Quantcast

One Week Later

OK.

Deep breath.

This last week has been the most wonderful week of my life. I am not the person I was seven days ago, and I never will be again. It has also been one of the most emotionally tumultuous weeks of my life. You know how they say you can love someone so much it hurts? You can, and I do. I love him so much it hurts my heart.

I’m grateful that I pulled together a bunch of posts on completely unrelated topics prior to going into the hospital, because I’ve been struggling a lot with figuring out how to express myself here, and have felt more or less paralyzed every time I sit down to type. Over the past two years I’ve learned to work through things that are on my mind by writing about them…but I just can’t write about this in the way that I’m used to writing about things — which is to say, openly and vulnerably. Not yet.

It’s felt so strange, having such a momentous thing happen and all of a sudden wanting to pull back - hard - from expressing my feelings about it. Because it’s so important to me to examine things honestly…and yet when it comes to this baby, I can’t be open and free like I’m used to being. To write about my feelings for my baby is to open up conversation about those feelings, and they are so precious and so mine that it would be heartbreaking for me were they to be trivialized, misunderstood, or interpreted in any other way than as they are as a result of my inability to express them in all their complexity.

But it is also so important to me to explore my feelings here, to share them with you and to take these steps forward together. Because I see now that mothers are scared, and mothers need to talk to one another, and mothers fear that they are doing things wrong, or imperfectly. I want to offer my vulnerability and inexperience as a mother, because I know that feeling uncertain is a part of motherhood – and a part of life, regardless of whether or not you’re a parent - that is universal and scary, and so very important to talk about. That said, what I’m interested in exploring here are my feelings about motherhood, not my child’s life in and of itself; this is not a website about Indy (hence the nickname – which I may change my mind about using, but not for now), and that’s a line I’m still trying to figure out how to walk.

Parents can so often fall into the trap of saying “No one but a parent can understand.” And while it’s true to some extent – there are emotions going on here that I did not realize existed, and that I absolutely did not understand until I held my son in my arms – it’s not true that an exploration of parenthood has to be alienating. Parents aren’t in one club, with everyone else in another. I don’t want to pick sides here; I want to talk about all this like a person, not like a Mom with a capital M. I want to focus on what’s universal about motherhood, and I haven’t yet figured out what’s universal and what’s mine.

I will be able to sort through these feelings and talk about this remarkable journey, I know I will. But I need these emotional waters to calm down a bit before I can see straight enough to figure out how to tell you what’s going on in my head these days. Right now, it’s too filled up with this little boy for me to separate one thought from the next.

And there you go: I feel better already. Writing about things that are on your mind always helps, huh?



You Might Also Like:


  • http://elledeau.tumblr.com sometimesella

    Nicely said.  Looking forward to all you have to share with us. :)

  • http://barnardbabyblog.tumblr.com Adrienne

    Yep.  Exactly.  I cried everyday for at least the first month.  I would just look at Emilio and cry for a million different reasons (one major one being hormones, oh those glorious hormones), and I still feel those emotions every time I look at him, heck every time I think about him.  It is absolutely wonderfully terrifying, motherhood.  I know you’ll find the way to incorporate it into this site, and your readers new moms, old moms and will someday be moms alike will be grateful for it!  I think it is so important that we as moms do keep talking about how we feel, what we feel and even how we choose to parent because even if some of it is not universal (and I do believe a lot of it is) there is at least one other new mom out there who is feeling the same thing, doing the same thing or wanting to do the same thing and hearing someone else speak openly about it can be so very reassuring. 
     

  • http://mylocalgiveaways.blogspot.com/ Elisabeth

    Thank you so much for sharing your feelings with us. I love how genuine and honest you are, it’s beautiful. 
    You take as much time with baby boy as you need to! :)

  • Jackie Danicki

    I hope you’re keeping a private journal. It will be precious to you in years to come, and can help you work through these feelings. (As my writing mentor says: “Write it first, then decide [whether you want to share it with others]. But just write it.”)

  • Cynthia Campos

    Yes, I agree – writing always makes me feel better too :) It’s like you’re taking all the mumbo jumbo and trying to make some sense of it all.

    I think having a baby does change you in a way that it’s still hard to describe, even after 14 months! I thank God each and every day for this beautiful opportunity, and I just pray that I can give my baby the best of me. Love is beautiful :)

    Many blessings :)

  • Ashley

    Thanks for sharing this.  As someone who is not a parent, I certainly can’t imagine all that you are going through.  But I really do appreciate the honesty of your sentiment here – that you’re scared to share things, or that you don’t always know what you’re doing.  It’s pretty sad, isn’t it, that we often feel pressure to be perfect or at least appear to have it all together for others.  But that’s just not real life, and I give you a lot of props for owning that.  

