Stop-Time
It was not the night I would have chosen to watch home movies of the girls. But Suzanne is here, and she is in a cataloging state of mind. So I found an excuse to go downstairs, to walk by the TV, and once I started watching I couldn’t stop. For there they were again — our grown-up girls as babies and toddlers, dancing and playing and learning to walk.
Here you are, you three, I wanted to say. Where have you been hiding? This is the way you’re supposed to be, giggling and singing and stirring soap suds in the sink. It’s not time for you to graduate from college, to drive to the beach, to have your first job.
It was all I could do to sit still and watch their chubby arms reaching out as they took their first steps into the world. I want to be there all over again for them, be there in a way that was so much easier than the way I must be there for them now.
2 thoughts on “Stop-Time”
I've been in a reflective mood too- my younger son just turned 14 yesterday. He's taller than me now, and I can see the manly shape his body is turning toward. Thank goodness for babies in the neighborhood who still let me schnoogle their necks and kiss their chubby cheeks!
Our second-borns have birthdays only a few days apart. Today is my middle child's–she's 20. My, that seems young. I remember when it seemed old!