January - February 2009 | Journeys


All Things Girl - Created by Women, For Women

The Blog

December 7th, 2007

Bitter-sweet memories of my child

bitter-sweet-memories-of-my-child

Early every Saturday morning, when my daughter was little, she would come into my bedroom and climb under my blankets with me.  We would snooze, chat, kiss and cuddle until I thought it was time to get-up and start the day and then I would tickle her until she begged me to stop.  It was our ritual.  Our special bonding time.  As she got older it happened less and less frequently, until it stopped altogether.  Now, at 14, she isn’t interested in cuddling her mum or being tickled or kissed.  Looking back at those times I wish I had known that final time, that it would be the last time.  I would have paid more attention to every detail, let it last a little longer, enjoyed it for the moment that it was.

 Now as she moves into adulthood, I know that this transition is what I have been working toward since the day she was born.  It has been my job to help her develop into a fully realised person.  To nurture her curious nature and guide her to happiness as a person, independent of me.  And I am proud of the person she is becoming, intelligent, witty, caring, a person with a strong social conscience.  Of that time, all I have is the memory of that playful child curled up in my arms and her sweet, innocent, gleeful giggle.  A memory that is bitter-sweet, remembering those simple, sweet joys warms my heart but knowing that it is lost to me now, is as painful as the memory is sweet.  I will always mourn the loss.

These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google
  • Ma.gnolia
  • Sk-rt
  • SphereIt
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati

4 Responses to “Bitter-sweet memories of my child”

  1. Marie Shield Says:

    Well written, very touching. I still have dreams of my daughter at that age. I hope this will be your biggest loss of your child. At age 40 my daughter seemed to forget everything. Her current husband doesn’t like me, so I haven’t heard from her for the past five years. I still think about my baby, the wonderful woman she became, my best friend as she became an adult. She is everything I hoped she would become, including a good and loyal wife. But, god, how I miss her. It gets easier, but it will never be easy.

  2. Cathrine Says:

    beautiful :-)

    but is it really lost to you ?

    it is very “alive” through your text

    it is still a part of you and of her

  3. Cathrine Says:

    PS: very easy for me to state the above as my princess is 6 and asked me for “alone time today”
    shame on me !

  4. Renée Says:

    I heard it said once that parenting is all about putting yourself out of a job.

    My daughter, too, is 14.

    She lives on the other side of the country with her father.

    I know of what you speak…and you say it so well. Thank you for sharing your heart.

Leave a Comment: