I brush her fine, straight hair and gently move the strands that hang in front of her eyes out of her face, as I gather them and place the pink hair clip just so. Her blue eyes look up at me as I say, “All done.” She insists she cannot put the clip in herself. She refuses to wear her hair any other way. In the last week or so she decided that she could dress herself in the morning and comes out in her own 5-year old girl uniform, of leggings and a long-sleeved shirt. I am pretty sure she would wear one of her Frozen shirts, with both Elsa and Anna on them, every day of the week if I would let her.
I walk into the classroom with little red chairs that really only fit one of my butt cheeks, as her two sweet teachers greet me with broad smiles. The first things they say about my girl are how sweet she is and what a great little student she is. I am taken by surprise when I cannot stop the tears from forming in the corners of my eyes and I get that familiar feeling in my throat. I am here to talk with them about Kindergarten readiness for my “baby”, my little girl. I get a little weak in the knees thinking about how this happened so fast as I attempt to sit, wondering where the adult-sized chairs are and doing my best to hold back the tears.
I make it through the conference without crying but as I drive away I picture her as a little baby again. I think about how there was a time when I never thought she would be. When her existence alone was a question in my mind. In our minds.
I go to pick her up from pre-school and as I enter the room she is laying with her head on the table, I know she is still sleepy. I move the hair out of her face again, her hair clip nowhere to be found. “Hey baby, Momma’s here, it’s time to go.” She looks up with her eyes half opened and motions for me to pick her up. So I do, and I hold her, although with much more difficultly than I used to, when she was a baby. These days she is all legs and arms and I can barely make it back to the van, carrying her and her belongings.
I find her in the pantry, reaching for her own snack and getting her own cup from the cabinet and filling it with water from the fridge. She puts on her own socks and her own shoes. She rides her bicycle without training wheels.
“Can I walk him, please, Momma?”
I hand her the leash and she skips away with the puppy at her side. I see them go ahead of me and I think about all the times she has already walked away from me and how many more times she will. And how as the years go by, how each time she will walk farther away, until she’s gone.
“Don’t go” she says. “Lay with me.” “Read me a book.”
I give in and try to make room for myself on her twin bed, covered in blankets and “stuffies.” We read a short book and say some prayers and then I cover her to the chin with her softest, big pink blanket. The light in her closet is on and the door is ajar. She has to go to sleep with the light on. She’s scared of something but she cannot tell me what. I get up as she begins to get sleepy and as I turn back to look at her we both say, “Blow kiss.” We both put our hands to our lips, do the kiss and blow it to each other. After, I quietly walk out and close the door, missing her just a little. Some nights she makes me pinky promise that I will come and check on her. Some nights I do.
It’s hard to measure the love we have for our children. It is even harder to quantify it when it is your littlest and last one, your “baby”. I want to keep holding her close, but I know I need to let her go too.
Right now, she is my shopping buddy, my worst eater, my sweet girl who lets me still brush her hair. She is my smarty pants who loves to sing, who plays on her own when her brothers are gone, but loves to play with them (especially G) when they are here. She loves her friends and always asks for them to come over and play. I cannot take her to the Target toy section or she will convince me to buy her something. I do buy her too many clothes. We are working on learning the entire alphabet. Some days I wish she would let me braid her hair. She would eat pasta with butter and cheese every day if I would let her. Her laugh is the most glorious sound. I dare anyone not to smile when they hear it.
She is my girl. And she has my heart forever.
This is the first of four posts this week about the people I love. Come back tomorrow for the next one…
Nina says
I love this, Elaine. I have a 5-year-old girl, too, and so much of this familiar. Minus the hair, which is dark like mine. You two would be a cute match of opposites with us.
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Kerstin Auer says
What a great post, Elaine! You really capture her personality 🙂 Also, she looks like she’s really attending to some serious business in that play house 😉
Kerstin Auer recently posted…A is for Appendix
Kimberly says
Always give in … steal those little moments
She’s very precious and this is a beautiful and well written post friend xo
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Angela@JumpingWithMyFingersCrossed says
So sweeeeet. Beautiful words about your baby girl. I am right here with you about my baby going to kindergarten next year and wanting to hold on but knowing it’s good to let go. Awwww, now I’m crying. But it’s a good sweet cry.
Love this post and love the pictures.
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Julia says
You are killing me with these beautiful posts. So many of the things you mention in here I can relate to with Jackson the being all legs and the come back and check on me, which I may go do right now.
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Alison says
She is such a love. Just like her Momma. xoxo
Alison recently posted…I Am Not The Fun Parent
Tamara says
AW, I might cry too. Last year at this time, I was planning kindergarten for Scarlet and it was giving me quite a reaction.
I always think of Scarlet as so much older than K, and it’s only because she’s my oldest, while K is your youngest. Really, they’re probably only a few months apart. And should totally hang out one day.
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Leslie says
I caught my head nodding along with so many points in this post. You clearly have a very special and sweet relationship with your little girl. Are you finding 5 to be the sweetest age yet? That’s certainly been our case. Love that she makes you promise to come back and check on her, too.
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Kat says
Oh love. What a beautiful, precious post. She will cherish this someday. Reading it will bring tears to her eyes, as it did to mine.
Just beautiful.
I feel ya. I’m right there with ya. The last child. The baby. The only girl. And they are growing so quickly.
*sigh*
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Emmy says
Totally made me tear up! And yes we are on the same wave length this week. I wish we lived by each other so this fall we could go out to brunch and cry a little together on that first day of kindergarten this fall.
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