Thoughts
at the Bottom of a Beanstalk
Once upon
a time there was a little boy named Jack who was about to climb his very first beanstalk. He had a
fresh haircut and a brand-new book bag. Even
though his friends in the neighborhood had climbed this same beanstalk
almost every day last year,
this was Jack's first day and he was a little nervous. So was his
mother. 
Early in the
morning she brought him to the foot of the beanstalk. She talked
encouragingly to Jack about all the fun he would have that day
and how nice his giant
would be. She reassured him that she would be back to pick him
up at the end of the day.
For a moment
they stood together, silently holding hands, gazing up at the
beanstalk. To Jack it seemed much bigger than it had when his
mother had pointed it out on
the way to the store last week. His mother thought it looked big,
too. She swallowed. Maybe she should have held Jack out a year...
Jack's mother
straightened his shirt one last time, patted his shoulder and smiled down at him. She promised to
stay and wave while he started climbing. Jack
didn't say a word.
He walked
forward, grabbed a low-growing stem and slowly pulled himself
up to the first leaf. He
balanced there for a moment and then climbed more eagerly to the second leaf, then to the third
and soon he had vanished into a high tangle of leaves and stems
with never a backward glance at his mother.
She stood
alone at the bottom of the beanstalk, gazing up at the spot where Jack had disappeared. There was no
rustle, no movement, no sound to indicate that he
was anywhere inside. "Sometimes," she thought, "it's harder to
be the one who waves good-bye than it is to be the one who climbs
the beanstalk."
She wondered
how Jack would do. Would he miss her? How would he behave? Did his giant understand that little
boys sometimes acted silly when they felt unsure?
She fought down an urge to spring up the stalk after Jack and
maybe duck behind a bean
to take a peek at how he was doing.
"I'd better
not. What if he saw me?" She knew Jack was really old enough to handle this on his own. She reminded
herself that, after all this was thought to be
an excellent beanstalk and that everyone said his giant was not
only kind but had outstanding
qualifications. "It's not so much that I'm worried about him,"
she thought, rubbing the back of her neck. "It's just that he's
growing up and I'm going
to miss him."
Jack's mother
turned to leave. "Jack's going to have lots of bigger beanstalks to climb in his life," she told herself.
"Today's the day he starts practicing for them...
And today's the day I start practicing something too: cheering
him on and waving good-bye."
-Author Unknown

|