Sunday, January 10, 2010

Cutting Up Coats: Motherhood and Sacrifice (part 1 of a 3 part essay)



I was excited to find out I was pregnant with our third child...mostly.  But about every couple of weeks there would be moments when I would panic.  Heart palpitations, sweaty pits and palms, queasy stomach--I mean real, physical panic, and I'd think to myself, "What am I doing?"

Things had just started getting easier.  Mr. Wicke and I were just now able to take a Sunday afternoon nap again.  After seven years it felt like such an indulgence.  And speaking of sleep, the children no longer woke us up on Saturday morning.  I no longer had to scrub scribbles off walls or clean urine off couches.  Things weren't getting broken as often anymore.  Mostly they had learned to keep their mitts off of my stuff.  No one had cut their own hair in years.  They could shower and bathe themselves.  They carried their own dishes to the sink and put away their own clothes.  They dressed themselves!  I mean the list of luxeries of a life with older kids just goes on and on.  Things were a getting easier, and now what had I done???  Had I honestly gone and got myself pregnant?  With a baby??  What was I doing???

This time around was much different than when we were expecting our first baby and even our second because now I wasn't naive.  I'd been to the rodeo a couple of times, so to speak, and that bull is one tough ride!  Parenthood will wring the selfishness out of you better than anything else.  So you see, I can understand why people shrink in the face of procreation.  Especially when one looks at all she would have to give up. 

Elizabeth Gilbert, I think, looks at it that way. In her book Eat, Pray, Love she tells a story about her grandmother, who, born with a cleft palate, imagined herself unmarriageble and so got an education, worked, and lived independently.  One of her personal rewards was buying a beloved fur-trimmed, wine-colored coat for $20.00.  Later, when she does marry and has her first child, a daughter, she cuts the coat up to use for the baby.  Gilbert seems to use this as an argument against motherhood.

She says, "That's the story of motherhood, in a large way. You take the thing that is most precious to you, and you cut it up and give it to somebody else who you love more than you love the thing. And we tend to idealize that, and I'm not sure we should. Because the sacrifice that it symbolizes is also huge. Her marriage and her seven children, in a life of constant struggle and deprivation — it was heavy.  And that beautiful mind, that beautiful intellect, that exquisite sense of curiosity and exploration, was gone."

I can sorta' relate to that in my pregnancy-induced, panicky state of mind.  There was some stuff I was going to have to give up.  Getting back in the classroom?  Delayed another six years, at least.  Traveling to Europe?  Gonna' have to wait.  Shoot, traveling across town was going to be a little tricky again.  Some of the things I wanted were going to have to be sacrificed.  Sometimes, when that was my focus, it did feel a little heavy.

But then a funny thing happened.  The baby was actually born.  And when they put him in my arms, I did exactly what I had done with my other two:  I wept.  That moment, connecting with a brand new living soul, is the closest I will ever come in my human existence to heaven.  In that sacred space, where love and joy, gratitude and humility, light and limitless potential entertwine, things become very clear:  None of that other stuff even matters.  It is this new understanding that allows us to do crazy-fool things like cut up coats and give up careers; not for some self-martyring notion that it is what one must do, but because those things no longer hold the value they once did.

Believe it or not, there was a time when I could not imagine my life without theater.  Acting, singing, entertaining--I loved it!  I was good at it.  To me, it felt like flying.  And a lot of my twenties was spent revolving around that world.  Then the kids came, and they became the sun and the center of my universe.  I was surprised to find that I didn't like to be away from them every night for large chunks of time.  I missed them.  It made me feel disconnected from my life.  It gave me stress.  I don't do much acting anymore.  Some people call that a waste of talent.  Some people call that giving up.  I just call it being happy.

Those kinds of choices may be hard for some people to understand because they can only be judged by experience; one sadly, that Ms. Gilbert has chosen to never have.  Just as I finished reading her interview, my son began to awake from his morning nap.  Hearing him call for me, I made my way to his room, her description of contant struggle, deprivation, and sacrifice still simmering in my brain.  As I opened the door he turned to me, eyes lighting up in joyful recognition, his chubby arms reaching out for me.  I lifted him from the crib, pressed his soft, warm cheek to mine as he put his arms around my neck, and I whispered in his ear, "You are my trip to India.  You, my darling boy, are my ride on an elephant."

If, in fact, I never do those things, I will not consider my life poorer because of it.  What is sacrifice after all?  It is to give up something valuable for something else.  That something would have to be esteemed as something even better, would it not?  Heavier? Maybe, but what of value in this life is not heavy? Perhaps the weight of our life should be a measure of its depth.  And if to love and to be loved, to feel that one really matters, is the desire of every human soul, I feel I have chosen the better part.

