Category Archives: The Teenager

Teenagers …

teenagerThrough the unsettling last couple of weeks, The Teenager has, in his own indomitable way, never failed to put a smile on my face.

Teenagers are just fabulous – they may wreck your house, bankrupt you and leave wet towels everywhere, but you get a refreshing honesty from them in return.

Take yesterday. He leapt downstairs in boxer shorts en-route to his Special K, and paused to show me his body-building moves.

At the time, I was catching up with ‘Come Dine With Me’ (final episode of six), absent-mindedly dipping into a bag of crisps.

‘Aaaaand, this (new pose), aaaaaand this (deep squat), aaaaaand look mum (muscle flex).’

‘Wow, that’s lovely dear. Most impressive.’

‘You jel?’

‘Huh?’

‘Well jel, yeah?’

‘Oh, yeah, very jealous. Well done!’

‘You know mum, and don’t take this the wrong way, but you’re not fat, not like that programme about obese people who have a year to save their lives, like, you could do it in a couple, you know? I mean, if you act now you could even get a Valentine’s card, you know?’

‘Yeah, thanks for that.’

Last week we were in the car (I was probably driving him to the gym) when, out of the blue, he said,

‘Muuuuuuuum, do you ever blog about me?’

Oh.

‘You know I do. You even have a compliment on an Amazon book review. So, yeah.’

‘I forgot.’

Ah.

‘Am I like, the main character?’

‘Oh look, we’re here already, have a great training session, ta ra!’

A couple of days ago, I was trying to wrap up some uni work when The Teenager texted me (he was upstairs). Expecting yet another video of wrestlers/Adele in a car/cats scared of cucumbers (google it, it’s odd), I ignored it. My phone went again.

‘Mum. You are a Legend. I love you.’

I melted then texted back,

‘Aw, and you are the best son ever!’

‘D’uh, you’ve only got one.’

‘I know. Still love you. Monkey.’

‘Calm down. Can you make me some toast?’

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The Teenager Gives Me Nightmares

festivalOne morning last week, I was leisurely sipping on my bowl-sized coffee cup, contemplating another thrilling day at work.

All was well with the world. Sort of.

Until.

”Mum, mum, mum, MUM, MUM, MUUUUUUUUUUUUM’.

 

The Teenager tornadoed into the kitchen, waving his mobile.

‘Huh?’

‘You know you, like, love me, you know I’m your amazing, like, adoring son, and you want the best for me and you want to make me happy and I would be really, really happy if you …’

I put my coffee cup down.

‘Huh?’

‘S’like, ah, sooooo ‘citing. Reading!’

‘Reading?’ (at last, The Teenager has inherited my love of books, the joy).

‘Yeah, no, Reading, not reading, d’uh, that’s, like, books. Reading! Can I go, can I go, can I go, can I go? Please, please, purleeeeeze?’

Ah.

That Reading.

The mud-fest music extravaganza, on a par with Glastonbury. I saw tents, mountains of beer, debauchery.

I gathered my thoughts, put down my cup and tried to look serious.

‘Well. Um. Really? We’ll see.’ (standard parent answer).

‘Nooooooooo, all my friends are going, I’m looking for a tent on Gumtree, there’s a payment instalment plan, the Chilli Peppers have confirmed, I will just, like, die, if I don’t go.’

Hmm. This was serious stuff. What could I do?

Reader, I booked his ticket. I gave him a lecture about drugs, alcohol and washing properly. I told him not to body-surf across the crowds (risk of neck injury, gah). He screen-shotted the booking page as he hovered over my shoulder and Facebooked his friends.

I pushed down my rising panic. How have we come to this? Not so long ago he was desperate to see Bob the Builder and Friends live on stage and was happy to take home a helium Bob balloon.

As he hugged me when the booking was complete, he asked me to google trolleys.

‘Huh? What for?’

‘Like, d’uh. To cart all the beer for the weekend. It’s going to be EPIC.’

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Welcome To The Future

nestThe other day, The Teenager was fiddling around with his phone, sighing loudly.

Nothing new there, but this went on and on and I was trying to rewire a plug. With MS hands.

Eventually I chucked the screwdriver down and said, ‘What? What?’

He looked up. ‘Oh, I’m just writing a packing list for Uni. How many pairs of jeans do you think I’ll need? Should I sell my X-Box or keep it?’

Right. Of course.

Through gritted teeth I said, ‘You won’t be starting Uni until 2017. The end of 2017.’

‘Yeah, I know, like, durr.’

‘Sooooo? It’s like, almost two years away?’

‘Mum, would you stop saying ‘like‘, it’s like, sad, y’know?’

I sulked for a couple of minutes as I’m so grown-up, then asked him what the urgency was.

He laid his phone down gently, gave it a little stroke and turned towards me before saying, ‘Mum. I’ve read about this EmptyNesty Syndrome. Do you think perhaps you might have this? Would you like to talk about it?’

I knew it was a mistake for him to study psychology at A level.

