The moment my baby boy was born he was placed on my chest where he rested quietly
for the next four hours. We were each attended to with him lying right
there. He gazed at me and blinked but mostly he was still and watchful as
we began the process of seeing one another.
I did not experience childbirth as particularly painful; rather,
intense.intense.intense, and demanding complete focus, relaxation, and
calm. I felt good when he arrived but I was admittedly exhausted. It had been hard work. Very hard work. "Thank you Jesus!" were my spontaneous
words when he finally emerged.
Three days later I stepped into the shower at home and the tears finally came,
streaming until the water ran cold. I
believe tears are one of the body’s deepest languages. There was simply so much to express…my entire
life frame moving from pregnancy to labor to birth in a matter of hours, the
profoundly cellular engagement every nerve of my body participated in during
those hours. There is no way to process any
of it as it happens…you just move through it moment by moment and go about the
integrating work later. But that work happens
on the go, blended with the early days of having a newborn and moving into a
new life. Over the coming weeks and months I would find myself at my wits’
end, depressed and feeling utterly lost.
It seemed nothing was the same and I was unfamiliar to myself. I was tired, yes, although that wasn’t the
hardest part. My baby had a dream temperament but I was in the throes of
an adjustment that felt more like crawling through thick mud at midnight.
There were some very, very dark days. I recall one afternoon when my
sweet babe was barely a month old, sitting with him in the bedroom, tears drenching
my face and thinking, "I have
died. Something in me has died, and it's just going to be this way. Maybe in a few years I’ll come back but right
now I’m just gone.”
Richard Rohr calls the soul the place where the human meets the divine. While my prayer upon my son’s birth was a two
word offering of gratitude, my prayers during the ensuing several months were
one word long. Or less. And some combined with words I rarely use. And there were lots of those prayers. I gave up mascara for the first few months
because I cried so much. I don’t recall
exactly but I think the leaves had turned colors before my husband could leave
for work most days without seeing me in tears. But
trying to feel God in the midst of the blur kept me closer to some semblance of
self-connection even as I felt pretty unhinged.
Often crying was all the language I had, and I used it unsparingly. I had to.
And I couldn’t help but do it. I
had to voice what was going on in some way.
And it helped remind me that I was actually alive, with a sliver of hope
in my heart. My soul was right there.
I don't have strong traditions around Lent, but this year Jonathan and I are
reading through a collection of poetry, one each evening. The poets range
from Alcuin to Anne Bradstreet to
Bob Dylan, and span several centuries with everything from slave spirituals to church hymns to modern
day jazz lyrics. We're loving it. A couple weeks ago I posted a beautiful
piece from Joyce Rupp and this evening I have to share George Herbert's
thoughts on prayer. Prayer can be a bit of a moving target...it's not an
end in itself but it somehow seems prone to gathering moss along the way,
becoming a 'technique' with a list of required elements, and often laden with
expectation. Herbert disallows that. His list is a little more sunny than I’d like
– there are some less “pretty” ways of authentically praying that he doesn’t
mention – but I like it nonetheless. There
have been times when I’ve borrowed ancient prayers and times when I’ve cried
out with a simple “Help” and times
when my heart was simply known to God. I’m
confident we could all add our own lines to Herbert’s list...the varied ways in which people pray is limitless. For me, this sonnet underscores the living
nature of prayer, the breathing of it.
As I reflect this Lent on the past several months, I’m grateful – deeply
grateful – for the voice of prayer, for the intertwining of rest and movement
in life even when it feels stuck, and that prayer, even when all seems as dross,
is yet dynamic as a reach toward hope and liveliness.
Prayer the Church's banquet, Angels' age,
God's breath in man returning to his birth,
The soul in paraphrase, heart in pilgrimage,
The Christian plummet sounding heav'n and earth;
Engine against th' Almightie, sinners' towre,
Reversed thunder, Christ-side-piercing spear,
The six-daies world-transposing in an houre,
A kinde of tune, which all things heare and fear;
Softnesse, and peace, and joy, and love, and blisse,
Exalted Manna, gladnesse of the best,
Heaven in ordinarie, man well drest,
The Milkie way, the bird of Paradise,
Church-bels beyond the stares heard, the soul's bloud,
The land of spices; something understood.
Prayer (I) by George Herbert, 1633
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©2014 Mindy Danylak (except George Herbert poem)
Showing posts with label birth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birth. Show all posts
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Sunday, August 18, 2013
10 years & 1 baby
Having a baby is like suddenly getting the world's worst roommate.
