End of the innocence. Mine. Bus pass pictures taken on the first day of school grade 7 to 11 - the high school years in Quebec.
I came in still a child having been in elementary school just two months before. It appears I didn't change too much too fast that until grade 10 when it looks like I might have had a wee puff before the picture was taken and then who knows what's going on in the last picture ... Cynical? Menstrual? Sad it's my last year on the kiddie ride of life? Thrilled that it is?
If the change in my signature is any indication I was a different girl every year. But, I didn't give my parents as rough a ride as some who know me may think. Those years were good - for the most part - and I was a still a virgin for another 6 months after that last picture was taken.
I had a few part time jobs, lots of friends, enjoyed my tokes but never bothered with anything harder, and while there was heartache and confusion the only thing that really stands out is the nickname I had to live with almost all the way through: Flatsy Patsy. No boobs, that was my lot. Could have been worse for sure.
But that was back then. When the phone was attached to the wall, pot grew out of the ground and porn wasn't something we'd see for another decade. Divorce was rare, moms didn't work and no one worried about bad men in panel vans.
We have a daughter and she is changing, she still has another two years of elementary school. But those two years will be gone in a blink of an eye and with it all the stuff of childhood.
But at the same time she is every bit a kid and she still believes, wholeheartedly, in fairies. I am loathe to have these remaining innocent years sullied with discussions about the less magical side of life. We make her aware without giving her details, frankly and I am in no mood to have to venture forth. I want to go back. I want to go back far enough to stuff her back into my womb. Forever.
Can't. So instead we discuss danger in tender terms and endeavour to help her - and her younger brother - develop the skills they need to ease into the world that awaits. Try to take it one step at time while their environment relentlessly pulls them in at a rate that we can barely clock.
I am not looking forward to this next decade of parenting.
These first ten years? Loved all of ‘em. I remember sleepless nights and puke fests thinking; “One day I will long for this kind of soothable, washable problem.” And here we are getting close to them.
Heart break, hormones, cyber safety, text anxiety, smelly pits and acne angst is The Dark Woods around the corner and my daughter, though still frolicking in the Enchanted Forest, has one toe out on the troll bridge. Once she crosses over she’ll never get back to fairyland.
And all the Good Queen power I have had at my fingertips to repair and calm, will be gone, as will my council when I unwittingly morph into her pathetic court jester, my very existence enough to embarrass and shame her into silence and my fix-it-with-a-kiss spells will only make things worse where once they had the magic of Merlin.
Someone pass the sleeping potion and wake me when she's 20.
First...who saves bus passes? By the end of the school year mine was so beat up that the mere act of removing it from my pocket without it disintegrating was a victory.
ReplyDeleteMy son is a little older than your daughter. He's now 16. We went through all of the things that you're going through (with a Y chromosome instead of an X). We made sure he was the last one of his friends to have a gameboy/xbox/etc., no PG movies, we monitored and limited his tv viewing. We let him try every sport and never pushed him into any. We watched (and wept) as he sat on the sidelines not wanting to join the other boys playing baseball or lacrosse or whatever.
We loved the innocence but feared for the day that we wouldn't be nearby to help him out. Would he be ok? Would he have friends? Would he make the right choices? Would he be bullied? Or worse...Would he be a bully?
One day we were discussing this with a (very wise)friend and she said something that we never forgot. "They come pre-wired" she said "all you can do is protect them."
So just keep protecting her Patti, you've done everything else you can. Trust your instincts. She'll be just fine. (I've spoken to her...she's smarter than most of the adults I know). You (and she) will get through this age. It's sometimes painful, but you don't want to miss it. Tell her to save her bus passes and she might turn out as perfect as her Mom.
We still have a few years to go, but everything has worked out fine with our son. We're exceptionally proud of the young man he's become. My wife found a box of condoms in his drawer the other day and was horrified to discover one was missing ( I comforted her by telling her that sometimes boys his age practice with them a bit first before using them in "game situations"). For all I know, he could be on his third box ( I practiced a lot too).
I know who this is, the opening paragraph gave it away. :-)
DeleteI take great comfort in your comments about your success Anonymous and I appreciate the kind words you sent our way. Having spoken to you on the phone now and enjoyed it she often asks about you. Happy father's day to one of the best at it, of this I have no doubt.
P
Hi Patti, I have a feeling it will be another great 10 years as they look like good kids. Will they cause you some stress? YES but there are many good things too when they are older. First of all, they can hang out on their own so you don't have to hire a babysitter anymore or rush home from somewhere to ensure they are not alone, easier to travel, can have some type of conversation (sometimes it is one-sided though), make you breakfast (ok so that was just a treat for Mother's Day but hopefully it will happen again), etc. I don't want to spoil it and tell you everyhing! Take care and look forward to different experiences with your kids.
ReplyDeleteHi Renee,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the mom-who-has-gone-before-me words of wisdom, they are the best kind. If stress comes with breakfast bed even once a year then I'm in. My concern is restraining myself from throttling the kids in their midst, man there are some dunderheads in the mix. Now I know how my mom felt when I hung out with the troublemakers - and dated some!
P