Instead of taking a last day of school photo, I'm tracking Zoe's progress toward Central Virginia using the Find My Friends app on my phone. I take a screenshot when I see she's arrived, her photo floating above the trees at the summer camp where she'll be working as a counselor for the next 10 weeks. To prepare for this, we went to Costco for sunscreen, bug spray, socks, and other supplies. We ordered rain boots, a jacket, a rainbow of $6 tank tops, and her favorite hair product online. We emptied her trunk--originally purchased for her first time at camp in 2015 and still in astonishingly good shape--and filled it with carefully labeled and rolled-up t-shirts and shorts stuffed into gallon-sized Ziplock bags. We dug out of the closet her camp backpack, which still contained items from last summer, including a sock she'd been looking for everywhere. Last night I filled her tank with gas and this morning I ordered Starbucks for her to pick up at 6:30am on her way out of town.
I have done everything I can to make things easier for her, so she can go out and do hard things on her own.
She's already done an admirable amount of adulting this year. She navigated junior year with challenging classes and two part-time jobs (three if you count occasional gigs babysitting for a family with three kids and a dog). She learned how expensive gas is (and therefore why it's important to look for the cheapest gas) and how to get her car serviced and inspected on her own. She's done banking and cooking and traveling out of state without her family and now she's driven 90-some miles by herself four times in one week. She wrote her own end-of-the-year thank you note to her English teacher. She's visited dozens of colleges and made thoughtful decisions about where she will apply this fall, demonstrating maturity and self-awareness.
And now she's off to work and play for the summer. When she was a younger camper, I asked a few times if she would someday want to be a counselor, and she couldn't imagine such a grown-up responsibility. Just like when she was a young martial artist and I asked her to picture herself as a black belt and she wasn't ready to even conceive of the challenge. But her counselors knew that she would join them eventually. They could see it in her even when she couldn't yet see it in herself. Last weekend she went down to camp for three days of staff training. She was nervous but ready. She was worried she wouldn't have anyone to talk to or hang out with. By the end of the third day she had already made a friend who she didn't want to be apart from for the two days she would be home before returning to camp. Thank goodness they are reunited now.
The evolution of parenting takes you from solving all your child's problems--once you discern what they are--for them to figuring out, one by one, which problems they are ready to take on themselves. This requires careful observation and immense amounts of patience and often guidance from other people who've been through it before and can see things more clearly than you can. And as they get older, paradoxically it gets harder. I'd heard that adage from older parents since my kids were small--"little kids, little problems, big kids, bigger problems," but of course I didn't believe it until my kids were big. Making the decisions about what decisions to let them make for themselves is actually a lot more overwhelming than changing diapers, if less smelly.
At this point I feel like most of what we can do is gently and as subtly as possible guide them toward what we think would be good paths for them to explore. We are not the type of parents to force them into anything, barring what is required by law or basic human needs. We've taught them everything we know (for better or for worse) and to think for themselves. We've also taught them that we will always unconditionally be here for them when they need us. And that we trust them to make good decisions, and know that sometimes they won't, because sometimes we don't, because we're human. So hopefully we've taught them how to learn from their mistakes. Or at least how to pick themselves up and dust themselves off and keep going.
So this summer while Zoe is working as a camp counselor, I hope she has fun--both with the other counselors and with the kids she will work with. She probably has no idea that so many young kids will look at her as a role model, and talk about how cool she is long after they've gotten home from camp, and introduce their friends back home to the music that Zoe introduced them to. I hope they come to her with problems and she helps them figure out what to do, or takes them to whoever can. I hope she learns incredible things from the 70+ other counselors who are there from all over the world, and from however many campers pass through her cabin or the archery range or the arts and crafts building throughout the summer. I hope she sees and hears stories and perspectives that will change the way she thinks and that she will never forget. I hope she tries things she's never tried before. I hope she can shake off the mistakes she makes, because I'm sure she'll make them.
I could not be prouder of her, or more excited for what lies ahead for her this summer. And I know I'm going to miss her like crazy. Patience has never been my strong suit, but I will have no choice but to wait for her to be ready to share the stories of her adventures. I know both of us can do hard things.
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