Anne LaMott ... Bird by Bird
Jonathan and I have had a pretty consistent tradition of doing something to celebrate our anniversary every year, be it dinner out or breakfast in, toasting with fizzy water on a picnic or bubbly on the patio, staying in town or exploring on the road. I almost always write a card for him. Two years ago I wrote a little piece on the occasion of our 8th wedding anniversary and shared it here. This year we did something completely different.
Yesterday, Saturday, was our 10th anniversary. It's the first time we've had an anniversary on a Saturday and we started celebrating Friday night with a bottle of bubbly, both of us hoping for an easy end to a rough day....baby boy received 5 vaccinations on Friday morning and was so out of sorts we skipped going to a dinner group of friends I'd been really looking forward to seeing. So bubbles hit the glass and we smiled and kissed and toasted. And before I got two sips in baby boy woke up. A few hours later I woke up around 3 am to feed him and had a sore throat and stuffy nose, a full-on cold in the brew. In the morning Jonathan made pancakes and I made oatmeal (I'm doing gluten & dairy free for the little guy...) and it was almost 1 pm by the time we got out of the house. We stopped at Whole Foods for picnic food & took off for a park we'd never been to for a walk we'd never been on. The clouds turned dark as we drove north and it started sprinkling just after we turned off the main road. Ten minutes we later discovered that the bird sanctuary stroll we'd been looking forward to started a couple thousand feet down a gravel road past a water treatment facility, complete with treatment pools and the sheriff making an arrest. We ended up eating our picnic on a table not far from the parking lot, camouflage fishing boats on the launch nearby, then strolled down the river for a little bit before coming home, where I crashed at 4 pm for an hour with a major headache and Jonathan kept the entering-evening-fussiness baby relatively happy. I was back in bed by 9 pm with the finally-asleep baby boy while Jonathan babysat a book on data warehousing. I even forgot to have someone take a picture of the 3 of us. We plan to reschedule our 10th anniversary.
But in the meantime, I have this to say:
When we brought the little guy home, Jonathan carried him into the house and my sister got our bags out of the car and we set up shop. And a couple days later all hell broke loose as exhaustion and hormones kicked in and breastfeeding appeared to be an utter failure and my body began to process having been through an unmedicated 12 hours of labor plus 4 hours of pushing out an 8 lb 11 oz baby with a 15 inch noggin. I honestly never felt like it was more than I could handle, but giving birth to him was hard work. Really hard. And my body needed to say so. On top of that I was super tired and completely overwhelmed. So the tears started and they lasted for about five weeks. I'm almost not kidding.
I'll share more of that story eventually, but I give those details simply to tell you that my husband is amazing. Every morning I would eat the five-star breakfast my sister whipped up, feed the baby, hand him off to her, and then crawl, sobbing, back into bed, where Jonathan would simply hold me until I cried myself into sleep. Jonathan was so tuned into me and himself, processing through his own experience of everything around our little boy's birth and listening as I processed through mine. Our little roommate is entirely disruptive. And entirely good.
I've heard women say they fell madly in love with their baby upon the moment of birth, but honestly I felt that more toward Jonathan than my baby. I adore my baby, but my sense of need for and connection to Jonathan was primal. We're both pretty independent and the downside of this is that it's too easy to live more parallel to each other than we'd like. That took a monumental shift in the first few weeks after our son arrived.
As much as I love celebrating in a festive way, I feel like the real celebration of what Jonathan and I are (which I wrote about here) spoke its most powerful voice in those days when we were both simply trying to keep our heads above water and generally not being able to do so, but were instead able to simply be moved along the drift and tumbled through the waves to a better place. I don't think there's any great honor in seeking out hard stuff for its own sake, but I do think that the most pivotal experiences in life are usually the most difficult. At least, that's been the case for me. And like our own personal development, relationships develop new bonds through those times too.
There is no one on earth I would rather be married with, creating life with, moving through reality with. Happy 10th anniversary, my love!
Because it is the nature of love to create, a marriage itself is something which has to be created,
so that together we become a new creature.
To marry is the biggest risk in human relations that a person can take…
To marry is the biggest risk in human relations that a person can take…
If we commit ourselves to one person for life this is not,
as many people think, a rejection of freedom;
rather it demands the courage to move into all the risks of freedom,
and the risk of love which is permanent;
into that love which is not possession, but participation…
It takes a lifetime to learn another person…
When love is not possession, but participation,
then it is part of that co-creation which is our human calling,
and which implies such risk that it is often rejected.
Madeline L'Engle ... The Irrational Season
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