Today is a very special day in my
family.
Today is my
son's 15th birthday.
Ah, to be 15
again! Actually, I don't think I want to go back to that time in my life. It
wasn't as much fun as perhaps I want it to be now.
But for my
son, 15 looks to be a great age. He has gotten a lot taller, more athletic, and
smarter.
He is still
a kid, albeit a big one, but is moving toward manhood full steam. Heck, he
shaves!
This year is
actually a big year for him. He enters high school, and he knows it's not kid
stuff anymore. He knows he has to continually work hard, and he will work
harder than he ever has now that he is in the top reaches of his secondary
public school education.
My wife and
I were reminiscing about our son's birth yesterday. We remember everything just
like it was yesterday: the exact moment we decided to go to the hospital, his
actual birth (yes, I was there to see it), and one funny incident.
My son was
just born, probably a few minutes old and a few minutes removed from the
umbilical chord, which it was my duty to cut. Anyway, shorn of that life line,
the doctor first gave him to my wife to hold. She was pretty weak at this
point, so they too him from her and gave him to me to hold.
I remember
that I walked out of the room and into the hallway of the expectant mother area
of the hospital (Winthrop Hospital, Mineola, New York) with glee. After having
had a daughter seven years earlier, I now had a son. My "nuclear
family" was now complete.
As I walked
out with boundless joy, a nurse from out in left field screamed at me,
"Get that baby back in the room!"
I honestly
didn't even realize that I left the room with my wife still on the table. I was
so happy that I guess I didn't know where I was at the time.
Anyway, the
rest is history.
He has grown
up to be a fine boy. He has his faults, and he has a learning disability which
we work on seemingly all the time.
But he is a
typical 15 year old boy. He loves sports (as I mentioned several posts ago, he
ran track this past spring), girls, his iPod Touch, his computer, and ketchup
and chocolate ... maybe not in that order, but he loves them all.
And I think
he loves his parents. I don't know if he can tell us that flat out, but I think
he does.
I know that
he respects his older sister to the nth degree. He is so impressed with her
going to, and graduating from, college, that he has declared that even though
he has some learning difficulties, he wants to do exactly what she did.
And I
wouldn't put it past him.
But right
now he is 15, so he is a few years away from doing that. Let him get through
high school and we will pick it up from there.
But again,
my wife and I worry about him, like any parent worries about their kids, but I
really feel the sky is the limit for him.
Let's see
how he progresses. I can't wait.
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