The
Pregnancy Glow and Other Myths of Motherhood
By Barbara A. Eastom Bates
It happened during the ninth month of my first pregnancy. I was
going through a department store check-out lane where a teenage
girl was ringing up my purchases. She looked shyly at my burgeoning
belly with an expression that could only be described as reverent.
With eyes full of dreams
of future motherhood she asked, “Is pregnancy really as bad
as everyone says?”
Without the slightest
guilt, I replied, “No. It’s worse.”
The Deception
When my husband and I
announced the birth of our blessed expectation some months prior,
along with endless congratulations, I received the good news of
the many wonderful changes I could expect.
"You’ll positively
glow.”
“Your hair and
nails will look fabulous.”
“You’ll feel
absolutely beautiful.”
According to family and
friends, as a gestating woman, I would feel nothing short of a precious
vessel, glowing with health and radiance given only to those experiencing
the miracle of growing a child.
About a week later, wearing
the pallor of death, I was running away from the smell of my husband’s
lunchtime tuna fish sandwich knowing I’d never been so violently
ill my entire life.
The Reality
Although it’s rumored
there are actually women who sail through pregnancy untouched by
any ills or discomfort, I was not one of them. If I’d ever
experienced a pregnancy glow, I’m certain I could only have
been radioactive.
I was told to expect
a little morning sickness. I didn’t anticipate 24/7 progesterone
poisoning, body aches, or never ending fatigue. And in all the happy
tales of pregnancy recounted to me, I'm certain I'd have remembered
hearing if pure, unadulterated misery were mentioned as a symptom
of gestation.
Sitting in my obstetrician’s
office near the end of the first trimester, she asked how I was
feeling. “Sick.”
“Good.” She
replied.
Seeing my defeated look,
she offered a small respite. “You’ll start to feel better
after week 12 or 13.”
I crossed the days off
my calendar waiting for magical week 13. It came and went. My never
ending nausea did not. I was sick, tired, and sick of being both.
I'd been told
how sharing a child together would make my marital relationship
more intimate. I, on the other hand, hated my husband. No matter
he and I had joyfully consented to make this child together, or
that he worried and did the best he could to make me feel more comfortable.
Somewhere in the back of my mind, as I watched him lie peacefully
asleep at night while I was awake fending off nausea, all I could
think was, “this is your fault.”
And so it went for the
entire duration of nine months. I knew beyond any shadow of a doubt,
if I ever survived this go-round on the pregnancy rollercoaster,
there would be no more children in my future, ever. Motherhood just
wasn’t all that it was cracked up to be.
The Grand Debut
Jacob Lyle arrived in
early fall that year, bearing 10 perfect fingers and toes, a head
full of brown hair and big blue eyes. He was bruised and battered
from birth, yet, to my eyes, perfection unlike the world had ever
seen before.
Suddenly, my entire life
made sense. At 23-years old, I wasn’t yet sure what I wanted
to be when I grew up, or what my future held outside of being a
wife to my husband. With the arrival of Jacob, I knew exactly why
I was here—to be the mother of this beautiful child. Having
Jacob filled my life with a sense of awe and wonder I had never
known. I was a mother, and that was enough.
Altered Expectations
While I had expected
sleepless nights with my newborn, what I hadn’t expected was
how much I would enjoy them. I gladly gave up sleep to have the
chance just to hold my tiny son in my arms and look at his sweet
face.
I expected life to change.
I never expected the very foundations of my world to be rocked.
It came as a total shock that the simple act of becoming a mother—wasn’t
simple.
Previous to motherhood,
tragedy in the world was sad. After the birth of my son, it was
heart-wrenching. No longer could I watch a movie or read a news
report depicting harm to a child without emotion. Every child became
my child. What if it were Jacob who was sick? What if it were Jacob
who was injured?
Issues I’d previously
given no thought suddenly became of substantial importance. Was
there truly a difference between breastfeeding and formula feeding?
Should we circumcise? If I vaccinated my child, he could have a
serious adverse reaction. If I chose not to vaccinate, he could
become very ill.
I became an information
addict and read every book on childcare I could get my hands on
and spent endless hours researching my concerns and second guessing
my decisions. The rest of my waking hours were spent staring at
Jacob as he slept, assuring myself he was still breathing and would
only continue to do so thorough my conscious willing of it. Fortunately,
he survived my new mother paranoia and came out relatively unscathed--
or at least, I will assume so until I’m presented with a bill
for therapy.
Personal Truths
I had gone into motherhood
with the words of many fostering my belief I’d have a baby,
but life would eventually go back to normal again by the magical
six-week check-up (at which point I'd also have lost all my baby
weight). What I didn’t know when I gave birth was normal was
gone forever, along with any peace of mind, my figure, and any hope
of a good night’s sleep, but that I’d never trade a
moment of my new life to have it back again.
Motherhood, I’ve
come to find, is a journey rather than a destination. And while
we may endeavor to share experiences with a new mom-to-be, the truths
of motherhood remain personal and hers alone to find. The only certainty
is the journey is well worth traveling.
I only wish I could talk
to that teenager one more time.
About The Author
Barbara Eastom Bates
is the author of the upcoming release, "Basic Training for
Brides-to-Be," and editor-in-chief of Operation Military Spouse,
http://www.operationmilitaryspouse.com.
opmilspouse@yahoo.com
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