A Year of Accidental Life Lessons

Posted on August 3, 2015 by

Dear Son,

Last August 3 I’m pretty sure I was sitting in this very spot, looking out this same window, thinking about my kids and how much I missed them. It was quiet without you both here, and I’m pretty sure I was anticipating your sister coming home from Mt. Hood that day, knowing I’d have a few days left with her before she left for college. I know I was wondering about you, and that I sent you our usual good morning text saying something about having an awesome day. You texted me back from the ski lift, and I was sure you were safe.

I was wrong.

A Year of Accidental Life Lessons

Your dad and I took our bike ride early that morning – it was going to be a triple-digit day – and we stopped for breakfast on the way home. The pancakes were huge, and I remember wishing you were there with us. We talked about how strange the upcoming year would be with Lily in college and you living back in Tahoe. We’d be empty nesters, and I wasn’t ready for it. I remember thinking about that year, and the next and the next and trying to predict what life would be like.

I had no idea.

Before I’d even gotten back in the driveway, my phone was ringing. I knew that if your coach was calling, it couldn’t be good. From that moment on, I gave up predicting…and just took life moment by moment, taking in the accidental life lessons as they arrived.

skiing accident

Life happens and show gratitude.

When you were lying so still in the hospital bed and I knew life was going to be very different from here on out, I momentarily panicked. How would I help you adjust? How would you go to school in a wheelchair and would you ski again and why did this happen to you? For all those moments of worry, all I could do was take them one moment at a time. Deal with what was here, now, in front of us. Accept the help being given. Trust that all will be well, and things will work out. And be grateful – do you remember our three gratitudes? At the time, they sometimes seemed silly – grateful for new water bottles with straws and free movies and Top Ramen – but boy did they make a difference. They made us laugh, made us think, and reminded us that we are OK.

You are stronger than you think.

You’ve always been goal oriented, driven, and focused – and physically strong. That’s what made you decide to move to Tahoe and dedicate yourself to ski racing. The accident squashed that dream, but your mental strength helped you when you couldn’t move or walk or stand anymore. You learned how to get yourself off the couch, into a wheelchair and ride in a car. You figured out how to navigate school, how to rip around on crutches, and even jump in a bouncy house.

cast into the car

Family is there for you, even when you don’t know what you need them for.

Without your dad, your sister, Grandpa Bruce and Grandma Sue, I’m not sure what we would have done. When we were stuck in Portland, your grandpa knew just what to do; we got the right doctors, the best treatment, and he decided to do the 10 hour drive to get us home when I had no idea how to get you on a plane. Your grandma knew to stay home and care for you so I could take Lily to college; she even put the kitchen back together after the flood while I was gone. I didn’t even have to ask either of them – they both just knew to step in when I couldn’t do it all by myself.

friends at Target dorm shopping

Friends can fill in the missing spaces.

I wasn’t sure how I would get your sister ready for college; all our planned time ended up just being a passing hello in the airport as she came home and I left to take care of you. Stephanie invited her home, took her dorm room shopping and elevated her ‘Tahoe mom’ status to another level. She even sent texts with silly Target shopping photos, just to make me feel included. I cried tears of sadness when I saw what I was missing, but the happy tears came once I realized what a great friend I had to count on.

When people show you who they are, believe them.

Kindness is free, but unfortunately, we learned some people don’t realize how easy it is to give. We’ve both met a few people in the last year -family, friends, teachers – who surprised us with their inability to look beyond themselves and that made us sad and sometimes angry. I think we’ve both learned to appreciate the kindness of those around us, and let go of the people in our lives who’ve shown us they’re unable of caring. Not the lesson I’d wish for you to learn at 15, but an invaluable one nonetheless.

Son, I can’t say that if I could ‘do over’ the last year I would want to do this all again. No mother wants to watch their child in physical or emotional pain. And I can’t say that I’d do over the tears or the worries or the uncertainty about our future. But these life lessons? I’d do these over in a second. It’s the experiences in life that are our teachers, the moments in life that push us to learn who we really are.

Wishing you a year full of love and (less painful) life lessons,

Mom

On the recovery couch, one year later.

On the recovery couch, one year later.

primark

Jennifer Wolfe

Jennifer Wolfe, a writer-teacher-mom, is dedicated to finding the extraordinary in the ordinary moments of life by thinking deeply, loving fiercely, and teaching audaciously. Jennifer is a Google Certified Educator, Hyperdoc fanatic, and a voracious reader. Read her stories on her blog, mamawolfe, and grab free copies of her teaching and parenting resources.

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Comments: 14

  • The Reasons Why I Didn't Write A Book Last Summer - mamawolfe

    September 16, 2015

    […] when Lily came home, I relished every single ordinary moment together. August 3 came and went, and I celebrated one year of healing since Cameron broke his leg and ten days of both babies sleeping under the same roof. My girl and I escaped to Carmel and Big […]

    Reply
  • Natalie @ Obsessive Cooking Disorder

    August 12, 2015

    Oh my, this is such a touching post. I want to make something like this one day when I have kids. Motherhood is hard – you want to protect them from everything but can’t

    Reply
    • Jennifer Wolfe

      August 12, 2015

      Thank you, Natalie. Yes, it is so hard to protect them – but really, if we’re doing our job, they will be able to protect themselves…and hopefully still want some hugs along the way! Thanks so much for stopping by today – I hope to get to know you!

      Reply
  • Marina Delgado

    August 12, 2015

    Beautiful post to honor your son and to share some sage wisdom. Recording the stories and lessons of our families is near and dear to me. Thank you for sharing your heart!
    Marina Delgado recently posted…Take a MomentMy Profile

    Reply
    • Jennifer Wolfe

      August 12, 2015

      Marina, thanks so much for your kind comment. I love that we both feel the value of recording stories and lessons for our children – I just hope that they soak them in along the way. So happy to get to know you!

      Reply
  • Julie Jo Severson

    August 5, 2015

    Oh, what a letter to be able to give to your son later on in life. That’s a huge reason why I blog and maybe you, too. It sounds like you have surrounded yourself with good people and that says a lot about you. A beautiful, quality site you have here. Glad I found my way to it.
    Julie Jo Severson recently posted…Debuting on Mamalode and Ten to Twenty ParentingMy Profile

    Reply
    • Jennifer Wolfe

      August 7, 2015

      It’s so good to meet you, and I’m glad you found your way here too! I hope he reads the blog post sooner than later, but if not, I know he’s had his own internal lessons as take aways. I’m glad you’re here and welcome to Mamawolfe!

      Reply
  • Nina

    August 4, 2015

    This made me think of nephew who broke his leg this summer a week before he was supposed to leave for camp. I will send it to my sister-in-law!
    Nina recently posted…Your Friend, Not Your EditorMy Profile

    Reply
    • Jennifer Wolfe

      August 7, 2015

      Oh Nina I’m sorry to hear that about your nephew. It’s been a hard year for my son but he’s over the worst. I hope your nephew manages to find ways to adapt. Thanks for sharing it- let her know I’m happy to help if she needs some encouragement.

      Reply
  • Tiffiney

    August 3, 2015

    Ah sweet boy.
    It’s so hard to watch them suffer. Glad you are surrounded with so much support and new dreams still ahead!

    Reply
    • Jennifer Wolfe

      August 4, 2015

      You’re so right, Tiffiney. Hard to watch, and I’m def. glad we’re on the other side. Kids bounce back much swifter than adults do, thank goodness!

      Reply
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