Thursday, November 26, 2009

Thankful for Longing

I take great comfort from this passage in Edwidge Danticat's memoir Brother, I'm Dying:

   When my daughter was born, her face blood-tinted, her eyelids swollen with tiny light pink patches that Colleen the midwife called angel kisses, her body coiled around itself as if to echo the tightness of her tiny fists, I instantly saw it as one of many separations to come. She was leaving my body and going into the world, where she would spend the rest of her life moving away from me.
   Groggy and exhausted, I asked Colleen, 'Is it normal for me to think this?'
   'Maybe you're one of those women who enjoys being pregnant,' she said.
It wasn't so much that I enjoyed being pregnant. I simply liked the fact that for a while my daughter and I had been inseparable.  

These words remind me that I had a bond with Elise while carrying her--one that will always remain undefinable by our experiences in this world, but a bond nonetheless. We separated when she was born too, but of course in a much more painful way--that final separation, skipping the togetherness of being daughter and mother on this planet. 

But that bond we had while I carried her inside me: we were as close as we could be, though we could not see each other and I could not hear her. She could hear my voice, and her papa's and her brother's, and she could hear my breath and heartbeat. But this whole experience took place on a subconscious level, invisible to us in our sense-driven existence. I take comfort in the connection we had while still mourning its lost potential. 

When I think of this closeness with my children that I lost with Elise, that slips away from me with each day Felix grows up, that closeness I cherish and mourn at the same time when Felix cuddles and kisses and says "I love you" to me, the words of Cindy Sheehan keep coming to mind. Cindy Sheehan was the woman who held a vigil against the Iraq war outside President Bush's Texas ranch in August 2005 after her firstborn son Casey was killed serving as a soldier. Regardless of whether you agree or disagree with her actions, I once read of her devotion to her son that "he touched every part of me." She carried him inside her, gave birth to him, nursed him and bathed him and helped him grow up. That sensory intimacy with one's child is like no other for me, and missing it with Elise is what aches the most.

But it does not hurt anymore. It will always ache, but the hurt with its rage and devastation has faded away, thankfully. 

All of us long to be with someone we miss, whether they have passed away from us or live on another part of the planet. And all of us have some belief in the invisible, in some form or element. My relationship with Elise is invisible, subtle, not of this world. Much more awaits us after this chaotic, contradictory life on this glorious, crazy earth. 

A week ago, I visited a couple in Labor and Delivery as a Peer Companion when they lost their baby boy. On the same day I met the new baby daughter of friends whose firstborn died two days after her traumatic birth a year ago August. My heart swelled and swelled with relief and joy and sadness when I saw little Chapin in her beaming father's arms. She is perfect, beautiful--truly one of the most beautiful babies I've ever seen. I went to Frances as she sat up in bed in the recovery room and started sobbing on her shoulder. I wanted to keep crying like that, but thought I should pull myself together because this was her day of joy. Frances said she felt Emerson's presence at every moment of her pregnancy and delivery with Chapin. 

If anyone is familiar with separation and reunion, it is Edwidge Danticat, who learned of this kind of love from her father and his older brother: her two papas. She writes lovingly of her uncle, a pastor who raised her for eight years in Haiti after her parents emigrated to the United States.

'Death is a journey we embark on from the moment we are born,' [my uncle] would say. 'An hourglass is turned and the sand starts to slip in a different direction as soon as we emerge from our mother's womb. Thank God those around us are too blinded by joy then to realize it. Otherwise there would be weeping at births as well. But if we weep at a death, it's because we do not understand death. If we saw death as another kind of birth, just as the Gospel exhorts us to, we woudn't weep, but rejoice, just as we do at the birth of a child.' 

This is what I resolve to do: keep hold of life and death. Like laughing and crying at the same time. 

Saturday, November 7, 2009

3 Years and Forever

Three years ago today we said Hello and Goodbye to Elise. This morning before I got out of bed I thought to myself, "Today is your birthday, baby girl. I love you. I miss you. I will see you again." I thought of those parents who suffer the loss of their child at any age: miscarriage, hours after delivery, months into babyhood, childhood flu, in the line of duty as soldiers.

