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OK, may be out of line here but it would appear that the thread is open to observations from those who have been through this...
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Its comforting and extremely helpful to hear from those who are traveling with us...and from those who have traveled this path before us.
You know this stuff but it bears repeating at times like this...
Good news...there is still time!...Don't waste it, eat drink and be merry!...take a deep breath, smile, laugh, cherish every last minute together, try to avoid letting the sentiment, the stress of the moment, or the looming event tarnish the fun, excitement, and tight family connection that this moment offers, engenders, and commands.
Because....you want emotion?...you ain't seen nothing yet...in a few days when you're watching him walk away/walking away and then leaving town...This moment is simply one of the the most bittersweet experiences you will ever have in your lifetime...You will be empty like never before, you will cry like a baby for the loss of both your son and a large part of your life, you will swell three times your normal size with pride....and you will do this all at the same time. There is no craming for this, you cannot understand how deep this emotional flood is until you have done it...but the good news is that you are built for this so you will handle it just fine. At last report no parent had yet died from HS post partum.
Good news...they are much better prepared than you ever could have imagined, and you will soon find that out. The challenges are large, larger than you and he can know at this point...but you have groomed him for nearly two decades to take them on and he will do so with gusto.
Good news...I have been telling you this for years but it bears repeating at this moment....IMO, being a college student is about the best gig on the planet, and playing college sports IS the best gig on the planet and yours is about to have that opportunity...this means an instant healthy, motivated, bright eyed, optimistic, happy peer group...this means coaches, experts and advisors whose jobs and lives depend upon your young man being successful....and they would not have brought him into the fold unless they had confidence in his abilities. And he will struggle but in the process he will learn and grow in ways that you cannot predict and the next time you see him he will be the same...but very different.
Good news...Fortunately most of yours are headed for dorms...the perfect halfway house between home and house/apartment life.
Good news...you know that group of HS/Travel parents you were sorry to see go/happy to be done with? Well, the faces change but you get a new peer group all over again to share the experience with. You may loan a son, but for better or worse you gain a new peer group. And that starts now.
And while it might seem like an end, and in many ways it is...you will soon understand like never before that the journey never ends, you will have a small window to appreciate the magnitude of the moment but then it's right back to work putting out fires and figuring things out as the challenges begin once again anew in new and different ways: How to help them when they struggle from hundreds or thousands of miles way? What do I do with all this time? Renegotiating job, free time, and relationships. And whose life DO I run now that my son is gone??
Best wishes, good luck, God speed and prayers...
We have great hopes for you!
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