
Our child’s beaming face reflected the warm mid-afternoon sun as she ran gleefully toward me, freshly plucked flower in her tiny hand. Her eyes were filled with the wonder of life in the moment, and she wanted to share it with me. In Guatemala, another child’s laughter filled the air as they traced their finger across an opaque glass window, and our child’s finger followed from the opposite side, her life making a difference in theirs…The world was hers for the taking, and she had seized it.
The mighty equine beasts towered over our child as she fed them apples from her little hand. She smiled as their soft lips gently probed her hand, opened the way I’d shown her, to take what she’d offered. She looked over at me, her eyes lit with wonder, and she laughed with delight as we shared the moment together. In the freshly tilled field, her triumphant holler echoed over the breeze as her tiny hand gripped the handle of the rope tethered to the kite she’d worked so hard to get airborne. She ran with the wind and became one with it as her spirit flew high above her, for all the world to see…The world was hers for the taking, and she had seized it.
And, time marched on.
High school came along and our children’s world got bigger. Supper was a time for animated conversation of their struggles in higher learning, and in navigating relationships. It was a time to discuss the nuances of humanity as they developed their unique perspective on the world they found themselves a part of. Their joy was mine, their pain was mine, and their angst was mine. I was a man blessed as they shared their lives with me, and I never took a second of it for granted.
And, time marched on.
Tears clouded my vision, hidden behind my sunglasses as we drove away, leaving our child to begin her life at university so very far away. As I counted down the months, days, and then finally the seconds for round two, I foolishly convinced myself that I would be better prepared. Yet, as we pulled away, leaving our other child to begin her life at university (closer to us, yet never close enough for me), the tears came again.
No more ‘Hi Papa!’ as I walked through the door, lifting my heart into the clouds with their youthful exuberance and genuine gladness at seeing me that day. No more random squeeze hugs simply because they were there, followed by an ‘I love you too Papa’ flowing in my ear and down into my soul. No more…of all that I had known of them for as long as I could remember.
I missed them terribly, yet celebrated with every fiber of my being, all the excitement and newness that had come into their young lives. I wanted this for them and would not have had it any other way. I kept telling myself that I would find my way and learn to be the old ‘me’ again, the ‘me’ whose life didn’t revolve around the myriad things that filled theirs.
And, I did. Sure, I still missed them (just not as painfully) and worried about them (that never lessens), but the old ‘me’ had always been there, I just had to get to know him again. He was a little older, and thankfully a lot more mature, and I realized that things were going to be A-OK. We had all begun new exciting stages in our lives (although I suspect their definition of ‘exciting’ would be very different than mine).
And, time marched on.
As we sit reading, the fire crackles while the snow blows in cold gusts outside the window, and the evening’s silence is interrupted by the ringing of the phone. It is our child, and she’s calling to say ‘Hi’ and ask about our day as well as tell us all the details about hers.
The spring teases the air as the sun shines through the branches of the trees, the buds beginning to grow in hopeful anticipation of what is to come. Our child is home for a visit and she walks with us along the forest trail and tells us about her life, and her dreams.
And, time marches on.
I can’t predict the future and have no idea of where this life will lead our children as they seize it and make it their own. The one certain thing…is that I can’t stop that cursed clock. All I can do is cherish every second I have on this earth with them and all that they have brought to my life.
Time will march on and while there’s a part of me that wishes I could be magnanimous and tip my hat in gracious defeat to that unyielding, callously indifferent son of a gun, I am not that man.
I will do my best to celebrate all that has been gifted to me, and try to waste none of it wishing for more. But, I will not lie. There will always be a part of me that looks upon this life, full to the brim with family and love, and wish for these precious moments in time to go on forever.
The End.






