Patches of Life

Dear Joy,

“No... no... NO. Don't change him there.”

I hear the words from behind me: a mom, sitting in a booth with her two children at Chic-fil-A, dressed in snappy workout clothes, hair pulled back. She's staring through the giant glass window into the restaurant's tiny play area, packed with screaming, sweaty kids on a Friday afternoon. Another mom, obviously pregnant, is sitting on a bench inside the play area, just on the other side of the glass from us. Her two-year-old is lying on the padded bench next to her, and, yep, it definitely looks like Pregnant Mom is about to change her son's diaper right on the bench, in the middle of the play place chaos. Sure enough, out come the wipes, a diaper, and hand sanitizer. Off comes the diaper.

A sigh from behind me, then a groan. Workout Mom is obviously distressed. Her kids munch their waffle fries, oblivious. (Speaking of oblivious, my 3-year-old is sitting on the bench next to me, watching YouTube on my phone, because he was just trampled inside the aforementioned play place, somewhere up in the tube maze. Charlie is still inside the hot, sweaty room, miraculously holding his own, graciously apologizing to all the kids he bumps into, which equates to a quick “I'm sorry!” every six seconds.)

Earlier, when Workout Mom sat down behind us with her kids and two trays of food, I hear this quick conversation:

Workout Mom (to her four-year-old son): “Hey... remember on Thanksgiving, when you poured that hot wax down Auntie Judy's toilet?”

Four-year-old boy (absentmindedly munching on a nugget): “Mmmhmmm...”

Workout Mom: “Well, that was a really expensive fix. We're not going to do that ever again, ok?”

Four-year-old boy: “Mmmhmmm...”

Later, a sweet Chic-Fil-A employee tries to take our tray for the second time, but I ask for a few more minutes, because I didn't know whether or not Charlie will come out of the play place begging for his waffle fry crumbs. Mr. Chic-Fil-A (wedding ring on his finger, kind expression on his face) says, “I see you're getting ready to have another one... Any day now, hmm? Due any day?”

(Why, why, why?)

“Actually,” I respond, “I'm due in two months,” (his smile cracks, just the tiniest bit) “and wearesoexcitedandyesit'sagirlandWHEW, I think we're done with this tray now!” He congratulates me, and off goes our tray. I silently resolve to wear ponchos for the rest of this pregnancy.

We leave when Charlie gets sandwiched at the bottom of the slide between two smaller boys (one, at the front of the line, who is particularly determined that NONE SHALL PASS). As we make our exit, I notice the businessmen, quietly lining the far corners of the restaurant, eating their chicken patties and scrolling on their phones, earbuds in place.

We're driving away, and I watch as two cars pull into the parking lot. The first, a minivan, is nearly rear-ended by a slick sedan, because Minivan Lady (with a vehicle full of kids) is driving slower than Sedan Lady (alone, in a suit, hands thrown up in obvious frustration) would have preferred.

This strikes me, because when I was twenty-one, I used to drive around in my flashy Mustang on my own lunch break. I had exactly one hour to get all my very important things done, and sometimes there were multiple errands to run, places to stop, before hurrying back to the office. I'd tap my high-heeled-shoe on the brake pedal whenever I found myself stuck behind a minivan, rolling my eyes at the “soccer moms” who meandered along at a snail's pace. My little zippy car would push the speed limit, and I'd leave those minivans in the dust, because I was a Very Important Lady with Things To Do. (Sedan Lady. Minivan Lady. I relate to you both.)

Back to present time: Later that night, my kids are gone, whisked away by my inlaws for the evening while we host a neighborhood Christmas party. I'm wearing a much larger, more forgiving, less “any day now” shirt, and talking with two sweet ladies next to a table full of cakes and hors d'oeuvres. The topic has turned to kids, and someone mentions that she'd love to have children someday, but her husband isn't sold on the idea. Another mentions the fact that, because she's single and childless, her entire family assumes that she has all the time in the world. She says, “My family asks me, 'Honestly, what do you DO with all the time you have?'” Her exasperation is obvious, written all over her face, as she lists job, house, caring for elderly friends, hosting guests, a life full of giving, going, working hard. “I wish I had a night to sit on the couch and just relax,” she finishes simply. We laugh a bit, and the conversation moves elsewhere, but her words stay with me for awhile.

Joy, you said this so well in your last letter: Aren't we all sharing this life together, to some extent? Aren't we all working hard at what we're doing, connected by (if nothing else) the oxygen we breathe in and the grace we do (or don't) breathe out? My single neighbor wants one night to sit quietly on her couch with her feet up, just like I do. She's doing good, important things, just like people with kids are. There's Pregnant Mom, changing a diaper in the middle of everything (yes, gross), but quite possibly because she's (1) desperate, (2) sleep-deprived, or (3) both. We all like to think that our own stuff is at the center of the universe. Maybe Mr. Chic-fil-A is dying for kids of his own, and isn't thinking about the social appropriateness of commenting on my large pregnant self. And my husband (a plumber) is probably out right now, fixing Workout Mom's Auntie Judy's wax-clogged toilet.

I think that there's another aspect of this concept of a grace-filled, shared life that I'm wriggling toward. I mentioned earlier that we all like to think we're at the center of the universe. We've written about extending grace, and making space for each other (which, as you so beautifully put, makes life bigger and richer and better). I think this includes our responsibility to acknowledge that every life matters; every person has a purpose. Susan Schaeffer Macaulay writes about this in an excellent chapter on community (from her book, For the Family's Sake):

Every “little” life counts; each day, each hour has its place. In God's sight, there is no “little” life; each person is significant. Together we should add up to a powerful whole – a body where each part is important. One person here and another there, each doing well enough in his own little “patch of life,” will add up to permeate society as a whole, as salt flavors a lump of dough. The influence can be for good or evil, for truth or lies.

