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Teenagers

Parenting teenagers has its ups and downs. Get advice from Mumsnetters here.

I miss them being small

102 replies

ssd · 22/04/2017 18:25

was just sitting out the back there, it's a nice night but very quiet...I remember not so long ago when the garden was full of kids, paddling pool out, slide and swing being used, or further back when ds1 was peddling his little trike down the path and loving it!

now they are growing up, teens, great boys but almost men...and I miss the days when they called me mummy and their gran was alive but that's another thread

it goes so fast, doesn't it..

OP posts:
alittlebitcountry · 26/04/2017 12:54

I'm a single mum with a 6 and 3 yr old, we've bed-shared since they were 3 and 18m when my ex moved out as it was a lot easier coping when they were tiny.
People keep telling me we need our own space, but it's such a brief few years when they want and need me this much - and lately I can see they're on the brink of wanting to sleep in their own beds (ready and waiting any time they want.)
I cherish every awkward elbow and disturbance in the night at the moment because I can see the end approaching and I'm hopelessly sentimental at the best of times.

UntilTheCowsComeHome · 26/04/2017 13:01

I got emotional yesterday seeing the little kids coming out of my DCs old nursery.

I long for those sunny days when I'd pick them up with my mum, who is sadly no longer with us, and take them out for some lunch in a garden centre and back for a play in nanny's huge garden.

I was so happy then.

mumontherun14 · 26/04/2017 13:09

Aww I totally agree. Mine are 13 and 10 and getting so independent. They are starting to make their own plans with friends at the weekend and love their hobbies. Different stage but I really also miss the younger years where we did more together xxx

motherinferior · 26/04/2017 13:21

But what they want to do is so boring.

Made mine go to a small local theatre with me last Saturday. We chatted all the way home. They were so nice.

motherinferior · 26/04/2017 13:23

And three year olds drive one to the brink. Give me a continent literate young person who can cook the tea for you any day.

claraschu · 26/04/2017 13:25

I always post Bill Bryson's article about his son going to uni on threads about kids growing up. It always make me cry, especially now that 2 of mine are all grown up-

On Losing a Son (to College)
from Bill Bryson’s book I’m a Stranger Here Myself, 1999

This may get a little sentimental, and I’m sorry, but yesterday evening I was working at my desk when my youngest child came up to me, a baseball bat perched on his shoulder and a cap on his head, and asked me if I felt like playing a little ball with him. I was trying to get some important work done before going away on a long trip, and I very nearly declined with regrets, but then it occurred to me that never again would he be seven years, one month, and six days old, so we had better catch these moments while we can.

So we went out onto the front lawn and here is where it gets sentimental. There was a kind of beauty about the experience so elemental and wonderful I cannot tell you – the way the evening sun fell across the lawn, the earnest eagerness of his young stance, the fact that we were doing this most quintessentially dad-and-son thing, the supreme contentment of just being together – and I couldn’t believe that it would ever have occurred to me that finishing an article or writing a book or doing anything at all could be more important and rewarding than this.

Now what has brought on all this sudden sensitivity is that a week or so ago we took our eldest son off to a small university in Ohio. He was the first of our four to fly the coop, and now he is gone – grown up, independent, far away – and I am suddenly realizing how quickly they go.
“Once they leave for college they never really come back,” a neighbor who has lost two of her own in this way told us wistfully the other day.

This isn’t what I wanted to hear. I wanted to hear that they come back a lot, only this time they hang up their clothes, admire you for your intelligence and wit, and no longer have a hankering to sink diamond studs into various odd holes in their heads. But the neighbor was right. He is gone. There is an emptiness in the house that proves it.

I hadn’t expected it to be like this because for the past couple of years even when he was here he wasn’t really here, if you see what I mean. Like most teenagers, he didn’t live in our house in any meaningful sense – more just dropped by a couple of times a day to see what was in the refrigerator or to wander between rooms, a towel round his waist, calling out “Mom, where’s my . . .?” as in “Mom, where’s my yellow shirt?” and “Mom, where’s my deodorant?”

Occasionally I would see the top of his head in an easy chair in front of a television on which Asian people were kicking each other in the heads, but mostly he resided in a place called “Out.”
My role in getting him off to college was simply to write checks – lots and lots of them – and to look suitably pale and aghast as the sums mounted. I was staggered at the cost of sending a child to college these days. Perhaps it is because we live in a community where these matters are treated earnestly, but nearly every college-bound youth in our town goes off and looks at half a dozen or more prospective universities at enormous cost. Then there are fees for college entrance examinations and a separate fee for each university applied to.

