She’s a big girl now
“I got my tongue pierced, lol.”
Heretofore, it was just another really crappy day at work. I was in the worst kind of foul mood— the kind you can’t really blame on anyone else. I was overtired, hungry and horribly misunderstood by all of humanity. So when I received this little “ping” on my cell phone, it wasn’t greeted with open arms.
“Shut up. Seriously?” I tapped back.
She was joking. She had to be joking, right? I mean, she’d just graduated from high school the night before, she was just stepping into the realm of adulthood, there was no way she would be so cavalier about stabbing a gash through an essential body part. My mind drifted to the pictures we’d taken of this poised, confident young woman, ready to take on the *ping*
“Lol yeah I did.”
I was driving, waiting at a stoplight with my son when her message came in. No words. I simply couldn’t respond. That was a good thing. A very good thing, as my brain was entirely unable to process the explosive mixture of frustration and confusion and disbelief that I was experiencing. Add to that the already-existing layer of grumpiness that shrouded my person, and I knew this conversation could be deadly. For her.
Seconds later, my phone rings; when I answer, the car is filled with my husband's rollicking laughter over the speakerphone. “Hey, have you spoken to the girls?”
“I just got a text message,” I say, my voice colored with disbelief.
His laughter explodes again. “What the hell is she THINKING?” We laugh, sharing a mutual facepalm moment.
Clearly she wasn’t thinking about chipped teeth, like I was. Or nerve damage. Or infection, halitosis, partial deafness and potential permanent numbness, like I was. Clearly she wasn’t thinking about life the day after today, when she returned to work, or life at the end of summer, when she had to face employers in search of a steady job. Clearly she wasn’t thinking!
Later that evening, after a few texts back and forth, after I explained to her my fears and she reminded me that she could always take it out… I processed the day’s events.
It’s not my tongue.
She’s 18.
She’s capable of making her own rash decisions.
Maybe that’s what scared me the most, that last one there. That, despite whatever control I felt I had—whatever say, thoughts, influence—the fact is, she is still fully capable of making her own decisions and acting on them. And shouldn’t that be a good thing? That she is able to make choices and live with them, with the full responsibility of an adult? Because that's what she was now. An adult. And while I have no issues with other people's pierced tongues, any issues I had with my daughter's piercing should be treated the same way: it's her gig to worry about. Passing judgment doesn't help anybody.
Merthiless teathing, howevuh, duz hep me cope.
...still, I don’t know. I’m working on releasing my attachment to the image of her growing further into adulthood with a non-gouged tongue. And honestly, it's not the end of the world. Perhaps the end of her speaking ability with crisp diction—but who knows. That may even change when the swelling goes down.
Modifying expectations
“I want to go to USC,” he says, his face a picture of total earnestness.
My barking laughter was probably not the polite response for which a son hopes. But, unfortunately for him, I’m the mother with which he was stuck “Seriously dude,” I squawk, “That would truly be amazing and fantastic and I don’t want to rain on your parade, but there’s no freaking way we can afford it. USC is over $56K per year.”
“Well, then what about NYU?” he says with the seriousness of a heart attack.
“Over $57K per year,” I say, feeling like I’ve just had one. This college conversation is one we’ve had dozens of times and I know one we’ll have at least a hundred more. Dreams build over time and are hard to relinquish; and though I would love to be able to give him what I always wanted and never had—a shmancy high-end university education—with six other kids at home (and two entering community college in the fall), there is simply no way we can even entertain the idea of a non-public University. I’ve been saving for my son’s education since he was 5-years-old and while twelve years seems like a long time to sock it away, the fact is I’d be lucky to be able to afford even a portion of CSU tuition.
According to CaliforniaColleges.edu, the average cost of attending a California State University is over $19K per year; just under $27K for a school in the University of California system. And these costs are for the 2009 – 2010 school year. Add the harsh reality that the CSU system cut statewide enrollment by 40,000 students this year and are promising more cuts for 2011-2012, and my son’s once promising G.P.A. and wide-range of extracurricular activities now seem very average.
Reshuffling plans and making dreams happen anyway is the forte of all single moms at some point in their parenting careers. Each of my kids was raised knowing that college was in their future; which is to say, attending college has never been an option for them. But rather, an expectation, one I laid upon them from toddlerhood. Hand in hand with that was the expectation I laid on myself to help them financially.
So now, after all the cajoling and coercion and urging and nagging to do the work, get good grades, volunteer in school activities, reality sits calmly staring at me, smiling as she asks, “Okay, big mouth: how about your end of the bargain? How are you going to make this happen for him?”
*gulp*
Right now I don’t have an answer. But I’m a smart girl, and I know how to use Google. And guidance counselors. And we’ll figure this out. Sometimes expectations need to be modified a little... but they'll be met.
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Perpetually anxious/simultaneously exhausted mom of a blended family of 7 kids & 2 pets. Writer about same. Wife to one amazingly patient husband. Drinker of wine. 




