In the summer, my husband would drop our six-year-old son, Luke, at his twenty-two-year-old sitter’s house on his way to work. It was their routine—quick hug, backpack handed over, and off they’d go.
One Friday, my husband woke up pale and feverish. So I took Luke instead.
When we pulled up to the sitter’s house, Luke unbuckled his seatbelt but didn’t move. He just stared at the front door like he was waiting for something.
“Sweetheart, aren’t you going in?” I asked.
He looked at me, confused. “Dad always…”
“Dad always what?”
“He always waits.”
“Waits for what?”
Luke pointed to the porch. “He waits until I get inside. And then he waves through the window. You have to wait, Mom.”
My chest tightened.
I’d always assumed drop-off was quick. Efficient. But apparently, it wasn’t.
“Okay,” I said softly. “I’ll wait.”
Luke climbed out, but instead of running up the steps like usual, he walked slowly, glancing back at me every few steps. I stayed parked, watching. The sitter opened the door with a smile. Luke stepped inside.
Then he turned around.
I rolled down the window.
And there he was, standing just inside the doorway, searching for me.
So I waved.
His whole face lit up. He pressed his hand against the glass panel next to the door and waved back wildly, grinning like he’d just won a prize.
I waited until he disappeared down the hallway before pulling away.
That evening, when my husband was feeling a little better, I told him what happened.
He shrugged, almost embarrassed. “It’s nothing. I just don’t want him thinking I left before he was ready.”
“It’s not nothing,” I said.
The next Monday, I insisted on doing drop-off again. This time, I paid attention. I knelt down, hugged Luke tight, and said, “I’ll be right here until you’re inside.”
He nodded seriously, as if sealing a contract.
He walked in. Turned around.
And there I was.
Waving.
It became our thing after that—whoever dropped him off stayed until he looked back. Sometimes he’d wave twice, just to be sure.
Years later, when Luke was old enough to walk into school alone, he paused at the doors, scanning the pickup line. Even in a sea of cars, he found us.
And every time, we waved.
Because sometimes love isn’t in the big speeches or grand gestures.
Sometimes it’s just waiting.
And making sure they see you’re still there.