Felix woke me from deep sleep with a sob and a call for Daddy last night. I went to him and found him trying to get his pajamas back on after changing his pull-on diaper. He had never done that before--he sleeps very heavily, doesn't wake up to use the bathroom yet, and only every once in a while does he cry for us at night. "I want to cuddle with you Mommy," he told me after I zipped up his pajamas and dried his tears. 

He leaned his head against mine as he fell asleep. The sheer solidness of his head on my brow brought back the memory of him inside me in the weeks before his birth, when I could feel that hard little head like a weight in my lower abdomen and his little bottom would wave back and forth under my belly button.

When I crawled back into my own bed, I thought about checking the time: it was about 1am three years ago when I woke up to go to the emergency room because I had not felt Elise move inside me all evening. But I didn't look at the clock, thinking it was probably hours past that.

The first thing Dan said to me when he returned from his Saturday group run this morning was that he had checked the time when Felix called out. It was four minutes past 1. He calls it coincidence, although he was the one to note the hour. I said I wasn't sure what it meant, but it felt "cosmic." Maybe what I mean by that is that Elise's connection to us is deep in our bones, our beings. It doesn't matter how much time she spent with us in her physical body on this seemingly solid earth: she is with us, in our flesh, in the deepest recesses of our minds, in our spirits. 

The tears well up and pour from my eyes because my body cannot touch hers and my senses ache for her face (what would it look like?), her hair (would it be dark like mine and Felix's?), her soft skin (I love to stroke Felix's pudgy forearm, hold his hand), her voice (my heart melts every time I hear the high pitch of any child's sounds).   

"When a loved one dies, the process of grieving is a completion that allows us to honor that person's life and claim the wisdom we have gained through the relationship." So goes an entry for November in my Pocketful of Meditations book. What relationship did I have, or Dan or Felix, with Elise? At a Share meeting I attended last week, I listened to a woman who suffered an early miscarriage bravely say that she didn't feel "worthy" of being at the gathering because the rest of us had lost our babies later in our pregnancies, when we thought about them and carried them for months as they moved around inside us. But this mother had imagined a future with this child. "You had dreams for you and your baby," I said to her. 

A relationship with someone, "knowing" a person: what does that mean? When I think of a person I love, I recall glimpses of them, moments spent together, snapshots in time; their smile, my gaze upon them, the shape of their hand. 

This is my relationship with Elise. It continues, and its length and depth equal any other on this planet. Because all relationships are a series of moments we spend together and apart, feeling, dreaming, seeing, missing. "As we receive the gift of understanding, it transcends time and space, simultaneously gifting the soul of the one who has passed over." This body of mine aches for you, Elise. But the me who is more than just flesh is listening to you, who live beyond absence. 


Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Yes again

This thought floated up and wants to be expressed:

I will always remain hopeful, no matter what the outcome.

*
Felix pointed out the full (almost full? Waning full? Anyway, big and beautiful) moon to me several times the night before last. I was still warm after dark, following an equally lovely, balmy day where we ate dinner outside at the Emerson Grill.

"And there's the first star!" he exclaimed. There was brilliant Jupiter, just to the southeast and holding its own, standing out even next to the moon's wide gaze. The first star of night always reminds me of Elise, for some reason. It doesn't have to be the same star, Jupiter or Hyakutake or Krypton--I'm no astronomer. Just the first star of the evening, whenever I happen to glimpse it.

Maybe connecting Elise with this star began around 6 months after her death, when we vacationed on a Mexican Pacific beach and I held a twilight ceremony with Uncle Jeff, Auntie Sarah and Uncle Ben, her cousins in girlhood and her big brother. We gazed at a candle I lit in the middle of our circle, and for a moment she was at the center of our world. I looked up once again at these loved ones gathered--I think Susie, Skip, and Francie were there too--and saw the first star of night was shining down on us from the west, just above where we admired the spectacular sunsets from our palapa.

Back to the night before last: Felix and I went on a twilight walk after dinner--maybe subconsciously beckoned by that moon. We met some new neighbors on Brady street and found that we have a lot of friends in common. Felix showed them his new handlebar headlight. I'd bought it months ago for Dan's and my bike, but was finally getting around to installing it until Felix said he wanted it for his own. He was so fascinated by the circle of glowing white that bobbed in time to his handlebars' movements. He hadn't been riding his bike for weeks, and I had not been on a walk on a balmy night for god knows how long.

