I spent much of my son’s senior year trying not to show him how much I worried.
Nathan was thoughtful, intelligent, and kind. He was the sort of young man teachers trusted and neighbors appreciated. Yet I knew that qualities like those do not always make adolescence easier.
He was quiet by nature and more comfortable with books than crowds. His grades were excellent, and his teachers consistently praised his character. Still, one comment from a parent-teacher conference stayed with me for months.
His teacher mentioned that he often ate lunch alone.
I thanked her politely, finished the conversation, and made it to my car before the weight of those words finally settled in. Like many parents, I found myself imagining the moments I could not see and wondering whether my son was carrying loneliness more often than he admitted.
When I asked him about it later, he shrugged and told me he was fine.
I wanted to believe him.
At the same time, I knew there is a difference between enjoying solitude and feeling unseen.
