When my son, our youngest, began kindergarten, I sat down every morning and cried for two weeks. I felt overwhelming sorrow. I looked like an idiot. I sat in puddles of my own tears.
The time of spending my
days sitting with my son on a curbside watching trucks go by, or standing in a
sunny park pushing him on a swing, was over. He was moving on: to yellow school
buses, to new friends, to teachers who would touch his life. I was happy for
him. But, I was sad for me, and I felt a great loss.
I did not analyze or
rationalize my feelings away. And for once, I did not judge myself. I did not
run from my sadness, nor did I "get busy." I did not berate myself
with statements like, “He’s only going to Kindergarten!" or, "What’s
wrong with you?" Instead, I sat on my couch and allowed myself to
cry.
It felt good. And
somehow, I knew that if I did not cry, I would live my life as a big, fat,
fake. I would be busy. I would be productive. But, I wouldn't be real. And I
didn't want that. Instead, I wanted to keep what I had been with my son: a
woman who feels fully alive and excited at the sight of a truck passing by; a
woman who feels joy at the sight of a child swinging up to the sky. I also
wanted to be a woman who lets her son go. I could not figure out how to do any
of these things intellectually, but I did know that the only way out is
through. So, I sat down, felt my sadness, and cried.
Our society isn't big on
grief. Instead, we prefer to say things like, "Get over it!" or,
"Put your big girl panties on and deal with it!" Don't get me
wrong: I know that we do indeed need to get over it and move on. But I can't
even begin to find my big girl pants, much less get them on, if I don't first
have a good cry. Otherwise, those tears get stuffed down into my bones and they
become dead weight.
But after each cry, I
felt great. My grief disappeared and I could see the gorgeousness and rightness
of whatever was in front of me. I no longer yearned for it to be as it once
was. I loved it for whatever it had changed into.
My son will graduate
from high school next week. The time of spending my days looking forward to him
walking through our front door every afternoon is almost over
He is moving on: to college, to independence, to a life without me.
I am happy for him. And I can honestly say that I am ready. I do feel sad
at times, and I will probably have a good cry on graduation day. But most days,
I feel fully alive. Most days, I feel joy at the sight of so much change
happening right before my eyes. And most days, I know that I am a woman
who can let her son go. Because on most days, I have allowed myself to cry.
You are so right. We have to let go of the sadness or else it prevents us from becoming the people we could be. It's amazing how much release comes with acknowledging an emotion and FEELING it.
ReplyDeleteAfter a friend of mine passed away, I had a wallowing weekend. I bought comfort food, a lot of kleenx, and borrowed some really sad movies. I had a sore nose, sore eyes, and a sense of peace after the weekend was over.
Oh My! I have been right there beside you on that sofa, sopping wet and dreadful! But, you are right, we purge, and then move on!
ReplyDeleteLori
i remember the separation anxiety when each of my three boys started school -- but it wasn't their anxiety... it was mine! so totally relate!
ReplyDelete