We took the night air with his miniature spotlight. It was just what I needed.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Still Here I Think

This will be a short post because I'm writing it in the few minutes before some friends are due to arrive. I'm tricking myself into doing some writing, because I (A) haven't done any and (B) think that if I can only do it for a short sprint it will at least be something.

The thing is (C) I've been sitting in some low-level depression. It's the kind that occasionally keeps me from falling asleep easily and makes me snap at my Felix toward the end of the day. It's not the kind that makes me burst into tears and have a crying jag over the ongoing, underlying grief in my life: I've made peace with that. I think.

I just don't feel much motivation to do the things that make me feel better--things for me. Instead I get obsessed over endless tasks like tidying the house, running errands, entertaining Felix, and telling myself that since these things are never done I must keep doing them or I am not worth much.

Ick! I've transferred the habit of mind/ego I had while in academia to housework! Talk about a job never done. So far I don't think I'm drinking too much, but I sure look forward to a gin and tonic or two in the late afternoon.

Must re-route those neural circuits that say I must work, work, work and do, do, do to be someone. It's time to Be, Be, Be--and Now.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Working to Rest

My mind is struggling against the quiet my spirit wants. It tries to pull me underneath where all is churning and blurry and deafening with confusion. All I need to do is be still and float peacefully with the current, but I thrash around instead, looking for some kind of handhold or foothold that isn't there right now.

I can't keep still because it is work to do so. I confuse this effort at peacefulness with struggle, and my mind convinces me that I need to sleep in instead of writing in my journal, that I need to read the news and dink around on the internet instead of playing music, in order to relax.

But these are distractions and avoidances, not relaxation. I know because I feel even worse after doing them.

It takes effort to be at peace. It means waking up a little earlier. And not berating myself for NOT waking up early either--I'm in mourning after all--but telling myself gently that it is hard to absorb yet another loss, and that I know what will comfort me: writing and music.

My mind and ego say that I can wallow for a while. My spirit says, Be sad and grieve, but in a way that takes care to let those feelings flow in music and words. Oversleeping, excessive distractions like the internet, worry over housework that I don't get to: this is wallowing and stuffing away what needs to come out, and needs coaxing to come out.

It's OK to write and play music--it is NOT an indulgence. It feeds me, it heals me. Healing takes effort because it requires overruling the mind games of guilt and defeatism. My mind is even telling me I am guilty of laziness because I don't create, when really it's the reverse: I feel I'm avoiding the "real work" of chores if I play music or write. Or is that my mind/ego at it again? --I'm confused. My mind is either clever or diabolical. Possibly both.

Meanwhile, my husband has a career that he desperately wishes were something he cared about, because he works very hard at it yet has no interest in it whatsoever. At this moment Dan is standing by for a flight home from Chicago, where he has been all week. It sounds like it's been miserable: from what he's told me, there is literally nothing in the Chicago suburb where his client's offices are. He has been working in an office building in a warehouse district, and the only place to eat meals is at his hotel.

He tells me not to feel guilty. I am almost convinced not to (a Catholic upbringing and American cultural ideals about work have quite the grip on my psyche--a subject for a later post). He is a big boy, he says, and knows what he needs to do for himself (unlike me). I listen to him when he needs to vent and I don't try to fix his situation or give him advice.

He does great work for his firm, because he believes in doing a good job even though it's personally unsatisfying. But he has little time or energy left for seeing friends, and misses his time with us. I myself however, could go out for drinks with some girlfriends last night. I almost cried when one of them said she felt struck by Dan's commitment to do whatever it takes to care for me.

We are committed to our healing, in our own way. Every day I will move forward. That means writing something, every day. It means praying for me and for our little family we want to grow. It means getting one chore done every day and having that be enough. It means closing my eyes and opening my heart to listen.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Dying to Live

Ever since reading his 2006 book Waking: A Memoir of Trauma and Transcendence, I find myself thinking of the wise and tender words of Matthew Sanford, a man in his 40s who was paralyzed at age 13 in a car crash that killed his father and sister. He went on to suffer the stillbirth of one of his twin sons, become a yoga instructor, and establish a charity he calls Mind Body Solutions.

