Thursday, March 26, 2015

field trip

Day 26 of the Slice of Life challenge.

Daughter-the-eldest had a field trip today. 
Two buses going to the same place.
3 hours one way.
All her friends on the other bus.  
They are all together.
She is alone.

She is 12.  Middle School.  Hard years. 
Figuring out who she is. Trying to find her place, her tribe.

I picked her up just now.  
I saw her birthday twin & best friend since the age of 3 
Walking with someone else. 
They shared a seat today on the other bus
While my kid sat alone in a seat all by herself.

How was the trip? I asked when she got in the car.
Boring. she said.
I sat by myself. 
I tried to text them on the bus
None of them texted back.

She doesn't tear up
But I do.
I try not to let her see.

She tells me that yesterday morning
When she got to school 
She walked to their table 
And said hello
The other girls didn't say hello back.

It has begun, I see.
The inevitable shift that happens in middle school.
I lived it myself
I taught through it for years

But this is my kid
And she is hurting
And I want to fix it
But I can't.

She is not a dainty darling
She is larger-than-life
Brimming with brilliance
And loud-and-proud
And funny as all get-out 
And strong-willed
And courageous
Traits that are not always prized in middle school 
By friends or teachers either, if I am truthful.
I know this from experience
I was that kid, too.

It took me a long time 
to truly appreciate my gifts
instead of letting comparison steal my joy
I had hoped (foolishly, I know) she would not 
Have to live it herself
But we all do
Don't we?

5 comments:

  1. Oh, I hurt for her! We have all experienced it, and grown through it. But it hurts. Your next to last stanza is brilliant, and your daughter sounds brilliant, too!!!

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  2. Oh, I hurt for her! We have all experienced it, and grown through it. But it hurts. Your next to last stanza is brilliant, and your daughter sounds brilliant, too!!!

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  3. thank you. it is so hard! I appreciate your kind words!

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  4. Your heart-wrenching poem takes me straight back to those moments I experienced in middle school. I wouldn't go back for anything! Stay strong and know she will come through this stronger and more confident than ever; but oh how it hurts when you're in the middle of it all.

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  5. Growing up is not easy. I feel for your daughter. I hope she can find her passion. I love your phrase, let comparison steal my joy. That is the hardest thing for me to battle. I can always see another who looks more professional, speaks with more grace, or writes more creatively. I know I should not compare, but it takes lots of effort.

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