Good News and a Touching Note

Posted by Unknown On Thursday, November 11, 2010 14 comments
Dear readers, My ordeal ended at 10.45am when my son called me to tell me his results for the UPSR exam. This is how he broke the news to me...



My handphone rings...

Me: Hello son

Nick: Hi mom...I am so sorry...

Me: So how? *heart palpitating and me at the point of collapse*

Nick : I only scored 4 As...

Me: It's ok son...

Nick : Plus 1 A

Me : Haiyo...You want me to die is it???

Well, that's my boy!!! LOL

I am deeply relieved. It has been a torturous ordeal this week to wait for the results. I am so glad I did not push him but let him handle it himself. My son says I should get a real job instead of blogging because of my tendency to be a professional worrier LOL! Thanks to God for His blessing upon Nick. I am thankful that his success is solely his own and it is a proud moment for all of us. Thank you for sharing our journey.

Special thanks to StraightTalking who sent me this touching letter written by an unknown person. It really touched my heart and encapsulates the essence of parenting. May God bless each and everyone of you. I will blog again later. Am taking my boy and his best friend out to celebrate!

Take care and have a great day!

__________________________

November 1994
Dear Summer,

Eighteen years ago I stood looking at you—fresh-born—through the big glass window in the hospital nursery, watching the nurses try to count your tiny toes. Minutes old, you were bright-red-screaming-at-the-top-of-your-lungs unbounded life, squirming and kicking in every direction—quite a challenge to those toe-counting nurses. How I wanted to reach through the window, to be closer to you as you celebrated your newfound freedom. From behind the glass, I breathed a promise: I would never stand in the way of your freedom.

When their counting was completed, the nurses managed to wrestle you into a little yellow sleeper (with built-in mittens so you wouldn’t scratch yourself). They swaddled you in soft blankets, then placed you in a toasty-warm infant bed. It comforted you. You became quiet. Then you fell asleep. Being born must have been quite a shock. How I wanted to reach through the window, to be closer to you as you slept your peaceful sleep of newborn innocence. From behind the glass, I breathed a second promise: I would always protect you.

It seems I took my eyes from the nursery window only a moment; now I look again, and you are a young woman. Eighteen years old, you are poised for yet another giant step into your future. And I, once again, find myself staring in awe, trying to fathom the miracle which you are. And I think back upon the promises made long ago.

Keeping those promises has proven far more difficult than I imagined. When I vowed never to stand in the way of your freedom, I had no idea how many ways we would be different, how many times your need to be yourself would clash with my need to be—as I saw it—a responsible parent. How was I supposed to know that you, barely out of diapers, would already have your own ideas about things as basic as what is hot and what is cold, and what clothing fits the weather. From age four you have dressed for warm weather when it is cold, and wrapped yourself in cold weather clothes for stifling heat. I had to curb my “better judgment” in order to give you freedom to choose what you wanted to wear; I comforted myself with the knowledge that no child ever died from wearing a sweater on the hottest day of the year, or a midriff top on the coldest.

I didn’t realize so few decisions would feel 100% right. Often when I supported your freedom, I wondered if I was abdicating my parental duty. And often when I exercised my parental authority, I wondered if I was crushing your spirit. Choosing when to offer you freedom, and when to lay down the law, has been exhausting work—and humbling. I have done the best I can. Sorry about those times I insisted on counting your toes when I should have let you dance.

When I promised to protect you, I had no idea what forms that protection would take. It was easy at first. You were so fragile; you needed me so completely. I enjoyed the feeling of being needed (except at 3:00 AM when I preferred to believe you needed your mother more than you needed me). There is a part of me that always wanted you to grow up, but another part of me that has always wanted you to stay little, so I could take care of you.

It was hard to watch you venture out beyond my protective care. On your first solo visit to our next-door-neighbor’s house, you came home proudly displaying the new haircut you gave yourself (with the help of the neighbor’s six year old). It was a reverse pony tail—shoulder-length everywhere except for a short blunt patch cropped off near the top of your head. A failed protector, I went momentarily berserk, but only because I hadn’t yet learned the most important of all parent maxims: Hair grows back. Of course I forgot all about this maxim ten years later when you emerged from the bathroom with your hair permed into oblivion and dyed black.



When I promised to always protect you, I didn’t realize that most of the time I would be protecting you from yourself—trying to help you understand the consequences of your choices. And then when you became a teen, I found myself not only trying to protect you from yourself, but also trying to protect you from your peers, whose zest for life often superseded their common sense. I’ve done the best I could to teach you how to protect yourself (and others around you). Much of that teaching you now carry inside yourself in the form of values, morals, and manners. If my too-long lectures had the power to protect, you’d have been untouchable. Sorry about the lectures—and especially for those times I failed to protect you from my own upset feelings.

