I'm sitting on the side of my bed debating my next move on Words with Friends when my bedroom door gently opens and my freshly-turned (as in today) 17-year-old daughter bounces over to me with a small box in her hands.
"Look what I bought today with the money I got from Nana and Grandpa." She opens the gold ornate box to reveal a palette of shimmering bronze, gold and brown eye colors.
"Wow," I answer. "Those are really pretty." As I say those words I am at the same time wondering how my daughter turned out so different from me. In this very blog I could envision me writing about the problems with women feeling they need to hide their faces in color. I would write about how cosmetic companies market to women to make them feel inferior--that the features they are born with will never be good enough. But at the same time I am torn, because for Sxylar the freedom to play with these colors is a form of expression. For her it is an art. She doesn't see the act of wearing makeup as limiting. She sees it as limitless.
She and I are so different. And I realize this is okay. And I also realize I am not always right.
I remember an entry I wrote back in March. In regard to Clara having Down syndrome I mentioned that none of our children turn out the way we expect them to. They don't. Let them be who they are and they turn out better.
I look at this young woman sitting beside me and I smile because I raised her. And she is beautiful. Happy birthday, my baby girl. I'm so proud of you. Thanks for helping me see the world through your eyes.
posted by Kel on child rearing, freedom, self-expression
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I love this, Kellie. Happy Birthday to your beautiful daughter.
Janet
Aw, thanks, Janet.