For Grandma Marge (may her memory be for a blessing)
Ok, it’s time for me to admit it: I’m getting scared. In less than 10 weeks (knock wood, pu pu pu – sorry can’t help it), my body will somehow, with whatever degree of medical intervention, bear forth two new beings whose well-being will henceforth depend, in very large part, on me. I confess to my husband, my closest friends, and my mother than I’m getting nervous. They offer comfort, try to allay my fears:
“Of course you’re scared. It’s scary.†–Daphne (mother of two)
“You’re focused on the first few weeks. I was too. But three months in, everything changes, and you don’t even remember that blur.†– Rebecca (mother of two)
“Too late now!†– Mom (mother of me)
Gee thanks, Mom.
Again, I must qualify. I feel blessed beyond belief at the bounty of having conceived not just one but two babies, twenty-first century techno style. I marvel at the way things have gone so far. In spite of bouts of stress (a layoff, a move, the start of a new company), these babies have grown the requisite parts. They’ve passed all their tests, independent of the fact that their maternal host has sometimes felt like a chicken without a head. They are of me, but they are not me—a lifelong lesson I’m sure, something they are already teaching me, something I am not yet wholly convinced of but want and need to believe.
My father, a psychiatrist, gets wind that I’m having a minor, belated freak out. He calls from the road 700 miles away to remind me I’m not alone. “It takes a village, Deb, and a village you will have.â€
And he’s right. When the babies arrive, my mother will come for a month, and my father will join her when he can. Rebecca will come for a week or so, all the way from California. The twins I grew up with, Molly and Busy, will each come from Chicago for a few days. Courtney will be across the park. Daphne will be nearby, as will myriad others. And then, of course, there’s Marco, my sweet attentive artistic Marco (author of the “2†on my belly in the above photo), who can’t wait to hang our twins’ art on the walls and take them to see Star Wars and play them Superman’s theme. We just don’t know yet, given his new position, the extent to which he will be able to be at home, in the beginning, with me.
But come what may, I will not be alone. It’s my new mantra, and I’m trying to buy it. It’s just that my experience of pregnancy, this experience of being so embodied, has been oddly isolating. I’m a social person who stops pregnant women on the street and cries “solidarity!â€, and yet there have been many times when I’ve felt alone, as in existentially, in my discomfort and angst. Locked in, with no escape. I’ve tried hard not to crawl too far into that dark hole—I have a small history of depression—and I’ve been successful at keeping healthy and busy. But every so often, that feeling of aloneless (is it just a fear?) creeps in.
A village you will have.
And I will. The last village elder, however, is gone, and I’ve been missing her a lot of late. My Grandma Marge passed away a year ago today. Grandma was a certified nurse—head of the department in her day—and used to bring great comfort whenever I was sick. Pregnancy is not illness, and yet its symptoms have been physically challenging, reminiscent of times I’ve felt ill. Grandma Marge made it our wedding last year, but she died before the technology worked its magic. How she would kvelled and basked in our news, enabled by money that I, her only grandchild, inherited from her. And how I would have loved to have shared the blessing of these babies with her.
If I can write it, maybe I can will it: these are our babies. They are not mine alone. I will be their mommy. But they will have a daddy, and grandparents, and aunts and uncles and cousins and friends, and if I believed, departed great-grandparents watching over them from somewhere. (On top of it all, I recently joined the notorious Park Slope Parents listserv. Never again will I worry about anything child-related alone!)
I am not alone, I am not alone, and yet…I am. It’s my body that’s primarily responsible, and that seems both a miraculous blessing and a bit of a curse. In spite of my feminism, I’ve internalized wholesale the cultural mandate that the buck stops with Mom. Because let’s face it, in reality, so often it does. How desperately, already, I find myself wanting to rewrite that script. But is it feminism, or existentialism, that I’m grappling with here? I’d love your thoughts.
Comments
Daphne — August 19, 2009
Isn't it amazing that with all you've had to do -- moving, working, etc -- you don't have to wake up and think, "okay, today I gotta make the kidneys, tomorrow and Friday, the lungs." The babies just DO it! It's like one big crossed-off to-do list taken care of by someone else.
Stacey — August 19, 2009
My biggest piece of advice to you is to use the village. Ask for help. Don't be a hero. You are human, and you will need rest, food, water, encouragement, and a break every once in awhile. My own postpartum angst came from trying to do everything myself and not letting on that I needed help ... it only makes you feel more isolated. Remember that though the babies depend on you, they can only get what they need if you have your basic needs met. Best of luck to you! You are about to experience something that is indescribable and amazing - motherhood.
Veronica — August 19, 2009
Embracing your role as a mother has no relation to feminism. The fact that everyone else expects you to be "the mom" is. Just remember that and let that feminist guilt float away.
