From the very beginning, motherhood is both
screaming, white knuckle, ripped wide open pain and giddy, heaven-hued,
otherworldly happiness. It is an
experience, a process, a relationship of simultaneous give and take, rise and
fall, push and pull that leaves you somewhere in between pleasure and pain,
fear and faith, lightning and thunder.
It's a landscape of glorious heights in pink and
orange blushed skies--moments that catch your breath and don't give it back,
convincing you of its unequaled importance--and also dark, discouraging valleys--moments
that tempt you with anger, impatience and apathy. It's a place of tremendous contradiction,
colliding emotions of extremes, ups and downs without rest. There is no paved
road for you here, no obvious direction, no map to find your multiple
destinations. You step and move with
instinct, guided by gut and good intentions, encouraged by that inside
whispering, that tickle in your soul that promises it's worth it, that it
matters more than anything, and with inevitable missteps, stubbed toes, bruised
heel, you walk on, a pocketful of hopes and crackers, chasing and carrying your
children.
It destroys you as it builds you, stripping away who
you thought you were, what you thought you wanted. It steps all over youth's vanity, that
selfish, naive creature of ambition and expectation, and through a constant,
steady stretching of sacrifice and love, the daily grind of what you do, it
builds something better, something unplanned, shocking in what it reveals--new
understandings, fresh empathies, awakened
curiosities, surprising capabilities.
It is a thief, stealing freedom, time, sleep, quiet,
balance, flat stomachs, dry clean only wardrobes, manicured lives but it is
also a patron of growth and character, the invaluable benefactor of the woman
you couldn't become without it.
It is a fight between what you want and what they
need, resentment and embrace, who they are and who they can become. Sometimes you win, sweet, honey-dripping
victories, but most of the time, you don't.
In a single day, you want to both throw it out the
window and cuddle with it in bed, its head tucked under your chin, its warmth
pardoning any offense. In a single day,
it pukes in the back seat, yells at you for ruining its life, complains about
dinner, throws itself on the linoleum at Target, loses its retainer, and
refuses to practice the piano and at its side, in perfect companionship, it
perfumes the air with butterscotch-scented baby breath, raises its arms needing
exactly you, leaves crayola love notes in your shoe, fills the house with
laughter and bubbles, does without asking, twirls in pink tutus around the
kitchen floor, and promises that it loves you more than Disneyland and orange
soda.
Motherhood is your complete undoing, but it is also
your making, your breathing and beating purpose, that soft, beautiful hum of
meaning in your heart. And to the very
end, give and take, rise and fall, push and pull.
7 comments:
Beautiful!
This one is a winner. It is a stunning rollercoaster and the best part is that the last paragraph was culled from the very recent past and was true. So true! Absolutely delightful. I award you a lunch out on me in June!
this is one of the most beautiful things i've ever read. i want to frame it. happy mother's day, you мать героиня you!!!
That is one of the best pictures of your kids! You and Mark should have snuck in the back of the picture to make is perfect! See you soon. Love you all!
Way to go, and thanks for sharing. You made every word count in this one. Thanks for your inspiration as a friend and as a writer. You have a beautiful family, and they are so blessed to have you. I can't believe how cute they all are in this picture, especially. Take care and keep writing!!
This is beautiful. You’re an incredible writer.
By far, this piece is the best perspective on motherhood I have ever read. Your writing is astounding. Absolutely a perfect combination of emotions with prose that digs deep to a mother's soul. Thank you for sharing your talent to increase our appreciation for this calling we've taken on. I read this over the pulpit during my talk on motherhood on Mother's Day. So many people were touched by your beautiful words.
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