One of those moments ... 4-18-2021 |
Know-it-all Grows Up. Early twenties when I thought I knew it all-- I'd graduated college with a 4.0, started my own company, sold it for more than I've ever seen since, traveled the world on my own, joined the military because it was something I hadn't done. Not my dad's Navy, but the Army. Couldn't get the job I wanted: would have had to wait too long. Wanted to go immediately before anyone (my dad, perhaps?) could talk me out of it. The army found me a slot first. Oh, I knew it all. Shortly after boot camp (honor recruit) was promoted, graduated second in my class at A.I.T. Met a guy. mid-A.I.T. Knowing everything, being so smart and all, we eloped. Told Mom and Dad after the fact. Broke their hearts. Brought new hubby home before he shipped out; went so well. Not five minutes in, he insulted them to the quick. Marriage went downhill from there. He'd left for overseas before I figured out we were pregnant. Finally sent to his duty station (at six months pregnant) he walked right by me in the airport. Six months fighting to get where he was. Six days and I was wishing I was anywhere but there. Couldn't tell the folks. Nothing they could do and I simply couldn't admit what a fool I'd been. Good at making sure the bruises wouldn't hurt the baby. Good at making sure the bruises wouldn't show. Good at making sure I was worthless; how dare I do better than he, how dare I outrank him. Divorce would be final some days after the baby's due date. 7/11/77. Lucky day! Big, old-fashioned rockers in new mom rooms. I remember rocking, singing her to sleep with a song called, 'Turn Around.' One of the last lines ... 'turn around and she's a young wife with babes of her own.' I sat there and rocked and thought. Somewhere between birth and endless rocking, I realized that my parents had morphed. They had changed. Suddenly they were so smart. They knew all this new baby, she's so tiny, how do I do all this, be a parent stuff I thought and rocked long after she was back in the nursery. I sat there rocking until the wee hours of my morning met my folks early afternoon. Called and told them they were grandparents. Details, happy tears, questions. Finally admitted about the divorce and what a fool I'd been. Then, I told my parents how brilliant they were and how much I appreciated them. My dad said, after a bit, that they hadn't changed at all. I insisted they had. I'll never forget his next words. "No, honey. You did. You grew up. You still don't know it all, but you're a lot closer than you were." |