I read a post on Facebook by a Mother about her teenage child, she wrote that there were times she wished she never had kids.Then she explained in detail what her son did that made her so angry.
I’m not in her situation, I don’t know her pressures, but what he did didn’t sound so awful to me.
Is momentary anger an excuse for the public humiliation of your child?
I’m not a parent.
I know that.
But I’m a child of a parent.
I’m not a parent.
But I occasionally provide care for children.
And I’m allowed to wonder.
I was sitting in a food court. Across from me was a mother with her child who had a physical and intellectual disability. She was seated beside him in his wheelchair.
She said, to all listening, “If I’d known he was going to be like this I would have …” She stopped herself. She looked around, “I’m sorry,” she said to her friend, a little loudly, hoping others would hear, “he’s a lovely boy and sometimes I say stupid things.” Then she looked at her son, and whispering lovingly, she said, “You know I love you just the way you are.”
I’m not a parent.
I know that.
But I’m a child of a parent.
I’m not a parent.
But I occasionally provide care for children.
And I’m allowed to be impressed by a woman who knows what words do, a woman that can stop words mid-sentence, a woman that can apologize for what she realized she almost did.
I’m allowed.