We all experience different levels of dying throughout our lives--the process of living guarantees it....If we can see death as more than black and white, as more than on and off, there are many versions of realized death short of physically dying. The death of a loved one sets so much in motion: grief, a sense of loss, tears, anger, a transcendent sense of love, an appreciation of the present moment, a desire to die, and on and on.

There are also the quiet deaths. How about the day you realized you weren't going to be an astronaut or the queen of Sheba? Feel the silent distance between yourself and how you felt as a child, between yourself and those feelings of wonder and splendor and trust. Feel your mature fondness for who you once were, and your current need to protect innocence wherever you might find it. The silence that surrounds the loss of innocence is a most serious death, and yet is is necessary for the onset of maturity....

Life and death, silence and action, emptiness and fullness at the same time--these are inward features of everyone's life. They are truths that do not lead to answers. Instead, they invite us to believe in and appreciate our own experience. When we do, when we carefully listen to that experience, the next story begins, the practical one, the story of what happens beyond waking.


As for me, the waiting is over. I can breathe again.

I have never witnessed a loved one struggling with a fatal diagnosis who waits for their death while still hoping to live. And I hope anyone reading this who has, does not take offense at my comparison. But this feeling I have right now brings such a situation to mind. For 2 years, 3 if you count the months I carried Elise and we looked toward the time when we would begin our lives with her, we've been waiting for another child to join our family. Today again, after trying another treatment and hoping this dream will finally come true, grief struck me down.

But at least the anxiety of wondering and worrying is finally over.

Felix has some mail-order caterpillars in a plastic jar. Every morning since they arrived a week ago, he has awakened with a smile of excitement on his face and urged me to come with him downstairs to see how much they've grown. In one week they probably tripled in size. This morning he forgot to check on them, maybe because I crawled into bed with him to tell him we were not going to have a baby because "the eggs in mommy's tummy didn't hatch."

I let him see my tears and told him he was our favorite boy in the world and we are so happy he is our big boy. At first his mouth curved down in that frowny face I find so endearing as he listened to my bad news. It made me think of the days and months after Elise died when I would burst out crying, and in his 2-year-old sensitivity and confusion he would cry too, perhaps scared he had lost his mother to some place he couldn't go. But this time he said, "Now we can play tackle again" because he didn't have to worry about being gentle with me and the "eggs."

So later this morning we did. And he kept holding on to me after he tackled me to the ground and said "I love you, you're my favorite girl in the whole world."

When we'd come downstairs, Dan told Felix his caterpillars were starting to hang upside down on the lid of their jar, getting ready to spin their cocoons. I used to look at the creatures and think of our microscopic embryos, growing and maybe wiggling their way toward a life outside.

Now as I look at the caterpillars, some of them quietly suspended, others getting their last nibble of food and crawling around looking for just the right place to start their next phase of life, I think, that is where I am now: beginning again. It's not such a bad place to be, even if I have to die a little first to take that next step. Even if I need to drag myself kicking and screaming, until I know for sure there is no looking back.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Needs and Wants

I've thought about updating my blog numerous times during this past month-plus. But I think the reason I haven't is because we're preparing for another in-vitro fertilization attempt, and I'm scared it won't work. And I don't know what to do with that fear.

All I can do is live with it. I suppose it's the same as living with the pain of Elise's death: it's just always there, part of our lives, in the background of every passing moment. Like my breathing, I am not always even aware of it, and then it stirs me in some way and draws my awareness toward it. This fear, and my longing for another child, colors nearly every moment, whether I like it or not.

It's not as if I don't love my life. I don't go around moping or tense. Quite the opposite, actually. I truly feel at peace with my life and grateful for my beautiful sweet son, and my loving husband who understands me better than anyone and is the world's best listener.

But it does feel as if our lives are on hold, waiting for our child. Maybe he or she will never arrive. Yet our family seems incomplete. Not because one-child families seem incomplete to me, but because I myself have wanted two children since Elise lived inside me.

