I used to think I already understood every kind of chaos motherhood could throw at me, because by thirty-eight you feel like you’ve earned some kind of emotional black belt. I’ve cleaned vomit out of my hair on picture day, talked a kid through a panic attack in a school parking lot, and spent a whole weekend at urgent care because my son decided jumping off the shed was “basically parkour.” I have two kids: Lily, nineteen, away at college and built like a résumé—honor roll, student council, the kind of child teachers cite as evidence that parenting works if you do it right. And then there’s Jax, sixteen, who looks like a warning sign to strangers.
Neon pink hair spiked straight up with the sides shaved clean. Piercings in his lip and eyebrow. Combat boots, black band shirts, a leather jacket that smells like gym socks and cheap body spray. He’s loud, sarcastic, allergic to sincerity unless he’s sure no one is watching, and he tests boundaries like it’s a hobby. When we walk into places—school events, grocery stores, the DMV—people stare. Other parents give me that tight smile that says they’re trying to be polite while judging us anyway. I’ve heard it all: Do you let him go out like that? He looks aggressive. Kids like that always end up in trouble. I always answer with the same sentence because it’s the only one that matters: “He’s a good kid.” Not perfect.
Not easy. But good. He holds doors, pets every dog, makes his sister laugh on FaceTime when she’s stressed, and slips me quick hugs when he thinks I’m not paying attention—like he has to sneak tenderness past his own pride. Still, I worried about how the world saw him, and how that would shape how he saw himself.