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An Open Letter to my Daughter’s Adolescence by Jeanne Holtzman  

post #1 of 13
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I wanted to share with all you wonderful parents a blog I read recently that just made me cry .. from http://www.hipmama.com

An Open Letter to my Daughter’s Adolescence by Jeanne Holtzman
Dear Adolescence,

I spent years waiting for you. Even as my daughter suckled at my breast, or slipped her warm little hand in mine as we crossed the street, I knew she was under your curse. I’d heard you mutter it when she was born. I knew that even if I dedicated my entire life to burning every single spinning wheel in every single galaxy, you, Adolescence, would still find her and claim her. And not on her sixteenth birthday, either. I would be lucky to get twelve, thirteen years before you snatched her from me.

At first, it was easy to ignore you, what with diapers and spit-up and all. And then daycare and grade school and bag lunches and dance lessons and softball and sore throats. But I never forgot about you. How could I? My own adolescence rang in my head. “Your life is over,” I spat at my thirty-five year old mom when she wouldn’t buy me clothes at thirteen. “You’re a disgrace to the family,” she accused me a few years later when I gave up fashion for flower-child attire.

My daughter sensed you were coming too, way before you started to change her body. Sitting at the kitchen table one day, a beautiful ten year old girl, she looked over at me and said, “Ma, I wish things would never change.” I squeezed her hand and said through my tears “So do I, sweetie. So do I.” Did she see you like I did, smirking in the corner? Hear your haughty laughter?

And now you’re here, and she’s in your clutches. You’ve convinced her that she knows everything and that I know nothing. Because of you, she cringes when I touch her, unceasingly criticizes me, and has forgotten the creative, independent little girl she used to be. You’ve taught her to put on makeup, to listen to her iTunes nonstop, and to IM her friends constantly. And, to my absolute horror, you’ve turned her into a superficial, materialistic, brand-seeking, Abercrombie-and-Fitch-and-Hollister wearing conformist. (I have to admire your dead-on aim, Adolescence. You knew that this would be the arrow to my old-hippie heart.)

I am in exile, waiting, hoping for my daughter’s safe return. Getting weepy at the sight of six-year-old girls in pigtails, giggling with their moms. I want to run after them and warn them, “Wait! Just wait!”

I am at your mercy, Adolescence. I know you will not release her until her transformation is complete. Until you have watered down my mother-power, and weaned her from my sloppy, milky love.

But are you willing to negotiate some terms of captivity? Maybe allow me a visit now and then? I realize I will have to stay behind the glass, that she will barely be able to hear my words. But please, may I occasionally glimpse her eyes unshielded by defiance or contempt?

And, I beseech you, Adolescence, to do your job swiftly, but do your job well. When my daughter finally comes blinking out of your confinement, let her bear no scars she can’t handle. Let her be content with who she is.

And maybe, just maybe, let her be content with who I am, too.

Begging you for mercy,

Jeanne Holtzman

Jeanne Holtzman is an aging hippie, writer and women’s health care practitioner, not necessarily in that order. Born in the Bronx, she prolonged her adolescence as long as possible in Vermont, and currently lives with her husband and daughter in Massachusetts. Her writing has appeared in such publications as The Providence Journal, Writer’s Digest, The First Line, Twilight Times, Flashquake, Salome, Hobart online and The Iconoclast. You may reach Jeanne at J dot holtzman at comcast dot net.
post #2 of 13
Wow, that made me cry. My oldest daughter is in preschool, so adolescence seems far away. But I know it's lurking, and her journey will involve me less and less. Sigh.
post #3 of 13
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post #5 of 13
Time flies so fast... I have "been" there (kinda still there) with DS, but I think with DD it's going to be way different...

<sigh>
post #6 of 13
That made me cry ~ and my DDs are only 2.5 and 4 months.
post #7 of 13
Mine will be 13 in 2 weeks--this sums it up perfectly.

Kate
post #8 of 13
My dd is only 6 but I have thought all those thoughts. I am crying.
post #9 of 13
I'm crying too.
post #10 of 13
Yes that sums it up! We are in the process of adopting a 12 year old girl and so we didn't have much time before adolescence hit to establish a good relationship. The other day though when she yelled at us that we had ruined her life we actually felt pretty good. We knew she was firmly bonded to us when she felt safe enough to say that and in fact the three of us had a good and loving laugh about it later. Thankfully she is still a wonderfully sweet child most of the time. It helps to hear what other mums of 12 year olds have to say.
post #11 of 13
Well, it has some accuracies, but . . .
I fretted and fretted over my older son getting older and mourning losing his babyhood - and then the day he turned 13, it turned out he was the same kid he'd always been. Maybe a little more sarcastic, and less likely to let me catch him agreeing with me, but overall, the same kid.
I'm so loving having older kids, and watching them develop their own personalities. My 11 yr old dd and I had a chick flick fest last weekend - dh not invited, and had a great time with it. My 18 yr old ds is off at college, and watching him explore all his future has to offer is so much fun. Yes, there are times of extreme sarcasm and irritibality, and it's painful sometimes to watch dd try to conform and get along - but it's also uplifting to see her state her own (not mine, but hers!) views firmly, wonderful to be able to speak to her in adult language and have her understand me, amazing to see how competent she's becoming - she can bake cookies, do research on the internet, program the dvd player. While I'm glad I have my 3 yr old who adores me single mindedly to squeeze and snuggle, I can really enjoy my older kids. I'm a big believer in making an effort to love the life you have - kids included and I'm not willing to write off years of their lives and wait for good times again.
post #12 of 13
I think about this every night when I rock her to sleep - what will I do when I'm not her favorite person in the world anymore?
post #13 of 13
Man, this hits home...my dd's are 16, 15, 13, 11 & 9
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