(More to come...)

8 comments:

Rochelleht said...

Have you ever!

That was brilliant. Love you, girl. Love that piece. I was telling my girlfriend about this on Saturday, as we were walking out of a movie, sans kids. She had read that book and hated it. Had to quit half-way through because of the selfishness of Elizabeth Gilbert. It annoys me to no end how society rewards selfishness by giving book and movie deals to people like her. We had just seen "The Blind Side", which is all about service, so the taste of Elizabeth Gilbert was particularly bitter.

As a woman who has seen my life take a different turn than expected (who hasn't?), I have found that God knows what I need better than I do. And it isn't a fur coat. Or even my dreams of an acting career. When I was selfish and young I thought that it was all so important and the girls who 'settled' were really missing out. Thankfully, with an education both temporally and spiritually, came a bit more wisdom and by the time I was halfway through my 20's, I started to see what was really important. SO grateful I didn't miss out on the joys of cutting up a coat.

And while I have 4 kids, I haven't lost myself. I have found her. And who I am was so much more rich and amazing than I could have ever imagined for myself. I still do selfish things for myself. Trips, nights out, etc. And having the poop clean-up at home makes it all that much more wonderful. Imagine if our lives didn't have the vivid colors of a diverse tapestry. If it only involved my wants and my desires, it would be boring, indeed.

Ella said...

Wow - this comes right on the heals of my weekend with my two sisters-in-law who seem to have no desire for a child (one has one daughter and the other has none). They tease me about wishing I could have more children. They say things like, "I can't wait for my daugther to grow up," and "I thought the point was to survive until your kids leave home," when I lament my children all going to school. To say the least, I returned home on Saturday feeling distrubed, so I wrote the following post to myself (I can't post it for real on my blog because they read it and I don't want to start a family feud).

Children =
Less sleep
Less money
Less free time
More sickness
More frustration
More expenses
More running around
Less travel
Less luxuries
Less pet projects
Less dinners out
Less fancy vacations
More heartache
More work
More laundry
More chaos
More damage to your home, carpet, walls, and paint

So why do we have children? Why do we have more than one? Why, even after having four, do we wish we could have had more? Why is it that you hurt more when your child hurts than you ever hurt when someone did you wrong? Why is it you’d rather be home than in a job even though the pay is poor, the hours are long, and the thanks are few? It’s because somehow you know that having a child is the greatest work you can accomplish in life. No one taught you this, you’ve just known it your whole life. And because of that knowledge, one thank you or smile or success makes hours upon hours of work worth it. It’s because you love that child more than yourself.

If this seems hokey to you or you scoff that anyone could ever feel this way or if you think having a child is a burden instead of a privilege - something to be put off as long as possible. You shouldn’t have a baby. Because you don’t get it. If you’re lucky, maybe those feelings will develop after the baby arrives. But for some, this incredible realization - that being a parent is the most sacred and incredible privilege on earth - never comes. I pity the people who never get it - never LOVE being a parent - because they miss the greatest opportunity of their life chasing things of lesser value like a hobby, a job, free time, bigger house, more beautiful house, more money.

Thank you Laurel for being someone I could send my thoughts to and for being someone I can say over and over - you are so right -- you GET IT!

Hamilton Family said...

I have five great resons to cut up a coat everyday and I'd never trade that in for the most coveted piece of fur! Trade my sacrifices as a mother for anything else? NEVER! Earthly wants and desires will fade away but the experiences of being a mother are heavenly and sacred!

Shana said...

Hi, I follow your blog, and was so excited to see your last post about this upcoming essay. As a newly divorced woman, I picked up Gilbert's book in hopes of having it be a right-of-passage type of read. I couldn't get past the first 50 pages and I've tried twice! There was a selfish undercurrent there that I couldn't enjoy. As a mother of three amazing children, I would cut my coat, my hair, or anything at all for those three. They are my joy and my greatest success, and my greatest love, too!

Looking forward to parts 2 and 3! Thank you for putting into words what most of us have in our hearts!

ShanaC

Laurel said...

Hi Shana C.

So good to meet you! Thank you for the vote of confidence today!

The Leithead Family said...

Beautiful. Can't wait for more. Thanks, Laurel!!

Erin said...

I couldn't even read that book. It almost hurt to read page after page of Me...me...me. Motherhood, is my greatest role, my greatest blessing and I hope that many more children are brought into my home.

Loved your esay.

Travis said...

Hey laura, I think you made the right decision. Children truly are a blessing and you have realized and worked at that working to gods plan for three of them. I remember how you turned out so if you raise your children like your mom raised you. Well they will be a great bonus to the world. SIncerely Glen Travis HOpkinson