My mother turned seventy-eight last month, and she still calls me her baby. Not when we’re alone, mind you. That would be one thing. She does it in public, to strangers, to anyone who’ll listen.
“This is my baby,” she’ll say at the grocery store, the doctor’s office, wherever. And there I am, six-foot-two, gray hair, bad knees, getting introduced like I’m still in diapers.
Used to drive me nuts. Now? I just smile and let her have it.
Took me a long time to understand what was really happening there. Longer than it should have, honestly. But once I figured it out, everything changed.
The embarrassment phase
For years, I’d cringe every time she did it.
Picture this: I’m forty years old, running my own business, married with kids. We’re at the bank, and my mother tells the teller, “My baby needs to open a new account.”
The teller looks at me. I look at the floor. My mother beams like she just announced I won the Nobel Prize.
I tried everything to get her to stop. Asked her nicely. Made jokes about it. Even got a little sharp with her once or twice, which I’m not proud of.
“Ma, I’m a grown man,” I’d say. “I’ve got kids of my own.”
She’d just pat my arm and say, “You’ll always be my baby.”
It was worse when my crew was around. One time she stopped by a job site with sandwiches. Sweet gesture, right? Except she announced to everyone, “I brought lunch for my baby and his friends.”
The guys never let me forget that one.
My wife Donna thought it was hilarious. “At least she still claims you,” she’d say. “Some mothers won’t even admit they know their kids.”
But I couldn’t laugh about it. Every time she said it, I felt like a little kid again. Like all the years of growing up, working hard, building something of my own just disappeared.
When the shift started
The change didn’t happen overnight. It was gradual, like most important things are.
I started noticing things about my mother I hadn’t paid attention to before. The way she’d light up when she talked about her kids. How she kept every school photo, every Father’s Day card, every newspaper clipping that mentioned one of us.
Her parish friends all knew our names, our jobs, our kids’ names. She talked about us constantly. Not in a bragging way, just in a way that made it clear we were her whole world.
Then one day, I was picking her up from her doctor’s appointment. The nurse walks her out and says to me, “Your mother’s been telling me all about her children. She’s so proud of you all.”
My mother just smiled and took my arm. “This is my baby,” she told the nurse. “He takes such good care of me.”
And for the first time, I heard it differently.
Understanding what it really means
Here’s what I finally figured out: when my mother calls me her baby, she’s not talking about me at all.
She’s talking about herself.
She’s saying, “I’m still a mother. I still have my children. They’re still here.”
Think about it. She came to this country as a young woman from County Kerry, built a life from nothing, raised two kids mostly on her own while my father worked double shifts. Being a mother wasn’t just what she did. It was who she was.
And at seventy-eight, with all of us grown and gone, with grandchildren who barely visit, with most of her friends either gone or going, what does she have left?
She has the fact that she’s still somebody’s mother. That her babies, gray-haired and creaky as we might be, are still walking around in the world.
When she introduces me as her baby, she’s not making me small. She’s holding onto something precious. She’s declaring that the most important job she ever had isn’t over yet.
What changed when I got it
Once I understood this, everything was different.
Now when she says it, I don’t cringe. I stand a little taller. I put my arm around her shoulders. Sometimes I even play along.
“That’s right,” I’ll tell whoever she’s talking to. “Sixty-six years and counting.”
You should see her face when I do that. Pure joy.
My kids think I’ve lost it. “Grandma calls you her baby and you’re okay with it?” my daughter asked last week.
I told her what I’m telling you. It costs me nothing to let her have this. Nothing. But it gives her everything.
My mother won’t be here forever. Hell, none of us will. But while she’s here, while she can still grab my arm at the store and tell the cashier about her baby, why would I take that away from her?
I think about all the years I wasted being embarrassed. All the times I pulled away or changed the subject or asked her to stop. What was I protecting? My dignity? Please. Any dignity that can’t survive being loved by your mother isn’t worth having.
The bigger lesson here
This whole thing taught me something about getting older that I hadn’t expected.
We spend so much time trying to prove we’re adults, trying to show we’ve made it, trying to distance ourselves from where we came from. But maybe that’s backwards.
Maybe the real growth is in understanding that some things don’t need to be fixed or changed or grown out of. Some things just need to be understood.
My mother introducing me as her baby isn’t about me being infantilized or her not respecting my adulthood. It’s about a woman who’s lived nearly eight decades holding onto the thing that mattered most to her.
I sit on my porch most evenings now, coffee in hand, watching the neighborhood. Sometimes I see young parents walking by with their kids. Those parents look exhausted, overwhelmed, like they can’t wait for the kids to grow up and give them some peace.
I want to tell them something, but I don’t. They wouldn’t believe me anyway. You have to learn it yourself.
Those babies they’re pushing in strollers, teaching to walk, staying up all night with? They’ll always be their babies. Forty years from now, fifty years from now, doesn’t matter. That kid will walk into a room and they’ll see the baby they brought home from the hospital.
And if they’re lucky, really lucky, they’ll still be around to embarrass that kid by saying so.
That’s it
My mother won’t read this. She doesn’t do computers, doesn’t understand why anyone would put their thoughts where strangers could see them. But if she did read it, I know what she’d say.
She’d pat my arm, smile that smile of hers, and say, “My baby’s become quite the writer.”
And you know what? I’d let her have that too.
Because understanding that it’s not about me was the first part. The second part was understanding that letting her have it, letting her claim me, letting her love me the way she knows how, that’s not a burden.
That’s a gift. One that not everyone gets to receive. And one that won’t be available forever.
















