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Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Lily's Birth Day

I walked home today in the sun with my one-year-old. My one-year-old. I have had this gorgeous creature's company for a whole year, and I am bursting with gratitude.

Her birthday was two weeks ago now. We celebrated with Kleenexes and baby Tylenol and a store-bought cheesecake with grandparents and an aunty who came over to make tea for the sickies. Poor baby--to be sick on her first birthday!

Notice the baby Tylenol on the counter?
She's showing you how old she is!

But then last Sunday we really celebrated: with balloons and paper streamers and cake and pink lemonade and "champagne"! I loved planning the party.  I was heady with the excitement of getting to show off this darling daughter to friends, to celebrate her, enjoy her and the amazing fact that God has allowed me a whole, delightful, precious year.

A friend put it beautifully in an e-mail to us after the party: "How do you fĂȘte a daughter like Lily?" It was indeed my joyous conundrum. His answer was our best effort: "With strawberries and books and Grampa's champagne!"












But my fĂȘte isn't quite complete: I wish to follow suit after Christie in recalling the searing victories and triumphant pains of my daughter's birth story.

It began with two little words you never want to hear from a medical professional, especially if you have an anxiety disorder: "Uh oh." It was the day after my due date, and we were at our *last* (we hoped) prenatal appointment with the midwife. We'd finished discussing measures I could take to get labor going, if I wanted to, we'd heard our Pipsqueak's heart beat, and the midwife was taking my blood pressure. I've always had great blood pressure readings--typically on the healthy low end. But that day, it had sky-rocketed. So, my wonderful midwife straight-away rocketed us all off to the hospital, where I was hooked up to a fetal monitor for an hour, had multiple tests done, and was diagnosed with pre-eclampsia and subsequently induced for labor.

I was strangely calm. I think I understood the gravity of the situation: the reality was, without medical intervention, both my baby and I could have died. But something--or Some One--told me that everything was going to be okay: I had my midwife, she had caught it in time, my mom was there, my Jem was with me, the doctor would do everything necessary, the hospital staff could handle this situation, and Pip (the name we used for her before she was born) would soon be in my arms!

Things went smoothly, though intensely after that. The labor pains were very soon hard and fast on top of each other, so that there was often barely time to breathe deep in between them. But I was, as I had imagined, just grateful for the physical pain that replaced the mental anguish of the months of waiting. My mother coached me, Jem comforted me, my midwife instructed and encouraged. A pediatrician and team came in to be there when baby was born.

Then suddenly, her warm, wet, wiggly, beautiful body was on me for just a moment. They whisked her away to make sure she didn't inhale meconium, and checked her all over, with her daddy holding her and letting her suck on his finger for comfort. I held her again. She looked deep into my eyes with her new ones. I recognized her, named her.  But I could not name the feeling that coursed through my torn and tender body--a love beyond words. My mother recognized it though, and in her arms, with my daughter in mine, I was just so grateful to her and for her.

I had torn, but not nearly as badly as Christie. Later on, I could only admire her gratefully for the wisdom and kindness and restraint that kept her from telling me the details of her birth story until after I'd had my own experience. Once I'd been stitched up, my mom gently helped me into the shower.

It may sound silly to most of you, but that shower was one of the most memorable experiences of my life. How to explain? For months, showers for me had been compulsive, exhausting, terrifying. Many days, there were two or three, often hour-long showers. I would finish shaking and crying and freezing (I nearly always ran out of warm water), never sure I'd done it "right". Washing my hair, which I did typically twice every day, I would hold my breath and close my mouth tight, afraid dirt and germs or chemicals from my hair and shampoo would run into my mouth and affect my baby.          

This shower was different. I was shaking yes, not from anxiety but from the effort of the labor that had brought a healthy baby into the world. I felt the warm water course over my body, and I opened my mouth and let the water run in, and it tasted like freedom.

There followed three days of joy and almost complete freedom before I plunged back into the darkness and terror. But I thank God who in his kindness gave me those three wonderful days of relief with my Jem and my mom and my new little Lily.

And now He's given me a year. A year of joy and wonder and new, growing freedom, and indescribable love and gratitude for God's gift of grace.

I wrote in my diary on her birthday: "I really can't believe it's been a year--a whole year since that night of ripping pain and insane strength and uncontainable joy. The first time her soggy new skin landed slippery on my tired, stretched-out abdomen, she looked at me, deep in recognition. She still looks at me with the same dark, wondering eyes and the same tiny fingers curl around mine and I can't believe I've had a year of this and where have the moments gone and don't let them slip away and please give me more years of this! I've never known such purpose or such joy."

My dear little Lily,
"On the night you were born,
the moon smiled with such wonder
that the stars peeked in to see you
and the night wind whispered,
'Life will never be the same'

Because there had never been anyone like you...
ever in all the world!"
(Nancy Tillman, On the Night You Were Born, 2005)


And here you all, is Lily's contribution to this post!:

<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<sb                                                      c

(I'm just so proud of my little budding writer!)


1 comment:

  1. Such a beautiful story you're writing, Judy. Thank you for sharing.

    ReplyDelete