My youngest turned 13 earlier this week. Somehow I managed to get through that day and several more before it really hit me. My youngest baby is a teenager! The exact time this news caught up with my heart and my tears was the night before Christmas as I finished up my gift wrapping.

I picked a book from my stack of gifts and slid the scissors along the wrapping paper to measure just the right size piece. I had been excited to come across a newly released book in the series my boy enjoyed. But as I creased the paper around the edges of the book I suddenly stopped. Why on earth am I gifting him this? Not only does he not enjoy reading, he hasn’t been into this book series for THREE YEARS!
Suddenly a flood of tears coursed uninhibited down my cheeks, as I realized this purchase had simply been a misguided attempt to ignore the fact that time was stealing away the years, and grasping at anything to freeze the moments in time.
I stood there for a long moment, hands resting on the paper, staring at a version of my son that no longer exists. The boy who once devoured those stories on the couch, legs tangled in blankets, asking me just one more chapter, please. That boy has been quietly, faithfully growing up while I wasn’t looking.

I finished wrapping the gift anyway, tears dropping onto the tape and ribbon, because motherhood doesn’t stop when our hearts ache. But something shifted in me. I wasn’t just mourning a book choice—I was grieving a season. The small hands. The loud laughter over silly plots. The years when his world was simple and I was still his safe place for everything.
Thirteen feels like a threshold. Not a door slammed shut, but one gently closing behind us while another creaks open ahead. He is becoming someone new—someone with opinions, independence, and a future that will carry him farther from my daily reach. And I’m proud of him. Deeply. Fiercely. But pride doesn’t cancel grief. They coexist, tangled together in the quiet moments, like Christmas Eve tears over wrapping paper.
I know this won’t be the last time I grieve the passing of who my children once were. Motherhood is a series of goodbyes disguised as growth. We celebrate the milestones, take the pictures, bake the cakes—while our hearts lag just a step behind, trying to catch up.
So this Christmas, I’m letting myself feel it. I’m releasing the little boy I tried to buy back with a book, and asking for grace to love the teenager standing in front of me now. To learn him again. To meet him where he is, not where I wish time had paused.

And maybe that’s the real gift of this season—not holding tighter to what was, but opening our hands to what is becoming.
