This past Friday, my baby girl turned 18. The night before that inconceivable event, I sat down to write about it, but as I combed through years of blog stories looking for pictures, I took a turn down memory lane and spent the evening reading about Allyson's life. I hope you'll take a walk with me down through the years.
The story actually begins about 21 years ago, after Bill and I decided we wanted to start a family. The 19 months it took us to conceive felt interminable. It occurs to me now what a blink in time that was compared with the dizzying passage of time these last 18 years.
We were on a Carribean cruise with Ethan when I finally learned I was pregnant--after I'd already filled the prescription for a fertility drug that I would never need to take.
I slept fitfully last night, waiting for the light, waiting to take my test. I got up around 7:30 and crept to the bathroom. I set the test stick flat on the lavatory and watched the fluid spread across the window. The reference line appeared immediately, but there was no test line at first. My stomach sank. [This experience had become far too familiar.]But then I saw a second line, very faint, begin to materialize. I strained to see it, and yes, it got darker and darker. There definitely were two lines, though the second was lighter. I sat and smiled at myself in the tiny mirror. I didn't cry.I climbed back in bed and snuggled up to Bill. I was too excited to fall back asleep, but I lay there for another hour enjoying my secret....
In the car, I didn't make it out of the parking lot before I started sobbing. I started imagining a little girl in a ruffled dress, a preteen getting her first bra, her first period, her first date as a teenager. I just let the tears fall as I contemplated the wonder of watching our girl grow into a woman.I must have been crying pretty hard because my cell phone rang, and it was Bill checking on me. He was in his truck, taking Ethan back to school while I headed to the airport for my flight to Chicago. He said, "What are you doing back there?"I laughed and admitted, "I'm crying." I assured him they were happy tears, and I asked if he was happy. He said very. I asked if he was afraid about raising a girl, and he said, "Of course." He told me to take it easy and not get into a wreck.
A Day When Allyson Felt Particularly Craftsy |
Bill: You want to do WHAT?Allyson: I wanna poke holes in the bread with the pencil.Bill: Huh? No, you can't do that to the bread.Allyson: But Mama let me do it.Bill: I'm gonna have to talk to your mom about that. That doesn't sound right.
First Day - Isn't she unbearably cute? |
Allyson's Soccer Career Begins
A couple hours [after the game], I heard her singing on the stairs. "I goed and I goed and I ran so fast! And I got two scores, two scores!" she sang."Yes, you did!" I called from the kitchen."Now cheer and clap for me," she said, and I did. "No, louder!" she ordered."You mean like I cheered at the game?""No, even louder!""It's not possible to cheer any louder than that," I explained. And I had the sore throat to prove it.
As ecstatic as she had been about starting school, her first impression wasn't all that great. "There's lots of rules," she complained. One thing she does like, though, is buying her lunch in the cafeteria....I think Allyson is enjoying school more now. She comes home saying words like "hypothesis" and telling me all about Leonardo DaVinci, whose paintings "look like music."
You can read the whole, sweet story here, if you'd like: Tales from Kindergarten
On Saturday morning, I broke the news to Allyson, who was curled up on an easy chair waiting for her breakfast. I rubbed her leg as I explained the situation. "So, if you get baptized tomorrow, Grandpa won't be able to come. And I know he would want to be part of your special day. But you've been waiting a long time. I know you'll be so disappointed if you have to wait even longer."Her chin quivered, and she heaved a shaky sigh, her eyes downcast."What do you think we should do, sweetie?"Her voice was barely audible. "I think... we should wait... as long as it takes for Grandpa to be there.""I think that's the best choice. Grandpa will be glad." I rubbed her back. "Now you'd better eat your breakfast and get ready for soccer.""Will you hold me?""You want me to carry you to the table?""No, I want you to hold me."I pulled her onto my lap, and she wrapped her legs around my waist and buried her face in my neck. I squeezed her so close that I felt her rapid heartbeat against my chest. We swayed back and forth as I stroked her hair. I felt almost guilty to be enjoying her so much when she was hurting. Do you think that's how God feels when we go to him with our hurts?
With My Parents, 2014 |
Middle School
Freshman Year |
License to Drive
Allyson still works for the same company, having worked her way up to a monitor, and then a manager, and finally a lifeguard instructor. I was so proud of her for taking a risk on the instructor training even though she knew that many other guards had failed the rigorous physical and written tests required by the Red Cross. I wasn't surprised when she passed with flying colors and was commended for her ability to do "teachbacks" of the many skills.
On the Job |
I am proud of Allyson for being smart and capable and working hard and doing all the things that she does "right." I am proud of her for persevering when life gets tough. But I am most proud because she is an amazing human being. She is generous, kind, and compassionate. I believe that she will use the gifts God gave her to make an impact on this world, and that will be a beautiful thing to behold.
In Her First-Grade Classroom |
May 28th |
With Her Boyfriend, Tanner |
Allyson's Journey Continues
2 comments:
Love you mama, this brought tears of nostalgia to my eyes (:
Aww, I'm so glad, sweetheart!
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