It's been two and a half years since she died, and I've been living with her absence as I always will. But on top of that is the longing, the seemingly endless longing for a second living child, a sibling for Felix.

I can live with the longing for Elise. I have accepted that she can never be with us here. But I am sick and tired of the unfulfilled longing for another baby. I wish I could make it go away. I'm TRYING to make it go away, in part by pursuing this IVF. But that might not be enough, if we're unsuccessful. And then comes more struggle. What will ease this longing, and how much longer will it take? Such are the ways my mind tightens its grip, with all these unanswerable questions about the future. Twice this week after yoga class, Chris read this famous passage from Dune. It seems meant for me:

"I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain."

I try not to live my life obsessing over this. I don't want to think that the success of this attempt is all resting on me and my body. That's too much pressure and also completely untrue. It will just happen the way it will. So I will acknowledge my fear and let it be my teacher.

"I may not always get what I want, so let me trust that I am getting what I need." So goes the prayer of a certain passage in my Pocketful of Miracles book. I am right where I am meant to be. This is true of every moment, good and bad. There is no right or wrong way to do this but live my life.

Friday, April 10, 2009

Spring-ing

On days like this I feel so damn good I try to squelch my pessimistic side from telling me I might be bipolar (and if I am? So what?). So there: got that out of the way. Now I can go on writing about how great I feel today, this moment, and celebrate it.

I've had one of those beautiful Bozeman mornings where I talk to or see friends from around town, and they fill me with gratitude for life's many blessings.

Sure, I woke up too late this morning to take advantage of my generous, environmentally conscious sister-in-law Sarah's offer to pick up Felix on their way to preschool.

But Felix woke up smiling.

Sure, I got him to school at the latest time ever (he's supposed to be there by 9am). But standing there chatting outside school were two other mothers I like, and one of them had her adopted baby girl in the stroller with her. Her older daughter is Felix's classmate at preschool. She was excited to hear me tell her I'd been in touch with the woman who manages adoptions through Lutheran Social Services here in town. We agreed to talk soon. I'm really interested in hearing about her experience and getting to know her family.

I took Genki on a walk down the Linear Trail after parking the car at the public library. I ran into an old neighbor I hadn't seen in years. The sun was out, a reward for yesterday's rainy 40-degrees. I crossed a bridge over the creek to head downtown. I stopped to look at the creek gurgling, and listen to the robins tootling, a downy woodpecker pecking, chickadees chirping high up in the tall, leafless aspens.

As I walked by the condo of our friends Annie and Maxwell, I called Maxwell on my cell phone. We've been out of touch for too long. We will meet up this weekend, after not seeing them since December at the house they bought and are renovating.

I called up my friend Frances, whose daughter Emerson died last August two days after her birth. We've met a few times at each others' houses for hours of uplifting conversation. Now she has a contract job organizing a science and nature festival in the Bitterroot mountains, where scientists will come to do fieldwork and the public will be invited to see the animals and plants at a nature reserve in the Lee Metcalf wilderness. A beautiful place, she said. I can't wait to bring Felix and Dan to the festival in June--I've been to Missoula and driven through the Bitterroot on the interstate, but never been inside its wonders.

Then my neighbor Sanna called. She and her husband Pete have a sweet 16-month-old daughter, Stina, and Felix and I might get to have her over today! Stina's big sister Oskaria died two hours after her birth in July 2006 of a genetic disorder.

Downtown, I stopped at the Montana Fish Company and bought yellowtail collar to fry, ahi tuna and tobiko "flying fish" roe for sushi rolls, and a bottle of red rice ale made in Ibaraki, Japan. I've never had red rice ale--a new adventure for me!

I went to the store Shoefly owned by Michelle, my friend and neighbor. I bought some potpourri and a lovely candle dish decorated with dragonflies for Shirley. I hadn't seen Michelle for months either. We talked about gardening and how much fun she had harvesting potatoes one autumn in Manhattan, and how I was nervous about whether or not I should start some tomatoes from seed and try to grow a whole bunch in Dave and Jen's backyard, formerly Shirley's. I'm a spring-fever gardener: I'm all gung-ho at the beginning of the season, then burn out at the end. Also, the last time I tried a serious vegetable garden was the summer of 2006, when it was a billion degrees out, I was pregnant with Elise, and visited Shirley often in the hospital while she went through her TWO colostomy surgeries--one that landed her in the ICU.

