Wednesday, October 4, 2017

Meditations on Posterior Birth

My mom in her wisdom always told me, when I'd fret or compete or ask who was her favorite, that she loved each of her children exactly the same.


I don’t know if I'll be able to say that. I imagine myself, looking into Sam's eyes, remembering our wild meeting and the horrible battle to follow, and I feel in my gut that I’d tell him I will never love anyone the way I love him.

Sam. Your name was so foreign. I said it first, looking at your wide, disgruntled eyes in that pointed, Yoda-like face, your little beak-ed mouth. They said it would be love at first sight, but you gave me more. You gave me love through a thousand battles.

In Scandanavia, they call babies like you Star-Gazers. It’s a pretty name to put on the way you fought and rolled to come into the world facing upwards. Your head wasn’t made for that. My Muttermund wasn’t made for it. You can eat and be strong and not tear downwards towards the perineum or upwards towards the pearl, but a star-gazer shatters outwards and makes a new shape, shears off a part of you in a bursting moment. I used to feel broken that my mind broke, in that moment. Wasn’t I supposed to look into your eyes and know you better than myself, pull you to my chest and leave all pain and blood behind? I was supposed to bring you, sleepy and darling, to my breast, and the love of you would expel everything I didn’t need anymore. But that didn’t happen. The world was pain, my mind was pain, and there was no insta-love. I thought it was my fault, that my birth had been like everyone else’s but I wasn’t good enough to feel painless. But that was just what it took to have you. That was the birth of my star-gazer.

It was also the birth of me, as a mother. It was the birth of us. And I grieved the postpartum I thought we were supposed to have, grieved it deep and long, but at the bottom of that grief, I found our joy.
Sam. Will you ask me if you’re my favorite? Will you ask me if I love someone more? I pray I can love the next little someone as much as I love you. You re-made me. You’re a part of me, now.
There are cells from you in my liver, and my brain, growing, replicating, giving me more strength, more life. The story of you is alive in me forever.

You changed my brain structure, too. My amygdala reformed to meet you. The same process that made our early weeks so nightmarish and super-hero-origin-y is what makes me wake up at the whisper of your arm moving at midnight, that makes meeting your need the most intense thing in my world. Other people can laugh, tell me you’re fine, babies cry, but your pain or fear or hunger or desire for touch is as urgent to me as the waves of pain that gave you to me. I heard people say they’d do anything for their child, and it sounded like a statement of determination. It’s not. It’s a primal, raw, savage intensity of being. When something threatens a baby on television, I know immediately as fearless, calm adrenaline roars through my fingertips that I could kill without thought or remorse if something threatened you.

You changed my body. I was not always the curvy bombshell you’ll come to know. Nor was I star-shaped. I can never say anything like angry mothers do on TV, could never shout or whisper the idea that you ruined me. I am the most beautiful I’ve ever been. I am the bravest I’ve ever been. I’d never liked all of me before you. You made me a creature of raw power and fierce delight, and my soul only thanks you, little unthinking one.


When you grew in the deepest part of me, you didn’t know you would re-make the first person you’d ever know. When you twisted inside me, you just wanted out. But your first action coming into the world shaped both of us. And I wouldn’t trade our battles for a sweet entrance, ever.

My Sam, every day, every battle, I love you more. If it’s true what they tell me, and every brother and sister you have I will grow for, perhaps, as my own mother said, I will love you each exactly the same…amount. But, my little wolf, my star-gazer, I will never love anyone the same as I love you.

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