I've so enjoyed posting here more often again and meeting some awesome new friends over the past two months. I want to extend a big warm welcome hug and heartfelt thank you to those of you who have stumbled across me recently and found my rambling worthy of a click on that Subscribe button down there. Y'all, having you here with me just humbles and delights my soul. I love, love, love your comments and insights and anecdotes. Every single time a comment notification comes into my inbox, I do a little internal happy dance. On my good days, bad days, in-between days, I unwrap and admire each with relish, like the thoughtful, personal handmade gifts that they are. Y'all bless me daily with empathy and connection and OH! that validating feeling that other women experience the highs and lows of wife-and-motherhood in much the same ways that I do.
It maketh me to not feel so crazy sometimes, you know? And remindeth me that I'm never without resources, never without good friends with whom I can laugh and cry and let it all hang out, so to speak. And y'all? How much of a blessing is that?
OHMYGRANNY! BUH-LESS-ING.
Thank you. Thank you, thank you and thank you.---------------
This morning Peabody came to me, whining, and held his arms up, buried his head in my legs, asking me to pick him up. Friday morning are PACKED with stuff we need to get done - preschool run, laundry, cleaning, last minute errands, it's all a big Friday hair ball - so at first I rebuffed him and tried to redirect his attention by showing him some toys that he loves. He was completely unmoved in his determination to have a cuddle from me and his cries only became louder and more pitiful as I went through my litany of
how-about-a-thises and
do-you-want-a-thats.
I stooped to pick him up, frustrated, I'll admit with shame, at his demands NOW, when a million other to-dos lined up and revved their engines menacingly behind me. He quietly lay his curly head on my shoulder and tucked his hands between our bodies. I felt him go soft and limp against me, as if the feeling of just being in my arms had immediately relieved all of his troubles. The warmth of his tiny body and the physical
force of his instant comfort made me wrap my arms around him so tightly and love him so fiercely in that moment that my eyes quickly filled and a huge, aching lump formed in my throat.
As he buried his head into my neck, I shifted my eyes as far as they'd go, sideways to his face. In my peripheral vision I took in the blurred outline of his soft cheek, the curve of his nose, the dark contrasting ruffle of his eyelashes moving slowly up and down as he cozily blinked, lying there in this simple vulnerability, letting me give him what he needed. Light played around each arch of him like a halo. Honestly I could have stood and held him and beheld those precious fuzzy features forever.
I remember as a single woman in my twenties, after my divorce from my first husband, I did as I pleased whenever I pleased, I took care of ME, having long, uninterrupted brunches with friends, traveling, shopping, completely unattached, with no demands on my time outside of my work schedule. In the busiest, most frantic moments of my life as a mother and wife, I sometimes look back with longing to those days when I looked after my own needs only, luxuriated in complete self-centeredness and could read, sleep, play, work,
DO exactly as I pleased.
But I also remember the deep ache I felt knowing that absolutely no one needed me. And that perhaps in my lifetime no one would
ever need me.
In all that freedom to do only what I wanted to do, to please only myself, I was bound up tightly inside with this intense pain and loneliness. I talked to my friends about it, my sister, my Mom. I cried and prayed and worried and resented. I just ... HURT. I was so vastly, cavernously empty. Empty like I never, ever want to be again.
And now, years later, the memory of that emptiness has faded so much that the freedom it accompanied sometimes looks glamorous and sparkling to me. From the crazy-busy chaos of caring for this family I occasionally peer across to those years of self-centeredness as a fresh, welcoming oasis.
And then I hold my son. And the fullness he stirs inside me flows fast and free and over-its-banks like a river in spring suddenly made new and amazing and vital again. I am needed now. Where once I had emptiness, I am flooded with more love and natural connection than I can sometimes navigate without holding my breath.
He nurses quietly, his eyes fluttering and hinting at a nap, but then, refreshed, he sits up on my lap, grins, and climbs down again to thump off and find a car he'll race along the windowsills as I return to my work.
If he comes again and asks for me, I will not hesitate or distract.
I'll gather him up and allow myself to revel in being
needed.
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