As Big as the Sky

Submitted into Contest #206 in response to: Write about someone facing their greatest fear.... view prompt

42 comments

Drama Sad Fiction

The mirror is no longer my friend. I can’t hide the grays, the lines, the weariness anymore–the signs that I am becoming what I always feared: old.

I am not so shallow, so vain as to believe that without youth and beauty I am any less–if anything, I am more: stronger, wiser, braver. But you do not see me that way, and I can only hope someday you will.

When you were young, my greatest fear was losing you–that I’d put you to sleep and you’d never wake up. That you’d choke on your food. That you’d be swept away in a riptide and I wasn’t fast enough to save you. Those fears always lurked in the shadows of your childhood.

But you’re older now and I don’t have to worry that you’ll suffocate in your bed or choke on a too-big piece of meat or drown in the shallows. In its place is something new, darker, and harder to dispel: the fear that you will reject me. 

You don’t look at me the way you used to. I’m not blind: I can see the way your bright eyes flit from my graying hair to my drooping lips, from my wrinkled skin to my plump stomach. You’re disgusted by me. Embarrassed of me. It’s ironic; when I was younger, I always cared too much about how the world saw me, picking at all my flaws and imperfections–but never with you. You saw me at my worst and I saw you at yours, and you still loved me, still ran into my arms each morning, stroking my bed-head and saying, you’re beautiful, mommy.

I was once your source of joy, of comfort, and now I feel I’m at the root of all of your frustrations. You treat me like something that just gets in your way, like an old dog that lies in the middle of the floor or the broken recliner we dragged to the curb last month. 

You used to hang on my leg, following me from room to room–my greatest little fan. I’d step into the backyard for a minute to water the flowers, then return to find you panicking, thinking I’d disappeared forever. You’d fling your arms around me, greeting me with wet kisses and declarations of how worried you’d been and how happy you were to see me, saying, you’re my favorite Mommy of all the mommies.

Now, I could disappear for days and you wouldn’t so much as look up from your screen until the internet went down and you needed the WiFi password or you opened the pantry and learned we were all out of cereal.

Have you forgotten all we’ve been through together? All those hikes through the woods, trips to the zoo, hours spent at the table crafting with paper and glitter and glue. Singing songs in the bathtub, reading books before bed, picking blueberries at Grandma and Grandpa’s. Hauling stacks of books home from the library, driving from ballet and soccer then stopping for ice cream on the way home. Summers when Dad took off work and we took off to the beach and lounged in the sun and combed the sand for shells. 

Don’t you remember?

Or have I already lost you? 

What will happen when the years keep chipping away at me, cutting deeper, taking more? 

When my knees creak and my back whines and my joints swell, will you still hike with me? Slow down a bit so I can keep up?

When I bring you my laptop and ask you again to show me how, will you roll your eyes at me and think I’m just old and dumb?

When you move out and you're on your own, will you answer the phone when I call? Just to hear your voice and know you’re alright?

When you meet someone special, will you bring them home? Share the world you grew up in? Or will you be too ashamed of us, of me?

When you begin having children of your own, will you reject my advice, push me away, tell me my methods are old-fashioned and archaic? Will you forget I’ve done this before?   

When my calendar, once exploding with activity, is scribbled through with doctor’s appointments and checkups, will you think I’m weak, fragile?

When I tell stories at family gatherings, repeating myself and forgetting details, will you wish I’d stop talking and just sit there quietly?

Will you let me be involved in your life? Bring the kids by and let me take them blueberry picking or to the ice cream parlor in town?

When my countertops become cluttered with medications, will you still see the real me, the woman inside the aging body?

When your father is gone and I’m alone in this big house, will you come visit me? Let me cook you lunch like old times, eat on the porch where we used to watch for hummingbirds?

When my hair turns white and my face becomes mapped with wrinkles, will you still touch my cheeks like you used to? Hold my head in your hands and tell me you love me as big as the sky?

When I can’t get around like I used to, will you help me into the car and drive me to the sea? Stand by the shore with me so I don’t get swept away by a rip tide?

When my hands shake and my teeth grow weak and I can’t eat the things I once enjoyed, will you make me something soft, put a spoon in my hand? 

When my lungs fail to fill the way they once did and breathing becomes difficult, will you check in on me during the night? Make sure I haven’t suffocated in my sleep? 

When I am gone, will you be relieved? Unburdened by the responsibilities of caring for me?

You don’t understand right now. Your universe is so small and you are the center of it. I was a teenager once too. I get it. I remember a time when the last person I wanted to talk to was my mother–how she was always in my business, prying into my private life. I pushed her away, just like you’re doing to me. And now, I would give anything to talk to her one more time–just to chat about the rain or laundry, or to hear her tell the same old stories again and again.

I am not afraid of my beauty fading or my body failing. I will grow old and embrace every minute of it–as long as I know that behind those pretty eyes you always roll at me, is that child who once threw their arms around me and said, you’re my favorite Mommy of all the mommies. 

