The nights are long.
When you’re finally home, hospital bracelet still on your wrist, and your sweet infant girl cries all night. When you try everything you know to soothe her and nothing seems to work, and eventually the tears of joy you expected become tears of exhaustion and frustration.
The nights are long.
When you rock, soothe, and sing lullabies all to no avail, and that bassinet you chose with such care sits empty, while you walk the length of your home, shushing, and swaying, and praying sleep will come.
The nights are long.
When the fever is high, his eyes usually dancing with delight, are dull and weary. When his little body is wracked with sickness, and you don’t know what’s wrong. When you call the 24-hour nurse line, or research symptoms online, only to end up terrified.
The nights are long.
When we lie awake at night wondering if our babies, now children, are making friends at school. Our bodies are exhausted from the day, yet our minds still churn with questions: are they adjusting, are they happy, have we taught them enough to navigate these new experiences?
The nights are long.
When the ones who once filled our backseat with more questions and songs than our ears could digest, now, a few years later, scroll their phones quietly instead. When the eyes once filled with amusement and laughter are now rolled skyward more often than we’d like, and we sit there wondering if all is well in their world. We try, but at times feel unable to find our way into the heart of things.
The nights are long.
When she’s out on a date, and you wonder if all the things you’ve taught her, and all the conversations you’ve had with her, will be enough. When he’s out with his friends, and you hope he’ll be a leader rather than a follower, and that the heart to hearts will be lived out now that the decisions are his to make. When the car is packed, and your eyes hold hers through that window one last time as she pulls away.
Yes. The nights are long.
But the years?
Oh, the years are short.
When the little bundle that once wouldn’t sleep in the bassinet is now too long to fit, and you lay her gently in the crib instead.
The years are short.
When the tiniest hand that once clutched your finger so tightly, releases your hand readily and walks towards the first day of Kindergarten.
The years are short.
When our babies, who were just cooing, snuggling, and filling their fists with our hair are now curling, straightening, and styling their own.
The years are short.
When the one you thought would never sleep, would now sleep until noon if you let him.
The years are short.
When you see the hand, that just yesterday learned to wave while you encouragingly said, “Say bye-bye,” waving goodbye as she drives away.
The years are short.
When our littles become our bigs; When our way becomes their way; When our love is stretched to the point of aching…
We will remember…
That the nights were so very long. But the years are so very short.
(Written by: ©Ginger Hughes – For more stories of motherhood and faith, I invite you to sign up to have the newest posts, as well as our monthly newsletter, delivered to your inbox. Also, I’d love for you to join me on Facebook and Instagram!)
Yes, so very true. My lil girl will be 12 years old in August. I miss those earlier days. Seasoned mommies were right, it flies by. I read a poem once and I can’t remember the specifics, but one thing stuck with me, “had i known it would be the last time, I would have took my time washing her hair that night.”
Ashley, what a beautiful thought, and it’s so true, isn’t it? We never know our last times…when they’ll ask to be held, or rocked, or helped with a certain task. Such a wonderful reminder to hold tight to our moments and to weigh them down with our presence…to really embrace them. Thank you for sharing!
So true. They grow up so fast..Love them all so much.
Beryl, yes they do. Thank you so much for reading and sharing your thoughts!
When they are away, separated by oceans
And the virtual chats are just not enough
The days are long and the years so short
Rekha, oh I hear your heart in this. No matter the age of our children they are always our “babies,” aren’t they? And we miss them, our heart hurts, when they are away. Thank you for sharing.
Same goes for grandchildren and great grandchildren; I know,cause I have four grands, and two great grands. How I love them all!
Doris, oh yes….children and grands….so much love for all of them. Thank you for sharing your thoughts!
This is so beautiful I get misty-eyed every time I read it. Thank you for sharing.
Hi Donna. Thank you so much for reading and for taking the time to leave this kind comment! I was teary-eyed writing it actually…so I’m glad it touched your heart as well.