Posts Tagged ‘pregnancy’

A Mother’s Resentment

 

That moment when you realize that you can no longer run from your truth.

 

I felt an inkling when I cried in the labor and delivery room. When I realized that the medication that I was coerced into accepting failed to deliver its promise. That pain blindsided me. I was prepared for the pain but that pain, I wasn’t prepared for. There were promises. It helps; it won’t be that bad but they lied. They mislead me. That pain jarred me into reality. This was happening. This faceless, voiceless being that has been living inside of me was going to be a person. I didn’t anticipate only seven or eight hours of labor and less then fifteen minutes of pushing. I thought I had more time. I didn’t expect to have a February baby; he was supposed to be a March baby. I thought I had more time.

 

The fantasy that I allowed myself to live in for a little shy of thirty-eight weeks caught up to me. It wasn’t what I thought it was going to be. It wasn’t what I signed up for. But laying in that bed, wrapped in cords and wearing an oxygen mask, crying and vomiting I was facing reality. This was happening. Ready or not, this was happening.

 

For many years, I knew that I wanted to be a mother. If there wasn’t anything else that I knew, I knew that. But I realize now that fantasy was just that. I didn’t think of it in terms of reality and I’m paying the price now. Promises were made and those promises formed expectations.

 

Throughout my pregnancy, I remember being frustrated because I experienced things that no one ever talked [to me] about. I remember being frustrated because it felt like women were apt to discuss pregnancy, childbirth and motherhood in ways that make other people comfortable. I realize now that helps no one. It certainly didn’t help me.

 

Society suggests that pregnancy and childbirth are beautiful experiences. They discuss these things in hushed, sugar-coated tones. Only after going through it myself have I encountered more honest conversation and I hate that it wasn’t there before. Yes, women glow. “Stretchmarks are war wounds” or “badges of honor”. And it all sounds good, but I felt jipped. I felt ill-prepared for the realities. I had no idea that most couples experience a significant decrease in satisfaction with introduction of children.  Who knew? And if you knew, why didn’t you say anything? Are we that commited to the image of motherhood that we’re reluctant to honestly say that it sucks sometimes? Are we that reluctant to honestly say that it’s not always great and beautiful? Are we that reluctant to honestly say that it’s not all cookies, hugs and kisses? Are we reluctant to discuss the feelings of loss that accompany this gift? It makes me angry. It makes me angry because I feel this way and I know so many others feel that way, but we just don’t talk about it. We need to talk about it.

 

No one told me that I’d cry in dressing rooms for two years after giving birth. No one told me that I might not feel connected to this child for the greater part of his first year. No one told me that there would be days where I felt guilty because I hated being a mother. No one told me… and so I felt these things and I buried these things. If we’re “supposed” to feel a certain way and yet we feel the complete opposite, what do you do with those feelings? Lest you be condemned as ungrateful, considered to be complaining or the worst, a bad mother.

 

So as my son’s third birthday is quickly approaching, I am feeling it all these days. I feel the resentment. I feel the guilt. I hate that when I discuss the ugly days and the hard days and the days that are wrought with regret, I feel the need to preface and pepper the dialogue with mentions of loving him and cherishing him. I have to make sure that I am clear that I am so grateful that he’s here. But I don’t want to do that here. I want to be honest. I need to be honest.

 

I have to face myself and my truth. I wanted to be a mother. I wanted a child. I needed a place to put this love. I needed to feel like I had a purpose. I needed to feel like someone loved me and needed me. And that’s ugly. That suggests that I had a child for selfish reasons. But tell me, what reasons are there to bring children into this world that aren’t selfish? You want to share that moment with your partner? You want you family name to live on? You want an heir? You. Want. These kids… these kids didn’t ask for this life. We decided that we wanted to give it to them. Or we decided, after being faced with an unexpected discovery, that we would give them life.

 

So, despite my feelings and struggles with motherhood, I don’t resent him. I don’t resent my child.  I can say that with a pure heart. I don’t look at him with contempt. I don’t. Remembering that I made the conscious choice with my partner to have a child, remembering that he didn’t ask for this, cloaks him and protects him.

