If you see me today, there’s a good chance I will be crying. It’s okay, I’m fine. It’s just that my firstborn turns 18 today.
I’m not sad about it. What would be the point in that? Being sad won’t make her be a baby again, and I don’t think I’d want her to be anyway. Don’t get me wrong: she was an awesome baby. But I sort of totally love the big person she is even more than I liked the baby.
No, the tears come from a deep emotional response to the reality that I* made an adult. She made it, she survived, in spite of no shortage of fuck-ups on my part as her mother. Shit, she’s reading this, I probably shouldn’t say fuck-ups. Wait, she’s an adult now, it’s all good.
Let me take you back for a minute.
I went into labor around 6 PM on June 1, 1998, and I remember being kind of excited (amidst many other emotions) that it looked like the baby would be born on its due date, June 2.
Nope. She arrived at five minutes past midnight on June 3, and that—the simple act of being born that way—would establish a few key attributes about our Kenzie girl:
- She’s often late (I might be partly to blame for that, both genetically and practically).
- She does things on her own terms.
Kenzie has always been an old soul. From the time she was very young, she has had a wisdom that belies her chronological age. She would gravitate toward adults before other kids, carry on thoughtful conversations with no hesitation, and she has always seemed miles apart from the immaturity that many of her peers have lingered in over the years.
Make no mistake, however; she is a goofball through and through. But in some ways, I think even that—the undaunted embrace of her own silliness/nerdiness/awkwardness— is a testament to her maturity; she approaches life’s interactions with the kind of “I don’t really care what anyone thinks” attitude that some people twice her age (*cough, ME*) still struggle to adopt. Her confidence astonishes me, in the best possible ways.
Kenzie is fiercely loyal and exceedingly thoughtful. She puts others before herself on a near-daily basis. Parents will get this: did you ever have those moments, when your kids were very small, when you’d stub your toe or hit your head or something, and your little one would toddle over to you, aware of your pain, and give you a kiss, maybe tell you, “It’s okay, Mommy.” That’s Kenzie with everyone she knows, still, to this day. The past couple of years have been pretty tough on our family unit, as we continue to adapt to our new “normal,” and there have been times when I’ve broken down. To have my teenage daughter, who has every right to be wrapped up in her own dramatic world (I acknowledge and respect wholeheartedly that a teenager’s world IS full of drama), put her arms around me and tell me, “It’s okay, Mom”—there’s no describing it. How in the world did I earn the blessing of my children?
[I’m totally bawling right now, if anyone is keeping track…]
Kenzie’s friends mean everything to her. She gives gifts for no reason other than to show she cares. She listens to other people’s litanies of ways that life has knocked them down, even on days when she herself feels that life pitilessly has her against the ropes too. She is a profoundly better sister to her little sister than I was to any of my siblings (sorry, y’all), protective and nurturing of Caitlin, and yes, tough when she needs to be. It’s not to say that Kenzie doesn’t ever have fights with her friends or family. She is still human, after all. But even through those, she speaks her mind and doesn’t back down from her convictions and says she’s sorry when sorry is called for.
Being Kenzie’s mom has been mostly wonderful. She is smart and so funny and seeing her tell a story about something she’s excited about is one of the most joyful things you can witness.
Of course we’ve gone through valleys with the peaks (human, remember?), but even during the worst times that I can remember over the last 18 years, the difficulty for me, as her parent, was that she was hurt or angry or struggling with the things in her own head, and I couldn’t get in there far enough to fix them. She’s always been like that, introspective. I remember when she was going through a particularly rough patch around third or fourth grade, one night she told me, “I just feel sad and I don’t know why.” It broke my heart, for obvious reasons, but it also struck me what a very wise yet simple feeling that was for a child to identify and communicate. It was around that time that I really invested myself into practicing empathy, a life trait that I work really hard to instill in my kids whenever I can: making the effort to, if not understand, at least recognize the pain that sometimes doesn’t have a name, in yourself or in others. There are some thing that we won’t be able to fix, not always right away, anyway. But if we can learn to call those things out and acknowledge that we “don’t know why,” they become less scary. My daughter taught me that.
People who have known me for a long time know that my parenting philosophy is this: I strive not to screw my kids up too much, I want to screw them up just enough. I say it half-jokingly, and largely as a way to forgive my maternal shortcomings with a little levity, but I do think it holds some truth. We have to prepare our kids for the world, a world where we won’t be able to protect them all the time. Many years ago, I heard parenthood described in another, similar way that really resonated with me: our goal as parents shouldn’t be to raise good kids, it should be to raise good adults. That’s what they’re going to be for the majority of their lives, so that’s where the focus should be. Well I don’t know how it happened, and I would never dream of claiming all—or even most—of the credit, but I look at Kenzie today, and I’ll be damned. She’s a pretty good adult. Looks like we screwed her up just right.
So I wish you the happiest of birthdays, Little Girl. I am amazed by you, so fucking proud of you, I love you bigger than the universe, and I can’t wait to see what’s to come for you. Thank you for making me a mom and then teaching me how to be one.
(*I don’t want to close this post without throwing heaps of praise, thanks, and crisp high-fives to Scott. Scotty, you are a remarkable father, rightly adored by your daughters, and I am fortunate to have you as my co-pilot on this parenting journey.)