And, maybe now and then, let me hold your face in my hands and tell you I love you as big as the sky and that I always will.

July 14, 2023 20:22

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42 comments

Nina H
11:05 Jul 17, 2023

Sorry, can’t comment right now. Need to call my mom.

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Aeris Walker
22:13 Jul 31, 2023

Love this! Thanks for reading ❤️

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Zatoichi Mifune
18:20 Jul 16, 2023

Wow. That should be in capitals. WOW. So powerful, so sad. The first sentence captured me immediately, but a few more sentences in and I figured that it wasn't the type of story I had expected from the first sentence. But, of course, I didn't stop reading. I was hooked. Feels so real; I get uncomfortable reading it, thinking that it's just too private and personal for me to read, but I carry on anyway because it's impossible not to. When I finished I felt so sad and scrolled back to the top, expecting to find 'Creative non-fiction' as a t...

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Aeris Walker
18:50 Jul 16, 2023

I do not have teenagers, as my children are still very young, but this story was inspired by a conversation with one, where I felt she sadly misunderstood her parents (whom I knew to be very loving and attentive) and viewed her mother only as old and out of touch. It stung, thinking my own children might someday see me that way. I think there always two sides to a story (and no parent is perfect) but I wanted to explore the emotions of how a mother might feel—maybe irrelevant or burdensome—as she ages out of her child’s life. Thank you ver...

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Alexis Araneta
15:38 Jan 18, 2024

Gorgeously written. It feels so personal. I do not have any children (and to be honest, if I never have any, I'll be okay with that), but I loved how I got into your protagonist's head. In a human development perspective, though, what's happening is good. This is a time of fostering independence and, well, sometimes, learning what NOT to do based on what your parents are displaying towards you. I suppose, though, the mother has to learn to be okay with any choice the child makes in their life --- including living far away from her, choosing...

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Amanda Lieser
02:41 Aug 30, 2023

Hi dear Aeris, Oh this piece was beautiful. I shall willingly admit my teen years with my mothers were exceptionally challenging. But both women prevailed, as many parents do, and they lived on the faith that their bird would one day return to the nest for regular visits. I adored all of these open ended questions. The italics were used brilliantly to help illustrate thought patterns and the imagery surrounding the memories were beautiful. This story had happiness and sadness, growth and stubbornness, agony and hope. Nice work!!

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Aeris Walker
18:29 Sep 07, 2023

Really love your analysis: "happiness and sadness, growth and stubbornness, agony and hope." I think that's pretty spot on. Thank you for reading, Amanda, and for sharing how you can relate. Much appreciated :)

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Anna W
17:24 Jul 31, 2023

Beautiful and devastating and complicated, just like parenting 😭 I always love your stories, Aeris. Thank you for this one! I'm going to enjoy a little bit more today that my kids still think I'm cool and beautiful because they're little.

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Aeris Walker
10:41 Aug 04, 2023

“Beautiful and devastating and complicated”—yes, love that. Spot on. Thank you for reading! I always appreciate it :)

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Janetra Waters
16:57 Jul 21, 2023

That was so beautiful and human. I couldn’t look away from a single word.

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Aeris Walker
10:20 Aug 04, 2023

Thank you, Janetra!

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09:09 Jul 20, 2023

It's not fair to like a story on 2 profiles but this story really tempts me, it deserves both likes... Don't know why I'm commenting a second time, I just want to say that this is definitely in my top 5 favourite stories, and you're in my top 3 favourite Reedsy authors (but don't tell anyone 😉) :)

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Aeris Walker
10:38 Aug 02, 2023

Hi, Khadija. I appreciate your encouragement from either profile :) Thanks for stopping by!

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Michał Przywara
20:41 Jul 18, 2023

Very nice! Change is something we all have to learn to live with (or not, I suppose - change won't care, it'll happen anyway.) Here we have two major changes coinciding - aging, and a changing relationship with a growing child. It's curious. The child begins completely dependent on the parent, and a good job of parenting teaches the child independence. And it makes us miserable, because having succeeded, we're no longer needed. Part of that is fond memories, of course. But as time goes on, the parent becomes more dependent too, don't they?...

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Aeris Walker
12:31 Jul 22, 2023

I always appreciate your thoughtful analysis! Thanks for reading :)

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Helen A Smith
16:10 Jul 18, 2023

So sad and poignant, it made me want to cry. You cover the passing of time so well and the eternal love of a mother for their child.

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Aeris Walker
10:36 Aug 02, 2023

Thank you very much, Helen :)

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Shahzad Ahmad
09:44 Jul 18, 2023

Aeris you have highlighted a phase of our life that we all go through and get the raw deal from our children. But did we do the same to our parents? Will we ever find the balance between what we do as a parent and children? I think we all have to realize our responsibilities and try to fib some moments off the self imposed restrictions enforced on us through our emotion less mechanical routine. A great subject and a great treatment. Deserves a short list!