Shirley lives next door now--hooray!--and told me yesterday she wants to grow tomatoes too. Of course, I still need to ask Jen and Dave if it's okay to grow a garden on their land. But if not, I'll still try containers and Shirley's raised bed in the yard of the house she rents from us.

Arriving back at the library after Genki's and my 2-hour meet and greet around town, an elderly man stopped me to chat outside after I said good morning to him. He was all smiles: "They had a storytime for the kids in there and sang 'Bah Bah Black Sheep.' Then the storyteller took the kids out to see a 2-year-old ewe and her lambs. Ohhh, the kids were so excited. A little girl petted a lamb and the lamb said 'BAH!' and she said 'BAH!' back, and it was the greatest thing!" "We sure have a beautiful library," I said to him as we parted.

And we do. It was finished the October before Elise died. It has gorgeous glue-lam timbers and skylights on its vaulted ceilings. Outside the windows are the magnificent evergreens in Lindley Park.

And like the rest of our fantastic town, I always see someone I know, or someone who returns my smile.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Clouds, then Sun

You will indeed listen, but never
understand,
and you will indeed look, but
never perceive.
For this people's heart has
grown dull,
and their ears are hard of
hearing,
and they have shut their eyes;
so that they might not look
with their eyes,
and listen with their ears,
and understand with their heart
and turn--
and I would heal them...

Matthew 13: 14-15









I haven't felt like writing these past two months because...well, there are many reasons I suppose. After the IVF didn't work and I wrote about it very honestly here and in messages to friends and family, I thought I'd preempted the grief by talking about my disappointment openly.

But then I went inside myself--too deeply it seems. I didn't go there in a self-pitying way, but I didn't do it in a healthy, self-reflective way either. I would describe it as a kind of shut-down, ignoring-everything introversion. I got addicted to internet Scramble. I read and read and read, without absorbing much. And then I got tired of reading (tired of READING? ME?). No topic or story interested me when I read it, but I read it anyway, as if I were shoveling in food, gourmet and mediocre, without tasting a bite. I stopped exercising. I stopped writing. I stopped the music, listening and playing both.

I could still act like the same person on the outside, but I felt disconnected much of the time. It depended on the person I was interacting with, and I gave up defending myself against hurtful, thoughtless chatter from loved ones when I was feeling fragile.

One of the things we don't want to see or hear is that death exists beside us. Knowing that death coexists with us doesn't mean we mope around as if we're in a cemetery. What I mean by an awareness of death is that we acknowledge the mystery each of us is, and also try to grasp that mystery by listening, not by trying to "solve" it with panaceas that make only us feel better on a superficial level.

Instead of living in the mystery, I became obsessed with bad news: the husband of a friend who died of brain cancer. A senior scholar in the Japanese literature field who once wrote me a kind e-mail complimenting an article I'd published, also dead, deteriorating within months, like my friend's husband. People losing their homes, their jobs, their businesses. A catastrophic gas explosion in my hometown that killed a young woman and instantly destroyed several cherished historic buildings and the businesses and jobs in them. A plane crash that wiped out 3 entire families with small children.

Ironically, I think all this focus on the morbid is because I've been silently dreading my 42nd birthday. I've been avoiding the anniversary of my birth as if I'm some youth-obsessed, declining starlet. I've always liked my birthday, the permission to give thanks for me. This year it became an occasion to fear that my body can never have another baby.

So I'd been rejecting myself and my body again. I wasn't listening to my pain. And then I got depressed, and got more impatient with people who talk without listening. That's because I haven't been listening to me. I've been ignoring my needs like a negligent parent ignores her child. I've been putting up with the thoughtlessness of people in my life because I haven't been doing much that is thoughtful for myself.

The thing is, it takes work to care for myself. But it feels good when I do. It's like the way people talk about relationships, or parenting: it's hard work at times, but the rewards far outweigh the demands.

