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Archive for the ‘infertility’ Category

a liberated life?

Thursday, March 10th, 2011

my post today is an essay i wrote for a fabulous blog project called “a liberated life.” vanessa and sarah solicit and post essays wherein women of every age and stage chronicle their joys and concerns along the path toward liberation.

here’s an excerpt, but you’ll have to scurry over to “a liberated life” to read the rest:

Liberation, as it turns out, is not as simple as a dream job or a grad school diploma, or a positive pregnancy test, or a happy home. In fact, I cannot even begin to envision what a liberated life might look like for today’s mothers, whose souls brim with enough passion and opportunity to fill a warehouse full of moon bounces and inflatable slides. There is an anxiety that comes with motherhood that has far outgrown the widespread dreams for balance and the tired juggling metaphors. Scientists study it, and talk show hosts allude to it, but this anxiety, for the most part, remains undefined.

how would YOU define a liberated life?

Tags:blog project, concerns, joys, liberated life, liberation, vanessa and sarah
Posted in balance, choices, construction, family, guest post, having it all, hopes, infertility, judgement, metaphors, ministry, progress | 4 Comments »

baby lust

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

i began talking about child number three when i was pregnant with child number two. this was a pretty bold move for someone who spent nearly four years under the impression that she might not be able to have children at all. but two in vitro attempts led to two successful pregnancies, and for the first time i allowed myself to envision myself with a house full of children.

but the second pregnancy was a tropical storm of emotions. for almost six months we reacted to quad-screen test results by preparing ourselves to welcome a special-needs child. we searched (unsuccessfully) at the offices of specialists and in the many alcoves of the internet for definitive predictions regarding our little bird’s number of chromosomes. if we could have checked out for a while, filled our car with plenty of gas and taken an evacuation route to sunnier pastures, we would have.

but this pregnancy was not like that. it was the constant, embodied awareness of darkness and light, fear and joy, reluctance and exuberance. there was no way out but through.

it’s funny how the female memory works. i can recall and describe the experience of my second pregnancy, but i am no longer capable of conjuring up and experiencing its particular level of agony. likewise, the pain of childbirth and the sleeplessness of the newborn phase are wrapped up and obscured in my head by a spectacular sense of wonder and awe.

saved from the monkey's first haircut

saved from the monkey's first haircut

apparently, the male memory does not work this way. when the subject of child number three comes up, my husband, who has become the official keeper of the more base realities of pregnancy, childbirth, and newborn parenting, reminds me of the tropical storm we just barely survived in 2009. “why,” he pleads, “why and HOW could we ever survive that again?”

nevertheless, i have baby lust. ayelet waldmen reminds me that i am not alone:

“other women in the park are having these same internal debates, i think. when a newborn shows up, there’s a pause, a hiccup in the general hubbub. we all stare, misty-eyed. we coo; we ooh. and then someone’s kid whacks someone else’s on the head with a shovel, or a toddler gets stuck on the top of the slide and gives a wrenching shriek, and we all briskly shake off that gentle longing” (bad mother, 182). 

maybe baby lust is merely the biological pull that ensures that the human species will persist. it doesn’t feel like this though. it feels more like standing at the edge of the creative center of the universe. staying outside of it takes almost as much of an emotional toll as bravely venturing in.

Tags:ayelet waldman, baby lust, bad mother, childbirth, in vitro, memory, newborn, pregnancy, sleeplessness
Posted in choices, embodiment, family, infertility | 10 Comments »

oh god, oh god, oh god!

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

once upon a time, before i was the mama to the monkey and the bird, i was known by my friends as someone else… namely,

ONE HALF OF THE POOR COUPLE WHO STRUGGLED FOR 3+ YEARS WITH INFERTILITY.

anyway, perhaps i’ll post again soon about the lessons i learned (and the large objects i wanted to hurl across the room) during this painful time. i wrote an essay a while back about my experiences with in vetro fertilization, and it was published in a book called oh god, oh god, oh god!: young adults speak out about sexuality and christianity.

 

i was reminded of the book just now when i read this review by sarah kinney gaventa on the fidelia’s sisters e-zine, and decided to post the link here because one of you recently left a comment asking for posts related to the infertility struggle.

those years were truly heartbreaking but they have given me the gift of connection with other women who are in the thick of the cycles of disappointment. the chances i have had to walk with other women through in vetro and other infertility issues have been strangely redemptive. this is why i’ve gone so public about such a private matter.

the monkey and the bird came to us in an unconventional way, and we thank god and modern science every day!

Tags:fidelia's sisters, heather godsey, in vetro, infertility, lara blackwood pickrel, oh god oh god oh god
Posted in infertility | 3 Comments »

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