She drops her daughter off at the dormitory this afternoon. This is it. This is the big moment. Mom promised her daughter she wouldn’t completely lose it. That was the deal.
Mom and Daughter have spent the last week packing, unpacking, lifting, moving, climbing endless stairs, and decorating a dorm room with cheap junk from the clearance aisle of TJ Maxx. And now it has come down to this.
“Goodbye, Lindsey,” says Mom.
“Bye, Mom,” says Lindsey, throwing open the door to the SUV and leaping out.
Leaping. As though the girl can’t wait to be gone.
Mom throws the car into Park and reminds herself again not to cry. No crying today.
The middle-aged woman steps out of the vehicle and her heart is throbbing. Her baby is leaving, and the aforementioned baby has no idea what kind of dangerous world this really is. All the kid thinks about is fun.
College freshmen are children. Make no mistake. We give them responsibility. We give them driver’s licenses. We give them bank accounts and perfect autonomy. But the reality is they haven’t even finished puberty.
“Do you have your phone charger?” says Mom.
“I got it.”
“Because your last one broke.”
“I have a new one.”
“Lindsey. You can’t have a dead phone.”
“Mom.”
“I mean it. Keep your phone charged.”
“Mooommm.”
Who will remind this child to do her laundry regularly? My God, has this girl ever done a load of laundry? At home the child leaves her dirty clothes on the floor for the Laundry Fairy. Now she’ll be in charge of her own hamper.
“Do you have enough quarters for the washing machine?”
“Yes. You gave me, like, a hundred, Mom.”
“How about your gas card?”
Eye roll. “Quit worrying.”
Who is going to make sure this child has enough gas in her Nissan? Who is going to remind this infant never to let her tank fall…