 

After writing and deleting a few times, the truth is, I resent myself. I painted a picture in my head of what this would be. I painted a picture in my head of what my relationship was and what it would be. The weeks leading up to being unexpectedly admitted to the hospital sprinkled wake up calls but I ignored them. I didn’t allow myself to see the truth. I thought I had time to figure things out and get it together, but it was too late. And so, because of this idea of what this would be was so ingrained in me; I was reluctant to face myself and the truth.

 

It’s tough, though. For years I held on to what I thought it was and going to be with a death grip. My worth, my value, my future, my dreams and me were tightly woven into this vision. But the vision never actually was. I spent too much time trying, crying, fighting, trying harder and crying harder in order to ensure that my relationship succeeded. I didn’t want to be a baby mama. I didn’t want to be a single mother. I wanted to have and raise a child within a relationship that was rooted in respect and love. I still remember writing a poem to my unborn child and telling him that he was born in love. And he was… It’s just that love doesn’t mean the same thing to everyone.

 

I am coming to realize that I can no longer fear the failure and the judgment. It is a very humbling and sobering experience acknowledging that my relationship, the one that I thought was it, the one that I thought was exactly what I needed and the one that I would be in, ended. I am reluctant to say that it failed because part of me feels like if you learned from a relationship then it wasn’t a failure. But at the same time, I feel like that’s the preachy me. Real me?  My heart burns every time I sit with it. My relationship failed. I invested a lot and way too much of me. I put too much stake in this. I chocked it with too much meaning. But aren’t you supposed to? When you believe that this is it? I don’t regret it…not entirely. I’m just angry and resentful, and I can admit that. I am angry and I am resentful.

 

I can’t imagine being the mother of another child. I truly feel like this child was the person that I was meant to mother. I feel like the universe gave me him for a reason. He in all of his, silly, smart, funny, and weird, glory. He was meant to be my son and I was meant to be his mother. And some days, that is all that I can cling to.

 

And then some days… It’s not enough.

 

Some days I feel like I’m suffocating. Some days I fear that I gave too much of myself to this situation. I fear that I don’t know who I am outside of former-partner and mother. I don’t know who I am outside of redundant days and duties. I stopped crying long ago. The dissolution of our relationship was difficult but it wasn’t a sudden happening. It took time and in that time I mourned. I mourned the wreckage and disaster. When it finally came to the light, I had already accepted it. Now, I struggle with feeling like the relationship was a mistake. A mistake in the sense that I invested where I should not have, I gave where I should not have, and I accepted what I should not have. But again, lessons, right? I guess…

 

When I showed that pregnancy test and saw the smile on his face and remembered the promises, I remember that I felt safe. I know that I was scared when I saw the positive indication despite us working towards it. But when he said, “you’re for real??” and smiled and hugged me? When I remembered the promises? I felt comfortable, safe and secure in our decision to do this.

 

But time showed me another side. Time told me that promises, even from the person that you love, could be empty.

 

I feel like I was lead into this dark room, holding his hand and promised that it would be okay. But somewhere along the line, he let go of my hand. I could still hear his voice. I was scared. I was searching for a light switch. I couldn’t find one and I couldn’t find him. I saw a slit of light and wandered to it. It was an alternate exit, a window. I opened it. I could escape, but I didn’t. I looked around the newly bright room and found him. With his hand over the light switch. The confusion, the betrayal, and the hurt… That’s what I found going into my second year of motherhood. While I could escape out the window that I found, I didn’t, I chose to say. I chose to work with him in understanding why he’d hide the light switch if he knew that I was scared and confused. I’ve gotten some answers but the truth is, they’re not good enough.

 

Lately, it’s almost painful. The feeling of suffocation. The realization of a loss of self. The fear of the unknown. The fear of “so, what now?”

 

And so, I spend my days mostly quiet. Knowing that there’s a chest of emotions and feelings that I don’t know how to sort through. I put my head down and do the work, finding small moments that remind me that at the very least, I got this awesome kid. But that’s only some days.

 

What now?

