Always being there
When my older son was in pre-school, he went through a bad patch. Miserable, not quite sure why. I was getting called away from work daily to comfort him. On one such day, he and I were leaving the school. I was holding his hand, feeling guilty and pretty miserable myself, when he looked up at me and said: "Mom, you're always there for me."
Yes, I thought, and I always will be. I felt it in my soul -- a promise to him and to his little brother.
Flash forward a couple of decades, and I'm talking to this same son. He's just started a graduate program in education, and he's telling me about the children he's working with, about the importance of nurturing their creativity and viewing them as individuals. My first thought is that a world of frustration awaits him -- bureaucracy, conformity, negativity. I want to warn him. I really do. But you know, he just might become a really great teacher, the kind who shapes lives. What could be better than that?
I smile and nod -- there for him, certainly. But this time, maybe it's best to stand back and watch. And be proud.
-- Submitted by Teresa Prout