一张录取通知是离别:从此后,父母只剩背影,故乡只有冬夏

s
sweetmelon
看了好多次了,每次都快要让人落泪。
a
avw
你孩子刚上大学?
v
violinpiano
選近的大學不就好了

放羊
和你共情一下。孩子这周也去学校了
凊荷
楼主大男人也这么多情
a
avw
选近的,他就有别的烦恼了
1
12度圆缺
矫情,上大学是好事啊
加州阳光123
It's not a death, not a tragedy. But it's not nothing,either

重贴一篇18年的旧帖 

https://bbs.wenxuecity.com/archive/2018/znjy/4154431.html

-----给所有2018家长们

"It's not a death. And it's not a tragedy. But it's not nothing, either..." I feel like this little boy walked out the door today, not the fine young man we've raised. Today is hard. Very hard.

"I wasn't wrong about their leaving. My husband kept telling me I was. That it wasn't the end of the world when first one child, then another, and then the last packed their bags and left for college.

But it was the end of something. ``Can you pick me up, Mom?" ``What's for dinner?" ``What do you think?"

I was the sun and they were the planets. And there was life on those planets, whirling, non-stop plans and parties and friends coming and going, and ideas and dreams and the phone ringing and doors slamming.

And I got to beam down on them. To watch. To glow.

And then they were gone, one after the other.

``They'll be back," my husband said. And he was right. They came back. But he was wrong, too, because they came back for intervals -- not for always, not planets anymore, making their predictable orbits, but unpredictable, like shooting stars.

Always is what you miss. Always knowing where they are. At school. At play practice. At a ballgame. At a friend's. Always looking at the clock mid-day and anticipating the door opening, the sigh, the smile, the laugh, the shrug. ``How was school?" answered for years in too much detail. ``And then he said . . . and then I said to him. . . ." Then hardly answered at all.

Always, knowing his friends.

Her favorite show.

What he had for breakfast.

What she wore to school.

What he thinks.

How she feels.

My friend Beth's twin girls left for Roger Williams yesterday. They are her fourth and fifth children. She's been down this road three times before. You'd think it would get easier.

``I don't know what I'm going to do without them," she has said every day for months.

And I have said nothing, because, really, what is there to say?

A chapter ends. Another chapter begins. One door closes and another door opens. The best thing a parent can give their child is wings. I read all these things when my children left home and thought then what I think now: What do these words mean?

Eighteen years isn't a chapter in anyone's life. It's a whole book, and that book is ending and what comes next is connected to, but different from, everything that has gone before.

Before was an infant, a toddler, a child, a teenager. Before was feeding and changing and teaching and comforting and guiding and disciplining, everything hands -on. Now?

Now the kids are young adults and on their own and the parents are on the periphery, and it's not just a chapter change. It's a sea change.

As for a door closing? Would that you could close a door and forget for even a minute your children and your love for them and your fear for them, too. And would that they occupied just a single room in your head. But they're in every room in your head and in your heart.

As for the wings analogy? It's sweet. But children are not birds. Parents don't let them go and build another nest and have all new offspring next year.

Saying goodbye to your children and their childhood is much harder than all the pithy sayings make it seem. Because that's what going to college is. It's goodbye.

It's not a death. And it's not a tragedy.

But it's not nothing, either.

To grow a child, a body changes. It needs more sleep. It rejects food it used to like. It expands and it adapts.

To let go of a child, a body changes, too. It sighs and it cries and it feels weightless and heavy at the same time.

The drive home alone without them is the worst. And the first few days. But then it gets better. The kids call, come home, bring their friends, fill the house with their energy again.

Life does go on.

``Can you give me a ride to the mall?" ``Mom, make him stop!" I don't miss this part of parenting, playing chauffeur and referee. But I miss them, still, all these years later, the children they were, at the dinner table, beside me on the couch, talking on the phone, sleeping in their rooms, safe, home, mine...."

- Beverly Beckham

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老糊涂2
那就家里墩呗,又没人逼。呵呵
加州阳光123
刚发现你是男ID, 我开始还以为是妈妈,当年我也哭过好多回,但你是男的,就不跟你惺惺相惜了

别在孩子面前落泪。。。

B
BrightLine
理解,不过也是娃成长的必经之路,咱们当年也是一样义无反顾的来到了美国,人生地不熟
p
phoenix05
我也看哭了。
r
randomness
不去上大学蹲家里啃老,爹妈也得愁
闻风
附近有好点的大学,还是就近读比较好。

大学差不多就行了。

圆西瓜
没事儿,多哭哭就习惯啦。。我们还没开学呢。。
s
sweetmelon
嘿嘿,送娃时一点事都没有。就是看不得这些酸文。

L
LVHawaii
至于嘛。
s
sweetmelon
yes
k
katies
矫情,留家里啃老,愁死父母。
s
sweetmelon
我一个人送的,娃妈身体不好没有跟过来,要不然估计娃妈也要哭

兔快跑吧
他家好像是儿子。儿子离家不想爸妈
R
Rockeymountain
哈哈, 我很不地道滴觉得有点好笑。
加州阳光123
再给你看一篇我当时的文章,那时是孩子离家前给她做外婆红烧肉烧蛋 :)

https://bbs.wenxuecity.com/archive/2018/znjy/4137759.html

大学第一年我去学校六次,每次单程2300Miles , 也过来了   

 

s
sweetmelon
其实更多的想到自己和自己的父母,30年前离家上大学,当时可高兴了

一点也没觉得啥难过的。现在回想下,可不就是从那以后,父母只剩背影,故乡只有冬夏。

现在,娃离开俺们这鸟不拉屎的小地方去上大学了,可不是重复俺们当年的历程。

加州阳光123
哦,让自己忙一些,没时间想孩子会好一点
兔快跑吧
忙完一个,还有小的继续忙,就平和了。也可以忙工作或发展业余爱好
兔快跑吧
是吧,儿子离家不想爸妈
加州阳光123
选近的,他就要跟燕子一样每周送菜送饭了 哈哈哈
s
sweetmelon
那肯定,都忙着快活呢,换个地方,啥都新鲜

加州阳光123
空巢了,就可以忙自己了

加州阳光123
你不会也要搬波士顿吧? :)
m
mmmwww
鸡汤味,控制型父母才会有强烈的失落感。社会心理学认为,父母真正的成功,是让孩子尽早作为一个独立个体,从你的生命中分离出去
S
Shanghaigirl98
本人觉得4个字: 实在太空。

s
sweetmelon
记得你家娃也是今年上大学吧?最后去哪了?
p
phoenix05
是啊,也是2027届啊

爬上藤了。

p
phoenix05
唉,还得留在老家给娃挣学费呀。
s
sweetmelon
赞大牛娃!

L
LVHawaii
我出国时在机场头也不回,我妈哭稀里花拉

a
avw
这就是空巢?
D
DukeAB
看出了近距离的好处了 :)
米奇的厨房
不会吧?不至于,我家的离家我挺高兴的,自由无价阿