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Aeris Walker
09:58 Jul 20, 2023

Thank you for reading and sharing your thoughts, Shahzad, I really appreciate it!

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Tolu Odel
23:29 Jul 17, 2023

This was really interesting for me to read as a teen/ young adult! I always imagined mothers as not having any fear of anything at all. Thanks for writing :)

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Aeris Walker
09:45 Jul 20, 2023

I think that’s a mask parents become very good at wearing :)

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Ellen Neuborne
21:48 Jul 17, 2023

A well-drawn portrait of a mother at the crossroads. The fact that we don't really know how her relationship with her teenager will progress gives it the injection of fear. Great read.

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Aeris Walker
09:34 Jul 20, 2023

Thank you, Ellen.

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Wally Schmidt
18:32 Jul 17, 2023

The beauty of your prose belies the dark shift of a changing relationship. I liked how the relationship comes full circle and the things the woman once feared for her child, she now fears for herself. And while I think one of the most 'delicate' points of a child-parent relationship occurs in the teenage years, I also think how you come out on the other side of those years sometimes depends on how patiently and lovingly you negotiate them. I once heard a psychologist speak about how those break away years are essential years where the child...

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Aeris Walker
10:09 Jul 18, 2023

I love your observation: “how you come out on the other side of those years sometimes depends on how patiently and lovingly you negotiate them.” Very well said. Thank you for reading, Wally, and for leaving your thoughtful feedback. It’s always appreciated!

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Wally Schmidt
14:17 Jul 18, 2023

Should probably have underlined 'patiently' ...

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Lily Finch
02:51 Jul 16, 2023

Aeris, I thought this was absolutely lovely. Such a strong, true story about teenagers and how some feel toward their mothers. I can honestly say I knew my mom is special and never felt that way. But I know kids who did. Your writing is so evocative of motherhood and aging. I loved how you captured the aging and thought initially how you were speaking about a woman talking to herself in an image in the mirror. A younger woman in her head to her true older self. (I was wrong!). It seems to me that everyone will have something to say about t...

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Aeris Walker
09:16 Jul 20, 2023

Hey, Lily! Thanks so much for reading. Always appreciate your feedback ☺️

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Emma D
23:01 Jul 15, 2023

Wonderful writing once again! This just makes me more determined to always love and support my mother. :) The part about hiking especially resonated with me because my mother and I love to hike together when we get the chance.

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Aeris Walker
09:52 Jul 18, 2023

I’m so pleased to hear that :) Thanks for reading, Emma!

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Kelsey H
10:13 Jul 15, 2023

I love all your writing on mothering, it's so beautiful and truly captures those deep and mixed emotions of raising a child, and in this case the fact you are raising them to not need you any more. I started copying my favourite lines but honestly there were so many I stopped, but a part I really liked how in the end you link it back to the beginning with the sleeping/choking/drowning fears of the mother related first to her baby, then to herself as an old lady. Gives such a sense of that full circle of growing up and growing old. Always gr...

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Aeris Walker
09:51 Jul 18, 2023

Hi Kelsey—thanks for reading! My short story game is a bit rusty after spending the past few weeks…or months..?only writing academically, so I greatly appreciate your positive feedback. I’m glad you saw the “balance” I was aiming for there in trying to circle back around to those early themes. :)

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Sophia Gavasheli
06:53 Jul 15, 2023

Wow, this was so emotional and heartfelt. I sometimes feel embarrassed/frustrated with my mother, so this story really resonated with me, and showed me the other perspective. I love the questions to the child, and the I/you POV worked so well for this piece, really highlighting those raw emotions. Favorite line: "When my knees creak and my back whines and my joints swell, will you still hike with me? Slow down a bit so I can keep up?"

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Aeris Walker
09:31 Jul 18, 2023

Thanks so much, Sophia!

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Mary Bendickson
05:55 Jul 15, 2023

Beautiful ❤️🧑‍🦳👶to the sky!

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Aeris Walker
09:30 Jul 18, 2023

Thank you!

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Zelda C. Thorne
05:16 Jul 15, 2023

Beautiful, heartfelt story. A relatable period in any parent's life. Lovely to read a story from you. Always hits the feels.

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Aeris Walker
13:51 Jul 15, 2023

Thank you 💕

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Delbert Griffith
00:19 Jul 15, 2023

So powerful and emotive, Aeris. This tale felt almost too personal, and I felt like I was invading your thoughts. That's some masterful writing there, my friend. I'll say what other Irish writers say when they speak of a great writer: you have the gift. This was as heartbreakingly beautiful as any tale I've read in quite some time. Nicely done, Aeris. Nicely done indeed. Cheers!

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Aeris Walker
02:08 Jul 15, 2023

Hey Del! Thank you, sincerely. I felt a bit like I’d invaded someone’s thoughts too—got a little lost in this woman’s head I think. But I’ve always found it interesting how each generation views the other, how the young and old seemed doomed to misunderstand each other. But anyway, I really appreciate your thoughts! Thanks for reading.

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