Today you turned 18.
I lay in bed last night and didn’t sleep. I wrestled with memory and hope and fear and excitement and terror.
Just over 18 years ago your father and I were living in a one-room shack, 10 miles outside of Palmer, a small town in Alaska. The shack sat in the middle of a crop of lucerne. There was no power and no running water.
Outside the window the fireweed was in flower. We had been in Alaska four months, climbing, hiking, kayaking, travelling, and using this tiny shack as our base. Summer was fading, fall approaching, and there was a pulsing urgency in the air, everything, me included, was pregnant.
Each evening I walked through the lucerne. There, my horizon hemmed by rearing mountains, I tried to reconcile myself to the thrumming life inside me.
Back in Australia, and you arrived with the same urgency as an Alaskan fall. The mystery of you was revealed as soon as you were lifted onto my belly and we locked eyes. I was 24 years old, out of step with my world, unsure of my career, but consumed by you.
Now, 18 years later and I am still as unsure about being a mother as I was when you were born. Your coming of age has taken me by surprise. I would even go as so far as saying I’m not ready. But you’re ready and this is what pulls me up.
When you were tiny I could never imagine you crawling and when you were crawling I could never imagine you walking and the same with talking and reading and spelling and going to school and every small milestone you effortlessly achieved – all of those I couldn’t imagine. And now you are 18 and I can’t imagine it. At least I’m consistent.