    Like others have said, I’m looking forward to hearing more about your journey, whenever you’re ready to share.  Also, the little guy is pretty darn adorable, and I’m kinda hoping we’ll see some pics in the future of him in those ridiculous baby hats you blogged about before.  Hehe. 

  • Kate

    I am so very happy for you.  Share at your own pace and I do like the idea (@Jackie) of writing in a journal, or simply in Word, and then decided whether it’s something to save for you and yours, or to share with the blogosphere.

  • Anonymous

    Love this post- I felt the same way! There is something so scary about feeling love that strong, and baby blues make it so hard to navigate those feelings. Eat every second up! Those first two weeks are precious.

  • http://catnipsprettythings.tumblr.com/ Jeanine Marie

    When you are ready and feel comfortable sharing, your loyal readers will be here.  I am enjoying your posts. You always have something interesting to share. 

    Glad to hear your are enjoying this magical time in your life.

    J

  • http://thegirlkyle.com/ thegirlkyle

    I love your honesty here.  I’ve never been a mom, but you just described what I’d imagine it to REALLY feel like.  Not all rainbows and butterflies, but emotional and all-consuming.  A BIG congratulations!  I look forward to following you into this next chapter of your life :)

  • Dania

    i love this,  as always, so open and honest. im not a mom, but its so great of you to share this experience :)

  • Francine

    I’m crying again.

  • Colette

    Your honesty is beautiful. You have the power to provide this little person with all that you are and to put a wonderful man on this Earth.
    My son just turned 11 and is just the most pure, kind boy and I am just so lucky to have him.
    This is coming from a woman (myself) who is an only child and never dreamed of having children. I never even babysat a day in my life before my son was born! I was terrified to leave the hospital w/o a manual for this child :) But, I followed my heart, always showed him kindness, patience, consistency, and love and I too became a very special “member” of this new club of women.
    Always feel free to ask questions, but believe that YOU will always know what is best for your child. There is no owner’s manual. That is why we are all so different and that is what makes us special.
    Enjoy your family and one more thing if I might, let your husband have his own “way of doing things” with the baby. They may be different than yours, but that also makes his way special.

    xxx

  • http://twitter.com/courtenaybetz Courtenay

    Congratulations!!! I remember how many emotions you go through when you have a newborn.  You write such wonderful posts that I am sure your readers will appreciate what you decide to make public or keep private. BTW – I think I past you and your husband in Fairway a couple weeks ago but I thought how weird would it be to say  ” Hi, I really enjoy your site” and then again I write to people I do not know :)  

  • MK

    Congratulations Jordan!  Wonderful sentiments.  I’m excited to see how you share your journey.

    I just have to respond to one thing, as a parent…

    “Parents aren’t in one club, with everyone else in another.”
    Well… you’ve only been a parent a week.  I agree with you in principle, but the longer I’m a parent, the more I feel like I have less in common with my friends who don’t have kids yet.  They don’t understand things like how I’d rather be playing peekaboo with my kid after work, rather than shopping with friends, or going to a movie, or whatever.  (Of course I need a girls night etc. from time to time, but I’m talking day-to-day.)  My priorities don’t make sense unless you have a kid of your own, because the love is unfathomable unless you’ve experienced it.  And the attachment that you feel this first week will grow exponentially as your baby grows into a real little person… the love (from you to him and also from him to you) is almost unimaginable.

    Congrats on your beautiful boy!

  • Anonymous

    Totally get your point, and agree. Even being pregnant, I noticed that I just naturally spent more time with friends in similar life situations because…well, we had more to talk about, and wanted to do the same kinds of things (like go to baby stores and eat lots of ice cream :) . I suppose I meant more that I was going to try to approach writing about it from an inclusive perspective, because I feel like so often when parents talk about the experience of parenting there’s an in-group/out-group mentality: people who don’t have kids are sort of freaked out by people who do, and people with kids feel like people without kids don’t understand them. And my hope is to explore motherhood in a way that parents, parents-to-be, and people with no interest whatsoever in parenting will find relatable and interesting, because there are themes at work here (life changes, growing older, loss of freedom, honesty about what makes you as an individual genuinely happy) that have less to do with being a mom or a dad, and can tie into far more universal experiences. Fingers crossed :)

  • Anonymous

    no, never weird, always awesome!!! say hi if you see us again!

  • Annmariemcqueen

    well as someone who is still on the fence you make it sound amazing :)

  • Pingback: The Way It Went | Ramshackle Glam by Jordan Reid