Last night, I traced tiny circles on my two-year-old’s back while his breathing slowed into sleep.
His small hand clutched mine, sticky with traces of the honey he’d snuck before bath time.
The nightlight cast shadows of dinosaurs on the wall, and I could hear my five-year-old in the next room, whispering secrets to her stuffed bunny.
In that moment, lying there on his too-small toddler bed with my legs hanging off the edge, I remembered something that made my chest tighten.
One day, without any warning, this will be the last time.
The thought hit me like it does every parent eventually.
There’s no announcement, no ceremony.
Just an ordinary Tuesday that becomes extraordinary only in hindsight, when you realize your child never asked you to stay again.
Maybe they’ll be seven, or nine, or twelve.
But that night will come, quiet as a thief, stealing something you didn’t know could be stolen.
The invisible timeline of childhood
Every phase of parenting operates on an invisible timeline we can’t see until it’s behind us.
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Remember the last time you picked them up? The last time they mispronounced “spaghetti” as “pasketti”? The last time they ran to you crying over a scraped knee?
You probably don’t, because these lasts disguise themselves as ordinary moments.
My five-year-old used to beg me to carry her everywhere.
“Mama, uppy!” she’d say, arms stretched high.
These days, she walks beside me at the farmers’ market, pointing out which tomatoes look best, chatting about everything and nothing.
When did she stop asking to be carried? I honestly can’t remember.
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What breaks my heart is that they end so quietly, without fanfare, while we’re busy thinking about tomorrow’s lunch boxes and Friday’s dentist appointment.
Why bedtime holds everything
Our bedtime routine starts at 7 PM sharp.
Bath time with too many bubbles, stories about dragons and talking vegetables, songs I’ve been singing since they were newborns, and those endless back rubs that make my arm go numb.
Some nights I’m counting the minutes, mentally running through my to-do list, wondering if I can sneak out early to fold that mountain of laundry.
Other nights, something makes me pause.
Maybe it’s how my two-year-old’s hand searches for mine in the dark, or how my daughter asks, “Mama, why do stars twinkle?” right when I think she’s asleep.
These are the moments that hold everything: The whispered worries about monsters under the bed, the sudden confession about, and the mean thing someone said at preschool.
The sleepy “I love you” that comes out of nowhere.
Every single night, I tell them both the same thing before I leave their rooms: “Nothing you do will make me love you less.”
They need to hear it, and I need to say it.
Bedtime is when the world gets quiet enough for the important stuff to surface.
The weight of everyday presence
Here’s what nobody tells you about attachment parenting or gentle parenting or whatever label we’re using this week: The real magic is in the showing up, night after night, even when you’re touched out and exhausted.
My husband takes Saturday mornings so I can sleep in, and I often hear him doing voices for every character in their books, making them giggle until they can’t breathe.
He doesn’t overthink it; he just shows up, present and patient, building their sense of security one silly voice at a time.
However, presence is heavy sometimes.
There are nights when I feel the weight of being needed so intensely.
When my body aches from awkward positions on tiny beds, when I’ve sung “Twinkle Twinkle” for the thousandth time, when all I want is five minutes alone with a cup of tea that’s actually still warm.
The paradox is knowing that one day I’ll long for this weight.
Future me will trade anything for one more request to “stay just a little longer, Mama.”
Letting them grow while holding them close
My daughter recently started insisting she could fall asleep by herself.
“I’m big now,” she announced one night, clutching her favorite book about butterflies.
My instinct was to celebrate this independence, and I did, outwardly.
But inside? Inside I was calculating how many more years I might have with my son before he makes the same declaration.
The thing about raising resilient, confident kids is that success looks like them needing you less.
You spend years creating this safe, warm cocoon of love and security, knowing that your ultimate job is to make yourself gradually less necessary.
Some nights my daughter still calls me back.
“Actually, could you rub my back just for one minute?” and I practically run to her room, grateful for the reprieve from her growing up.
Finding meaning in the mundane
Yesterday, while tucking in my son, he grabbed my face with both hands and said “Moon!” pointing at the sliver visible through his curtains.
We spent ten minutes talking about the moon, though his version of talking is mostly pointing and making excited sounds.
These are the conversations I’ll forget the details of but remember the feeling of: His wonder at ordinary things, his complete trust that I have all the answers, and his assumption that of course I have time to talk about the moon.
When did we stop finding magic in everyday things? When did bedtime become something to get through instead of something to treasure?
I’m trying to remember that the laundry will still be there in twenty years.
The emails will keep coming and the dishes will never end, but my son won’t always think the moon is worth getting excited about.
My daughter won’t always want to tell me every single thought in her head.
What really matters in the dark
In our house, bedtime is about connection.
It’s where my kids learn they’re safe, loved, and worth showing up for; it’s where they practice being vulnerable, sharing their fears about tomorrow’s swim lesson or their excitement about the fort they’re planning to build.
Every parent has their own version of this.
Maybe yours isn’t bedtime or maybe it’s breakfast conversations or car rides home from school, but we all have these windows where our children crack themselves open and let us see inside.
The heartbreak and beauty of parenting is that these windows won’t stay open forever.
One night, without warning, your child will close their door and fall asleep without you.
They’ll stop needing your presence to feel safe in the dark.
A love letter to right now
Tonight, when bedtime comes and I’m tired and there’s still so much to do, I’m going to remember this: there’s a last time coming.
I won’t know when it is as it might be years away or it might be next Tuesday.
That uncertainty is a gift, really.
It forces me to treat every bedtime like it could be the last one, to breathe in the smell of tear-free shampoo and little kid sweat, to memorize the weight of a small body relaxing into sleep, and to stay just five minutes longer (even when my to-do list is screaming).
Twenty years from now, I won’t remember what was on that list but I’ll remember the feeling of being needed in the dark, of being someone’s safe place, of mattering so much that they couldn’t imagine falling asleep without me.
When that day comes when they no longer need me there, I want to know I stayed.
I want to know I gave them enough presence to last a lifetime, enough security to venture into the world, enough love whispered in the dark to echo through all their years ahead.
Tonight might not be the last night, but I’m going to lie there like it is anyway.
