My Pookie is moving to France, but at least he’s on speed-dial

Pookie left home. He’s been gone six nights now. Don’t worry about drug crime, says his new inner-city landlord, because we don’t have any problems with dealers here: the pimps chase them away.

But I paraphrase, because the new landlord was speaking in French. Yes, my baby now lives in Paris.

I suppose I should know how my parents felt when first my sister and then I said goodbye, going to Cape Town, to London, going travelling, going far away.

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I remember cherished letters, postcards like wishes, hideously expensive international calls. But things are different now.

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Thanks to the wonder of the internet, FaceTime and WhatsApp, we’re in touch all the time, me, him and my older son.

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This is probably the third time he’s gone away for longer than a few nights.

He spent three months as a waiter in the US, a summer travelling by train across Europe, but this time is for real.

This time he’s moved to France with his girlfriend and two pals.

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The other three are job-hunting, but my boy has worked for the last two years, saving money so he can study further, and now he’s doing his Masters at a French university in some deeply scientific subject that I don’t understand.

If you think I’m mom-bragging, just wait till he gets his PhD.

Pookie is 24, he’s long-since weaned and over six foot tall, but still he’s my boy going off into the world as a man.

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I feel I should be sadder… Yet truly, it’s like he’s hardly left.

He’s right here, in my pocket, on speed-dial.

He’s also in a ninth-storey apartment, living on baguettes, cheese and cheap wine in the colourful neighbourhood of Montmartre.

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(The bright edifice of Sacre-Coeur atop the hill blocks his view of the Eiffel Tower, but he’s coping admirably with this deprivation.)

I’ve already had a full guided video tour of his new home without leaving my own. I’ve looked inside his food cupboard, suggested storing garlic in the fridge – it keeps longer – and laughed at his pink loo paper.

I even “sat” on his balcony with him while he ate lunch, propped against his water glass.

He plans on staying for a year. I suspect this time is forever. But I can drop by, online, anytime.

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By Jennie Ridyard
Read more on these topics: Cape TownColumnsFranceParisWhatsApp