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Shalene Roberts

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Welcome, friend! I’m so glad you’re here!

Shalene Roberts
Family · Intentional Motherhood

The Curl – A Mother’s Thoughts on the Gentle Ache of Watching the Years Fall Away

My son got a haircut today, and when he got up from the stylist’s chair I almost cried. The stylist had cut his curl. This is ridiculous, I know. My son is 14. This obviously wasn’t his first hair cut. It wasn’t even a haircut to mark a special occasion. It was just a normal appointment on an ordinary Wednesday. And yet there I sat, swallowing tears as that boy who once fit on my lap walked towards me without that curl reminiscent of his younger years. 

In 14 years of motherhood, I’ve come to expect waves of nostalgia, those moments where you get glimpses of the baby they once were and the young adult they are quickly becoming. I expect them when I scroll my photo feed, or when we celebrate a milestone. I anticipate them when we revisit the same vacation spot each year, and I get a tangible image of how much the children have grown. 

But today was different. 

Today was unexpected. 

Today was simply because of that curl.

I suspect there will be many more moments like this in the future, in these four years between now and 18. I might as well get used to the unprovoked tears, but I doubt if I ever will. Because how does a mother get used to the reality of waning time? How does she hold with an open hand the memory of the tenderness of those early years and the swelling emotions of growing a child and watching him fly?

I don’t know. Clearly I don’t have the answers. I’m fumbling through this along with all of you … this tension of mourning the little years while looking forward with hope-filled anticipation to what lies ahead. If you’re a mom, I think you understand this. You know the gentle ache of watching the years fall away. You feel this tension … the longing to hold onto them fully knowing you must let them go. 

What I do know is that sometime in the not-too-distant future, that child will walk toward me, grown and flown, and in the fullness of the man God created him to be. And in those days, my heart will swell with gratitude at the person he has become. In those days, I will marvel at the broken-beautiful motherhood journey that gets us there, a journey of grounding and giving wings, of holding tight and letting go. 

That day is coming. I get previews of it sometimes, and there is the promise of so much goodness in it.

But today … today is not that day. Today my 14-year-old got a haircut, and she cut his curl, and I almost cried.

/ / /

If you like what you see here, please share! You may also want to check out my first-ever children’s book, Bruce the Brave. Now available on Amazon! 

For more like this, connect with me on Facebook and Instagram. To receive more encouraging posts AND get a free copy of my “Five Ways to Build Faith in Your Children”, enter your e mail in the subscribe box You can also follow me on BlogLovin’.

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Post Tags: #children#family#motherhood#mothering#Parenting#Raising Kids

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In just three week, these kids who i love with my In just three week, these kids who i love with my whole heart will walk across a stage. They will accept a diploma, shake a hand and move a tassel from one side of a graduation cap to a next. Every single one of them is bound for a beautiful, bright future, and I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that the Lord will bless them and go before them. Their friendships have been the richest blessing in my son’s life. So how am I supposed to say goodbye? 

Thirteen years to 3 weeks has give by in the blink of an eye. 

#momlife 
#senioryear 
#gradution 
#seniormom 
#grownandflown
It all ended last night. A decade and a half of sp It all ended last night. A decade and a half of spring seasons spent beneath the Texas sun atop a red dirt diamond ended in one final out. When they’re younger and the years stretch before you, time feels luxurious. You think you have so many games left. And then you blink, and they’re a senior. And suddenly they’re playing in their last play off game. 

It ends in the blink of an eye. And no one can prepare you for the heartbreak of it. I’m so proud of him and the way he finished well, but I will miss these years immensely.

#seniormom 
#momlife 
#baseballmom 
#senioryear 
#raisingteens
Tonight I watched him step up to the plate for the Tonight I watched him step up to the plate for the last time. Play offs. Single elimination. Down by 1. Last inning. Two outs. And the batting line up just happened to fall to him.

Nothing prepares you for that.

He took a breath. The weight of an entire lifetime spent in red dirt hinging on this moment. He set his face like flint to that pitcher. The ball left the glove, and he swung. 

Strike one. 

He stepped away. Reset. Tapped the base. Then set himself once more. He swung, hit a line drive and sprinted headlong towards the base, setting his foot atop it just a fraction of a second after the first baseman caught the ball.

The final out. 

Nearly 15 years of our lives ended beneath stormy skies on that Dallas baseball field tonight. We’ve spent every spring since he was old enough to hit a ball sitting along a baseline. And it all came to a final conclusion in one out.

I asked him later what it was like with that pressure. The weight of it all on his shoulders. He told me he wouldn’t have wanted it any other way. “I wouldn’t have wanted one of the younger players to have had to step into that,” he said. 

Several years ago, a finale like that would have crushed him. Tonight, he saw the challenge, rose to it, and left with his head held high despite defeat. 

I wish we had another game, another season, another victory. All these last senior milestones have a way of ripping your heart right out. But in the end, who I’ve watched my son become through a decade and a half on the baseball diamond is even better than winning.

#seniormom 
#motherhoodunplugged 
#baseballmom
#senioryear 
#momlife
No one can prepare you for this, this ebbing and f No one can prepare you for this, this ebbing and flowing of emotions, this elation mixed with sorrow. Senior year. District playoffs. Single elimination. There is no next season. And the ache of that realization is desperately hard. 

#senioryear
#baseballmom 
#graduation 
#seniormom 
#classof2026
Twelve years and what feels like the length of an Twelve years and what feels like the length of an entire lifetime ends in just three and a half weeks. 

#seniorsunday 
#senioryear 
#momlife 
#thisismotherhood 
#graduation
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