Last night I came across a post that several of my friends had shared and I took the time to read the entire thing (a rarity for me on social media). It was such a refreshing heartfelt post regarding young moms -- something that many women were, but very few seem to remember accurately. This mother remembered, and her words were such nourishment and comfort to me, who is days (or maybe a few weeks) away from becoming a mother to four under four. I do not know this woman, but her name is Jen Hatmaker, and I immediately shared the post on facebook, but I also had to post it here because it was so thoughtful and beautiful.
"This is me in a hospital bed in 2002 having delivered my third baby
Caleb five hours earlier. The "big kids" came to meet him and crawled in
bed with me. I found this pic yesterday and shed tears upon tears for every baby in this picture.
For Sydney, my baby love who had just turned 2 thirteen days earlier.
She was still in diapers. She had just been evicted from her crib
because there was a new sheriff coming to town named Caleb. She had a
meltdown just before this pic was snapped because we wouldn't let her
hold Caleb, who she kept calling "my new baby, my new baby," by herself.
Look at her snuggled into her mom. I could bawl and never stop.
For Gavin, my first-born joy, who had just turned 4 not two months
earlier. He was the sunniest, happiest, most delightful boy. He started
using the word "actually" when he was like 15 months old and, only in
the 5th percentile from the day of his birth to this very day, it was
like a little tiny old man was walking around saying big words. I kissed
him 300 times a day.
The tears for my babies come quick. I can
literally feel the phantom weight of them leaning against me with their
snow white hair and baby skin. I remember exactly how they felt in my
arms. Exactly. My life's joy. I can hardly look at their little faces.
But most of my tears are for that young mama. She was 27 years old and
five hours removed from delivering her third baby in four years. She was
sore and tired and stitched, but she pulled those big babies into her
bed to snuggle and read to them so they knew they were still her moon
and stars. She would go home the next day with three babies and work
from sunup to sundown and also in the middle of the night taking care of
these treasures and sometimes crying in the bathroom. There was never,
ever enough of her to go around, but God have mercy did she try.
Here is to all you young mamas this morning. I see you. I remember. I
know exactly what it feels like to have two in diapers and one still
nursing. I remember the exhaustion that seeps all the way into your
bones until you fall asleep with your clothes on and your contacts still
in. How people hold the door for you at Target and say, "Wow. You
really have your hands full." When your body, at its absolute peak just a
few years ago, now shows the full effects of childbirth. I remember
cutting grapes in half and squeezing ketchup packets until your fingers
bleed.
And the worry! I remember the worry. The world feels like
a terrifying monster out to harm and steal and injure your babies, and
you alone can keep them from eating pennies and avoiding bullies and
obviously the onus is on you to not drive your car into a body of water
with them all strapped into their carseats, a highly likely scenario I
imagined no less than 7098 times. You are their guardian and protector
and God help anyone who comes between a young mama and her little
charges.
I want to tell that 27 year old mom of three the same
thing I want to tell you: You are doing a breathtaking, beautiful job.
Your children are so loved and they know it. You are giving them
something priceless that they won't even know how to identify later but
it will settle down deep in their bones: security. They are safe with
you, absolutely cherished. This isn't from one big thing you do; it
comes from the million minutes you love them well. That's it. All your
mistakes and meltdowns won't change it. You are raising healthy, loved,
secure kids - it will matter so much. It lasts. It sticks. It is the air
they breathe from that first day in the hospital, and you can't undo
it.
So much love to you, young moms. Love your babies exactly
like you are doing, even if you feel like you are reading to two of them
in the hospital bed you just delivered the third one in - I know. There
isn't much down time. But all of this matters and you matter and this
work is so important. I am cheering you on from the other side. I'll
hold your seat over here. You're going to make it."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for stopping by and joining the conversation.