreed to guest post for me today. I have been reading Lindsey's blog for a few months. Her writing always makes me shiver because she uncovers things that are appropriately uncomfortable. She shares her perspective with incredible eloquence. Thank you, Lindsey, for participating.
Dear Grace,
Today is your first day of kindergarten. I honestly can’t believe it. Almost six years ago you knocked my planet into a new orbit, dented my universe, and changed me forever. You will always be the person who made me into a mother, and for that I can’t articulate my gratitude. In those dark days after you were born (I can wholeheartedly say that having a baby on the very day the clocks go back is not ideal timing) I can’t remember who cried more, and I can’t really tell which of us had the colic, but I do know that the plates inside of me were shifting in a very fundamental way. I have a lot of guilt and emotion about how those first weeks unfolded, but I’m not ultimately sure I would change them: we laid down some tracks that I’m glad we are on now, forged an alloy that has proven to be very strong.
You emerged into the world screaming and you haven’t stopped making your opinions known. I adore your openness, your curiosity, your eagerness to understand the world around you. You are generally outgoing, friendly, and quick to warm up. You approach the world with an open mind and open arms, ready to throw yourself into any experience and to greet any person with enthusiasm. You are as fond of the nice man at Starbucks as you are of your teachers, though you have very definite favorites: your grandparents and your friend Clio are at the top of your list right now.
Your physical fearlessness trumps even your emotional openness. You approach a physical challenge with confidence and coordination. You are full of energy and love to push yourself – this summer’s accomplishment was riding your bike without training wheels. When you tried to ride the bike two-wheeled last summer you fell off and quickly asked for your training wheels back. This summer you asked to try again (I deliberately did not bring it up) and the minute you had the bike to yourself you took off down the street without looking back. As cliched as it is, that is a formative moment for me – I remember my Dad running behind me on a gravel driveway in France and realizing suddenly that he had let go and that I was on my own … this time it was I who was the parent standing, watching you bike away.
You are desperate to learn to read and the gusto with which you apply yourself to this effort reminds me of when you decided you wanted to learn to write your name. Determined, you practiced and practiced, scrawling spidery “R”s that looked like jellyfish and clenching the tip of your tongue between your lips. You were so little and so determined; the same sense of absolute commitment permeates our attempts with the beginning readers today. You sound out words (wow, I did not remember how very hard that is) and try and try, sometimes guessing blindly (“Sam” – “sandwich? Sarah? someday?”) but often actually getting to the word, slowly and with great pain. The satisfaction that takes over your face when you get a word right is visible, your delight tangible.
You want so, so desperately to be “good,” to be liked, to play by the rules – the degree to which I identify with these desires is so close as to be painful for me. I watch you oscillate between the innocence of not knowing about rules, expectations, and norms, to suddenly being aware of them; sometimes the impact is like watching your wings be clipped, watching your spirit shrink. I wish I could keep you in a world where all that matters is your whim and the comfort of those around you, wish I could protect you from the onerous cloak of expectation and performance that the world is slowly pulling around your shoulders. And as much as I want to protect you from it, I know I’m pulling one of the corners. The conflicts of parenting. I want to celebrate your free spirit, your joy at devil-may-care adventure, your unbridled enjoyment of your own physical self and what it can do. But I also know I need to help you live within the world, and I know what it is to feel a deep need for approval.
I adore you, Gracie. I love watching you venture out into the world, love seeing that curious half-smile on your face as you hang back, assessing a situation quickly before plunging into it. The way you peer over the edge of the diving board for a moment before looking up, shaking your head quickly as if to rid yourself of anxiety the way a dog shakes off water, and then closing your eyes and cannonballing into the pool. The way you approach a wall of backpacks at Target and say to me, with no small amount of resignation but also no attempt to change my mind, “I guess no Hannah Montana or High School Musical, right, Mum?” The way you want to be Wonder Woman for Halloween and the way you rejected an all-girl party because you still think it’s fun to play with everyone in your class.
