When Allie Left Home
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By Sandi Kahn Shelton ¡ö¼ÃÄϽ¾üѧԺ
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My daughter Allie is leaving for college in a week.
Her room is cluttered with shopping bags filled with blankets, towels,
jeans, sweaters.
She won't talk about going.
I say, "I'm going to miss you,Ó and she gives me
one of her looks and leaves the room. Another time I say, in a voice
so friendly it surprises even me: "Do you think you'll take your posters
and pictures with you, or will you get new ones at college?Ó
She answers,
her voice filled with annoyance, "How should I know?Ó
My daughter is
off with friends most of the time. Yesterday was the last day she'd
have until Christmas with her friend Katharine, whom she's known since
kindergarten. Soon, it will be her last day with Sarah, Claire, Heather
... and then it will be her last day with me.
My friend Karen told me, "The August before I left
for college, I screamed at my mother the whole month. Be prepared."
I stand in the kitchen, watching Allie make a glass
of iced tea. Her face, once so open and trusting, is closed to me. I
struggle to think of something to say to her, something meaningful and
warm. I want her to know I'm excited about the college she has chosen,
that I know the adventure of her life is just starting and that I am
proud of her. But the look on her face is so mad that I think she might
slug me if I open my mouth.
One night¡ªafter a long period of silence between
us¡ª I asked what I might have done or said to make her angry with me.
She sighed and said, "Mom, you haven't done anything. It's fine." It
is fine¡ªjust distant.
Somehow in the past we had always found some way
to connect. When Allie was a toddler, I would go to the day-care center
after work.1 I'd find a quiet spot and she
would nurse ¡ª our eyes locked together, reconnecting with each other.2
In middle school, when other mothers were already
lamenting the estrangement they felt with their adolescent daughters,
I hit upon a solution: rescue raids.3 I would
show up occasionally at school, sign her out of class and take her somewhere¡ªout
to lunch, to the movies, once for a long walk on the beach. It may sound
irresponsible, but it kept us close when other mothers and daughters
were floundering.4 We talked about everything
on those outings¡ªoutings we kept secret from family and friends.
When she started high school, I'd get up with her
in the morning to make her a sandwich for lunch, and we'd silently drink
a cup of tea together before the 6:40 bus came.
A couple of times during her senior year I went
into her room at night, the light off, but before she went to sleep.
I'd sit on the edge of her bed, and she'd tell me about problems: a
teacher who lowered her grade because she was too shy to talk in class,
a boy who teased her, a friend who had started smoking. Her voice, coming
out of the darkness, was young and questioning.
A few days later I'd hear her on the phone, repeating
some of the things I had said, things she had adopted for her own.
But now we are having two kinds of partings. I
want the romanticized version, where we go to lunch and lean across
the table and say how much we will miss each other. I want smiles through
tears, bittersweet moments of reminiscence and the chance to offer some
last bits of wisdom.5
But as she prepares to depart, Allie's feelings
have gone underground.6 When I reach to touch
her arm, she pulls away. She turns down every invitation I extend.7
She lies on her bed, reading Emily Dickinson8
until I say I have always loved Emily Dickinson, and then she closes
the book.
Some say the tighter your bond with your child,
the greater her need to break away, to establish her own identity in
the world.9 The more it will hurt, they say.
A friend of mine who went through a difficult time with her daughter
but now has become close to her again, tells me, "Your daughter will
be back to you."
"I don't know," I say. I sometimes feel so angry
that I want to go over and shake Allie. I want to say: "Talk to me¡ªor
you're grounded!"10 I feel myself wanting to
say that most horrible of all mother phrases: "Think of everything I've
done for you."
Ó
Late one night, as I'm getting ready for bed,
she comes to the bathroom door and watches me brush my teeth. For a
moment, I think I must be brushing my teeth in a way she doesn't approve
of. But then she says, "I want to read you something.Ó It's a pamphlet
from her college. "These are tips11 for parents.Ó
I
watch her face as she reads the advice aloud: Ò "Don't ask your child
if she is homesick,'it says. 'She might feel bad the first few weeks,
but don't let it worry you. This is a natural time of transition. Write
her letters and call her a lot. Send a package of goodies ...'"12
Her voice breaks, and she comes over to me and
buries her head in my shoulder. I stroke her hair, lightly, afraid she'll
bolt if I say a word.13 We stand there together
for long moments, swaying. Reconnecting.
I know it will be hard again. It's likely there
will be a fight about something. But I am grateful to be standing in
here at midnight, both of us tired and sad, toothpaste smeared on my
chin, holding tight to¡ªwhile also letting go of¡ªmy daughter who is trying
to say good-bye.14
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