Life on the Water – Seen Through a Woman’s Eyes ②
I stepped away from boat-related work once.
Not because I ran.
Not because I gave up.
I simply stepped out of the role.
From 2018 to 2024,
I took on the physical work around boats
and the responsibility of driving the inflatable.
Even after my brain hemorrhage,
I continued to operate the inflatable.
It wasn’t about whether I could.
It was about whether it was needed.
So I did it.
One day, it was very windy.
That day too,
my husband wasn’t around.
I was on the inflatable,
heading to the jetty to pick up the kids.
Then the motor suddenly stopped.
It wouldn’t restart.
I didn’t panic.
I checked the wind direction.
I knew that if I went with it,
I could reach a nearby beach.
That part was clear.
So I started paddling—
hard, without hesitation.
As I got closer to the shore,
I saw the kids running along the sand,
chasing me.
That was the moment I knew.
This is where I hand it over.
My older son was 15.
His voice carried.
His body was strong enough.
His judgment was already there.
I didn’t need to stay in front anymore.
Right there,
I decided to pass this role to him.
Until the kids leave home,
I’ll step back from this responsibility.
Not forever.
When the time comes again,
I want to be able to take it back.
That’s why
I’ll keep my body ready.
Whether I return or not
will depend on the situation.
Living on the water
isn’t about whether you can do something.
It’s about who should do it.
That day,
in the wind,
I made that choice.
I’ll say this honestly.
I worked hard until he turned 15.
Not by doing everything for him.
Not by removing all danger.
And not by walking away.
I chose the hardest option—
leaving space for judgment—
and I did that for 15 years.
I didn’t raise him perfectly.
I didn’t finish the job.
But—
we made it in time.
Fifteen is a precise age.
Too early, and you can’t hand things over.
Too late, and you miss the moment.
That day,
my child stepped forward,
and I stepped back.
The structure of our family shifted—
quietly, but clearly.
Life on the water is like that.
Stepping forward matters.
Stepping back matters just as much.
And I know this:
I did what I needed to do,
until 15.
#lifeonthewater
#roletransition
#fifteen
#situationaljudgment
#justintime



コメント