Yesterday my older child turned seventeen. It’s unbelievable to me. I know kids getting older is most likely mind-boggling to all, or at least most, parents. You remember the day they were born; you look at pictures from when they were tiny; you share stories of the funny things they did and said. And then you look at the near-adult sitting next to you (in my case, the one who agreed to wear flats to dinner so that I could wear my three-inch platforms and be almost as tall as them) and your mind does flip-flops. Or at least mine did.

Then I look even further and wonder, how did I ever manage to have a child and to parent a child anyway?  To have a teenager, a teenager who still likes me and likes to be with me? We’d spent a good part of the day together – watching my son’s little league game, shopping for graduation presents for their friends – and had enjoyed each other’s company. Which is more surprising, that I enjoyed theirs or that they enjoyed mine? We browsed our favorite local store and, when asked a simple question by the store owner, both offered the same answer at the same time in the same cadence – from opposite sides of the store. How did I get this lucky?

When I was seventeen it was different. It was way different for me. I was never really close to Danny – are any teenage girls close to their dad? And my relationship with my mother was strained at best. I was pulling away from her and from the Church. I was just discovering life on the “outside” as something enticing and welcoming. I was consumed with guilt and confusion as I questioned my “old” life and excitement as I waded into my “new.” Is that normal teenage angst? Has my child walked their own path of confusion and excitement? Has it been similar for them, or only different?

I’ve come up with parenting skills, ideas, and rules along the way. Sometimes I’ve devoured how-to books and often I’ve blundered along as best I could on my own. I’m certain I’ve made mistakes, many mistakes. But my baby child is seventeen, and they like me. Really like me. And I like them. Sure they’d rather be with their friends – which is as it should be – but they also like to hang out with me. They enjoy my company and think (at times) that they wants to be just like me. If only they knew.

I look at them in amazement – that they’re seventeen. I look at us in amazement – that we’re close. I look at myself in amazement – that I’ve managed to parent with my whole heart and give more than I ever knew I had. It is such a gift.

Happy Birthday baby!

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