He’s 19 and he bought a Ducati.
A few of my friends, fellow mothers, tilt their heads and eyeball me and ask, “So how are you with that?” They seem to really want to know.
I have heard the many nicknames for motorcycles, including “Donor Sled,” a term coined by ER docs. I’ve also been dragged to motorcycle shops by the enthusiasts in my family and (true story) had the proprietor crutch out with his leg in a cast and his arm not only in a cast but propped up on a 45-degree-angle, hip-to-elbow pole contraption. He proudly told us he had broken his femur in thirteen places and then turned to the happy and obvious task of selling us a bike. I was the only one in the showroom feeling the irony. So I left and went to an antique store with my mother in law. No one’s ever been killed by a milk glass compote dish.
But.
Any thoughtful mother of a boy knows that nine-tenths of her job is backing up and praying. The other tenth is table manners.
So, when he tells you he’s buying a motorcycle, and you flash over the hospital horror stories and maimings and utter road pizzas you have read about, you have to make your lips say something you really don’t mean: “Son, that’s great! Ducatis are awesome.”
And then you quietly walk to the garage and you lay your hand on that bike, and you pray. I prayed that angels would anoint the Duke with their permanent presence and blessing, that it would be an ever-visible bike, and its driver would be as savvy and prepared as a Boy Scout. That it would never leave our garage without a host, an angelic army, before and behind. And after praying, I rest in the knowledge that my prayers don’t evaporate, but are an effective conversation with the God of this universe. He hears and remembers.
My own ears have become fine-tuned instruments, cupped for the sound of the bike on its way home after a day at the work site or the twilight exhilaration of the cool pockets and mosquito slaps of a summer road. I can be sewing, cooking, studying, hostessing, or attempting sleep, and my ears are independently turning like an antenna seeking a satellite. And although I am oblivious to the sounds of the car I drive throwing a rod, or jake breaks on the interstate ratcheting down, I can hear the cycle from a good half mile, turning off 31 on to Woodland Street, and then every neuron I possess goes soggy as a zinnia stem the morning after the dinner party.
Are there positives to the son purchasing a powerful, unprotective rocket? He is a man striding in with the freedom of a man. That’s the whole point of my neuron exhaustion, anyway, plus it makes me really happy. Surely some fine motor skills are being developed like balance and dexterity and coordination and intuitive bike IQ. Maybe some mechanical-tinkering know-how. You know, those guys. Physics, algebra, principles of internal combustion? Or maybe none of that, but a whole lot of joy. Either way, I will look like that zinnia.
I age a little bit every time the popping, chesty rumble ignites in the garage. And I just pray for stamina to make it until someday when he is married and his wife is expecting their first child and the Duke has to be sold for diaper money.
That’s how I’m doing with it.
You amaze me! My daughter! You are wise far beyond your years. You are a gifted wordsmith. (I love reading your posts.) But the biggie! You live what you believe! God has this! “He is able to do exceeding abundantly above all we dare hope or think.” Your faith is deep enough to trust your only son into God’s care!
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I wept and cried and thanked God for putting you in our world!
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My eyes were drawn to this, as I lay awake thinking about my boys and how I am “doing” in my role as their Mother. I suspect that at least one of them will one day desire a motorcycle. I feel myself aging just thinking about it. The emotions that come with supporting such a dream are overwhelming….
Thank you for your words!
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I Love this one! It strikes a chord in my heart that is true from first steps to first motorcycle.
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Like a thousand times.
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What a gift you’ve given to your son! I love the 9/10 step back and pray and 1/10 table manners.
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Forwarding this to the wife. Love it.
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