Excerpts
Contents
Unfolding
Nesting
First Days
Fragments
Little Man
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Contents
1.
Longing
2. Possible Futures
3. Loss
4. Life
5. Weakness
6. Waiting
7. Fear
8. Joying in the Body
9. Ordination
10. Nesting
11. Him
12. Fullness
13. Danger
14. Birth
15. First Days
16. Breastfeeding
17. Later Weeks
18. Sleep
19. Attention
20. Little Man
Afterword
Acknowlegements
Suggested Reading
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Unfolding
Perhaps
we should consider the special, holy work of pregnancy as the truer
picture of all that human beings do, all our actions in this world.
We fuss and flurry about anxiously to build and achieve and secure,
thinking that the successful results redound credit to us. But all that
we are and are capable of is a gift, ultimately. Whatever is blessed
about one’s birthplace, education, family, health, all this is
a gift. The encouraging words of a teacher, a job opportunity proffered
by a friend, a gorgeous sunset that appears just when life seems entirely
gray and hopeless, all these are gifts. Even nasty or frightening or
difficult circumstances sometimes get salvaged and lead to something
surprising and beautiful. How then can we claim any accomplishment as
truly our own? All things are brought into being by God. I do not mean
to imply that free will is an illusion; our individual wills are real.
But our actions are caught up in God’s patient and elastic plan.
To paraphrase Proverbs: “A woman’s mind plans her way, but
the Lord directs her steps.” We can damage and destroy God’s
direction, or we can participate willingly and attentively. But the
outcome does not belong to us. Pregnancy, then, with its disconcertingly
unconscious progress, may be the truer picture of our histories, individual
and cosmic. Ultimately, we simply watch in wonder for God’s work
to unfold into its vast and intricate completion.
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Nesting
The
most amusing part of this nesting urge is the element of anger. Where
does that come from? Why does every little bead on the floor and fuzz
heap under the bed seem a personal affront? Why am I on this vendetta
against all things dusty and cluttery? Perhaps it’s my own revenge
against that law of the natural world that my scientist brother would
label the second law of thermodynamics: all things tend toward entropy.
In other words, left to themselves, things fall apart. Keeping them
together requires constant energy. This is true both of galaxies and
children’s closets. So I may well be lashing out in anger at the
very nature of the universe here. Well, why not? The universe could
use a little sprucing up.
Too
bad this anger does not currently seem aimed at the great messes of
the world. What might happen if expectant mothers everywhere would band
together and sally forth, buckets and mops raised in their rubber-gloved
hands, and aim that nesting energy at problems like interethnic violence
or environmental pollution? Unfortunately, this instinct seems quite
determinedly limited to the small scale – kitchen drawers and
car interiors. If anything, I want more than ever to shut the big problems
of the world out. I am fiercely focused on bringing a child into a world
of beauty, wonders, and love, and I can only make that appearance take
effect in my own little domain. My nesting is just for the next, not
for the whole forest.
Maybe
I am moving a little unnecessarily beyond the basic, logistical needs
of preparing a bed and getting diapers and few items of clothing together.
Clearly, this tiny person is not going to care whether the arms of the
pink chairs have been shampooed. All this is obvious to Ron, as his
furtive eye rolling reveals. But after all, we are about to welcome
royalty into our home. There’s something in my motherly soul that
urges me to prepare as if for the arrival of a prince. Wordsworth had
this instinctive infant regality in mind, I think, when he wrote in
his poem “Ode: Intimations of Immortality” that “trailing
clouds of glory do we come/ From God, who is our home:/Heaven lies about
us in our infancy!” Of course, these beautiful lines do make me
wonder if Will was every present at an actual delivery. Probably not.
Births are exceedingly earthy affairs, leaving the floor strewn with
blood-soaked linens and wads of gauze and various fleshy items that
used to be tucked neatly into one’s private insides. But Wordsworth
was right about the fresh wonder of a newborn baby’s very first
breaths. Out of the earthiness, a star of mystery rises. We understand
so much about the body and its processes, about gestation, about delivery,
about infant physiology. And yet the personhood, the soul-essence of
each infant, appears as a glorious mystery.
It’s
hard to know how to honor this properly at the moment, or how to prepare
for it. So as women have done for centuries in the face of the great
and mysterious events of existence – birth, death, illness, marriage
– we clean and cook. We turn to the plainest tasks and perform
them with reverence and determination. Sometimes with a ferocity that
annoys everyone around. It’s simply a time-honored and productive
way of dealing with something we recognize is much bigger than ourselves.
For so long, so few women learned how to honor the magnificence of existence
with the larger, louder poetry of art, architecture, music, and poetry
itself. We’ve learned that now, too. But still the simple responses
of the hands, or maybe I should say, the hands and knees, remain. In
the face of the profound, we begin with the simple, and work.
