Shortly after entering graduate study for creative writing, a person began growing inside of me. Oblivious to this person’s dividing cells, I went about my business being the independent, self- centered writer/woman I had consciously and carefully become. The foreign body grew. When I finally learned of the invasion, I began a slow and sorrowful surrender. It was sorrowful because an entirely new negotiation of identity was about to ensue for me; one that would give me no choice but to accept the death of my own singular self. Though I was abstractly excited at the thought of having a baby, emotionally I resisted the thought of sharing my world so thoroughly with another person; a person I didn’t even know.
Yet, this body continued erupting inside of me; a body I did not know. Though it filled me until I was swollen with it. Though it fed off of my generous blood and tissue. Though it twisted and kicked around inside of me as if I were the cave carved into the side of the mountain, this body was its own. It did not belong to me. It had its own needs. It had its own expectations; yet it was of me. It was from me. It was with me. It and I were mutual bodies; a communion of We.
And so, my graduate study experience was not what I expected it to be. Though I did spend a great deal of time luxuriating over the practical applications of literary theories and philosophies that have come to be the life-blood of my own writing, my child became my practical priority. My own body split itself so that I was obligated to pay it some attention. So there was less time for fiddling around with my writing and there was less room in my brain for poetry. Or, was there?
One of the midwives that helped me deliver my baby once told me that there is an old native Guatemalan tradition which calls for pregnant women to leave their looms and stop weaving for not only the duration of their pregnancy but until their children are old enough to care for themselves. These women are considered amateur weavers before they become pregnant but when they return to their looms, after not having woven anything at all for some time, they are considered among their communities to be master weavers.
But what does one do when one is not a weaver but a writer? Should a pregnant writer put away pen and paper, or computer, as the case may be, until her child is grown? Perhaps, but that would be missing the point of this tradition. In one way, it is easy to interpret this tradition as a means of forcing women out of their vocations – and forcing them into the home. On the other hand, it seems to me that this is first and foremost a tradition that respects the meditative quality of motherhood; that quality which allows maturation and rumination over all other life practices; that quality through which we are reborn into a plural and, I must finally admit, a more enlightened being.
This plurality presents itself practically every day. Before I became pregnant I paid no attention to time, sleep, or for the most part, other people’s needs. Suddenly I was going to bed every night by 9pm. I woke up every morning at 5am. Most nights, I woke on and off to breast feed the baby. I was never away from him for more than five hours at a time and when I was away, I came home to pump milk from my breasts so that the flow didn’t choke him when he tried to eat. Even now that he’ s a bit older, my entire day revolves around an 8am breakfast, a 10am nap, a noon lunch, a 2pm nap, a 5:30pm dinner, a 7pm bath and an 8:30pm bedtime. This is not my schedule, this is his. My schedule is secondary, almost inconsequential – I do what I absolutely have to, when I have the time.
Every place I go and everything I do begins with the question, is that practical for the baby? I avoid public venues that are too loud or too quiet or too smoky or too, simply, not kid friendly. I listen to “Classics for Kids,” very quietly, in the car. I spend a lot of time worrying about how to sneak vegetables into the endless loads of complex carbohydrates this kid can eat. I don’t wear my hair down when he is awake because he likes to pull it out one strand at a time. I have had to temporarily remove my coffee table, my rubber plant, my fireplace tools, my coat tree, the metal ammunition box I keep all of my writing in, and several other objects I hadn’t even realized were dangerous until my little explorer managed to knock his surprisingly resilient noggin against them. And these practical manifestations of my plurality as a mother are just, as they say, the tip of the iceberg.
But it is through this daily practice of being that one achieves what I now understand to be a more enlightened existence than the one I was living before. Indeed, there is a meditative element to raising a child which imposes a deep metamorphosis on a body. A Buddhist friend of mine describes raising children as “sitting” in constant meditation. She told me that a man at one of her Buddhist retreats once bragged (which doesn’t seem very Buddhist in the first place) about having sat in meditation for 11 days straight. It made her laugh. She said, “Attempting to raise three men, I guess I’ve been meditating for close to nineteen years.” But, it’s true. Just as weavers who put down their looms do not forget the intricate pattern their fingers draw through the yarn, a woman does not cease being anything but a mother once she has a child. Her daily practice of motherhood only strengthens her understanding of the myriad tasks and responsibilities her life offers. Women who become mothers don’t suddenly stop living they just suddenly are living bigger, more complicated, and more potentially fulfilling lives.
And so, a woman/writer doesn’t stop writing. In fact, through the quiet and constant process of caring for a child, the fingers realize wilder, more elaborate patterns and more and more efficient ways of fashioning these constellations into fabrics. Through day to day mothering I realized that each time I came to my writing, I felt full and ever-ready to write. It was as if I had been scribbling non-stop during what would seem to be “down” time. It was as if, rather than distracting me, my second self was creating focus in me; clearing the clutter inside me until my being was fully attentive to only that which was truly essential.
There is simply no way to articulate this deepeningly pervasive sensitivity to the world. Even all that I write here about the process of becoming a mother and motherhood as a meditative process – even all of this comes to me only in a kind of on-going retrospect. Just after my son was born, I didn’t understand how all of this was going to come together. How could I be a student, a writer, a teacher, and most importantly, a mother all at the same time? How would there be time for all of this? There were countless times that I resolved to quit my graduate studies and there were countless times that I thought sure I’d never be a decent mother. I fell into a daily routine of going over the first hill of a roller-coaster – covering my eyes, screaming my head off, and hoping for the best. Every task I accomplished could no longer be clearly subscribed to a particular role. While I wrote, I was a mother. While I was a mother, I was writing. While I taught, I was writing and I was a mother. While I studied, I wrote, I was a mother, and I taught.