Yes, yes, yes...Those babies are ours. Yours and your village's. Tony & I find ourselves sometimes saying that our daughter actually has traits from our best friends. How can that be? It's odd the things that kids pick up. But it's beautiful when you think that one of the kids will be so Daphne (hi! great comment!) because you let her be so close with them, you let go for an afternoon and let her nurture them. Ditto for all the other members of their village.
Actually I think the first 3 months were the easiest. OMG, how much they usually sleep! All worn out from their birthing experience and all that body part making. It's when they start walking and pulling on cat parts that it gets interesting. But it's all relative.
And yes, you'll be fine. Just fine. Esp since those two lil babes will have a fabulous village to call their own. And you have so many who you can call, email, tweet, when motherhood starts to wear on you.
Alison — August 19, 2009
I remember something frighteningly lonely about labor, because no matter how much support I had (and I had significant support from Walter and our midwife-become-doula) it was my body that was going to be pushing out a person. But being afraid and doing it anyway was such a great experience--I felt really proud of myself.
Motherhood has lonely elements, too (nighttime nursing, sleeplessness unrelated to nursing), but I've found that the village really is there for us.
And it gets better! Parenthood gets better and better. I did not fall instantly in love with Maybelle, but that overwhelming love came at its own pace, and just keeps expanding.
anniegirl1138 — August 19, 2009
Labor was actually much easier than I expected it to be because I went into knowing that it would be hard and it would hurt and that it was finite. You can do anything when you know that it isn't going to last forever.
Ask for help when you need it. Don't worry about being perfect. Babies somehow survive our less than stellar parenting in the early days and months and the beauty is that unlike every mistake you will make when they are teens - they don't remember the baby stuff and can't use it against you in the heat of an argument.
Anne from www.equalcouples.com — August 20, 2009
Your pregnancy blogs are wonderful. Keep them up. It's so nice to read honest feelings and reactions. There is so much fluff about pregnancy and babies. We need to know about real experience and feelings. As others have commented you have a village. Make sure you use it. And forget about perfection now! Babies and children do not thrive on perfection. They thrive on love, which is different.
Christi — August 20, 2009
There's something about that moment you realize, I'm the one in charge here? that can make the bravest of us dizzy with fear.
My mother passed away before I had my two kids. I've missed her greatly, but I've learned to find pieces of her in the women who surround me: sisters, friends, someone else's grandmother. Revel in those moments.
Deborah Siegel — August 21, 2009
Reading your comments, everyone, is making me weepy (the good kind of weepy). Your collective wisdom and response is like having a psychic village. Thank you Daph Stacey Roni Alison Anniegirl Anne and Christi for sharing your words with me. It makes all the difference in the world to hear your experiences right now. You are keeping me sane! xoDeborah
urbanartiste — August 21, 2009
I have to second the let others help and don't be a hero. Plus, if the maternity ward nurse tells you to sleep the nights and let them feed the babies, even if you are planning on breastfeeding, listen to her. I did and was grateful because once you get home there is very little rest at night. And the best advice I keep getting is little ones = little problems, big one = bigger problems. Enjoy every moment when they are little.
Rebecca London — August 22, 2009
I think the best advice I can give you is make a plan - which I know you like to do - (eg, I plan to breastfeed, share nighttime duties with Marco, sleep when the babies sleep) but be flexible if your plan doesn't work out. It's so hard to know if the babies will be sleepy or active, colicky or mellow, etc. And it's hard to know what roles or tasks will come naturally to each of you (with a few major exceptions of course). I think you'll find that parenting is instinctive in many ways. But, when you are at a loss, you have lots of people to call on. xo
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Caroline — August 24, 2009
Your post made me weepy, too, and all the comments are great; you will have your village, and it's just up to you to say when it comes to help and when it goes away (because you'll want that, too). A friend of mine used to say that when you're visiting someone with a new baby (or two!) no one can come in without bringing a meal, no one can stay without sweeping or washing the dishes, and no one can leave without taking the laundry. Words to live by.
gwp_admin — August 25, 2009
Rebecca, I find this line comforting: "I think you’ll find that parenting is instinctive in many ways. " And this one, of course, too: "But, when you are at a loss, you have lots of people to call on." Expect your phone to be ringing off the hook :)
Caroline -- I love your friend's approach. House rules?!
Harriet — September 2, 2009
Dear Debbie
"“It takes a village, Deb, and a village you will have.â€"
That's beautiful.
You are so blessed, you are not alone and yes, it's scary when you ponder it, but when the time comes you will handle it as women always have, and you will even be thrilled, astonished and grateful for your twin miracles, to says nothing of your loving hubby and your 'village'.
Sending good thoughts your way and BTW, congrats to Marco on his position
Gret — September 22, 2009
ИнтереÑно, повеÑелило :) Хоть наÑтроение поднÑл. Побольше бы таких Ñайтов :)