When I watched you that first day through the nursery window, I desperately wanted to reach through the glass, so I could be close to you. The opportunity came. My eyes fill with tears of joy when I think back on all the wonderful moments of closeness we’ve shared through the years. But eighteen years have taught me that parenting isn’t just about being close; it’s also about creating space. I’ve had to learn to be happy looking at you through glass—contenting myself to watch you celebrate your freedom, without always joining your dance; standing by, always ready to protect you, but not always holding your hand.

Summer, you are a gift—the wondrous creation of a boundless grace beyond all words. A great man, Irenaeus, once said, “the glory of God is a person fully alive.” That you are, Summer; you are exuberantly alive. Whether holding you close or watching you at a distance, nothing in my life is more fulfilling than being your dad. I am deeply thankful for that privilege, and I look with excited anticipation to the next eighteen years.


Yours,

Dad

After her 18th birthday, Summer went on to earn B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in psychology. Today, she works as a consultant to life science companies. Summer and her husband have one daughter and another on the way.

14 comments to Good News and a Touching Note

  1. says:

    Tiger Well, I think he did alright.
    If there's any comfort, the richest guy among all my schoolmates is the one who didn't even pass SPM!
    So there's no direct co-relation between school results and your life's results.
    Thanks for that beautiful note.
    I hope to write something as beautiful as that for Estelle someday.

  1. says:

    Anonymous Congratulations to both mother and son!

    Now you can both go out and party until 4am. :-)

    StraightTalking

  1. says:

    Anonymous "Haiyo ! you want me to die is it !!??"
    hahahahaha , mws, cute lah you !!

  1. says:

    Anonymous PMR = Parents Manyak Risau in 2013 ... alamak !

  1. says:

    Anonymous Hey, he din score A for B.Cina ah !!!???...... aiyo, mana boleh ?

  1. says:

    Anonymous Dear Nick,

    Congratulations on your UPSR results. Never a doubt that you would pass with distinctions. Enjoy your celebration. Syabas!

    Dear MWS,

    Now you can sleep well, after all the incessant worrying LOL. Take care.

    Best wishes
    edward

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Tiger

    I agree with you wholeheartedly! The main reason why I was uptight is because his results will directly determine which secondary school he attends next year. He picked SM Bukit Jambul over PFS and to get in, he needs straight As.

    Thanks to StraightTalking for that beautiful note! I am sure you will do fine with Estelle.

    Take care and have a great weekend!

    Warmest wishes
    mws

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear StraightTalking

    LOL Yea...Nick is so happy that you have given him the green light to do just that ROFL!

    Thanks a million for who you are!!

    God bless you and yours always!

    Warmest regards

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Anon # 3

    LOL!! I really said that to him cos I would have died LOL!!

    Thanks for sharing our joy!

    Take care and have a great weekend.

    Cheers

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Anon # 4

    Aiyo - you just burst the bubble hahaa! Thanks for sharing our joy Take care and enjoy the weekend.

    Cheers

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Anon # 5

    Sadly, my son is not in a Chinese medium school so 5 subjects is the max for UPSR.

    He writes Chinese beautifully BUT he seldom knows what he is writing...but we do converse in Mandarin sometimes...

    It is one of my biggest mistakes in parenting.

    This afternoon, my girlfriend from Singapore was telling me how I must let Nick learn Mandarin. My goddaughter who lives in US has also been lecturing me on that. Sighs...

    Anyway, do take care and have a great weekend!

    Cheers

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Edward

    Thanks for your congratulatory message to Nick and for your gentle knock on the head for me LOL!!

    Yup- I did not sleep well last night and woke up early this morning too!!

    Sighs...the woes and joys of parenting!

    Take care and it is great to hear from you again!

    God bless you and yours always.

    Shalom

  1. says:

    daffodils Dear MWS,

    Great for supporting your son to be the best version of himself that he can be.

    That may not always be an A, of course. I said to my students that if they did their best and got a C, I would be proud of them, but if they got a B when they could have gotten an A because they slacked off and didn’t do their best, I would be disappointed. I said that to my son who is studying in a competitive environment. I suggest to him but the choice is ultimately his. I steer my children just like any parents would do. You are no exception.

    I think I’ve done what I can reasonably do as a parent to help and guide my kids. The most important thing to teach a child is how to live INDEPENDENTLY after one is gone.

  1. says:

    Unknown Dear Daffodils

    Thanks for being an exemplary educator and parent.

    I wrote about how I trained Nick from young to be independent in my post at http://masterwordsmith-unplugged.blogspot.com/2010/11/waiting-and-waiting.html

    I also agree with you wrt how it is more important to try one's best within one's abilities and that may not necessarily mean an 'A'. I let go where Nick is concerned but sometimes worry if I let go too much! :-)

    It has been a challenging but most rewarding journey to be a parent and I am thankful to God for my two boys (and hubby of course haha).

    Take care and may God bless you and your family always. I hope to meet you one day and to thank you face to face for the way you have been an inspiring commenter.

    Have a blessed weekend with your family. Do keep in touch.

    Warmest regards

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