Sunday, June 5, 2011

Commencement Day

Today I watched my youngest child receive her high school diploma. Virtually anonymous in a sea of bright red caps and gowns, I only saw her face when she was walking across the stage to accept her diploma and when she carefully maneuvered back down the stairs in her high heels for the walk back to her seat.
Melissa's face, like the faces of her classmates, reflected joy, relief and excitement: It's over! We did it!
I imagine that sentiment was echoing in the minds of every parent, as well. And, like the graduates, our joy was tempered by a throat-tightening recognition that an era was ending. Our children are free of our sheltering/smothering oversight. We are free from the mantle of vigilance and daily responsibility we've worn since the day we became parents.
I am a veteran of high school graduations, having seen my older daughter and son collect their diplomas seven and five years ago. But seeing my youngest, the baby of our family, reach that milestone, tugs a little harder at the heartstrings. Even Melissa's big sister and brother are sentimental over it.
Yes, it's sentimental. And also, for me, surreal.
For the first time in 25 years, I will not be the mother of a public school student. No more permission slips to sign, no more lunch boxes to pack, no more sitting in a crowded, stuffy auditorium for an hour and a half to see my kid sing or play an instrument for 12 minutes.
Am I going to miss all that? I imagine so. But being a person who's allergic to "have-to's," it's also going to be a relief. My days are going to be my own, with only myself to consider.
At times like this it's hard for me to do what my recovery program advises: live one day at a time.
Each of my children's graduations have opened up my overpacked closet of memories, and for every happy one there's a prickly remembrance of the times I let my children down, the times I wish I'd been better to them, better for them. That chapter of their lives is over, though, and all I can do is acknowledge the times I was hurtful and be grateful for the good times, and for the fact that, despite a far less than charmed childhood, each of them - Jessica, Daniel and Melissa - has grown into an openhearted, intelligent, loving young adult.
My recovery program also promises that, in time, I will not regret the past nor wish to shut the door on it. I don't think that's possible for a parent. But if I can't not regret the past, I can most certainly be grateful for the gift of the present, for a program that's given me sobriety, the ability to make amends to my kids for the times I failed them, and a heart full of gratitude and pride for each of them, including my newly minted graduate.

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