In the next few weeks, thousands a little children in
Wyoming will be marching off to school.
Especially for those parents of kindergartners, it is a poignant
time. It sure was for me back in 1976
when our daughter Amber marched off to her first day of school.
Here is a column that I wrote about how I felt about that
event. The column won a national award and was originally published in our
newspaper, the Wyoming State Journal
in Lander. It was included in my first book, The Best Part of America, which was published in 1993. Here is the
column. I hope you like it:
It’s been five years
of diapers, dollhouses, skinned knees, pony tails, Barbie dolls, tricycles,
sparklers, double-runner ice skates, Big Wheels, kittens, and hamsters.
Today, I’m sending our youngest child out into the great
unknown. She will leave our nest and find out there’s much more to life than
just that which she has learned from her folks.
For five years now, she’s believed that anything I told her
was true. That all facts emanate from Dad. I’ve been her hero as her life has
revolved around her mother, two older sisters, and me.
Now it is somebody else’s turn. Today, we trust an unknown
teacher to do what is right for this little girl. This five-year-old, who is so
precious to us, yet is just like any of thousands of other little
five-year-olds here in the Cowboy State.
I suppose there are scores of other little girls with blond
hair and blue eyes right here in Lander.
But, please, I’d like you to take a little extra care with
this one.
You see, this is our baby. This is the one I call “pookie”
when she’s good and “silly nut” when she’s bad. This is the last of my girls to
still always want a piggyback ride.
And, this little girl still can’t ride a bike. And she stubs
her toe and trips while walking in sagebrush. She’s afraid of the dark and she
doesn’t like being alone.
She’s quite shy. But she is a friendly little girl, too.
She’s smart, I think. And she wouldn’t hurt a flea.
I’ll tell you what kind of kid this is.
Twice in the past month, she’s come crying because the cat
had killed a chipmunk. She buried both chipmunks, side-by-side. She made little
crosses for them too.
This is the child with quite an imagination. For example, she calls the stars “dots.” And once when we were watering the yard, she
assumed we were washing the grass.
She told us that telephone lines were put there so birds
would have a place to sit.
She’s just five years old.
I’m trusting her care in someone else’s hands and I’m judging that they
will be careful with her. She’s a fragile thing in some ways and in other ways,
she’s tough as nails.
She’s not happy unless her hair is combed just right and she
might change her clothes five times a day. She likes perfume, too.
She also likes to play with toy race cars and Tonka Trucks.
This is the one who always called pine trees “pineapple”
trees. And when we visited our old home state of Iowa and she saw the huge
fields of corn, she said “what big gardens they have here.”
And like thousands of other little girls here in Wyoming she’s
marching off to her first day of school this week.
I know how those other parents feel.
There is tightness in their chests. Their world seems a
little emptier. The days are a little longer.
And when our little girl comes home, waving papers and
laughing about the great time she had at school . . . when she tells us about
the stars and pine trees . . . and how the farmers raise crops, well . . .
she’ll have grown up a little bit, already.
And I’ll have grown a little older, too.
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