So yesterday I ran with Genki, and the day before, I had a long yoga session. I ran again today with my friend Deborah. I wrote e-mails I'd been procrastinating on: to the administrative coordinator at the IVF clinic, and to a woman who manages adoptions at a service here in town. I tested out some guitars at the music store. Tonight I'm letting some girlfriends buy me a drink or three.

And...I wrote in here again! I'm back.

Felix called me outside to build a snowman. Here are some pictures of our handiwork. As Felix says, "I'll be sad when our snowman melts." And I say, "Yes, but then the flowers will start blooming," and he says, "I can't wait until it's winter again and I can build ANOTHER snowman!" Hope springs eternal. Even after it's been hibernating a while.

Friday, January 30, 2009

Fear and Trust

We may not have a new baby on the way, but we did get a new family member. Yesterday afternoon, I went with Felix and our friend Shirley to the animal shelter. Shirley adopted two kittens that were buddies at the shelter, and Felix picked out a quiet-tempered, affectionate, sleek black kitty named Puma (we're not sure if we'll keep that name or not). It only took him about 5 hours last night to venture out from under the sofa to sniff every piece of furniture and pace back and forth alongside me to rub the length of his body against mine.

He is slowly beginning to trust this strange place with its strange smells and beings. He's staying in a small room off the kitchen, but early this morning he ventured into the kitchen itself and up the stairs where we were sleeping. I know this because Genki woke me by leaping up to charge down the stairs growling.

The kitty doesn't trust Genki yet, needless to say. I thought Genki's dogzilla behavior would send our new family member back behind the sofa for the rest of the day. But he came out as soon as I went downstairs to call to him, and is batting at his new toy. I have no doubt that soon he'll be roaming the vast new territory of our house, hundreds of times more vast than the nice, but small cage he lived in for 4 months at the shelter.

I've wanted another kitty for a while, ever since our lovely, feisty dilute calico Freud died in October 2007. But I didn't realize that he would teach me so many things in his very first hours with us.

Things like:
* Proceed with caution, but let yourself trust.
* Let things take their natural course, but participate in their process too.
* Let your heart be prepared for the unexpected, even if your mind is freaked out by it.
* Stretch and relax as much as you can in your new surroundings.
* No matter how scared you might feel about where your life is going, you will purr again.
* Someone will be there to inspire your purring, but having been through some of life's trials and weathered them somehow, you will find also that you've gained the ability to feel scared and to purr at the same time.

If I do say so myself (even though I grew up with the guilt of Catholicism and the outward modesty of a Japanese), I've become a much wiser person for the trials of the past couple of years. I trust my instincts more. I criticize myself less. I'm more understanding with my fears, and try to let them teach me about myself.

I haven't achieved these on my own: Elise is my greatest teacher, and the family and friends who show their love for me are my greatest living teachers. But I can give myself credit for calling these beings into my life. How else is the sincerity of loved ones tested, if not in times of trouble? I did not turn away from Elise's death, but let her take me to the darkest depths of pain. Now as I struggle with my inability to have another child, I see that sadness and joy, darkness and light infuse every moment, and I cherish both.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Opening the Door

A home pregnancy test turned up negative today. It's heartbreaking, but at the very least I can stop obsessing about it and just bury that dream once and for all. We're still considering adoption, but it's too exhausting to think about the process right now.

I'll close this posting with a poem from Rumi that speaks to me:

This Being Human is a guest
house. Every morning
a new arrival.

A joy, a depression, a meanness,
some momentary awareness comes
as an unexpected visitor.

Welcome and attend them all:
Even if they're a crowd of sorrows,
who violently sweep your house
empty of its furniture, still,
treat each guest honorably.
He may be clearing you out
for some new delight.

The dark thought, the shame, the malice,
meet them at the door laughing,
and invite them in.

Be grateful for whoever comes,
because each has been sent
as a guide from beyond.

Welcome difficulty.
Learn the alchemy True Human
Beings know:
the moment you accept what troubles
you've been given, the door opens.

Welcome difficulty as a familiar
comrade. Joke with Torment
brought by the Friend.

Sorrows are the rags of old clothes
and jackets that serve to cover,
and then are taken off.
That undressing,
and the beautiful
naked body
underneath,
is the sweetness
that comes
after grief.