My group. All done with me, but not really. |
Yesterday I had lunch with my friend Bernice, whose
last two children, fraternal twins, will leave for college in a week. We talked
about the difference in how we separate from girls and boys. To us, maybe to you, there is one.
Last
year, after Sam left for his freshman year at Elon, I grappled with the same realization I had when our oldest son left and it was this: I would never again, know him as well as I did living with him every day.
Without
the adhesive of daily interaction, and
without the intuitive advantages of shared gender, I would know him less and less. Our
communication, always real and spontaneous, might become something to locate now, like a pulse. Without
those daily glimpses into who he
was becoming, I would have to understand him again from a distance.
But
how?
If Sam and I spoke a single cross word to each other last August as the weeks closed in on his departure, I wouldn't be
able to describe the exchange. I wanted the shortening period with him at
home to be harmonious, and it was.
In
contrast, when our daughters were preparing to leave for college a few years
ago, despite our close relationships, prickly tension developed between us in
early August and didn't abate until after the drop off. Arguments were frequent and pointless, conversations were awkward, doors were closed
- hard. They separated the only way they
knew how, which was to force the break. And they did us both a favor.
But,
it was just that. Separation.
As
my friend and I discussed, it's easier to separate from a daughter, but not because we aren't close. It's easier because we are both women.
In
the work of getting daughters ready for the world, we're not just supportive, we're
coaches. We've played this game. We've done
the girl's life already, we can
commiserate with the myriad emotions of a growing up a girl.
Unique
as the events of their lives are to them - getting their ears pierced, finding
a first friend, falling in love, getting a job, being accepted at their target
college, being accepted everywhere - they are not strange or unfamiliar to
us. They are things we've done, and imagined
them doing since the days of baby teeth and first haircuts. Even if we're not alike, we have gender in common. We know
our daughters like our own voices.
We can relate to
their journey, while we can only observe a boy's. We work harder to align our expectations with who she is and
not who we were. We suppress judgement as she does things her way, not ours. We contain the urge to
warn her away from things that she must encounter to learn who she is. We allow her time that we ourselves needed to cultivate grace and wisdom. We trust. We believe. We know. We've seen this movie.
It is an entirely exhausting and exhilarating work in progress that lasts for eighteen
years before it's over. But when it is, it's not goodbye. Not really.
As
chilly as things were leading up to their drop off days years ago, I knew
looking into the faces of my daughters that only one of my roles in their lives was ending. I was not hanging up my mother-of-a-daughter hat, but merely trading it for one better
suited to the mother of a woman. With their
looming freedom and growth, would come experiences we'd discuss as
women who could relate to, and possibly learn from each other.
But boys?
"We already don't talk as much," said my friend about the son she'll launch next week.
I shared two stories with her.
But boys?
"We already don't talk as much," said my friend about the son she'll launch next week.
I shared two stories with her.
Ally me with my grown up girls |
A
month ago I invited my oldest son, a journalist, over for tacos and advice. I was to appear on a radio show where I'd talk about something I'd experienced in the community.
I was nervous about appearing and knowing he'd understand this first-hand, I asked what he'd done to quell his nerves before his own radio appearances. He had some suggestions that were truly
helpful. "Can I listen?" he asked. "Oh, I don't
think you have to." I said. "Gotcha," he said, understanding completely.
Two
weeks ago, my daughter, a bride-to-be, came home for several days. We planned her reception seating, we picked up
her dress, we had pedicures. We talked about relationships, about marriage,
about learning to make decisions as a couple and defending them to others. I
asked how I could be her ally and not her critic in her coming life as a new
bride. She told me she never wanted to defend herself to me, and I nodded. It wasn't because we're both women that I understood this. I understood because I respect her as a person.
This week, our son will leave for his sophomore year at college.He will likely not be back next summer. There will be internships, chances to work and room with a friend in another city, opportunities to travel, etc. "I don't know where I'll be," he said, in complete honesty.
It feels like goodbye this time. But the takeaway after a year in the empty nest is this: It's different to mother girls over boys, and it's different to separate from each. But with the distance that follows, and only after they find their independent footing comes an opportunity to be people in their lives as they will be in ours, who understand each other. It trumps every other role we've had to date, and if we let it, it thins out the weight of goodbye.
It feels like goodbye this time. But the takeaway after a year in the empty nest is this: It's different to mother girls over boys, and it's different to separate from each. But with the distance that follows, and only after they find their independent footing comes an opportunity to be people in their lives as they will be in ours, who understand each other. It trumps every other role we've had to date, and if we let it, it thins out the weight of goodbye.
And
that, Bernice, is where the difference ends.