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First
Days
Awakening
from some dreaming depth, in which I was someone and somewhere else,
I hear a knock on my hospital room door. Oh yes. The hospital, the middle
of the night. I know where I am now. “Your baby is awake and hungry,”
the nurse says softly. “Would you like to feed him?” In
the dark, I raise up my stiff, heavy body on one elbow, reach for the
height-adjusting buttons on the side-rail of the bed, and shove the
pillows awkwardly into place behind me, trying not to wrench any of
my sore muscles or put any real weight on my bruised bottom. The nurse
hands me a little cocoon of blankets with a tiny face peeping out. She
shows me Philip’s ID tags, but I know he’s mine; I already
know that face. His eyes are dark and shining, wide awake, his tiny
mouth pursed open and waiting. We unwrap his upper body and two wiry
little arms pop out of the blanket, like featherless bird’s wings
unfolding. I know how to hold him against me and place my comparatively
enormous dark nipple into the pink circle of his mouth. He has a good
idea what to do, too. Once we get started, the nurse leaves us alone,
and I lie there, watching his jaw work and adjusting his position, keeping
him going with a jiggle or a stroke on his cheek. Half vigilantly attentive,
half in reverie; half awake, half dreaming; utterly joyful yet frightened;
euphoric yet profoundly tired. Now begins a swirl of twilight states
that will bump me across the hours for the next many weeks.
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Fragments
This
was all harder the first time around, when the shock of the baby as
literal burden continually rattled me. I felt as if I would never again
have both hands free. Everything I did required skewed elbows and a
sturdy back, because babies like to be held. They cry less when held,
which is good for one’s sanity. So I was always carrying a baby
on my left forearm or slung over my shoulder. Would I ever be able to
hold the toast with one hand while I spread butter with the other? Would
I ever be able to hoist the laundry basket up the stairs with both handles
rather than dragging it, bumpety-bump, behind me? And what about going
to the bathroom? Would I ever be able to do that without hitching my
pants back up inch by inch, front-back, front-back, with one hand?
This
time, I already know the answer: No. It’s true that eventually
the baby grows and lands on his feet and walks around, and you do have
two hands free, at least for a few minutes at a time. Of course, then
children enter a period of several years (sometimes decades), during
which they are as civilized and controllable as goats. But even when
baby is sleeping and damage control is not the issue, it feels as if
you never put him down. People talk about how children change your life,
by which they usually mean the day-to-day arrangements of what you do.
But the real change is inside. A child changes the shape of your soul.
No longer am I only myself; always, always this baby is on my mind,
in my heart. Miriam and Jacob altered the contours of my soul before
they were born and have settled there for good. Over the years, they
have enlarged it, I think, stretching it even more quickly than their
small bodies have grown.
This
deep alteration is different from marriage, though that changes the
psyche, too, or at least it ought to. I’m connected to Ron, hooked
together side by side like two kids in a three-legged race (and sometimes
about that graceful). But the babies, I carry in every way. So I’m
not shocked by Philip as a new bundle on me – I said good-bye
long ago to my independent, streamlined, hands-free self. Philip simply
makes me more bulky, psychically speaking.
Maneuvering
around the corners of life – changes, decisions, growth –
is much more complicated when it’s not just me: it’s all
of us now. Parents can never use the little carry-baskets in the great,
crowded grocery store of life. Instead, they have to push a big cart
up and down the aisles, skidding along with all the kids clinging and
clamoring. And sometimes behaving like goats.
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Little
Man
I
stride along the road that runs across the top of the dune bluff, high
above Lake Michigan. I look out at that broad horizon, soft and beautiful
like a silk thread edging the slate blue satin, the living waters of
the lake. The horizon curves far to the south and north, and I see the
greatness of the earth, the vastness of time. It feels cozy and safe,
somehow, to be so small against it.
Perspective
is what I need most right now. The days have been going by so fast.
Events come zinging at me and then they’re past, wave after wave.
My feet pound the asphalt, my arms swing, and I think how strong I feel
again, how streamlined and agile. Then I wonder if this new strength
isn’t quite as rich as the weaknesses of the past two years. Can
I feel as deeply now? Am I still cracked open enough for life-water
to seep in?
When
I was a teenager and a younger woman, I used to walk several miles a
day and spend the time in fairly concentrated meditation. These days,
a walk is a rare treat and sustained prayer beyond my capability. Well,
I have learned that a robust prayer life may be a fine and desirable
thing, but a lousy prayer life works for a while, too, in a pinch. Making
sense of things in snatches while waiting for the tea water to boil
or driving to the office or helping Philip down the slide for the fortieth
time – it’s all right. God can build things with pitiful
dribbles of thought, too. Anyway, I think experience might have advantages
over prayer. Chattering away at God we can block out what we need to
hear. But when we’re busy in the middle of things and our guard
is down, sometimes whatever astonishing truth God needs us to recognize
can take us by surprise.
Maybe
I’m not as cracked open as I have been. But whatever slipped into
me these last few years still burns there. Everything burns more now,
more painfully and more energetically. I’m angrier, more passionate,
tougher and softer, too. Maybe becoming a mother has invested me deeper
in the world and in the eternal, for good. It’s put me in view
of the horizon and set me walking with the fiercer winds.
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