The Child, The Boy, The Man — Through a Mother’s Eyes
I wrote these lyrics on April 17th, 2026, after realizing that while I had already created several wedding lyric videos, I had never really touched the mother-son dance. I have written about the father-daughter connections, and it pulled at something deep, but this… this felt different.
I wanted it to feel like something a mother would quietly carry inside her. Not polished. Not perfect. Just honest. Almost like a page from a diary.
This One Wasn’t Easy For Me to Write
As a mother of four adult sons and a step-mom of two more, I thought the words would come quickly. But they didn’t.
I sat there for a bit, unsure how to even begin, which doesn’t happen to me all that often. So I did what I always do when I can’t quite find my way in… I closed my eyes and pictured my boys.
Not just as they are now, but as they’ve been.
I let my mind go all the way back. To the moment they were first placed in my arms… to the baby years… the childhood years… the boyhood years… and then to the men they’ve become.
And somewhere in all of that, the feeling finally came through clearly.
When I look at my sons, I don’t see one version of them.
I see all of them.
I see the scraped knees. The sleepy eyes. The laughter. The learning. The growing. I see everything layered together. And even now, after all these years, there are still moments when I catch a glimpse of the baby they once were. Not constantly, but just enough to remind me that those days don’t actually leave you. Not when you’re a mother.
And that’s really what this song became about.
Because life does what it’s supposed to do. Our children grow up. They become independent. They build lives that are their own. That’s how it’s meant to be. But none of that erases what came before. It doesn’t replace it… It adds to it.
So when I think about a mother standing on that dance floor with her son on his wedding day, I don’t see her dancing with just the man in front of her.
She’s the only one in that room who’s danced with all three.
The child. The boy. And the man.
That’s something no one else shares in quite the same way. A wife may know the man. Sometimes she might know the boy if they grew up together. But the mother… she’s the one who carries all of it. Every version. Every stage.
And that’s what I wanted these lyrics to hold.
That quiet, overwhelming knowing… that when she looks at him, it’s never just who he is now. It’s who he’s always been.
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