Meanwhile, not only was my identity spreading and melding, this new person was inherently part of this new identity so that whatever was with me was with him and whatever was with him was with me. Goals, ideas, preoccupations, concerns, desires all blurred against one another and I forged through not always trusting that this blur was for the best. It seemed impossible to trust anything because everything was not like anything I had ever known before. I was no longer the one person I thought I had become. I was something else. I was a plural body. I was a different me and I was someone else now, too. And it’s hard to know which end is up when everything changes so drastically, so completely.
I believe this drastic and complete change is the major reason that I suffered from postpartum depression after the baby was born. It was not severe, in that my child was not in any danger around me. But, it wasn’t mild either. There were constant tears. Constant. There were panic attacks, mostly growing out of the gnawing dread that I would die and leave my child motherless or my child would die and leave an impossible wound inside of me. There was outrageous anger, not just toward my partner who I had seen as having gotten me into this mess but toward every mother in the world for having lied to me about how difficult this was. Not that women don’t try to warn other women or explain what it’s really like but our society does not support this openness. God forbid a woman sound as if she is complaining about her role as mother!
Also, it is a sticky situation because a pregnant woman is so fragile that the last thing any decent woman wants to say to her is “you know, there is an aspect of it that is really unbelievably difficult” and send her into tears and nightmares for the remainder of her pregnancy. Also, if there is any absolute truth of pregnancy, birth, and motherhood it’s that every woman’s experience is quite different so one never knows if there is anything to warn another woman of in the first place. Sadly, the most common form of advice from other mothers that I encountered was, “huh, you think it’s bad now, just wait, it only gets worse.” Left without the openness necessary to discuss the truth about becoming a mother, most mothers that I encountered simply seemed bitter. This was an important aspect of my postpartum depression, in that I didn’t have an appropriate voice for what I was feeling.
And I must quickly mention here that the diagnosis of “postpartum depression” has been so overly used by the media in coverage of cases of maternal infanticide that I find most women are loathe to admit they feel any confusion/ sadness over their new status of “mother.” Popular media makes it sound as if postpartum depression is synonymous with baby killing. This makes things difficult for those of us who experience much milder forms of postpartum depression – and there are many of us – because if we mention what we are going through to other mothers we are treated as if we are abnormal, even dangerous.
And yes, all of this left me feeling angry, most of all toward a world that would 'allow' someone like me, so obviously not interested in sharing my life with someone else so thoroughly, to have a baby in the first place. But, I was assured time and again that everything I was feeling was perfectly normal. “Think of the changes your body has been through and is going through. Think of the changes to your daily routine. Think of the fact that you are becoming a mother.” My midwife was especially helpful in recognizing that this “depression” was an adjustment period; the struggle of the sticky, inchoate wings to press open the chrysalis. This struggle lasted no less than six months and there are times I still sense the dark corners of that cocoon creeping up around my head. Still, this happens only when I allow myself to forget that I am no longer a solitary, novice weaver but a master weaver connected to the ultimate plurality of being; the plurality of motherhood.
I suffered postpartum depression because I was mourning the death of that old, singular self that could be selfish, self-centered, and, ultimately, self-defeating if it wanted to be. But my catharsis is clear each time I embrace the power in the necessary expansion of my soul through parenting. Becoming a mother has put me in a state of mind within which doing what I have to do every day is writing; is poetry. Rather than dying with my singular self, I, and my writing, held on and became reborn into this new plural self. There is no boundary anymore between my words and my being. There is no time or reason for separating my self and my writing. Just as I am intrinsically bound to the budding animal life of my child, I am bound to a new awareness of experience as expression and expression as experience.
This awareness keeps me present and awake in every moment so that I am not only a constant observer of the world but also of language – so that writing is happening in me regardless of what is actually physically taking place. Most writers instinctively work towards this ability and this presence of mind. It is not at all necessary, of course, to have a child in order to learn this. It just happens that having a child is what finally brought me to this point. Having a child is what brought me to an awareness of my writing as inseparable from my, which is really our, everyday existence.
When I think of the process of pregnancy, birth, and motherhood that the last two years have brought me through it is impossible to deny that important work has been taking place. Every moment of every day with my child is a raw, new event, explosive and relentless. It is one of those fast-forward films of flowers blooming, playing over and over. Holding this kind of bustling life in one’s hands requires an inexhaustible focus. The inherent meditative quality of motherhood has created a vast wild space in my consciousness within which I am constantly aware of not only my connection to my child but my connection to everything.
Of course, it is no small side note that even as I write this, my current understanding of consciousness is being challenged by the fact that my now 15 month old son suddenly realizes that he’s a separate person with desires and needs that don’t always coincide with mine. He thinks it’s a good idea to eat windpipe sized magnets for example and I take them away from him while he screams, etc…. While my thorough acceptance of this plural self helped see me through the first year, I realize it is only the groundwork that will help support a steady stream of change for a lifetime to come. I feel my singular self resurfacing, remarkably renewed and more self-assured, in order to allow my son’s singular self to fully emerge. After all, the bridge cannot exist without the individual stones that crowd to form it. Yet, without the bridge of which they are a part, the stones are only stones . And ultimately, respecting the singular selves that shape the support we are to one another individually is just as important as recognizing “the line of the arch” our plural self forms. In the meantime, I’m busy at my loom.
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