But all this pales beside the cost of college itself. My son’s tuition is $19,000 a year, which I am told is actually quite reasonable these days. Some schools charge as much as $28,000 for tuition. Then there is a fee of $3,000 a year for his room, $2,400 for food, $700 or so for books, $650 for health center fees and insurance, and $710 for “activities.” Don’t ask me what that is. I just sign the checks.

Still to come are the costs of flying him to and from Ohio at Thanksgiving, Christmas, and Easter, plus all the other incidental expenses like spending money and long-distance phone bills. Already my wife is calling him every other day to ask if he has enough money, when in fact, as I point out, it should be the other way around. And here’s one more thing. Next year, I have a daughter who goes off to college, so I get to do this twice.

So you will excuse me, I hope, when I tell you that the emotional side of this event was rather overshadowed by the ongoing financial shock. It wasn’t until we dropped him at his university dormitory and left him there looking touchingly lost and bewildered amid an assortment of cardboard boxes and suitcases in a spartan room not unlike a prison cell that it really hit home that he was vanishing out of our lives and into his own.

Now that we are home it is even worse. There is no kick-boxing on the TV, no astounding clutter of sneakers in the back hallway, no calls of “Mom, where’s my . . .?” from the top of the stairs, no one my size to call me a “doofus” or to say, “Nice shirt, Dad. Did you mug a boat person?” In fact, I see now, I had it exactly wrong. Even when he wasn’t here, he was here, if you see what I mean. And now he is not here at all.

It takes only the simplest things – a wadded-up sweatshirt found behind the backseat of the car, some used chewing gum left in a patently inappropriate place – to make me want to blubber helplessly. Mrs. Bryson, meanwhile, doesn’t need any kind of prod. She just blubbers helplessly.

For the past week I have found myself spending a lot of time wandering aimlessly through the house looking at the oddest things – a basketball, his running trophies, an old holiday snapshot – and thinking about all the carelessly discarded yesterdays they represent. The hard and unexpected part is the realization not just that my son is not here but that the boy he was is gone forever. I would give anything to have them both back. But of course that cannot be. Life moves on. Kids grow up and move away, and if you don’t know this already, believe me, it happens faster than you can imagine.

Which is why, if you will excuse me, I am going to finish here and go off and play a little baseball on the front lawn while the chance is still there.

Motheroffourdragons · 26/04/2017 13:36

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This has been deleted by MNHQ to protect the privacy of the user.

bibbitybobbityyhat · 26/04/2017 13:49

I don't know if there's something wrong with me but I find the tendency of parents to be nostalgic and sentimental about their babies and young children just a little bit nauseating.

Yes, if it were possible, I would like to spend a day when my children were babies again, or 4, or 6, or 8 or whatever. Just for a reminder of what it was like, how they used to be, what we used to do.

But it's not possible so I don't even think about it for more than a brief moment!

Hankering over their younger days or getting upset about them moving on is incredibly burdensome on our children. I think they need to know that we will be absolutely fine once they have left home. My mil is absolutely hopeless at this, and her son left home in 1982!!

That Abba song, Slipping Through My Fingers, actually makes me cross. I turn it off the second it comes on the radio.

Sorry, but I think of the people I know whose children died young and never had the chance to become teenagers or students. It is a wonderful thing to have your children grow up, leave home and be independent.

Sparklingbrook · 26/04/2017 13:54

I think it's ok and not nauseating to be a bit wistful TBH. It goes so quickly.

It's natural to look back occasionally in life over everything including children. It's all about memories.

user1487175389 · 26/04/2017 13:57

OK, so this won't help you because I imagine your dcs were much better behaved, but I'll share it anyways and then you can be glad you're not me.

Ds is 3 & spends most days a mixture of lively and violent. He has alienated most of the staff at his nursery and takes his rage out on the other kids there and me and his siblings at home. I I don't know how I'm going to work when childcare providers don't want him. I don't know what's wrong with him, and none of the professionals I speak to have a clue either. I pray that despite all this he will one day emerge into the world as a whole, undamaged and mentally stable adult, but sadly I doubt it. If things are like this now, I think they'll only get worse.

