The birthday: her day or mine?
I love birthdays. Any excuse to celebrate an individual and recognize her uniqueness is as good a reason for cake as any other. But I have a secret about this birthday cake, I feel it’s as much for me as it is her. It was me after all, who sat 5 years ago perched on the threshold to motherhood, unable to see the next steps, choosing faith and love as my only companions.
Shooing fear and doubt away with every labour horror story I willed to bounce off me was easier said than done. Those acquaintances are the type that like to visit at dusk when I’m most tired and susceptible to suggestion. You have no idea how much pain you’re going to be in they’d taunt. What if the striking ambulance workers can’t get to you fast enough? You’ll never forgive yourself! they’d whisper ominously into my heart.
I still struggle to explain where the confidence to birth at home with a licensed midwife came from. There is no explanation except somewhere within. It’s not something I can share or teach. I looked hard at what I could control and how I felt in the quiet of myself to make that choice. I asked until I heard the answer: Where should we be? Where will we be safe? In a hospital was never part of the picture I got, neither were the anticeptic smell, bright halls or gowned strangers. I went with what I got. The quiet of our bedroom, the firm softness of our bed and the smell of my husband’s pillow. Love made the choice, faith showed me the place.
As I stir the batter for her 5th birthday cake I read the recipe, following the steps I’m reading for the first time. I’m poor at reading a recipe through before making it—I have all the ingredients on hand, I just fail to read the instructions in my haste until I’m in the moment. This lack of preparation usually leaves me feeling a bit trepidatious, with butterflies in my stomach—particularly when I come to a part I didn’t anticipate. At that moment I scramble to make what skills or utensils I have accomplish the task. And I throw in a big heap of intention and silent prayer. Becauase I love to feed people—well.
My mothering is basically the same. I haven’t read the receipes for raising a child. I mostly ignore parenting advice except from trusted sources and I scramble to handle the surprises I get along the way. But because I expect to be surprised, I have learned to trust that I will adapt. Jack Canfield in The Secret compares the road to life as being like driving in the dark: you can only see ahead as far as the head-lamps will show you. But that ambiguity about the whole journey doesn’t stop you from driving. Similarly, he notes, we climb stairs in the dark believing that there will be another, and then another step for our sure footedness. As I licked ice cream and wandered around my neighbourhood pacing my way through the early stages of labour I held onto that trusting faith. I have no idea what’s next, but I’m going with it.
Shocked was how I felt when I held Kate in my arms for the first time. Observers might say that’s because she was howling to wake the dead (and perhaps she was?). But I was stunned silent by her formidable presence, her strong and yes, vocal spirit and the fact that there she was in my arms for now and always. My legs shook as I knelt, holding her head-down to allow her lungs and passages to drain. I stared first at her red face, then at her long length and girl parts. Here she is, my daughter. I thought. I’m so glad you’ve come to me!
So as I prepare to ice the cake, putting a heavy dose of love on it, I’ll mix onto the sweetness my secret celebration of my on-going journey, now 5 years old. Michael added a new layer of engagement for me and for us. He’s made us richer, laugh harder and love more deeply still. So I ice the cake for both babes who come for me to mother, and celebrate the mysterious, affirming and surprising mothering journey we are on together. Happy Birthday Kate!