 

Hurts When I Breathe Part I

And it only hurts when I’m breathing
My heart only breaks when it’s beating
My dreams only die when I’m dreaming
So, I hold my breath–to forget

Shania Twain

 

 

The pain will always be the worst part. That much I’ve come to accept. This pain is here to stay. But the part that I haven’t let go of is this desire to be normal. All I really want is a sense of normalcy. Don’t ask me what normal means. And don’t try to tell me normal doesn’t exist, or some bullshit like that.

 

Normal is just not what this is. Normal is being able to process life without your mind going haywire. Normal is being able to trust someone. Normal is being able to feel sadness and happiness and whatever is in between, and not just the extremes of depression and [hypo] mania.

 

If I make it out of this struggle alive, it will be the hardest thing that I’ve ever done. Every time the scales shifts to the left and the depression seeps in, I’m so sure this will be the last time.  I’m convinced that this will be the time when I call it quits and just end it. It doesn’t get any easier. If anyone tells you differently, they’re lying. This depression kills. Literally. This depression is the most painful thing you could ever experience. It doesn’t make it any better trying to remind yourself that it’ll be over soon, it’s just a cycle. Reminding yourself of that, is just reminding yourself that it will be back. Where’s the optimism in that? Push through it one more time, just to reach some pseudo-happiness, just to come back around full circle to this abyss of nothingness?

 

It’s so difficult to remain hopeful, when you know it’s not going anywhere. It’s so difficult to believe it gets better, when you know it’s going to come back around. It’s all temporary. The good feelings are temporary. The blah feelings are temporary. The low feelings are temporary. This depression reminds you of your own mortality. Nothing lasts forever. And the saddest and scariest thing to me is that when I hear of another person with BP who takes his/her life, while most people are sad and talking about how they left their loved ones, I envy them, I get them. Every single day you will have to face this. Every single day you will have this. You can pray, you can cry, you can medicate, but it’s not going anywhere. From today until whenever your forever is, you will have this. And if the pain that those people felt is anything compared to the pain that I feel, I understand. And in all honesty, I’m so surprised that I’m still here.

 

Each time that scale slides to the left and the depression begin to seep in, my heart sinks. I try to remind myself of the reasons to stick around, but I’m just kidding myself. I couldn’t give any less of a fuck about anything once that depression comes. Each time it’s anyone’s call. It could be the last time. It could just blow over. No one knows. I don’t know.

 

I just want to be understood, but it’s difficult to be truly understood by someone who doesn’t live this. A lot of things about it don’t make sense. And a lot of things about it I’m not sure how to explain to the ignorant.

 

It hurts.

What hurts?

Everything.

 

What’s wrong?

Everything.

What’s everything?

EVERYTHING.

 

Is there anything I can do?

No.

 

Do you want to talk?

No.

 

Do you want me to leave you alone?

No.

 

What do you want?

I don’t know.

 

I can understand how that can be confusing and frustrating. I can understand how that could make your loved one(s) feel helpless and useless.

 

When I’m not sliding down the scale, I try so hard to make my needs clear so when I get like that, they’re prepared. I try so hard to talk about it and explain it to the people who matter most. So that when I get like this and I can’t speak so clearly, or explain so effectively, they’re prepared. Most people say they want to learn, they want to understand. But truth is, most just say that because it’s the nice thing to say. You explain and explain and explain, and when wartime hits, they don’t know what to do. Then they get frustrated. Then they get angry. Then they cause you to push further away when that’s the last thing you need.

 

Before wartime, you try to explain that you might be mean, you might be shut down, you might say things that are terrible, but you don’t mean it. You won’t talk. You won’t go out. You won’t eat. You won’t want to move. But you need them to stick it out. You need them to hold you tightly when you’re crying, and not push you to talk about it. You need them to understand that you don’t want to talk. You need them to hug you tighter when you try to pull away. You need them to see through the facade, the fake smiles, and the “I’m okay”s. You need them to realize that the “I’m okay” and “I’m fine” and all of those things are the default. You say that as a reflex. You need them to not be so passive and eager to say, “okay, I’ll give you your space.” Space is the worst thing you could do. You need them to read between the lines. You need them to hear your heart and not the words when they ask you what’s wrong. You need them to be able to read your eyes. You need them to be able to know that there’s more to it than what you’ll lead them to believe. You need them to get that you don’t want pity, or people to worry so you’ll lie and say you’re fine. You need them to be strong for you while you’re going through this. You need them to remind you that you’re beautiful, that you’re loved, that you’re needed, that the world needs you, that no one would be happy if you disappeared. It probably seems like silly things to say, but understand this; if you sat for one day, with some of the fucked up and terrible thoughts that go on in their head, you’d probably off yourself. So suck it up if you feel like an idiot saying “I’d miss you if you weren’t here” or “you’re special to me” or “you matter to me” or “I appreciate you.” Suck it up.

