Letter from Harrisburg
Navigating the dangerous days of youth
Published:
I’ve learned to be relieved
when the cookies taste awful and the car runs out of gas.
It means my husband and I have
managed, for the moment, to set the boundaries where our
teenagers are making choices for themselves, but the
consequences are still manageable.
Parenting is terrifying mostly
because the stakes are so high.
It’s tempting for protective
parents to make all the children’s decisions. Or, similarly, to
let kids choose but to protect them from any of the results.
At the other extreme, there’s the
chilling prospect of young people making increasingly unwise and
unsupervised decisions until the doors to healthy future
prospects close and lock, one by one.
So we search for a redemptive
middle ground.
Jenny, our youngest child,
celebrated her 15th birthday by having her cousin Allison over.
The two of them decided to make a big batch of monster cookies
for Jenny to take to school the next day, a birthday tradition
at her private school.
Both girls are capable of
baby-sitting, cleaning a bathroom and cooking a meal, so I had
no qualms about turning them loose to make cookies after I
handed them the right jar of peanut butter.
I hadn’t counted on the special
insanity that happens when two teenagers work on a project
together.
“Oops! Hahahahaha!!”
“How much flour?”
“This recipe doesn’t take flour!”
Waves of giggles.
The first batch into the oven
oozed like a lava flow all over the cookie sheet.
They stirred in a cup of flour,
but the next panful wasn’t much better. “I’m sure it’s that
weird peanut butter,” Jenny announced, hoping it was all my
fault.
The mixing bowl went into the
fridge to salvage later. We bought ice cream bars to take to
school.
When I made the remaining cookies,
the dough was sticky and heavy, like a science experiment
demonstrating highly viscous liquid, a lot like ... corn syrup.
That evening I asked Jenny, “How
much corn syrup did you and Allison put into the cookie dough?”
She said, “I don’t know. Whatever
the recipe said. A cup and a half I think.”
The recipe called for one and a
half teaspoons.
“Oops,” Jenny said.
Next time, she’ll get it right.
Meanwhile, our 19-year-old son,
Steven, was on a three-week road trip, accompanied by two
friends, meandering home from a friend’s wedding on the East
Coast by way of two cars and hospitable friends and relatives in
Arkansas, Indiana and other places. One of the cars was a 1996
Cadillac “funeral car,” we were told, that an acquaintance had
accidentally bought on eBay and asked these guys to transport
home from South Carolina.
We pictured a sleek gray hearse
with a swooping silver emblem on the side crossing Nebraska with
Steven at the wheel, singing.
“No no,” Steven said, “Not a
hearse. Like, a limousine to take the family to the cemetery and
back. With six doors.” Either way, it was just the sort of
quirky arrangement that Steven loves.
I prayed a lot about this trip, as
texts from Steven were scarce and scary. “Where are you?” I sent
one day, and soon got a reply: “Bottom of a canyon with a broken
leg and I can’t move.”
What a guy.
They came home, safe and grinning,
on a Thursday evening. “Did anything unusual happen on your
trip?” my husband asked Steven, who gives out information like
my mom used to dole out spending money: seldom, sparsely and
like it caused her great pain to part with it.
“No. Nah. Not really.”
“Oh yeah, we ran out of gas four
times,” Steven recollected, two days later. “I think there was
something funny about the gas gauge in the limo. So after the
first time we got this little gas can and kept some gas on
hand.”
Between monster-cookie rescues and
prayers for safety, it’s easy to forget that these are
remarkably smooth waters. Many young people their ages face
monstrous dilemmas where none of the options are pleasant and
the consequences are almost unthinkable.
Sometimes it’s through reckless
decisions accumulating one by one, sometimes through others
preying on their innocence, sometimes through lack of a guide —
they all lead to situations no teenager should have to face.
The day Steven returned, my
friend Ila and I took our church’s Girls for God club to visit a
pregnancy center and deliver the baby blankets and hats we had
sewed at our club meeting the month before.
With 15 girls aged 9 to 14, we
crowded into the beautiful waiting room. Debbie, our tour guide
and director of the clinic, told us about the wide range of
services they provide.
“Our youngest client ever was 10
years old,” she said. Seventeen pairs of eyes stared at her,
round with disbelief.
“Such innocence,” commented Debbie
wistfully, looking over our group.
“A third of our clients are under
19 years old,” she went on. “Almost every girl who walks in here
for a pregnancy test has two things in common. She is scared to
death, and she has no one to help her. No one. We try, first of
all, to let her know that someone will be there for her.”
I tried to picture Jenny and
Allison, not giggling in the kitchen, but preyed on, possibly
pregnant, alone and terrified, facing adult decisions with the
sketchy wisdom of ninth-graders.
No wonder we obsess about
protecting them.
Two days after that, I noticed a
news article about a young man who had been arrested and accused
of recruiting children for explicit videos. His name stirred a
memory, and a bit of Facebook sleuthing confirmed it: he had
sung in a children’s choir with Steven, long ago when both of
them were little and innocent. I used to chat with this boy’s
mom while we both waited on our kids to finish choir practice.
He faces at least five years in
prison if convicted.
I have been to state prisons to
help with cookie projects at Christmastime and a barbecued lunch
for the inmates in the fall. Prison is a hard, harsh little
universe of its own, sharp with tension, relentless in its daily
realities. It always reduces me to tears and makes me come home
and extract promises of lifelong law-abiding behavior out of my
boys.
What steps would lead from little
choirboy to possible inmate, I wondered. Was it one impulsive
decision, a series of worsening choices, or a disturbed attempt
to salve pain inflicted by others? No matter what or why, his
steps had led to darker places and narrowing possibilities until
suddenly they stopped in disaster.
As a parent, I want formulas.
These rules, these words, these boundaries — and at the end of
the fragile teenage years, capable people stepping into
adulthood.
The scary truth is, much of it is
out of our control. We are dependent on what we know at the
moment, the grace of God, unseen compulsions in a child’s soul,
and the influence of many others.
So we try to let them experience
results in doses they can handle. We let Steven figure out how
to keep his car going and we have Jenny make the recipe over
again. We love deeply and pray a lot and believe in second
chances. We apologize when we get it wrong. We sew burp rags for
the pregnancy center and make Christmas cards for prisoners.
And we try to keep our eyes and
hearts open for all the lost young people who need someone to
say, “I am here for you, I believe in you, you’re going to make
it through.”
I have worked at a CPC for fifteen years. While there I think I have heard every story of human depravity imaginable. When I would leave the city, coming home 30 miles distant, I would be so thankful, so grateful for the conservative Mennonite culture that works to protect its young from the ravages of sin that I encountered every week there. The tragedy of this is that very few conservative Mennonite young - and maybe their parents - have a clue what I am talking about. Sad.
ReplyDeleteYes, Debbie is right on when she looked at your group of girls and saw innocence in their faces. People that work at a CPC will pick this up in a heartbeat. I promise.
I mentor women coming out of prison. These are women just like any other women I know but they have been caught up in bad choices and ruined their lives. They can never go back to where they were before prison because their families do not want to deal with what they did or husbands divorced them while they were incarcerated. Their children do not want them to be their mothers. This is something that I would really like my adult children to see but the reality of it is too harsh and heart wrenching.
ReplyDeleteMay I state my opinion that this is probably one of your best posts ever?! My husband and I are raising two precious boys. To people who know me, I would appear to have had a charmed childhood, but it was filled with horror and hurt behind the picturesque scene. I constantly run to The Lord for wisdom and perspective and sometimes He uses your blog to answer my prayers!
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