Skip to main content

Not sure if I am saying the right things

This afternoon while at the pool, J told me to put out my arms as she was going to jump into them. I obliged for some reason, but quickly regretted it, as her weight put quite a strain on my back. I grimaced in pain, which made J feel bad, and she immediately said, "I don't want to get older. I just want to stay like this," amid tears. She then went on to say that she does not want to grow up and that she wants to always live with us. I told her, as I have before, that of course she can always live with us, but I also said that when she is a teen, she probably won't want to be near us. Then she will go on to college and have fun and again won't think home is so great. Eventually she may find someone to marry, and she will want to be with that person. And she may one day have kids and will love them as much as I love her and they will be whom she wants to be with.

Her response to this? "But when I have kids, you'll be dead." Sheesh, girl, it's not as if I am 60 or 70 now!

It is hard to reason with a child when she gets like this, and I don't pretend to have all the answers. Or any of them, really. She also asked what if heaven is not a nice place and the devil comes to take her/us? (Note to self, find out what the school is teaching her about the devil; or maybe she just has been paying attention at church.) I explained that the devil probably wants only the bad people, the ones who kill others and do other really bad things. And, of course, she asked how I know this, and how I know what heaven is like.

I don't know it. I just think it/this. Sometimes, anyway.

When Jordan was younger, I told her we (her family) would all die then walk into heaven at the same time. Was that a bad idea to do that? I don't think so. I wanted to ease her into death, and I started with that. I am not sure if that came before or at the same time I told her that only old people died. Then I stopped hiding the harsh realities of the world from her, at least some of them.

Some days when things get rough, I tell myself that there had better be a heaven, a better place, because this world is so sad and broken. I don't say this in a complaining, negative way. I truly try to be positive, look on the bright side, and count my blessings. But it just seems as if you can't go a day or more without reading about a shooting or someone lying about something. Forget the poor economy, the plethora of natural disasters, diseases and illness, and constant fighting/division in the world. If this place is as good as it gets, well, I just don't even want to think about it. But having faith in the afterlife (and my faith is not exactly strong, unfortunately) gives me hope. It reminds me that when I can't understand why this or that is happening, it is okay, because I am not meant to. I just have to keep trying to do the right thing to get to the right place.

Hopefully, J will be off this kick for awhile, because I don't see myself coming up with any satisfying answers. But I know this discussion (and angst) will come back; it always does. But I guess I can take solace in the fact that she now wants to be with me forever. I am afraid in the not-too-distant future, she will not feel that way.

Yeah, kid, I don't want you to grow up either.

Comments

Sherri said…
I remember going through this as a kid - crying because I didn't want to grow up. I think it will pass. I think the relationship she has with you must be so good that she just wants to know that you'll be together a long time. That you can probably reassure her with, using the same affection and doing the same fun things you always do. I tell my boys - when they also go down the "I want to live with you forever" road - that we'll all get older and we'll all be able to understand aging and death a bit more, and.... that we have a lot of ahead of us - whether we live together, apart or whatever! I have my oldest going to college in a year - and my youngest still in preschool. We will be dealing with distance sooner than we want to. It is hard.
Anonymous said…
I often feel paralyzed when my son asks me these questions. In the moment, I want to say whatever will comfort him most. But then I also feel like I don't want to set him up for even deeper heartbreak later on.

When my kids were babies, I thought it would never get any harder than the days of sleepless nights and non-stop nursing. How wrong I was. :)
Facie said…
Sherri: I am not sure I ever said or thought that I don't want to grow up, but I did think and/or worry about death and dying. It was different for me b/c I spent most Sundays as a child above a funeral home (my grandma's house). I will try that "we'll understand it better as we get older." It does make me feel better knowing that she wants to be with me. :-)

Kristen: My keeping things from her (or lying, really) has caused me some grief, but there were times I just thought she was too young to handle whatever it was. I hate that she now knows that there are people out there who abuse others, guns can kill (including children in schools), drugs and drinking too much can result in harm to yourself, others, jail, etc. It was indeed easier when she was a toddler. But I know how much harder it will get in a few years.
Jessica R. said…
I think I'm going through this in reverse. Logically I know that I will want Sarah to grow up and move out one day, but now I just can't imagine my home ever being without her! And seeing that from a kid's perspective where mom and dad are everything is even scarier.
Facie said…
Jessica: As it stands now, I would love for my kid to live with me forever and never grow up. I want to say those very things to her, but I don't, because I should say something close to what I did, I suppose. :-)
Anonymous said…
These moments are so tough! I too struggle with wanting to comfort my daughter in the moment while feeling like I need to be truthful at the same time.

Popular posts from this blog

What a year 2021 has been (Day 7)

I have almost no words for what happened yesterday at the Capitol. Protesting is one thing (though I truly think it is and has been time to move on). But to storm the Capitol? A friend on Facebook said, quite simply, " Almost 20 years ago a group of people on an airplane sacrificed themselves to protect the Capitol. How far we have fallen!" Indeed. And, yes, it IS storming the Capitol. I have seen numerous videos of people knocking down barricades/fences, pushing police officers, and breaking windows and climbing through them. That is beyond protesting. And even if a protestor did not do those things, if they followed those seditionists past those barricades and into the building, they are just as guilty. I did not support the violent protests this summer that resulted in damages to businesses and public property (I was in full support of the actual protests). But I also acknowledged as a white person, I cannot truly put myself in the position of a black person who is angry a...

Why do they stand up there and say that when they are just lying?

That extra-long title is courtesy of my nine-year-old and was something she uttered during "Say Yes to the Dress" on Friday evening. I watch very little reality TV, but I make an exception for this show because I like to look at the dresses. And sometimes, the stories are heart-warming. Typically at the end of the show, a snippet of a wedding is aired. In this particular show, a woman who was confined to a wheelchair was exchanging vows with her fiance. After the two of them finished, J made her comment. I asked her what she meant as I must have been on the computer while the TV was on, and she explained that because so many people just get divorced, why do they even say "as long as we both shall live"? That is tough one, kid. I tried with what I thought was a sound explanation: Most of the people who get married truly believe they will be together the rest of their lives, but sometimes it just doesn't work out. But if you don't think that you will be ...

Disenfranchised Republican

When I went to vote this a.m., I handed my ID to the guy, since my last name can be tricky. He looked for several minutes in the box with the cards. Then he asked if I was in the right place (there is another area in this room, for people in a different neighborhood, I presume). And I told him that this is where I have always voted. He then reviewed the bound paper list, found my name, but could not figure out why it was there, yet not in the box with the cards. Then he realized what was going on and rather exclaimed, "Oh, you are a Republican!" One of the ladies sitting next to him said, "Oh, one of those." I said I assumed they had not seen too many of "my kind" that morning, and she said I was the third. Then, being the open person I am, I eagerly said I was coming to rock the vote and vote for Ron Paul. One of the women commented that she liked some of the things he had stood for, perhaps to try to make me feel as if I was not voting for a terrible per...