Dear Teenage Daughter Of Mine,
Iāve given it a lot of thought and Iāve decided that we canāt be friends.
Itās not me. Itās you.
You help me understand why some animals eat their young.
When you were born you were exceptionally adorable, far surpassing the adorableness of the other babies born that day. I’m sure the other mothers looked at their newborns that day with great disappointment. You were such a good baby. You took long naps so that I could get a break, you slept all night in your own bed. You ate anything, which made me feel superior to the other moms complaining about their picky eaters. You were independent and had a desire to do things on your own. You took crap from no one, even as a toddler. When the sweet old man from church would touch your hand and smile at you, you would respond by pulling your hand back and throwing a āgo to hell, go straight to hellā look at him. You were so cute though that he would just laugh and try again next week. You were pretty perfect, actually. I had high hopes for you.
Now you are a teenager and at only 14 years old, you are equipped with a super model body and killer eye lashes. You draw attention of older boys because you donāt look a day younger than 17. This is not fair to me, being that Iām a full 7 inches shorter and 15 pounds heavier than you. You are still very strong willed, smart, creative and totally hilarious. You still will on occasion shoot a death glare at anyone talking to you whom you are not fond of (itās something we are working on). However, none of this is why we canāt be friends.
You have turned from a sweet wide eyed little girl who loved zoo animals and American Girl dolls into a hormonal, irrational, emotional teenager. I have to strategize how Iām going to approach you about topics I fear may set you off, like trying to tell you that the wait at Olive Garden is too long and we are going to have to find a plan b restaurant to eat. When you are hungry you are especially scary. Full disclosure, you get that honestly. You may have inherited that trait. You bounce back and forth from being a child to being a fun loving, energetic teenager to being an immature adult. This is why we canāt be friends. People have warned me about this teenager thing, but I didnāt believe themā¦.not my baby. Turns out they were on to something.
We canāt be friends because you need my help to survive your teen years and become an adult who people donāt avoid at parties.
Right now you donāt really need the other half of my BFF heart necklace. You need a mom.
When we argue because you have decided to wear your new fall outfit that includes an adorbs boho top layered with a long cardigan and skinny jeans with ankle boots on a day in early September when the weather forecast calls for a humid 92 degrees I am reminded that while you may not like me, you need me. Literally, need me to save you from heat stroke on the bus.
When you roll your eyes at me and mumble something hateful under your breath as you walk out of the room because I wonāt allow you to ride in a car with the 16 year old boy you are crushing on I can see your innocence and how short sighted you are right now. You don’t see all the life altering consequences that can come from it, but I can so Iām willing to let you treat me like Iām the one being unrealistic in the matter.
When we are on a paradise beach vacation where everything seems perfect, yet when one little thing doesnāt go your way you curl up those long legs into a ball so that you can get in my lap and nuzzle into my chest to cry Iām yet again reminded that even though you are getting closer to being grown, you are still a child. You need me.
Letās be honest. You have friends. I have friends. We donāt need to be each otherās friend right now. I make you insane with all my dumb rules and frankly you arenāt always a peach to live with either.
Never mistake my determination that we canāt be friends as a lack of love. Iāve prayed for you since the moment I discovered I was pregnant. Every day. My prayers have shifted as life has shifted. I used to pray that you would sleep well at night in your crib. I prayed that your diaper rash would clear up. I prayed that you wouldnāt get too hysterical over the shots you were going to get at the doctorās office. I prayed for your self-esteem as you went through that awkward phase of snaggled teeth and crooked glasses. I prayed that your 1st day of high school this year would go great. Daily, I pray for your health, your safety, that you will make wise decisions and that you wonāt get involved with the wrong crowd. I pray that as you edge closer to those dating years that you will know a douche bag when you see one. I pray that you will find a balance between confidence and humility.
Itās hard for you to understand and I donāt expect that you will ever fully understand until you have children of your own how deep my love is for you. You are the best part of me and your dad. You and your brother are the beat in our hearts. When you hurt, we hurt. Itās our job to raise you to be an adult who is kind, responsible, respects herself and shows respect to others. We want to send you out into the world as ready as you can be for what life will throw at you. We want you to be fierce and strong.
As it turns out, to fulfill that mission, this love I have for you is not well received all the time. It sucks and I wish it wasnāt that way, but I have hope it wonāt last forever. Itās okay that you donāt always like me or think Iām cool.
So when you yell at me to come into your room to curl your hair in the mornings, complain about how it looks afterwards, ask me to iron your shirt, make you some breakfast then on the way to school remind me of a 3 page form I need to complete before I drop you off at school or you wonāt be able to attend the field trip I knew nothing about, I will take a deep breath and do it.
Because I love you.
Also because I have been praying to God that you will have a daughter exactly like you one day. That, in itself, will be the reward I need to make this all worth it.
I hope you understand. Donāt take it personally.
Love,
Mom