More than likely they are quietly destroying something,
messing up the room or re-arranging some precious paperwork in my bedside
cabinet.
I’m tired. They are
too, but they have more energy in their young, supple bodies than I do in my
stout, pregnant frame. Lately, the
thought of having a new baby in only a couple of weeks has both excited and
terrified me. I’m not that mom who
romances over the infant phase. I can’t
even remember it once it’s gone. It’s just one big, chi-chi, poopey,
un-showered blur.
So why am I, to use the culture’s terminology, not “done”
with children? It seems I’d be a prime candidate
to enlist in ranks parading to the tubal-ligation center for disease childbirth
control.
It's because quite simply, and not so simply, at the end of every
exhausting, stressful, water-retaining day, I’ve still never loved so well, nor so
poorly, nor as purely as I have since I had kids.
I’m not perfect at it, by any means, but, it must be love for it compels me to do strange selfless acts, that otherwise would be entirely foreign to me.
For example, when my son, who is obsessed with poop right now, tells me earnestly that we shouldn’t go to the park because the sand is where “the kitties go poop,” I must, in all seriousness, affirm that he is correct about that, and assure him that we will be sure not to touch the poop when we are there because it has germs. In that moment, he matures a little more knowing that he made such an intelligent statement.
For example, when my son, who is obsessed with poop right now, tells me earnestly that we shouldn’t go to the park because the sand is where “the kitties go poop,” I must, in all seriousness, affirm that he is correct about that, and assure him that we will be sure not to touch the poop when we are there because it has germs. In that moment, he matures a little more knowing that he made such an intelligent statement.
Or like the times he goes “Big poop!” in his little toilet,
the fruit of weeks of potty training on mine and my husband’s part, and he
calls out that he ‘needs’ me to come and clap my hands together like a daft
penguin celebrating him becoming a big boy.
And we’ll do this everyday until he finally figures out that
bowel movements are just one of those things that everyone eventually manages to do without
applause.
But, darn it! I was
there and I clapped for him! And I
was happy for him for no other reason than I loved him.
I can only credit him with giving me the opportunity to love
in that way. My daughter too, when she
did the same thing. Where else in the
world would I have been able to love like that?
I know they may be silly, minor examples of love, but,
really I had almost zero experience of doing anything similar before I had the kids. Nor have I loved anyone or anything for such
a prolonged amount time (I looked at my daughter the other day and thought,
“Wait, she’s only five?”).
This love that I, and many parents, have for our children is
the most hectic and purest love many have ever known. So, no. I am not 'done' being purified by having kids, if you want to put it that way. Are you kidding? There's still so much I have to learn about what love actually is and what it actually means to love.
At the end of every
tough day, I feel that I can only thank God for them. And soon enough, when I am 'done' I hope to thank my kids for putting
up with me as their mother.
Where I am sitting, I can feel the baby in my abdomen kicking
so hard that I am breathless. A little
foot drags across the underside of my belly and the muscles harden in
anticipation of a future contraction.
Yet another baby is coming into our world. They will be yet another opportunity to love
purely, selflessly and with a lot of
grace.
I figure that, with God, I too am like this baby. How will I get to heaven? Just like my kids will: kicking and
screaming, pooping and clapping. A
strange package that He sees, for all it’s hecticness and flaws, for all it costs and simply
says, “It’s because I love you.”