About Me

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Ten years into widowhood, after one year of incredible happiness and nearly 14 years of single blessedness. Retired, and mostly enjoying it. Still knitting. [Zen]tangling.again after a brief hiatus.

Monday, October 22, 2007

Matters of Life, and Death

One of my young friends asked me recently, “What is adding #5 like? I hear not much different than #4 and I hope that is true! I am exhausted these days and keeping up with 4 is tough.”

That's a subject worthy of a blog post all in itself. LittleBit was conceived about six months after we’d been through a really rough patch financially, where he was in school and we were living on food storage until the student loans kicked in.

That was the time when we ate oatmeal twice a day, and sometimes three times a day. Just before the loans were due, we had $14 to feed six people for two weeks. I went to a grocery store that sold four conjoined loaves of bread for a dollar, and I bought seven of them. If we ate nothing else, two loaves a day would keep us alive. I also bought two boxes of generic powdered milk; we had sold the goats at that point.

Firstborn was in fifth grade, and in three weeks she dropped ten pounds because she couldn’t gag down another bite of oatmeal. I lost 21 pounds in those same three weeks and was so stupid from hunger that I couldn’t see that my children were starving. Fortunately, her teacher saw; she insisted that we put the kids on free lunches at school.

So when I found out that I was pregnant, I was both happy and worried. I didn’t know if I’d have the health and strength to carry her to term. I did a lot of praying and bargaining with God, and actually it turned out to be my easiest pregnancy. Those middle-trimester glory days, when you feel good and have enough energy to take on the world? God extended those for me well into the last trimester. My sewing jobs meant the difference between student loans and reality; when the children’s father graduated from chiropractic school we had borrowed $90,000 and lived on about $11,000 a year for three years.

LittleBit fit seamlessly into our family. I was already dancing on the edge of exhaustion, so the crazy-weariness of having a newborn in the house barely fazed me.

I found out that I was pregnant on my 37th birthday. I don’t know what it would be like to be younger and healthier and stronger and less desperately poor. I only know what a joy she has been and is, to me.

Raising kids has been the wildest roller coaster ride of my life, the hardest work, and the greatest blessing. My heart aches for all the good women [including, apprently, two of my precious daughters] who want to have children, and cannot; it has been the making of me as a human being, after all that my parents taught me and all that I’ve learned from the scriptures and the Sunday School lessons.

I have been struck, over the years, at the intertwining of love and birth and death. Middlest was conceived when her father came home from a week in California, after the death of his mother. I’ve always felt that Middlest was a farewell gift from her, every bit as much as she was a gift from God.

And when Mom called to tell me that one of my aunts had died, I was in labor with Fourthborn. I like to think that they waved at each other as my aunt rode the up escalator to Heaven and Fourthborn rode the down escalator to earth.

I remember reading, as a much younger woman, that couples often go home after attending a funeral and make love, and that very often they have “proofs of affection” nine months later. I thought it was just plain weird and a little disrespectful, but now that I’m older I think I understand it. Making love is, or ought to be, a sweet and profound communication between a husband and wife, a comfort in times of trial, an affirmation of life and hope.

And, unfortunately, it is not an option for me at the moment; I can’t just go to the spouse store and pick one out the way I’d choose between one pair of shoes and another. [And there is the matter of making sure I’ve chosen one that’s not the equivalent of a pair of stiletto heels. I want somebody who will be dependable and trustworthy over the long haul, not somebody who looks good but makes me hurt.]

So I thank you kindly for the lovely comments and emails and phone calls. And I’ll take all the hugs I can get. I’m not looking forward to telling my friends at work today. Sunday was infinitely better than Friday night in terms of emotionality, but it’s really hard to answer the switchboard with a stiff upper lip.

Tomorrow is Knit Night. I have a little church work to do before I get to go knit, but I plan to be there even if it's not until 8:00, and even if I can only stay until 8:30. [Of course, LittleBit may be working tomorrow; she gets her schedule at work tonight. So I may get there and have just enough time to say hi to everybody and then have to leave.] But time spent in the company of other good women is wonderfully healing. Particularly *these* good women.

5 comments:

Lynn said...

A postscript. Shortly after I found out I was pregnant with LittleBit, we learned that Dad had lung cancer. When she was five months old, Mom and my sister sent me enough money to put gas in the car and pay for food and rooms, and I put the six of us girls into our Honda hatchback and drove from TX to ID so Dad could hold her before he died. Having an infant to care for kept me sane.

Tan said...

This is a beautiful essay about life, survival, and life after survival. Thanks for sharing. My thoughts and prayers are with you.

Rory said...

That was the weirdest summer I'll ever remember.

Jerry said...

Lynn, You always evoke such feelings that I have kept so deep in my memories. Thank you for sharing with us. You are a testiment of faith and love for your family. I was trying to send you an e-mail off line to share some things with you and I realized that you don't have a link even on Ravelry. If you ever want to just vent and talk, Please feel free to e-mail me. I'm not trying to replace anyone, just try to fill a void that I know you have in your life. We share a lot of common experiences or similar frames of reference. You can reach me at e1jerryt@sbcglobal.net
The fires came within 5 miles or so from my work and home but we are fine so far. Lots of city between us and the fires. Thanks for the concern.
Jerry & Debbie

Jerry said...

Lynn, you always evoke such feelings that I have kept so deep in my memories. Thank you for sharing with us. You are a testament of faith, love and strength for your family. I was trying to send you an e-mail off line to share some things with you and I realized that you don't have a link even on Ravelry. If you ever want to just vent and talk, Please feel free to e-mail me(us). I'm not trying to replace anyone, just trying to give you another place to turn if you ever want to talk about whatever. I know you have a void in your life now, just know that you aren’t alone. We share a lot of common experiences or similar frames of reference. I appreciate your concern for our well being, although the fires came within 5 miles or so from my work and home but we are fine so far. Lots of city between us and the fires to help ease our worries.
Thanks for the concern. Jerry & Debbie