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Family
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Sending my daughter off to college

This was the moment I'd been working toward for 18 years. So why was it so hard to let go?

After 18 years of motherhood, I figured there was nothing left that could occasion the kind of kick-in-the-guts surprise that leaves one gasping for breath. But I hadn’t yet delivered a child to college. Foolish me: I actually thought I was ready for this particular rite of passage. From the moment I adopted my daughter as a 1-day-old, college was a certainty. Although I knew very little about why Maury’s birthmother had made the brave, hard decision to relinquish her baby, I did know that one of her stated reasons was that she wanted her child to have a good education. From the beginning, then, the dream of college was something I cherished not only for Maury, but also for the woman who had given her to me.

Over the years, I steadily put away money, peppering family conversations with the phrase “when you go to college” — as if college were some proverbial pot of gold at the end of the rainbow of Maury’s childhood. We even survived the single-minded frenzy of her senior year in high school, when she and her friends threw themselves body and soul into the application process — taking SAT prep courses, attending countless college fairs, and editing one another’s admission essays. In the end, I was crestfallen when Maury chose a small liberal arts school close to our home in Texas instead of one of the high-profile California schools I’d lobbied for.

None of this emotional buildup, it turns out, was adequate preparation for the moment last September when Maury and I faced each other in the dorm room and said goodbye. It came after a long, hot day of hauling her belongings — the mini-fridge, the stereo, her computer, and teddy bears — up three flights of stairs. From her new perch on a single bed in room 324 of Doyle Hall — roughly half the size of her room at home — Maury supervised the move. I didn’t mind; she had all she could handle in dealing with the awkwardness of meeting her new roommate, Alexa. Mercifully, the match looked like a good one. Both love music. Neither smokes or has a disproportionate number of body piercings. Moreover, each seemed eager to accommodate the other. “You take the top drawers,” Alexa offered.

“No, you take them,” said Maury in her most upbeat voice. The two put together a shopping list: pink comforters, a throw rug, extra surge protectors, an erasable message board to hang on their door. Meanwhile, Alexa’s mom and I were down on our knees furiously scrubbing the grimy baseboards, as if keeping our heads low and hands busy would wipe out the emotional messiness of the situation.

All summer long, my mantra had been, Let her go, let her go; it’s her life, let her live it. But the gap between my mantra and my feelings dwarfed the Grand Canyon. Everything in me wanted to manage this experience, just as I’d once managed getting her to school and to dance lessons, followed by


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