I have glimpses into little “patches of life” all around me: Workout Mom, Pregnant Mom, Minivan Lady, Sedan Lady, Mr. Chic-fil-A, my neighbor down the block – all fighting their own battles, living out lives that I only know a few seconds of. Macaulay goes on to say, “Although we have just one short life to live, that doesn't make it easy – 'nothing in this life is simple.' As we are flawed ourselves and live in a flawed reality, things go wrong. We were never perfect or well-rounded in the first place – all of us have needs. That is when we help each other. It is a terrible thing when we are isolated from a working-together community.”

It took a really chaotic lunch at a chicken sandwich place and a quiet conversation at a Christmas party to help me realize, all over again, the importance of all of this. Am I just restating what we've been talking about all along? Probably. But forgive me. It's a topic I've been living with, breathing in, working through, ever since it came up a few weeks ago. This idea of living out grace, and extending understanding and compassion, even when it seems undeserved, has been remaking me, changing me.

I might (might!) think twice the next time I sit down on a restaurant's play place bench. Actually, I hope I do. It'll remind me that (1) everyone's fighting their own tough battles, and (2) moms are usually right. (A long time ago, my mom told me to forget the 5-second-rule: in a restaurant, I should never eat the french fries that fell onto the seat next to me. Hello. Really. You were right, Mom. You were totally right.)

Your Life, My Life, Shared Life

Dear Sherah,

Last week (exactly a year after I wrote that piece about secondary infertility that you referenced in your last post), a man I had just met asked me a very direct, very personal question.

"Is there any chance you're pregnant right now?" 

This is one of those situations in which context is everything. The guy was a Physician's Assistant, and he was asking because he wanted to give me steroids, muscle relaxers, morphine, and an x-ray for a back injury. But even so, hearing that question come out of someone else's mouth was almost eerie. I've lived with that question ringing in my head almost every day for the last two years. I've turned down drinks at social events, avoided certain medications when in doubt, and popped prenatal vitamin after prenatal vitamin. I've felt my hopes rise and plummet and plateau, over and over and over. I've texted my best friend on the first day of my last twenty-four periods, utilizing the full spectrum of emojis. One month I'm outraged, another month I'm strangely relieved, the next month I'm heartbroken, the following month I'm at peace. (Okay, fine, "cranky and annoyed," not "at peace." No matter how zen I'm feeling about infertility, a period is still a period.) 

You know that bit of brave recklessness you have to summon before trying to have a baby? That center of the seesaw between terror and desire where you balance, a little wobbly, wondering whether you'll pull this off before you change your mind? How I went from there (knees bent and barely standing) to here (the confusing world of fertility testing and treatment options), I'm not quite sure. 

But I am sure about this. That lavish grace you were talking about? I've discovered and experienced it in so many ways these past two years. I've experienced it in quiet, precious moments with my one little boy, when we're snuggling nose-to-nose and my heart is bursting with enough. I've experienced it in the embrace of my husband—a place where both of our disappointments added together somehow feels lighter. I've experienced it in prayer and music and long walks, and in all twenty-four of those text conversations with my best friend.

But one of the ways I've experienced grace most has been in celebrating other pregnancies and babies. You and other friends have gently shared your happy news with me, and I'm grateful for the sensitivity. But I don't feel the stab of disappointment or jealousy in that moment—just genuine happiness. And the only reason I can come up with is grace. 

While we were trying to get pregnant with Anders, one of my best friends announced she was pregnant on the same day that (unbeknownst to her) I took a negative test. I remember how I felt, swallowing my disappointment, trying to say all the right things, feeling intensely jealous. "We weren't even trying!" cut like a knife. And then, a month later, I found out I was pregnant with Anders the day after she miscarried. Another friend accidentally broke the news before I could find a way to gently tell her. While we were both at the hospital visiting another friend who had just had a baby. 

This is the part of womanhood that I never picked up on when I was little girl, watching my mom and her friends have babies. It all looked so simple, so straightforward. Grow up, have babies. But it's not that simple and nothing about it is easy. Comparing one woman's experience to the another is useless and fragmenting; we're all in this together. From the 30-something woman who doesn't know whether she'll ever have kids to the mom of four littles and every woman between or beyond: this isn't easy. Even if the decision to have a baby is yours to make, making that decision is scary for some of us. Even if the decision is easy for you, getting pregnant can be difficult. Even if getting pregnant is a piece of cake, growing a human is a nine-month exercise in faith. Even if you have a healthy pregnancy, childbirth is painful and dangerous. And even if childbirth goes well and your baby is healthy and none of your worst fears are immediately founded: your heart (as they say) now exists outside of your body in another human being for the rest of your life. It doesn't get any freaking easier from there. 

You know what does make it easier? When we share it. When we offer our joys and struggles and stories as women without fear of being disqualified or shut down. When I can share what it felt like having a male nurse report that the pregnancy test came back negative, and when you can share what it felt like when someone called your growing body "fat." When there's space for both of those experiences in the same conversation and the same friendship, neither one putting the other "into perspective" but letting them each just be, it's easier. 

(Not easier—I should stop saying easier. It's better. It's bigger and richer and better.)

More and more I'm coming to realize that stories don't belong in a hierarchy and other people's lives are not a lens by which to view or assess my own. Your life is your life, my life is my life, and then there's this sweet spot between us of shared life; this whole extra space we create when we do life together. I'm not happy for you, my friend; I'm happy with you. And I'm tickled pink that we're adding a precious little girl to this shared life of ours.

Thank you, thank you, for always making space for me.

Love,

Joy