A friend stopped by this week to borrow our double stroller, darling new baby in tow. They are headed to North Carolina for a Bluegrass Festival, to enjoy a long, soul stirring weekend of music and family. We had the usual conversation about feeding and sleeping until I made the unfortunate mistake of asking when she was going back to work.
If there is ever a time when mothers' faces look exactly the same, it is when they are too
near to the end of that precious allotment of time with their newborn. It is an
expression that is full of duty and longing, knowledge of what we want and what
must be and the difference between them. It moves across our faces and clouds
our eyes. And we keep it like a secret because we don’t want to betray
ourselves, our gender, by talking about it too much. Because we appreciate our
employment, our offices and responsibilities. Our minds being needed elsewhere.
This is not an essay about one or the other, and certainly
not one versus the other. It is about the emotions of both and the burden of
choice. I have read so many of the former kind- printed only to polarize. It is
hard for me to believe any of them were written by mothers, who understand with
the rawest of senses what it is to have your mind in one place and your heart
in another. This is what it is like for our kind. We are given windowless
corners to contemplate the choice between two things, neither of them what we
really want.
I remember it so well: how you will dread that slow walk
back through the door of your old life, the return to your desk and your files.
Your heart will race and sweat will break. Of course it will! You aren't the
same in form or function, a stranger within yourself. Your body, your clothes, your
posture, your hunger. You won’t shake it: the feeling that you are missing
something important.
Try to be still if you can. Try to see beyond this countdown.
Someone has probably told you that it is the quality of the time and not the
quantity that matters, and they are right. Your sweet baby will not remember
the minutes that ticked by so fast, but she will remember what you did with them
when you were together. Glistening bubbles you blew into the wide open of
summer, the way you look at her when you sing happy birthday, something as
simple as shoes and socks in the morning, inconsequential routines like silver cups
you fill with joy, shaping who she becomes.
I have been listening to music myself these days, hearing
the voices and reading the words of remarkable women who came before me,
mothers and martyrs, philosophers and philanthropists. They all seem to whisper
the same refrain: There is only one choice, only one way to be and only one
person to be it for: You.
I have never read ( or heard ,"ode to your flat iron") any of your blogs without having your words pluck at my heartstrings. Your ability to capture the core of being a woman is truly magical. Although it has been nearly 2 decades since I felt this... You precisely crafted the words, that swiftly brought me back to when I was counting down until I needed to return changed, to my former work life. Looking forward to the nest read....
ReplyDelete