CLICK HERE FOR THOUSANDS OF FREE BLOGGER TEMPLATES »

Monday, May 30, 2016

Era of the Surreal

Surreal is as close a word as can be used to describe life currently.  At a point which seems not very long ago, my life was about raising kids,  and it seemed as though those days would last forever; in a good way most of the time…really, honestly.  Well, some days it may have seemed like an eternity in a not so great place, but by and large…good!  I was so fortunate to be home when my kids were growing up, only entering the workforce in recent years.  Even then, the work I have done has kept me close to them, in proximity if nothing else.  The light of the childrearing tunnel has been a distant pinpoint for many years.  One I have not envisaged apparently for a long while. So this week when I dared look up, and around, and forward, I realized that the light has become very large, glaring even, while I hurtle to the conclusion of these parenting days.
I looked up this week because #4, Elsa, the fourth and last daughter, is graduating from high school.  This in and of itself has its own out of body experience tied to it.  She is an anomaly within our fairly bright and intelligent family, standing out as a super achiever, graduating 2nd in her class of over 300!  This is her shining hour to be sure.  She has embraced all of her years of schooling with an enthusiasm and fervor which has been remarkable to watch.  While her siblings all enjoyed their high school years, Elsa has experienced every aspect of high school possible to its fullest extent, most of the time with her bosom chum Libby alongside her!  AP classes, Student Council, Class Vice President, theater, vocal music, lacrosse, NHS, French Club, Book Club, community service projects, Homecoming dances, court, Sadies, Prom; there are pictures to mark her investment and involvement in all of these things and more!  Just this morning she was honored at a local business club as the Rotary Student of the Month, and it was there that I started to feel overwhelmed with pride in the person she has grown to be.  This 4th daughter, who I worried would always be growing in the shadow of three older sisters, has clearly not been shadowed by anyone. She has grown, bloomed and flourished while the rest of us have watched her with astonishment and a bit of quizzical wonder through the process.   She will graduate with many honors next week,  and in the fall move across the country to attend college and begin a different journey away from me.  Away from the home where I thought I would be raising her (and her siblings)  for what seemed like so many more years.
Surreal is the realization that this very home, which has been seeping estrogen for so many years, will, for the first time, harbor a more balanced measure of estrogen and testosterone. I have always viewed myself as a mother of girls….and The Boy.  This house is, in many ways, “a girl house,” by color scheme and the feminine paraphernalia that litters every room; e.g. make-up, foundation garments, shoes, scarves, sundry accessories, feminine products, and on and on the list goes.  All this does not preclude signs of the lone male cub here, to be sure, there are many.  Balls for one.  There are balls everywhere.  In the house, in the yard, in the garage, in the trees, and of course the obvious set, which thankfully we do not see but I would be remiss to not acknowledge their existence,  just sayin’.  The sounds in the house are distinctly The Boys.  Train horns. Vines.  YouTube videos.  Episode after  episode of South Park and other such nonsensical shows.  Plates of dried food, and wrappers from said items, scattered like so much trash in an alley.  There are signs. 

Over the next three years I wonder how the estrogen seeping, girl house will evolve.  I wonder if the whiffs of estrogen that will be left in the wake of the last daughter leaving will linger in corners, swirling at our feet on days The Boy and I are missing The Sisters.  I wonder if we will miss them with an ache, like amputees miss their limbs, or if the years of estrogen will be like a fading memory, pushed out by all the new balance of hormonal ascendancy.   I wonder how quickly these last three years of parenting will fly by.  Actually, I think I know the answer to that.  The last 26 have hurtled by without my realizing the speed at which they were passing.  I want to slow things down.  I want these next years to move like a zephyr, softly and gently.  I want to pump the brakes and relish these last years, much like I cherished the first years.  Soaking up the moments, the small things of everyday life.  Even when I know that many of those small, everyday things will not be centered on the girl-centric things of the earlier years. Fully understanding and embracing that these last years of small, everyday things will likely include Vines, and trains, and YouTube and of course, balls.