| A
little while back, I asked my mother if she could pinpoint a time
when I seemed the happiest. It was part of some exercise or another,
and you have to ask several people closest to you their opinions
of your life.
Her answer surprised
me. She said, "When your boys were born. I've never seen anyone
so delighted in their children."
And because
it happens to have been my eldest's 20th birthday this week, I had
occasion to remember how it was, how that came on me, that love
and happiness.
There is a photo
of Ian, my eldest, when he was about four or five days old. It's
summer, and he's wearing a pale green short set that sets off his
rosy-gold skin and blue eyes. He's propped up on an infant carrier
on the couch, staring calmly and with curiosity at the camera. There
is a wash of light falling from a leaded glass window that lends
a softness to it all.
I took the picture
and I say without vanity that it is beautiful. The light, the fresh
softness of the baby and his luminescent skin, his steady gaze,
even his tiny, pink, pointing fingers, combine to create a wonderful
composition. It's one of my favorites.
Every time I
look at it, though, what I remember is how I felt. And more than
that, when his birthday rolls around every year, as it just did,
at some point during the day, I always think of that photo and go
get it and look at it.
Every time,
I am transported to that August afternoon, now more than twenty
years ago.
It wasn't the
day I brought him home from the hospital, but a few days later.
Everyone had gone home, his father had gone to work, and for the
first time, Ian and I were really alone.
I had never
been one of those girls who swooned over babies. I didn't dislike
them or anything, but when a mother brought a baby into a room,
I was not one of the girls/women lining up to hold it, look at its
tiny feet, coo over its perfect baby skin, or--God forbid--inhale
its scent. I didn't have baby dolls as my sisters both did--I preferred
Barbies or Tonka trucks, thanks. Maybe I did too much babysitting
or spent too much time around little children to be dazzled by the
romance of them. I knew, deep in my bones, that they were hard damned
work.
Not that I was
opposed to having children. I supposed I would, as most people did.
When I discovered I was pregnant, I was quite happy and I took to
the whole business with a lot of pleasure.
Until about
8 months and 28 days into the process.
Which is when
I realized I didn't know anything about babies. About caring for
one, understanding one, knowing how to make sure it was all right.
Oh, sure, I'd gone through my classes, and my mother lived a few
miles away, and it wasn't like I'd never taken care of one.
But this one
would depend on me entirely. I was in such a panic that I acutely
remember awakening every night in a cold sweat, my hand on the baby
safely inside. I would get up and pace until my heart stopped racing.
When I went
into labor, it was all right. I was a good student. I was trained.
I had a great female doctor. It was fine, and went according to
plan, and there were so many people around--he was the first grandchild,
first nephew, first everything--those first couple of days that
I didn't have time to think much. There is a sort of haze that settles
around a brand-new mother, golden and protective, and it carries
you through those first days.
But then, I
was alone with him. He slept a lot. I watched him. I put my hand
on his tiny back when I couldn't see if he was breathing. I fed
him and changed him, and it was all novel and made me slightly giddy.
When he woke
up and I tended the usual things, I took him to the couch and put
him in the carrier because it was too hot to hold him. I didn't
want him to overheat and we didn't have any air conditioning.
He settled back,
blinked, and gazed up at me. I gazed back.
We speak of
love in a thousand metaphors. We struggle with it because it is
so huge when it arrives. We speak of sunlight and flowers and songs
in our hearts. We speak of steadfastness, and commitment. We speak
of honoring another, and caring for them. I had loved, and loved
deeply--my parents and my grandmother, my siblings and certain friends,
and the husband who was not there just then.
I gazed at my
baby son and I touched his tiny finger nails on his long, graceful
hands. I stroked his peach-colored cheek and bent my head into his
neck to smell him. Not baby powder or soap, but him. I breathed
it in like a lynx or a bear, with ferocity, so that even if I were
blinded, I would know him.
The world shifted.
Entirely.
Even now, after
living with that hugeness of love for so many years, it's hard to
express that shift that happened in that second. It was as if all
the oceans of the earth--eternal and wild and powerful, with their
roar and lushness---had combined to wash through me. So much love.
So fierce. So soft. So huge.
It sounds so
small to say I knew in that instant that I would die for this child,
that I would not even blink, that there would not even be a choice.
But until that moment, my own mortality had concerned me very much.
All the world,
all of me, all I thought, was transformed that hour, gazing at my
new baby son, who gazed up at me from his carrier and communicated.
So I took my camera, and gazing with the new eyes of love, I took
his photo.
Two years later,
again hugely pregnant and fretting in the week before the birth,
I held that now-sturdy toddler on my lap and voiced to my mother
my most terrified thought, "What if I can't love another child
the way I love this one?"
She laughed
gently, reached across the table for my hand. "I used to worry
about the same thing before your sister was born." Her smile
was so gentle. "It doubles, that's all. You'll see."
And when that
son came home, like a little frog, dark and curly and beautiful,
I had a day when I sat with him, and gazed at his hands, and breathed
in his scent like lynx, like a bear, so I would know him in the
dark or if I were blind. Next to me, his brother touched his fingers,
his soft cheek, leaned in to smell him......
Till next time,
Barbara
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