This morning, as my oldest hopped out of the van he yelled, “love you Mom!” So all the cars in the car line might hear.
He already said he loved me when we parked. I had said it to him. And yet, there is something in the leaving action that sometimes propels people like him, people like me, to yell it.
It’s important for us who get wrapped up in all the various emotions to make sure the one thing that is heard above the clanging of anger, tears, anxiety, frustration, and fierceness that love is there.
“I love you too!” I said again.
As I pulled away, tears crept into the corners of my eyes.
The day before, my oldest was so mad he slammed his hands into my beautiful new desk. He slammed them so hard I thought there might be tiny divots where his knuckles met the wood. He slammed them so hard I worried his hands would word for hours.
“I am SO angry,” He said.
I’d told him he needed to work on his March project. The project that was due in…March. After all, we were already through week one of April.
He’d been diligent all week but the first draft he’d enjoyed tweaking, adding to, and indulging in the story of, was now long. And part two was rewriting the story after edits from the editor in our family (who is not me).
He broke a pencil. He stormed around the room.
I felt like storming around the room too.
Why can’t you just sit down and write it so we can move on!! Why must you get so wrapped up in your feelings instead of just doing the thing!?
I worked to ignore the nasty voice in my head that wanted to yell and scream and kick and shout, “I just cleaned up puke! I don’t want to have to do this too. I just don’t!”
There really can’t be two people trapped in their emotions in a small room together. Especially because one of them chose this; I chose to become a parent. I wanted to raise children who confidently work through emotions like these.
And once upon a time I was very good at working through my emotions. Once upon a time I also lived alone.
I became the person he needed me to be.
“Let’s work through this, buddy, and get to the other side.”
It took time. I left the office. I returned. His anger worked to break me but the calmest part of me saw a child who clearly didn’t want to be angry.
I took deep breaths. I tried this. I tried the other thing. How long would this go on?
“I just can’t focus!” He said, “it’s too hard.”
I pulled the first draft away from him and sat in the peach chair of my office. I started to read the words he wrote aloud and when I paused I said, “write.”
He pressed his pencil into the paper, his fist gripping so hard I feared he would break that one too. Instead, he wrote.
We continued on like that, back and forth. I read, paused while he wrote, then I read more.
“This is working,” he said finally.
The tension was less. The pencil could breathe.
When all the world heard my son shout, “I love you Mom,” he didn’t mean for anyone else to hear it.
He wanted to make sure I heard it.
But just as my mother came back to me over and over again after I spit words at her and just as my father came back to me after I fought a similar battle my oldest did with me. I will always return to them with open arms and a love that is unyielding.
And, I think, it might have been him reminding himself. It hurts to be angry, to be sad, to be frustrated. Giving love doesn’t hurt, it replenishes our souls.
I am loved. I love.
He leaped from stair to stair up to the school doors as if on air. The cloud of knowing, despite it all, there is love.