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Stephanie Rische

Blogger and Writer: Capturing Stories of God's Grace

March 9, 2026

A Letter to Our Son on His 5th Birthday

My beloved son,

How is that you have been with us for half a decade? Or one whole hand, as you put it.

If I close my eyes, I can see that snuggly baby version of you (“Cheeks,” as your dad nicknamed you—for good reason). But when I tried to lift you up the other day, I was shocked by how solid you are. When was the last time I held you? I wondered. After having you in my arms for five years, that “last” went by without fanfare, without warning.

Yesterday you were talking about how some of your friends stay at preschool in the afternoon, and I asked if you wanted to do that too.

“Mom, you’d be too sad,” you said solemnly. “What would you do if I was gone all day?”

I smiled at your tender oblivion to my to-do list, but all at once my smile got caught somewhere in my esophagus. Because in the fall you will be gone all day. I might be more productive, but indeed, I’ll be a little sad too. I’ve been here before, standing at the cusp of kindergarten, and I know how this goes. Once you start “real school,” it’s like going from the bunny hill to the black diamond: straight down from here. While you’re zipping ahead, I’ll be behind you, snowplowing the whole way.

I love the person you’re becoming—the deep questions and silly ideas and bursts of empathy that bubble up from inside you. I wouldn’t trade in any of this big kid stuff. But I do miss the way your pudgy baby fingers used to squish my cheeks and the way you called your brother by a special tongue click (and later “Dam-dam”) and how you looked at us with an impish grin before jumping from any number of inadvisable heights.

***

You came home from school one day last week and matter-of-factly informed me that one of your best friends said she didn’t want to be friends with you anymore.

“How did that make you feel?” I asked, trying to be all neutral and Dr. Becky about it, despite the thundering of my own heart.

You flashed me that dimpled grin, shrugged, and said, “Oh, she didn’t mean it, Mom. We should invite her to my birthday party.”

***

You are growing up, is what I’m trying to say. And that makes me proud and happy and misty-eyed all at once. No, I’m not trying to rewind time, but I do kind of wonder where it all went.

I do know, though.

In these past five years, we went down slides at the park. We read books. We held hands. We pretended to be dogs. We sang silly songs in the car. We ate pancakes and drank hot chocolate brimming with marshmallows. We rode our bikes and applied hundreds of Band-Aids. We said bedtime prayers. We made up nonsense rhymes and spun far-fetched tales about lions. You told Dad and me “I love you” dozens of times a day. You turned somersaults in the living room and jumped off the couch and built forts and Lego creations and played with your brother.

You became yourself. You are still becoming yourself.

And we are so grateful God picked us to be in the front row, cheering you on.

We love you, our five-year-old.

Mom and Dad

3 Comments Filed Under: Family Tagged With: birthday, children, growing up, kids, kindergarten, preschool, seasons, time passing
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July 18, 2014

Friday Favorites for July

friday_favorites_header1

And now . . . for a few of my favorite things for July. Enjoy!

For anyone who has ever tried to articulate whether they like a book . . .
These book reviews by kids are part insightful and part hilarious. Case in point: “This was a good book but it didn’t make much sense.” Book Reviews by Kids

For bookmark aficionados . . .
I realize a scrap of paper or a receipt would work just as well, but I do love a good bookmark. These are fabulous—especially the bedside lamp bookmark. Creative Bookmarks

For anyone who has wondered if their marital status makes them less valuable . . .
Shauna Niequist nails it again: “Marriage doesn’t make you me more special. It’s not a status symbol.” You Are Significant with or without a Significant Other

For anyone who likes to devour books . . .
These cakes are literary and culinary masterpieces. Just wait till you see the Narnia-themed one! Gorgeous and Delicious Literary Cakes

 

3 Comments Filed Under: Friday Favorites Tagged With: Book reviews, bookmarks, books, cakes, Friday Favorites, kids, Literature, marriage, Shauna Niequist, singleness
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September 10, 2013

Learning to Fall

Daniel and I recently attended a family celebration in honor of his nephew’s first birthday. Colin himself was underwhelmed by the occasion (although he was pretty excited about the chocolate cake and the ensuing opportunity to make a mess with the frosting). Eventually, with some enticement from us grown-ups, he did start getting into the gifts (or at least the wrapping paper and boxes), but for the most part he didn’t seem to know what all the fuss was about.

walk7

 

After the birthday boy went to bed, the rest of us sat around the table reflecting on how much Colin had changed over the past year—and how much he had changed us. As we talked, it occurred to me that the celebration of the first year is as much about the people who love the kid as it is about the kid himself.

We went around the table listing adjectives that describe our 15 pounds of charm and came with this list: adventurous, determined, focused, sweet, flexible, curious, daring, funny, hammy, independent, cuddly. And fearless.

There was no question about fearless. In fact, he’d proved it earlier that day at his own party.

walk5

 

Perhaps we owe Colin’s impeccable timing to the fact that he’s a bit of a ham, but sure enough, he waited to take his first steps until there was an adequate audience. Then, right between cake and presents, he stood up on the blanket in the grass and showed off his first steps to the adoring crowd, over and over again. The more we clapped and cheered him on, the braver he became, the more consecutive steps he took.

As I watched him learn to walk—toppling to the side, lunging forward into his mom’s arms, or plopping backward with only his diaper for padding—I thought how smart God is to have us learn this rather treacherous skill as babies. Colin doesn’t have enough life experience yet to be afraid. He doesn’t know that falling and failing are pretty much guaranteed when you’re learning something new. And he doesn’t know how much it can hurt sometimes.

walk2

 

I have a few years on Colin, but there are some things I need to learn from him (or maybe things I need to unlearn). Because here’s the thing: when I try so hard to prevent myself from falling—to self-protect from failure and pain—I miss out on the next steps, the new adventures God has in mind for me. And I deprive myself of the thrill of lunging forward, childlike, into the arms of grace—into the arms of someone who loves me.

So here’s to Colin. Here’s to being one, to being fearless. Here’s to toddling—to falling and failing. If that’s what it takes to learn the next baby steps before me, then count me in.

But I still may look into some padding for my backside, if it’s all the same to everyone else.

 

walk3

 

We get knocked down, but we get up again and keep going.

—2 Corinthians 4:9

2 Comments Filed Under: Faith Tagged With: failing, Faith, falling, Family, God, growing, kids, learning, toddler, walking
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