 

This is the toughest depression I have had to deal with because it’s not just me anymore. It’s so difficult to keep that in mind. I want to just crash and burn and just lay here. I want to starve myself. I want to drink. I want to just run away. But I can’t. I have a hostage inside of this bomb and he didn’t ask to be here. And that shit breaks my heart even more. He didn’t ask for any of this. I just can’t describe how hard it is to be concerned about his life and welfare when I don’t care about my own.  He depends on me. While a few years ago I’d probably grab a razor, or just walk out and disappear, or not eat for weeks… I can’t do those things now. I can’t kill a few bottles of liquor, I can’t chain smoke some cigarettes or face a few blunts. I have to sit with this. And the reality is I thought I had this under control. I choose not to medicate. And I saw nothing wrong with self-medicating as long as no addictions were formed or as long as my health wasn’t negatively affected. And now that I’m forced into sobriety, and I have this person whose very life depends on what I do to my body, I have to sit with this. I can’t run from it. I can’t drown it out. I can’t hide from it. And being left to sit with this…..is forcing me to face realities that I didn’t prepare myself for.

 

I’m sure the average person couldn’t stomach the thoughts that have crossed my mind in the last six days. The tears I’ve cried this week could fill bottles. And it’s not letting up. Each time I want to lay and just pray for it to be over, I feel him. He has no idea that he’s the only reason I’m still going right now. I keep praying that this thing doesn’t get him. If he has to feel even an ounce of what I go through, I’ll never forgive myself. He deserves a shot at normalcy, a shot at happiness… he deserves a normal mom.

 

I’ll keep hoping on it, and praying on it. He deserves better.

 

The pain will always be the worst part. It won’t go away. It’s here forever. I just hope that I can push through it and be the mother that he deserves, even if I can’t be the me that I deserve.

My Sun

The days on the calendar are becoming tomorrow quicker than I can process.

I fear I’ll open my eyes one morning and nine months are gone.

And I’ll still have the same nagging thoughts in the recesses of mind,

The same aching feelings in the corners of my heart.

It’s during these sleepless nights when the silence forces me to confront the noise.

The voice asking,

will I be good enough?

Will I leave fingerprints on you?

Will I let you down?

Will I fall victim to this day and night that plagues me?

Will it also plague you?

And before my mind spirals into panic, you intervene.

 

Bouncing along to my anxiety

And reminding me,

“Mommy, ready or not. Here I come.”

And that scares me.

Ready or not.

Here he comes.

Am I ready?

Is this world ready?

 

I feel you inside me

A miracle

Already protecting me from myself.

A reason to want more tomorrows,

a reason to want to fight.

The sun of my life.

 

I pray darkness doesn’t find you.

I pray happy is your life.

I pray you not be broken like so many of your brothers.

I pray you grow strong.

I pray you allow yourself to feel.

I pray you believe you are loved and were created in love and raised in love.

 

Caressing you and you reminding me,

“Mommy, ready or not. Here I come.”

And that scares me.

Ready or not.

Here he comes.

Am I ready?

Is this world ready?

 

Too many cycles

And they all end here.

We will protect you and prepare you for this world.

When you’re a man we will let you go learn and explore.

But you will always be our baby boy.

We will give you the tools,

We will have faith you make the right decisions.

You can make mistakes and be forgiven.

You can always come home.

You will always be loved.

 

My miracle.

The sun in my life.

My reason for more tomorrows.

 

Mason Anthony Austin,

Our son.

 

For Mason,

 

For My 1st Son- Millz

From,

Daddy