I’ve written a lot about your fierce independence and how much I admire and encourage it. I also, truth be told, love the moments when you still need me. Of course I want you to bike away from me, skilled and confident on your two-wheeler. But I also like when the only thing that makes a bruised knee better is my kiss, or when the middle of the night nightmare is soothed only by my special good-dream-head-rub. I realize what a tremendous blessing it is to be aggravated by your intense, constant need for my attention. The call to “please slow down, Mummy – you know if the police officer notices you are going too fast it will take a long time” is both super annoying and absolutely correct. There is so much that you do masterfully for yourself now, but you still want me to wash your hair for you, need me to tie your shoes, and hold your hand up instinctively for mine as we cross a parking lot.
I admire your wide-open attitude about your own life. Your openness to all kinds of friends, diverse in age, race, gender, religion, and socioeconomic background. It is my devout hope that you can maintain this. I am prouder than you can imagine when you announce that when you grow up you want to be, “An Olympic horseback rider, a doctor, and a mummy.” That’s a good trio, in my book. You make me laugh and you make me cry every single day. Your very existence marks life’s passage in a viscerally bittersweet way, but how would I know where I am without you to show me? I know I am sad sometimes, and when you ask me, “Mummy, why are you crying?” I always wish I could be a better, happier, more constant mother for you. I simply can’t, and I guess what I am teaching you there is that it is useless to fight certain inalienable parts of who we are.
I’ll pick you up today at 3 and will hear all about your first day of kindergarten. It’s equally as easy to remember October 2002 as it is to flash forward and imagine the day you graduate from high school. You and I feel perched on a fulcrum here, launching into Real Life, as you become more and more who you are each day. It is my honor to watch you unfold, Gracie, and I honestly believe my only task in life is to keep you alive and fed and loved. I think the seeds of who you will be – who you already are – were in you the day you were born, and the best thing I can do is stand back and let you grow. I hope I can demonstrate to you that there isn’t much in life that matters more than finding people you respect, work you love, and being as true to both of those as you can (and I’m not saying I’ve accomplished either, just that I’m engaged in the effort to do so). But ultimately I know I am neither your keeper nor your source; I am a passage you come through on your way to the Great Wide Open. On this day I feel distinctly privileged about that.
I love you. No matter what.
Mum
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Amber,
ReplyDeleteWhat an honor to be posting here today. Thank you!!
Thanks for reminding me, always, every day, that the moments count. And how.
xo
Brava! Beautiful words that I know your daughter will cherish.
ReplyDeleteGrace reminds me so much of Miss D.--a true force of nature, a wide-open heart and spirit.
And it's true, we are only the conduit. The thing our children pass through on their way through the world. Sometimes that seems like too much responsibility, and sometimes it feels like too little...does that make any sense?
Wonderful post!
A fiercely loving portrait of the daughter, and the mother. Beautiful.
ReplyDeleteLindsey, this post is breathtaking in its eloquence and beauty. What a wonderful reminder of the shades and dimensions of love between parent and child.
ReplyDeleteAmazing and inspiring and beautiful. Your daughter will cry over this one day, knowing how much she was loved. Always loved.
ReplyDeleteOh how I loved this so. It was interesting to read this knowing that Grace is now older and it is now Hannah who is entering kindergarten. I now see so much of Hannah in the 5 year old Grace. I could have written so many of the same thoughts about my girl (although not nearly as beautifully!). It made me tear up, knowing this huge monumental day is nearing for me, when Hannah enters the "real" world, her first step without training wheels.
ReplyDeleteOh, and every single night since the day she was born, as i put her to bed I say to her, "I love you, no matter what and always."
Beautiful Beautiful Lindsey. Thank you.
Wow, what a joy to visit here today and find this lovely letter to your daughter, Lindsey. This reminds me of how powerful words are, and especially words written down. How amazing for Grace to have this written photograph of not only her five-year-old self, but of you that day.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful letter. That first day of Kindergarten is such a milestone, especially with the eldest child (or as you put it so well, the child that made you a mother).
ReplyDeleteThank you for being part of Won't You Be My Neighbor!
Gorgeous, graceful words. I am not surprised, but I am indeed touched. A certain little girl will cherish these very words for a long time to come.
ReplyDeleteAmazing words - beautiful and, as Kelly said, words Grace will treasure when she is older.
ReplyDelete[...] [...]
ReplyDelete