Later on that evening, I had a think. I’ve always prided myself on encouraging The Teenager to get out into the world, explore, make mistakes, learn from them. When I was 17, I backpacked round Norway and Scotland for six weeks by myself and I wanted to pass this sense of adventure on to him.

Even though MS has been a feature of his life from the age of 11, I’ve tried my utmost to ensure it hasn’t impinged on it to any lasting degree. I hope he’s gained an appreciation of what it’s like to live with a life-changing event but also to turn it around and make the best of it.

So do I have ‘EmptyNesty Syndrome’? Two years early? I doubt it. Of course, it will be weird living on my own, in any capacity, but I’ll adjust. Life will re-shape itself to accommodate a new way of living and I will be bursting with pride as The Teenager takes his first tentative steps into adulthood.

Now that he can be left on his own for a few hours without setting fire to the house or advertising a party on Facebook, I’ve enjoyed going out with friends, expanding my horizons once more. Last week I went to an open-mic poetry session, next week I’m going to an ‘experimental evening of visual and performance art’ and am in the throes of deciding which scarf and jewellery to wear.

For both of us, life will open up in new ways; I will buy more scarves and he will finally understand that clean clothes don’t magically appear in his bedroom. Result.

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The Teenager, Reinvented

teenagerIn the Summer of 2011 when MS brutally crashed into our lives on a beautiful, blue-skied, Summer’s weekend, my first thought was, ‘My son. What about my son?’

I was lying on a cold, hard bed in Accident & Emergency at my local hospital, unable to speak properly or walk in a straight line.

He was eleven years old and due back from visiting his dad in London, a round train journey of almost 300 miles. He expected me to be waving at the concourse, holding up a bag of goodies from Marks and Spencer’s.

Instead, I hastily organised a trusted friend to pick him up and take him to my mum’s house where he was fed cookies, milk and platitudes.

Since then, we have traversed the triple-whammy rocky roads of secondary school, the Teenage years and MS. It’s not been easy for either of us. Just when my son needed me as his rock, my foundations were shifting and I was floundering. Life as I knew it was crumbling around us and I was desperately trying to shore up the gaps to no avail.

The answer dawned slowly through the fog of grief and self-pity; rather than cementing the crumbling footings, we could both build anew from the ground up, and that is what we did. We had a lot of very, very honest discussions and also confrontations. We were both learning to live and grow in wholly new ways. It was simultaneously frightening and enlightening.

My son has learned to live with MS as a constant, just as I have, and this saddens me. However (and despite it all), he has matured into a caring and kind young adult and I burst with pride at his achievements.

Over the Summer this year he decided to train at the gym on a regular basis. Now he is in sixth form, he plays for the school’s rugby team and boasts a six-and-a-half-pack, standing tall at well over six foot. He has swapped his favourite Domino’s pizza – extra pepperoni, don’t hold back – for protein snacks, and exudes a glowing sense of confidence and self-determination.

Looking back over the last four years, I couldn’t ask for more.

Hang on, yes, I could.

If he could find a weekend job, my joy would be complete. But that’s another story.

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All Grown Up

appleI had the joy of accompanying The Teenager into town today.

Sadly for him, his savings are held in his kids account at the building society and he needed my signature to clear it out in order to buy a MacBook.

The woman behind the counter was somewhat startled to see his fun savings book with a grinning little red dragon on the cover.

‘Erm, ok. Are you off to  Uni then? You do know you can change your account?’

‘Gah. I turned 16 a couple of weeks ago.’

‘Ah. Wow. What do you feed him then, mum?’

‘Just porridge.’

Money extracted and with The Teenager slouched next to me, we headed for the Apple store where we were accosted by an eager sales assistant as soon as we stepped inside.

‘Hello young man’, he said, looking up at The Teenager. ‘Off to Uni?’

‘Gah.’

‘Well that’s a shame. If you had a student card you could have had 15% off your computer, insurance cover down from £199 to £48 and a free pair of Beats headphones, retail price £165. Aren’t you tall? What do you feed him?’

‘Just porridge.’

A dramatic pause. Amazingly, something in my brain clicked. I fumbled in my wallet for my student ID from the Master’s course. And I am now the best mum ever, having just saved The Teenager almost £500. He quickly facebooked and tweeted his friends the news while I dealt with the paperwork.

Everything bagged, we left the store, with The Teenager holding his bags with utmost reverence and care. He would stop every now and again just to look at them, stroking the Apple logo with a dreamy, faraway look in his eyes.

Back home, we chatted about his A Levels. He has an induction day tomorrow and I trotted out the usual parent stuff:

‘You’ve got to hit the ground running with your studies. Make mind-maps as you go along.’

‘Yeah.’

‘You’ve chosen to continue your education. A big step. Drink lots of water, keep your brain hydrated. Oh, and don’t forget your pen tomorrow.’

‘Pen, lol. So old-fashioned.’

A bit later, I got a text from The Teenager.

‘School was great today. Am in love.’

Oh. This is a new one. I told him to invite her over for coffee so we could have a little chat.

‘D’ur, Mumzie (his new way of addressing me)  I’m in love with my Mac. Lolz.’

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