Could you tell?
I wasn’t sure.
It was so obvious to me.
Not at first, I must admit.
He loved school.
But he’d always loved school.
However, there seemed to be a special gleam in
his eye this year, when he talked about what he was learning from his
teacher.
Our conversations were mostly about what the
teacher said and how she said it and how she looked and the amazing way that
her mind seemed to work just like his in processing information. He rarely mentioned his friends or his
favorite subjects.
And I started to wonder.
Then we saw you at church.
“Should I go and say hi!?”
Sure, I answered.
“I don’t know.
I mean, we’re not at school.”
But he couldn’t take his eyes off of you.
And then you came over to say hi to him.
And his smile was wide. His eyes were sparkling, though he turned
them down slightly, a little sheepish.
My first thought was concern.
He was too young for a crush.
But as I watched and listened, I realized that,
in a world that pushes our children into sexuality at an alarmingly early age,
there was nothing sexual about his feelings.
He was a young boy, responding to the God-given
desire inside of him to search for a helpmate.
And in you, he saw so many good things.
He saw your intelligence.
He saw your kindness.
He saw your enthusiasm.
He saw your gentleness.
He saw your capability.
He saw your patience.
He saw your strength.
He saw your goodness.
He saw your selflessness.
He saw your honesty.
He saw your wisdom.
He saw your love for God.
These were the things that caught his eye.
Or, I guess I should say, caught his
heart.
I watched him watch you; I watched him glow
under your praise, and I held him the day he cried because you had corrected
his behavior. It broke his heart—not because
you were unkind or unreasonable—but because your opinion mattered to him more
than just about anybody else’s.
And I realized that, though I didn’t feel ready
for my son to have his first crush, his choosing you for such an honor was a
really good thing. It meant that his
mind was focusing on the qualities in a woman that would enhance and enrich his
life, and ultimately bring him closer to God. He hadn’t allowed himself to be distracted by
the short lived, shallow amenities that the world inflates and
overemphasizes. It gave me great hope as
I imagined him in twenty years, finding a woman to be his wife.
He cried again, on the last day of school—the realization
that his days in your classroom were over was too much for him to handle on
that tired afternoon.
But today, we started a summer of healing.
And yet, no matter how much he heals, I pray that he
never forgets you.
Because I pray that, someday, he finds someone just
like you.
Proverbs
31:10-31, NLT