Someday, when the kids are grown, life will be different. The memo on my refridgerator door will read "Afternoon at hairdresser" or "Browse through art gallery" or "Start golf lessons", instead of "Pediatrician at 2:00" or "Club Pack meeting"
Someday, when the kids are grown, the house will be free of graffiti. There will be no crayoned smiley faces on the walls, no names scrawled in furniture dust, no pictures fingered on steamy windows, and no initials etched in bars of soap.
Someday, when the kids are grown, I'll get through a whole chapter of an engrossing book, without being interupted to sew a nose on a teddy bear, stop a toddler from eating dog food, or rescue the cat from the toy box.
Someday, when the kids are grown, I won't find brown apple cores under the bed, empty spindles on the toilet paper hanger, or fuzzy caterpillars in denim jeans. And I will be able to find a pencil in a desk drawer, a slice of leftover pie in the refridgerator, and the comics still in the center of the newspaper.
Someday, when the kids are grown, I'll breeze right past the gumball machine in the supermarket without having to fumble for pennies, I'll stroll freely down each aisle without fear of inadvertantly passing the candy or toy section, and I'll choose cereal without considering what noise it makes, what prize it contains or what color it comes in.
Someday, when the kids are grown, I'll prepare Quiche Lorraine, or Scallops Amandine or just plain liver and onions and no one will say, "Yuck, I wish we were having hot dogs," or "Jimmy's lucky, his mom lets him eat chocolate bars for dinner." and we'll eat by candle light without anyone trying to roast peas or carrots in the flames to "make them taste better" or arguing who gets to blow out the candle when we're done.
Someday, when the kids are grown, I'll get ready for my bath without having to first remove a fleet of boats, two rubber alligators, and a soggy tennis ball from the tub. I'll luxuriate in hot steamy water and billows of bubbles for a whole hour and no fists will pound on the door, no small voices yell, "Hurry up, Mommy! I gotta go!"
Yes, Someday, when the kids are grown, life will be different. They'll leave our nest and the house will be...
quiet...
and calm...
and empty...
and lonely...
and I won't like that at all!
And then I'll spend my time not looking forward to Someday, but looking back at Yesterday.
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This page added to My Place of Serenity March 17, 2000.