She’s leaving me, and it’s my own fault.
My daughter wants to be an actress. “Acting is hard,” I told her. “You’ll have rejections, and critics, and people constantly telling you you aren’t good enough.”
“But I can deal with that,” she said. “I’ve watched you deal with it with your writing, and you always come out on top.”
She really wants this and I’ve been the example that they can have what they want if they’re willing to work hard enough. She wants this like she wants air. She wants it like I want a four book deal with Harper. And so when she got the brilliant idea to go to Tuacahn High School in St. George, I couldn’t say no, because I know what it’s like to want something so huge. I know what it’s like to drop pennies in fountains and make wishes bigger than the sky. I let her apply.
Three days ago, I got the email that said congratulations.
I cried and held this information hostage until I could process it and deal with it on my terms. And I cried some more (and continue to do so). Friday, while she was at the regional science fair, I made her favorite dinner, pulled out the china, and crystal, and sparkling white grape juice. I made place cards with messages in them for the kids.
For the boys, the cards were little notes of how proud I was of their accomplishments and their work. In hers were the words, “Congratulations! Tuacahn said yes!”
All the while, I swiped tears from my cheeks and hummed the tune slipping through my fingers by ABBA. Wasn’t it just a moment ago she was placed in my arms and pronounced MINE? Isn’t there a parental contract that we’d get to keep her for eighteen years? After several years of infertility and praying for a child, we were given a gift so beyond delightful, and now I am giving her permission to leave four years before her contract with me is up. Foolish, foolish mom.
And yet, how could I say no? How could I hold her back from reaching? Wouldn’t that make me a hypocrite of the worst sort?
So I made dinner, set the table, lit the candles, and held my breath while she read the words inside her card. I won’t lie that I cried some more, but found myself surprised when her hazel eyes met mine and they were also brimming with tears. She was excited and scared–overwhelmed. When our eyes met, it was with the knowledge that our lives were shifting, and the roles that we play for each other will change with that shift.
She can still back out, she has some time to decide for certain. It’s a grown up decision–the one to grow up. There are friends here, life here, brothers here, dad here and ME here. It’s good to know I am part of the reasons to stay. It’s good to know she’ll miss me. But ulitmately, I think she will go. Not because we are pushing her that direction. On the contrary–we are staying absolutely out of this decision. It has to be hers. But she will choose it because she has made wishes bigger than the sky.
I asked her, “Would you think I was a bad mom if I confessed I’ve been praying for you not to get in?”
She hugged me and said, “I think you’d be a bad mom if you’d been praying for anything else.”
Several moths ago, at dinnertime, one of the kids asked, “Will you celebrate when we move out?”
Mr. Wright said, “Yes.”
And we will. We will celebrate the lives stretching out in front of them like blank pages in a book waiting to be filled with grand adventures. We will celebrate and, apparently, we will cry.


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