logo

English
                 

Role Reversal: When Kids Are The Grown-Ups

Posted: 03/14/2013 7:26 am

Kathryn E. Livingston, Author "All about Motherhood"

I'll never forget the day I dropped my middle son off at college. He was my "easy" child, and I was having a really tough time as he'd decided to go to a university six hours from home (my other two boys attended nearby colleges so the separation wasn't quite as dramatic).

As I stood sobbing at the car in the parking garage after we'd unloaded his belongings and attended all the first-day-at-college/separation events, Sam pulled a Lifesaver out of his pocket. "Want a candy?" he asked, giving me a big, rib-crackling hug.

"Whoa!" I thought to myself, tearfully accepting his offering. Total role reversal. Isn't offering a treat and a hug supposed to go the other way around? In addition to the angst caused by the fact that my son was leaving home was this new twist: It was possibly the first time it seemed like he was the grown-up and I was the kid.

Not long after, I was practicing my yoga handstand against the front door (the only free wall in my cluttered house) when my eldest son (who works in the computer world somewhere in Manhattan) happened by. "Stop that!" he admonished. "You might hurt yourself!"

Hmm, those words had a familiar ring. It sounded like something I might have said when this same young man was a child diving headfirst down a slide or climbing a tree in the backyard.


The writer with her youngest son

There's probably a point in every parent's life when our kids start telling us how to behave. Suddenly, the children who were once so busy with their peers and activities, their job or their studies, look at us and realize we, the parents, are doing some mighty foolish things and they'd better warn us. In fact, I remember telling my own aging mom that she'd better stop drinking soda (which she loved) and eat more kale (which she detested). I probably made my mother's advancing years rather miserable with all my instructions and directions. Actually, I think I was a lot bossier with her in her old age than she ever was with me when I was a child.
Once I started noticing this new phenomenon with my sons I got a little freaked out. My kids thought my husband and I were "crazy" to be driving a 13-hour stretch when we recently went down south to visit my sister (who, btw, at 70 is just starting a new career). "Have a safe trip," Sam said, calling me on my cell during our voyage, "and be careful; there might be snow when you go over the mountains!"

Be careful of the snow? Since when, I wondered, do my kids tell me to be careful? Not long after, I went to the mall with my youngest son, a college senior. He grabbed my elbow as we negotiated the parking lot and warned, "Watch out for cars!"

Now, hey, let me be clear: I am not a doddering old woman. I am a pretty fit yogini who can do an inversion with aplomb. So why the heck, I wondered, are my boys treating me like an octogenarian (never mind that their grandmother on their father's side is an octogenarian who still does yoga, drives, works and travels)?

At first, I was amused. Then baffled. Then, I guess, a little insulted. Until I thought back to my own mom and remembered that the reason I started bossing her around was just because I cared about her and fervently hoped that she would live forever.

So I guess I should cut my kids a break. Okay, so they think I'm a little too old to be driving from New Jersey to North Carolina in one day, a little too old to be placing my hands on the floor and flipping my body up against the front door, a little too elderly to be packing a tent and heading to New Mexico on a yoga retreat.

I'm happy that they care; actually, I'm quite touched. But it's payback time, and I don't intend to be any less naughty than they once were.

No. Subject Date Author Last Update Views
Notice How to write your comments onto a webpage [2] 2016.07.06 운영자 2016.11.20 18166
Notice How to Upload Pictures in webpages 2016.07.06 운영자 2018.10.19 32307
Notice How to use Rich Text Editor [3] 2016.06.28 운영자 2018.10.19 5891
Notice How to Write a Webpage 2016.06.28 운영자 2020.12.23 43812
425 [시사평론] 타이거 맘과 대전 아줌마 [5] 2011.03.03 임춘훈*63문리대 2011.03.03 26301
424 서울의대 재미동창회 명부에서 본 姓氏의 Alphabet 화 [12] 2010.11.06 김영철*61 2010.11.06 25927
423 Anton Schnack, his life <k. Minn> [4] 2012.03.07 민경탁*65 2012.03.07 18133
422 [Video Essay] God and The Tsunami [2] 2011.03.15 운영자 2011.03.15 17474
» [Getting Old] Role Reversal: When Kids Are The Grown-Ups [5] 2013.03.15 운영자 2013.03.15 15434
420 노을과 화약연기 [5] 2012.02.27 조만철#70연세의대 2012.02.27 13574
419 [Essay] 판소리 춘향가 [3] 2011.07.19 김창현#70 2011.07.19 11935
418 클래식이여 안녕! [5] 2012.01.24 김창현#70 2012.01.24 11863
417 [잡담] My Failed Crossing of George Washington Bridge [4] file 2018.12.03 정관호*63 2023.08.01 10452
416 목단 頌 [3] 2011.05.18 김창현#70 2011.05.18 10044
415 [Essay] 왜 한국인은 행복해하지 않는가 2011.02.01 Rover 2011.02.01 9691
414 [Christmas Story] 크리스마스의 기적 [1] 2010.12.23 운영자 2010.12.23 9490
413 [Essay] 날 살고 싶게 하는 냄새들 (서갑숙) [3] 2010.01.08 Rover 2010.01.08 9026
412 어느 산골 소년의 사랑이야기 - "소나기" [4] 2010.12.17 운영자 2010.12.17 8974
411 가을이 묻어 왔습니다... [4] 2009.09.17 유석희*72 2009.09.17 8796
410 [Essay] 한국인들의 단점 - 김진홍 목사 [2] 2011.01.09 Rover 2011.01.09 8784
409 ♫ 마에스트로 아바도(Abbado)의 루천(Lucerne)하기 음악제 [1] 2009.09.02 이종구*57 2009.09.02 8683
408 최고의 ‘숙취 해소제’는 술 마신 다음 날 운동 [1] 2011.01.28 Rover 2011.01.28 8651
407 The Ugly Koreans - 내가 본 그 위대한 세대 [6] 2010.08.30 Rover 2010.08.30 8563
406 치열하지 않은 고요는 없다 - 배영순 [1] 2010.03.17 김원호#63 2010.03.17 8478