To my daughter on her twelfth birthday
Dear Audyn,
On a cold, cloudy day in early February 2009, I woke
wondering if this would be your day. Three days overdue, I felt heavy
and exhausted, but I packed up your sister and waddled to our weekly moms/play
group at a local church. Half-way through the motivational mom lecture, you
were finally ready. You arrived quickly, without incident, entirely on your own
time table. Waiting. Waiting. Waiting. Go! It makes me laugh to think of
it now, because that is exactly how you still are. You will not be rushed when
you are not ready. But once you are ready, look out world. Here she comes! This
little quirk of yours drove me nuts when you were three and Every. Little. Thing
was a battle. Truly. It almost killed us. I have never been so undone by a
toddler. Then a five-year-old. And even an eight-year-old. I got a lot of advice
from a handful of well-meaning folks, who usually offered their words of wisdom
before they saw you in action. Once they did, I commonly heard, “Oh. I get it now.”
Though the battles were fierce, I held on to the belief that someday what would
bloom within you would be the valuable character traits of an independent girl—determination,
perseverance, conviction. I’m sure glad I was right. 😉
On Feb. 3, you turned twelve. It seems like ages ago, with all that has happened since. A month behind as usual, I started your birthday letter in early March. You asked me about it. “Mom, are you done yet?” Because now you want to read the letters I’ve been writing to you all these years. I got a little nervous; I wanted it to be good. But most of all I wanted it to be true.
Then spring break rolled around and you broke your leg skiing. That event upended your world and my good intentions. The letter, among other activities, was put on hold in order to navigate this new challenge. I’ve watched (sometimes helplessly) as you have faced the physical and emotional complexities that came with it. I’ve wanted to “fix it” countless times, but I’ve also observed in awe your quiet courage in the face of adversity.
I’ve broken plenty of bones in my life, and they were a hassle,
to be sure, but they pale in comparison to the difficulty of a broken leg. The
pain is different. The challenges to mobility are greater. The patience
required to heal demands, well, determination, perseverance, and conviction. I’ve
watched you grapple with three things in particular that have also taught me a
little more about who you are.
First, you’ve had to ask for a lot of help. This is not
something you enjoy. By nature, you are a helper, a quiet leader that comes
alongside others to support and encourage with compassion and empathy. Many of
us who enjoy helping others are terrible at asking for that help ourselves when
we need it.
Second, you’ve gotten a lot of attention. This is also something
you typically don’t enjoy, even when it’s positive. You’re not one to jump into
the spotlight; instead, you prefer to spotlight others, championing your
brother’s hard-won accomplishments, admiring your sister when she shines. You
love to receive a quiet compliment delivered just to your ears, but prefer there
to be no loud announcements on your behalf. Cruising the hallways of middle
school in a wheelchair is not your preference. I know you’d rather be the one pushing
a friend in need from behind.
Third, you can’t move. And you are a mover. Both in the
physical sense and the figurative one. You’ll sit still as long as your hands
are tinkering (I’ve watched you take apart, rebuild, and create some pretty cool
stuff), but otherwise, you’re up and at ‘em. When I can’t figure out how to fix
something, you’re the one to call for help. The other day, the leg extension on
your wheelchair got stuck and you wiggled yourself down under it, thigh-high
cast and all, to see how the mechanics of it worked, named the problem, and
quickly informed me it was a job for Dad’s tools. On the one hand, forced
stillness has been a challenge. On the other, your problem-solving mind has
found lots of ways around it. At dinner, your wheelchair swishes back and forth
at the table giving you the movement you crave—so much so that I’ve gotten a
little seasick watching it out of the corner of my eye as I eat. Of course,
that probably says more about my weak stomach than your need to move.
Twelve was the birthday we planned to take you on your own
trip. When Emelyn turned 12, we took her to New York City. From the moment the
three of us returned home from that adventure, you started dreaming of your own
birthday trip, not sure where we might take you, but sure it would be special—because
it would be just for you with no siblings in tow. Quality time is one of your
love languages, and the prospect of this trip meant a lot to you.
Then. Covid happened. You saw the writing on the wall before
your birthday even arrived. You weathered that disappointment as you weather
many disappointments in your life: with mild protest and quiet rumination. And
then you put on that Pollyanna face—the half smile matched with a half shrug.
“It’s okay,” you conceded. “We’ll still do it.” But I know you were sad,
because the trip still comes up from time to time. I’m not sure if you’re still
processing the let down or just reminding us it’s still on the horizon when
we’re all free to move about again.
I am really looking forward to that day.
What does all this say about who you are at twelve? At this
age, you’re probably better equipped to fill us in than any birthday letter
can. Still. There’s value in hearing what others see in you. You’re
compassionate—as ever. Focused—as ever. Independent—as ever. Creative—as ever.
And, experimental.
At twelve, I see you working to figure out who you are. Are
you like your big sister? Like your brother? Are you like Mom? Or like Dad? Dad
calls us twins—we share a physical resemblance for sure. We also share similar
temperaments…and tempers—we fire up quickly, but we forgive quickly, too. The
best we can hope is that others will quickly forgive our occasionally fiery
natures. The good thing about big feelings, though, is that they also produce
an empathic nature—you’re good at putting yourself in others’ shoes and
understanding their view of the world. As a result, you have a low tolerance
for meanness and injustice, as much when it’s directed at others as when it’s
directed at you.
Audyn, one thing is for certain. What I see makes me so
grateful I get to be your mom. You hold within your nature the best of your Dad
and hopefully a little something good from me. But you are also so clearly your
own unique person, a gift to those of us who get to call you ours and who get
to be called yours. We count it all joy. Onward together. Birthdays. Trips. And
all the moments in between.
Happy Birthday, Little Pip.
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