The other night, daughter had a concert with her Chorus and the Jerusalem Youth Chorus. The show is A Song for Peace Everywhere, which used to be A Song for Peace in the Middle East, but with all the recent local violence, the name has been adapted.
“S” is in the highest division of the chorus, which I discover can sometimes carry a certain snobbish privilege of TAUNTING the lower choristers. We have meetings with the directors to discuss this taunting business. I don’t know if it is the girl bullying that is the final straw for daughter or if it is that she is about to start high school as a vocal student. But I knew I was losing the DON’T QUIT chorus battle. I even enlisted son to try to help reason with her. “But you LOVE singing.” “What else are you going to do with your time?” “You are going to miss it.” “What about all those cool venues?” It did not matter. Nothing worked. At the end of 8th grade daughter quit. Yes, she sang in 9th grade high school. But it was not the same. “Don’t you miss it? You miss it right?” I ask. Silence. When we moved to Philadelphia the high school did not offer a vocal concentration. I wait. And I wait some more. And one day, when it is the right time, when I can leverage the need for this particular talent on a college transcript, I pounce. “You need to rejoin chorus.” I say. You might imagine how this goes over. But somehow I win! Daughter auditions and joins Philadelphia Girl Choir. With only a minimum of teenage mish-mash grumble-mumbles. I just ignore them. Slowly the music comes back. Daughter is singing in the shower again. Daughter is cueing up musical theater favorites and sharing them with Philly, who also is a fan of musical theater. Of which I myself, am not.
And now, here we are tonight. At the concert for peace. One of the arrangements is so beautiful it almost makes me cry. And even though we are way up in the nosebleed seats, I can still see daughters smiling face right in the middle of the stage. I feel like standing up and waving, “Up here daughter! Up here!” and “That’s my daughter!”. But, ok, I do not. We go through the whole two hours of the concert. I watch as daughter joins and exits gracefully and rejoins. I think: Daughter knows what she is doing now. Daughter is a professional. After the show, the singers gather in the lobby for pick up by parents and somehow erupt into a spontaneous jumping up and down, dancing around songfest. I look over and daughter is laughing and jumping and singing her heart out. I look at Philly and smile. I say, “She is having fun!” “Yes.” he says. “She is.” Even though I am on four hours sleep due to previous night of doula work, I let her jump around for a while. When it is time to go she is all teenage sweaty and flushed. “That was the most fun I have had in chorus!” she says. “I can tell.” I say. Ok, I cannot resist. “Aren’t you glad you are singing again?” I ask. “Yes mom.” she says. I smile a big mama smile. And I think: Don’t quit before the miracle happens. Yeah. [cta id=”2866″ align=”none”][/cta]
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