By Sarah Hare
“Are you excited?” I ask, ignoring that Olive can’t nod with her jacket zipped up to her chin. The snow is blinding, fluorescent white. Olive, not quite four, squints to watch a middle schooler descend the hill, staring like he’s in the circus. “You can sit on my lap,” I start bargaining. She’s too much like me, frightened enough of diving in the pool or jumping off the monkey bars that she convinces herself just to stay home. She needs more gross motor play, her teachers tell me. “Let’s just try,” I say, my gloved hand finding hers.
I cheer as the bare trees blur and the cold air rushes past. Even through the layers of fleece and stiff snow pants that separate us, I can feel her body slowly unclench. Her giggle fills the empty winter air as the sled stops.
“No, I don’t need you anymore,” she insists on our sixth time up the hill. “I can do it myself.” She’s wide eyed and flush, a trickle of half-frozen snot running down her face. One moment I’m watching her straddle the sled like a frog, rocking her body back and forth, and the next she’s racing down the hill riding her own momentum. Only once Olive makes it to the bottom without me do I see my breath leave my lungs.
Sarah Hare is a writer living in Southern Indiana. Her work has been published in Mutha Magazine. In 2024, Sarah received a scholarship to attend the Martha’s Vineyard Institute of Creative Writing.
Image by Zuberka courtesy of iStock
I’ve never been on a snow sled and now I feel like I have. Thank you for this lovely moment of both nature and parenting.
This is such a lovely letting go of a piece! Oh that outbreath of motherhood/parenthood. Thank you!
What a gorgeous scene of parenting, holding on but needing to let Olive go on her own. Your imagery is evocative, and I especially love Olive watching the middle schooler slide down the hill like he’s in the circus.
Indeed this is lovely and loving, “her giggle fills the empty winter air…” beautiful.
Wonderful extraordinary ordinary moment of parenthood. The last line stuck the landing!
The moment, the mom moment of release. What a beautiful narrative short.
This is a beautiful depiction of overcoming fears and letting yourself be released into whatever joys, along with their risks, surround you. And the mother? Precious!!
Loved this!
Beautiful image/story. I can see and feel it. Thank you.
so proud of you Sarah!