Now go enjoy your grown up kids. Who knows what the future holds for any of us?

motherinferior · 26/04/2017 14:08

Bibbetty: I have a lot of pics of mine as cuddly smalls on my office wall (they put them there!) In among them is a group one with a lovely little girl in a friend's garden.

Two months afterwards the little girl was diagnosed with a brain tumour. She died a couple of weeks short of her sixth birthday.

I look at her picture on my wall and I want to hug my huge and robust teenagers. (And often do.)

rogueantimatter · 26/04/2017 14:16

Oh my goodness that Bill Bryson piece......

Totally get you ssd - younger DC is going to uni in a different city in September. Very proud of him but it makes me fail waily.

The older one is about to move into a flat with her bf. Feel like I now have to 'share' her with the boyf.

Some of the new stuff is enjoyable though - discussing politics with DS, reminiscing about when they were little, having proper chats with their friends, being pleased that they are 'getting on okay'...

Sigh

MortifiedinAsda · 26/04/2017 14:33

Lord that video made me cry! I'm sitting here next to Eldest DD 25 this year and I remember the day she was born like yesterday. My DS now 22 and at Uni and I only see him every six weeks or so and lives with his GF. My other DD is 20 - Lives theee hours away.

I miss them being small so much but I met my 2nd DH in my 30's when they were all nearly teens more or less ( I had them in my early 20's) and then I had DS2 at 37 and DS3 at nearly 41. I am now 45 with an 8 and 4 yo and I am only too aware how quickly it all goes. I make every day count and enjoy them so very much as even DS2 seems to be growing way too fast at 8, DS3 is the baby of our 5 and probably always will be.

Even the hard yards when they are little and believe you me it is especially when you are 45 Grin I try to enjoy. I thank God every day for the blessing that is my little boys as well as my wonderful grown up children - I just wish the other two weren't so far away.

NavyandWhite · 26/04/2017 14:38

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

RyanSarah2010 · 26/04/2017 14:41

LanaKanesLeftNippleTassle
Yes I'm the same, mines are 5 and 6 and they drive me crazy sometimes and can't wait till they are in bed some nights. But reading this it makes me realise how lucky I am and these are the best years, so young, cuddly, innocent and funny.

BeyondThePage · 26/04/2017 14:41

I don't "miss" mine being small, I have the memories of that time, but find it much better to live in the moment, to make now the best now it can be.

I have 2 teenaged daughters and am positively relishing watching become the women I can see they will be, watching their independence unfurl before my eyes, it makes me so proud to be their mother my heart could burst sometimes.

Sparklingbrook · 26/04/2017 14:45

I have to agree with the Abba song. Plus Mamma Mia is a terrible film. Grin

Suzietwo · 26/04/2017 15:37

I get all of this but I don't think it's terribly helpful to indulge it! I mean I don't mind other people doing it but for myself....I'd rather look forwards and upwards

Sparklingbrook · 26/04/2017 15:40

Does that mean you never look back on old photos or wedding pictures etc?
This is just an extension of that.

NavyandWhite · 26/04/2017 15:48

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

motherinferior · 26/04/2017 16:00

I remember the bone-weary exhaustion. The being tethered to the house. The never getting any time off except on the rare occasions of a babysitter when you'd be horribly aware of the ££ clocking up by the hour. The tedium. The need to produce tea at 5.30. The planning for any small journey to eg the shops.

Sparklingbrook · 26/04/2017 16:17

Oh I don't feel sad. Just look back on those days with fondness every now and again. I hope that's allowed.

I liked the Bill Bryson piece. DS1 is off to University in September. I have mixed emotions. Hope that's allowed too.

Suzietwo · 26/04/2017 16:19

You should feel exactly as you want. My comment is about how I prefer to feel.

Sparklingbrook · 26/04/2017 16:24

Mine too.

Crunchyside · 26/04/2017 16:26

I do agree that it's a bit insensitive towards bereaved parents when people act as if they've "lost" their babies when they grow up, in fact in one article I read the woman literally compared the process of her kids growing up to them actually dying. Which is of course ridiculous. But on the other hand it's fair enough to feel some sense of loss, this sort of nostalgia is totally normal - its just a case of being grateful at the same time that you do still have your kids even if they're all grown up Smile Its best not to let yourself get too upset by looking back and missing old times, but I think being a bit wistful is fine!