"When I was a child, I spake as a child and now it is time to put away childish things." Or is it? Perhaps life is a bell curve and I'm over the hump and on the way back down to old age when I can become child-like again shedding responsibilities like daisy petals.
"he loves me, he loves me not"
He loves me but do I love him?
How many people can we love in a lifetime?
I have a son. " He loves me, he loves me not."
He loves me, he needs me not. Yet I need him.
I miss him - that little boy who told me stories of Batman and Calvin and Hobbes and begged me not to go to work - and now he comes home and doesn't stay and doesn't speak. A good conversation for him is teasing. It has its own kind of intimacy but it has barriers too.
And yet he lives - he grew up - they don't all - some are missing.
As long as he lives there is hope for re-acquaintance - for an adult conversation for connection.
Old age is a privilege. We don't all get to grow old. My father taught me that. Every day over 70 years was a gift for him. He died well my Dad, not so my mother . She lives on and knows not why. Every day a burden, a woe is me, a glass not full day.
I wrote her a mother's day card this morning. "you are in my heart and in my mind." A lovely sentiment it would seem. It is true she is in my heart and mind but often not in a good way.
I am a mother and I have a mother and I should feel blessed and usually I do.
I have a son and a daughter and both have reached their 20's. My college friend who wanted a child so badly she adopted one lost her son when he was barely 20 years old. My son's roommate died in his sleep in their dorm room in April. Mother's day will be sad and poignant for their mothers.
But we have our children for as long as we have them and to have them at all is a gift.
"he loves me, he loves me not"
He loves me but do I love him?
How many people can we love in a lifetime?
I have a son. " He loves me, he loves me not."
He loves me, he needs me not. Yet I need him.
I miss him - that little boy who told me stories of Batman and Calvin and Hobbes and begged me not to go to work - and now he comes home and doesn't stay and doesn't speak. A good conversation for him is teasing. It has its own kind of intimacy but it has barriers too.
And yet he lives - he grew up - they don't all - some are missing.
As long as he lives there is hope for re-acquaintance - for an adult conversation for connection.
Old age is a privilege. We don't all get to grow old. My father taught me that. Every day over 70 years was a gift for him. He died well my Dad, not so my mother . She lives on and knows not why. Every day a burden, a woe is me, a glass not full day.
I wrote her a mother's day card this morning. "you are in my heart and in my mind." A lovely sentiment it would seem. It is true she is in my heart and mind but often not in a good way.
I am a mother and I have a mother and I should feel blessed and usually I do.
I have a son and a daughter and both have reached their 20's. My college friend who wanted a child so badly she adopted one lost her son when he was barely 20 years old. My son's roommate died in his sleep in their dorm room in April. Mother's day will be sad and poignant for their mothers.
But we have our children for as long as we have them and to have them at all is a gift.