I’ve gotten to talk to a few almost moms over the
years. They’re the ones waiting for
their first baby to make his or her entrance into the world. They’re the ones who walk on eggshells as
they await a birthmom following through with a difficult decision. They’re the ones who will soon make their way
to the hospital. My mind has been
reliving this time and rethinking it like I’m watching a movie of my own
experiences. Those first-time, soon-to-be, adoptive mamas are on my radar.
I know you’re out there and that we’re few and far between. You’re soon going to meet your first
baby.
And she or he is coming into the world while you watch.
While someone else goes through labor pains, you will pace a
room in anticipation. You will let your
hope rise just high enough to protect your soul in the event that there’s a
change in plans. You start to think of
the future, but also try to silence that question that rises up over and over,
“What if she changes her mind?”. You
have an empty room at home outfitted for a newborn. Diapers are in the drawers. Clothes are hanging in the closets. Formula is in the cupboard. And you still don’t even know if you’ll come
home with this baby.
This mama…you,
first-timers, are on my mind.
I wish someone had prepared me for that time when I stepped
foot out the door, buckled into the car, and drove the seemingly endless drive
to the hospital. I wish I had heard the
wisdom of someone who had gone through that experience. Instead I felt confident in the run-down of
procedure from a social worker. I was
prepared for the schedule of events. I
wasn’t prepared for the onslaught of the uncomfortable emotional reality that
for the first few days, I was going to be somewhat of a bystander in the
arrival of my child.
That is a hard spot.
This is the letter I wish someone had written me.
Dear Almost Mom,
Can you believe you are here? THIS DAY.
The one you thought might never happen.
The one where all the past, the pain, the struggle would blur with
anticipation at an ACUTAL, REAL, IN-THE-FLESH child on the way? The one where a phone call telling you that
you had been chosen turned into you stepping into the car and heading to the
hospital? It is here! Your baby is on the way! She is coming today! It is happening and I am so excited,
joy-filled, overflowingly happy for you. I know what you’ve gone through to get
here. I know how the nerves are on
overdrive, the heart is bursting, the hands are shaking, the adrenaline is
pumping and the thoughts are racing.
Did you make your phone calls? “Mom, we’re on our way to the hospital. She’s in labor. I don’t know the details. I’ll call you when I know more.”
Did you walk to the kitchen four times trying to remember
that you were looking for your keys?
Did you grab the gear?
The camera? The gifts? Your shoes?
Did you get in the car, look at your husband and lock
eyes? The look that says more than words
can articulate. You’ve been on this
journey with him and it has taken you to places you didn’t know you could
weather. And now you’re here…together.
Did you drive out of the driveway wondering how your
neighbor could be mowing at a time like this?
Did you pass familiar sites thinking they all looked differently? Did time move too slowly and too quickly all
at the same time?
Did you try and act calm as you were on your way? Did you take deep, deep breaths and let them
out trying to settle yourself? Did you
look in the mirror and wonder if you should put on lipstick for this sort of
thing?
What I want you to know is that when you get there, when
you get to the hospital, it’s going to be hard.
It’s going to be an uncomfortable and awkward kind of special. This is a part of your labor experience even
though someone else is going through the physical pain. And more importantly…this is going to be a
shared experience. Sometimes you will
get a taste of motherhood and other times you will watch someone else look down
at her baby with affectionate eyes. For
a day or two or three, you will both be moms….in the same space, in the same
room, to the same child.
Can I tell you about my time in those moments?
I didn’t know where to sit. In the chair? Across the room? Next to her on the bed? I held the camera but didn’t know what to do
with it. Should I even take
pictures? A few? A lot? Or her? Or me?
Or just the baby? Or maybe all of
us? Or maybe none of us? Do I pick up my daughter or wait for her to
be handed to me? Should I kiss her face?
Express my love when she doesn’t yet feel like mine? Do I look away when tears rise up? Do I act joyful knowing I will be a mom or do
I act somber knowing that soon she won’t be?
Do we stay when others come to visit?
