
They Grew Up Way Too Fast
Thereās something incredibly rude about how fast children grow up.
One minute youāre cutting their food into tiny little pieces and teaching them how to tie their shoesā¦
ā¦and the next theyāre graduating high school and talking about college like theyāre full-grown adults with plans and opinions and everything. š
Excuse me, maāam.
Werenāt you just watching cartoons and asking me for snacks five minutes ago?
Because Iām not okay. š
Graduation Day Hits Different as a Parent
Today is my daughterās high school graduation day.
She hasnāt even walked across the stage yet, and somehow my emotions are already all over the place.
Iām proud.
Iām excited.
Iām emotional.
And if Iām being completely honest⦠part of me wants time to slow all the way down.
Because part of me selfishly wants her to stay home forever.
Not because I donāt believe in her.
Not because I donāt want her to chase big dreams and build a beautiful future.
But because being her mom has been part of my everyday life for so long that the thought of her leaving for college feels bittersweet.
I know sheās supposed to grow.
I know sheās supposed to become independent.
But wow⦠nobody really prepares parents for this part of graduation season.
Watching Your Child Graduate Feels Emotional
I know sheās going to do amazing things.
I truly believe that.
Sheās smart, capable, caring, and determined.
And honestly? Watching my child graduate hits me emotionally in ways I didnāt fully expect.
Especially because my own path looked different.
I never graduated high school the traditional way myself. I earned my GED and later got my associate degree the hard way. So seeing my daughter reach this milestone fills my heart with a kind of pride thatās difficult to explain.
Maybe thatās part of why this graduation feels so important to me.
Because I know life isnāt always easy.
I know success doesnāt always happen in a straight line.
And seeing your child step into opportunities you hoped theyād have someday? That hits deep. ā¤ļø
Nobody Talks About the Emotional Side of Graduation
People talk a lot about graduation parties, senior pictures, decorations, and celebrations.
But nobody really talks about the emotional side of watching your child graduate.
Nobody talks about the strange mixture of joy and heartbreak that sneaks into your chest when you realize your child is stepping into adulthood.
You spend years teaching your children how to become independentā¦
ā¦and then one day they actually do it.
Honestly, Iām still trying to process how I can feel so proud and so emotional at the exact same time. š
Letting Go of Your Child Is Part of Parenting
The older I get, the more I realize that loving our children isnāt about keeping them close forever.
Itās about preparing them to confidently walk into the world even when it hurts our hearts a little.
And maybe letting go of your child isnāt really about losing them.
Maybe itās about trusting that the love, guidance, life lessons, and support we gave them will stay with them wherever they go.
Even during hard days.
Even in college dorm rooms.
Even when they no longer need us in the same ways they once did.
That kind of love doesnāt disappear just because they grow up.
To the Parents Struggling With Graduation Emotionsā¦
Itās okay to feel proud.
Itās okay to feel emotional.
Itās okay to secretly wish theyād stay little forever.
And itās also okay to let them grow anyway.
Because sometimes the hardest and most beautiful part of parenting is realizing our children were never meant to stay little foreverā¦
They were meant to spread their wings.
Even if we cry while watching them do it. šā¤ļø
Until next time, have a blessed day.
