posted 5 years ago
I was concerned about this for a while, that I would end up dying before I could tell my daughter everything I wanted her to know, and I wrote a "list of things I wanted her to know". I updated that list every so often (this could be interesting for you-- to redo it every so often, which makes a fabulous video record of what your lives were like); now that she is 20 and off at college, we've covered everything that was on the list and it's not needed anymore (lucky us!) but I think at some point I might print it up nicely for her (if she ever has kids it would be a nice present). I still do have a document that she has access to with all my passwords, bank access info, etc just in case, and I`m trying to get into the habit of telling her something she didn't know about her young childhood when we spend time together.
Edited to add: you ask what is in it. I just spent the last half hour hunting, I know the list is around here somewhere but I could not find it. I put in my list everything that I wished someone had told me when I was a kid that I only had to find out through suffering (people lie, bad things happen, nothing good is easy--- but that for every liar there is a person who helps, for every bad thing there is a thing that can lift you up again, for every difficult challenge there is satisfaction, if you are brave enough to hang on). I also added info about our family medical issues. We are chock full of addiction, mental illness, and cancer, and I didn't want her thinking that her stomachaches and racing heart, her rosacea/dermatitis and all the rest were her own shortcoming. We all have anxiety, we all have IBS, this is the body doing what the body does, and not in any way your fault. We also have a distinct reaction to a certain class of drugs that makes their use very unpleasant (which is not something to be discovering as a teenager at a party surrounded by strangers, for example). Thanks to her ethnic makeup she also doesn't metabolize alcohol well, also not something to be discovering casually.
I told her the one phrase that I always call on when I'm scared: Be intrepid (yes, Julia Child talking about making omelets, but it works for everything). Life is too short to not try.
I also told her the things that made my life better when I was faced by challenges. Helping people always makes you feel better. Nature/God/Life is everywhere, and always emerges victorious. People, whether rich or poor or here or there, all put their pants on one leg at a time, all love their children, all want to be safe and loved, and when you remember that you can create connections.
About love, your children certainly know, mine knew. But it never hurts to say it again and in different ways.