How do we introduce ourselves? What
do we talk about? Should we stay a long
time or keep our visit short? What do I
do and where do I go when her friends pass my/her baby around the room? Do I refer to her as my baby? Her baby?
Our baby?
During this time…
I had a young brother loudly and repeatedly ask me where exactly
we lived.
I went out for Thai food with a father I had just met
while his daughter waited for some forward labor progress.
I had a teenager tell me how to clean out a baby’s nose
when he was congested.
I had a nurse ask if I was the sister.
I was asked if I wanted to hold her legs while she
pushed.
I watched my husband cut her chord.
And then I went home at night still without a baby. And I did not sleep.
It is a time of feeling out of control. It is a time of meeting your child but on
someone else’s terms. It is a time of
sitting back and sitting by. And that’s
OK. Because in a few days, she will put
this baby in your arms and then life will happen on your terms. Let her have this time even though it will
fight against everything you feel. She
has these few days. You have
forever. What a gift for her to have
these moments with her baby. How hard it
is to watch it all in front of your eyes.
How hard it is to share. How hard
it is to not be mom yet.
The time is coming when you will get back in the car,
make the drive again, and walk into the hospital carrying an empty car
seat. The emotions of the days before
will now be amplified ten-fold.
You will walk into a room and the mood will have
changed. It will be uncomfortably quiet
or there will be meaningless conversation to fill the room with noise. There will be a sense of what’s to come. What you thought would be the best day of
your life will equally be the worst day of your life. These are moments of acute reality. These are moments of finality. These are moments when a decision made months
ago become a decision coming to fruition.
This is the painful, painful part of adoption. And you will maybe even start to blame
yourself for having a part in the grief.
What I did not see coming was how awful I felt when I saw
the red, splotchy face. I did not
anticipate the guilt that would come as she kissed a tiny face and whispered a
few words and then walked away. Instead
of smiling, we all stood there weeping in the public lobby of the hospital. I did not feel joy-filled anymore. I second guessed this decision for her. I wondered if this was a mistake. My heart was heavy and grieving. My emotions were tricking me. I partly wanted to buckle this kid up and
run for the car, partly wanted to stay right in this moment, and partly wanted
to adopt an entire second family on the spot.
Almost mom, you can do this. It is one more time when most won’t
understand what you’re going to go through.
I do. Love this baby and her
first mom, but give her this time. It is
a gift to her and to your child. Let it
go. Take the pictures. Take them of the two of them even when your
heart kind of hurts doing it. Someday,
your little one will grow into a bigger one and these pictures will show her
she was loved, cherished and wanted when she feels abandoned and rejected. Love on the both of them. Say how hard it is. Hug often.
Let her see your tears. Let her
see your smiles of delight. They’re both
important and honest and part of this whole, crazy, complicated situation. Write it all down. It’s your child’s birth story and you don’t
want to forget it. Bring her
flowers. Pray in the midst of it all.
There will be this one moment…the one where everything
switches. You will now hold your baby
and you will no longer be almost mom but instead just mom and she will
watch. You will weep for her and for
your baby and for this whole life-changing moment. And then you will get in the car again, this
time heading home for good. Those hard
feelings…they’re going to stick with you.
They’ll be right on the surface for some time . Ten years later they may bring tears to your
eyes when you think back on the whole situation.
It will get better.
How thankful I am for those special, difficult days. It softened my heart to a young woman who it
may have been easier to keep at an emotional arms length. We are now bonded over a deep love for our
daughter. We both stepped into an impossible
situation and came out the other end.
It was so worth it.
But above all else, can you remember one important thing?
Someone else was in that room. He held us each in our different
emotions. He wept and loved and
encouraged and took hold of our hands. He
saw us in our desperate times. When she
got in the car without a baby, he went with her. When we got in the car and began our shaky
days of parenting, he came with us, too.
How. Great. Is. This. God. He was there!
He was there!
So, dear almost mom, I am hugging on you right here in my
kitchen wherever you may be, whatever you are about to go through…You are on my
mind as you learn to love your little one and her first mom. May this time be filled with the full
spectrum on emotions, but more importantly may you remember that you walk this
path with Him.
He will be there for you, too.
K
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