As the weather warmed this week in October, I was thinking again about the summer. This was written 8/27/11, a few days before our son left home for a gap year in Israel.
This
has been the last summer our son was going to be with us, before leaving the
family to go to a gap year in Israel and follow his life. At the same time, our daughter fostered a
kitten all summer long, destined to leave her for another home. Every moment of
this summer has been bittersweet, knowing that things would change forever at
its end. It has also been full, with
many long deep talks, and with four of us hanging out around the dinner table
until late, enjoying each others’ company. Just as I stand this morning in my
bathroom eking out the last drops of hair gel to save every bit, I know that these
last 3 days with my son are totally precious; I can’t ever buy any more of
these moments, and the ones in the future will never be the same. My daughter and I are united in the
anticipation of loss. My husband turns away from it as much as possible to
support us all. He spends time with our
son watching “Die Hard with a Vengeance.” They plan to bake challah together
the last day. For our son it has been the summer of anticipation of a different
kind, that of freedom, adventure, exploration, adulthood. He can hardly wait to go, and his imagination
explodes with fireworks of possibilities.
For
those of us who remain here, in the family home, we are already drawing closer
to each other, getting used to plans that are for three instead of four. We have redistricted the lines of
responsibilities. We remind him to leave
his room clean and spare, so it can be used for…something. We watch him look at everything with the eyes
of one who is leaving, we watch him with eyes of the ones who are left.
I
remember leaving my mother, my family, to go to college. I could hardly wait. The short distance from the San Fernando
Valley of Los Angeles to Berkeley seemed so satisfyingly far away. The unknown was sweet and enticing.
Many
years later my mother told me how she made herself wait until I was on the
airplane before she cried.
Now
my mother lives ten minutes away. She
will be with us when my son has gone, coming over for Shabbat meals on Friday
nights, asking what we have heard from him.
I will turn on my computer to show her his blog from Israel. We will all talk on Skype, but he will not be
here to make me feel small against his chest when he hugs me goodnight.
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