As I write this post, my daughter is
hanging out at a boy’s house. She is 13; so is he. His parents are there, as
are other friends.
But still. I want the boy gone.
Goodbye.
I’m just not ready. I have to be
ready, but I’m not. I need to father a teenager, not a child. And I don’t get a
script. Parents never do, especially for the oldest.
It seems like a heartbeat ago, we
were dancing in the living room to Johnny Cash’s “Ring of Fire,” me swinging
her in circles while she giggled and called for more. It feels like yesterday we
were reading Fancy Nancy picture
books together, her eyes beginning to recognize words and sentences as we
turned the pages. It seems like last year she’d go to bed asking me to tell her
a story, and I’d regale her with tales of my childhood, while she lay in the
glow of a nightlight, listening intently.
Now she takes her shower at nine,
says a quick goodnight, sets the alarm on her iPhone, and goes to sleep. She wakes
up and checks her Instagram and Snapchat, then dresses in her American Eagle
finest, before munching on a quick bowl of cereal and heading off to the
hallways of middle school.
We butt heads pretty often these
days. I tell her that I think she needs to broaden her friend base. I take away
her phone when the device is taking place of the actual world. I encourage her
to step away from the texts and Facetimes to go for walks and read books. She
tells me to stop, stop, stop it, Dad.
Did I mention the part about no
script? Yes, I think I did.
I know that if I push too hard, I’ll
lose her. I also know that there are far worse things than a 13-year-old who needs
to learn a few lessons about friendships and boys and the allure of devices.
Much better that she learn this stuff now than later on in her teen years. But
when you want to get the parenting stuff right, it’s hard to know when to pull
back and when to go all-out. So, with my wife’s guidance, we pick our battles.
Talking back to us? No way, Jose. Watching Dancing
with the Stars after you’ve finished your homework, in lieu of reading? OK,
your choice tonight.
Asking if you can hang out at the
boy’s house? Yeah, I didn’t make the call on that one, as you can imagine. But
she’s there, and she’ll be home soon, and I’m sure she’s having fun.
It’s getting harder to remember this
as I climb into my 40s, but I was actually 13 once myself. And I can remember
hanging out in basements with girls, playing “Spin the Bottle” while the more
daring kids tried “Seven Minutes in Heaven.” That’s not happening tonight, and
my daughter has so much of her innocence intact. But somehow I navigated the
thrills and terrors of adolescence and came out in one piece. Why can’t I
expect that she’ll do the same?
Because she will, and my wife and I
will be there for her every step of the way. But right now, I have to face the
reality: I am parenting a teenager now. It’s a different Ring of Fire than the
one we danced to all those years ago. But as I see the hormonal sparks and the flames
of independence alight in our house, I need to know which fires must be
extinguished, and which ones have to burn out on their own.
Nothing is easy about this. But it
is, in fact, what I signed up for. This is my daughter, my oldest child, my
pride and joy. I don’t know the script, but I think there’s a lot in there
about patience and love.
And boys.
2 comments:
As the fellow parent of a 13-year-old, I so enjoyed reading this, Warren. Thank you for writing it. Someday your girl will be dancing in your arms again--no one holds a candle to Daddy. :) --Gail
Warren, this was a very heartfelt post. Although I am not a parent, I always viewed my students as my 'kids'. And I always wondered if I was doing the right thing...teaching them the right way...giving them the proper encouragement. I would drive myself crazy feeling like I wasn't doing 'enough' to help them in school and in life. I finally realized that, in the end, the only thing that really mattered was the knowledge of where my heart was. And it was always wanting to do what was best for the kids (even though at times, being human, I didn't succeed). I think parenting is the same. You have to trust that whatever you have done in raising your children, was done with love and with the best intentions. Also know that your kids will make mistakes, they will make decisions you don't like, but one day (maybe not now) they will realize that everything you did was done with love. I can assure you, from having taught your daughter, that you have raised her well.
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