18 Years: Our One Shot at Parenting

My insides are humming. The low-grade buzz of bewilderment mixed with nerves and how did we get here? In my head, a gaping space. Hollowness. I don’t remember.

So I freeze like a statue in the kitchen while the bread toasts. Memories present themselves for inspection.

Slowly at first.

18 years of parenting

Mom remembers all the things about her son’s 18 years

Then, all at once, these details crowd my brain:

The Velveteen Rabbit Tea and a Gold Rush Musical. We the People. One mission project. Countless tears shed over a Jackie Robinson speech. I’ll never be able to memorize it, he sobbed until he memorized it.

The slap of shoe against black top on his first day of kindergarten. A parade of classrooms and patient teachers. Folders checked. Reading logs signed. Lunches. Snacks. Harry Potter books.

After school we’d walk together to the car, his little sister there too, happy to be next to him and one year behind.

They talked and talked (and talked) over each other. Sometimes I listened. Sometimes I tuned out.

He tried soccer, basketball, baseball, guitar, swim lessons. Then, finally, karate.
We played Apples to Apples and Who Knew and Memory and some firefighter rescue game (the name of which I can’t remember) and CLUE and Monopoly.

Doesn’t everyone play Monopoly?

He watched Nickelodeon and The Disney Channel when his homework was done. I tried not to worry too much about charting screen time.

In middle school, he began each morning ready to take on the day with his whole heart. Wear green for Spirit Day? YES! My boy was all in. Green socks. Green shirt. Green hat. Something green wrapped around his arms (I can’t remember what). As he bounced down the street (full of spirit!), I worried he’d be embarrassed.

He was too thrilled to be embarrassed. At least not much.

The years passed without teen-movie stereotypes of extreme awkwardness, rebellion, or popularity. I won no trophies for Volunteer of the Year and he wasn’t valedictorian or the MVP of any team. We were generally ordinary and that was okay.

It still is. Okay.

We ate dinner together when our schedules allowed, and I fixed him breakfast every morning of his life until he decided (recently) that eggs at six o’clock no longer appealed. He leaves for school at 6:30 and when he goes to lunch afterward with his friends then straight to his job delivering pizzas, I sometimes don’t see him for 24 hours.

A hello in the morning, then nothing until the next morning.

Have a great day. Be safe. I love you.

He says I love you back every time. This means more to me than I have words for.

On his last day of school, he ambles down the stairs and I ask him to take a picture with me (please!). He obliges as I knew he would. This quick kiss and a long hug.

Soon he’ll be in Oregon for college and I’ll be here with his dad and his sister, one year behind him.

Have a great day. Be safe. I love you.

After he leaves, I search my heart for what we could’ve done differently, what I could’ve done better. 18 years.

A blur of joy and pain and smiles and frustration that fill the individual moments of a childhood.

This was our one shot at it. That’s all you get.

One shot.

As a parent, you know this, but somehow while you’re checking the clock, wishing the witching-hour away, you forget.

No. That’s not right. I didn’t forget. I just got through each day one at a time until I’d gotten through all the days.

In hindsight, most hard stuff softens around the edges. What’s left (for me) is this quiet certainty: we had a good run.

The minutes drag, but the years fly. Don’t blink. Life is short. They grow up so quickly.

Despite these warnings (and they’re everywhere, all the time) you can’t feel the truth of it until you’re looking backward, moving away from what was. People tell you having a child is a love like no other. You try to imagine, but it doesn’t live in your bones until it’s already happened to you.

To us.

Our time together isn’t over. There will be the next phase and the next one and the next.
But this time—the stretch of years where he was my son under this roof, and I got to be his only mother—we’ve reached the end.

And the beginning of something else.

You and I, Jack.

We had a good run.

Related:

Knowing My Sons a Little Less 

High School Graduation: 15 Things Moms Need to Know Now 

About Julie Gardner

Julie C. Gardner is a former high school English teacher who traded in her classroom for a writing nook. The author of Letters for Scarlet and its prequel Guest List, Julie lives in Southern California with her husband, two children, and three dogs. To learn more about Julie, visit her website, juliecgardner.com and subscribe to her newsletter; follow her at Amazon: Julie C. Gardner, on Twitter: @juliecgardner, at Facebook: Julie C. Gardner Author, and on Instagram: Julie C. Gardner.

Read more posts by Julie

Don't miss out!
Want more like this? Get updates about parenting teens and young adults straight to your inbox.