My Child’s Daughter
As I stared, stunned, at the two lines, my thoughts drifted to my own mother. I was a planned child, a glimmer of hope and new beginnings. I thought of the last moments I saw her. I thought of the pain, both mine and hers. The look of helplessness clouded over with the hopeless worries of a mother for her child. I held her hand until she told me to go. And I looked back as she kissed her hand and waved. I left her with the promise to return. She died that night.
And so there in that tiny bathroom I knew. These two blue lines that came so unexpectantly into my life, were actually not a new beginning but instead a long waited return. I laughed. My shaky hands cradled the two blue lines as I showed them to him. We do have a choice. No we don’t. It’s a non-negotiable deal. It’s her.
There are religions that believe firmly in reincarnation, the transformation of old souls into new life. I can’t say I do. But nor can I say I don’t. However I couldn’t write a blog about motherhood without writing about my own. A woman who suffered. Who spent her life bringing new life into the world and who gave her own to bring her 5 children into the world. A huge influence in my life; my morals, my decisions and my work. She’s an inspiration to overcome the pain and grief of her passing, and the pain and worries of motherhood.
However, the sad truth is that all that influence and inspiration fails to make an appearance when I need it most – amidst the chaos of progesterone – which can turn me into a massive emotional pain in the arse. It’s only after, when I sit and reflect, I calmly imagine her advice and guidance. And then I laugh to myself as I realise I’m imagining some godly-peaceful-figure, she was never a saint herself and I’ve gained many of her traits. She made many mistakes in her short life, she wasn’t perfect, but she was mine, and I loved her. I still do.
I remember someone told me once that losing their father was so difficult to deal with, and it wasn’t until their own son was born, that they could come to terms with it. I always wondered how. It can’t be a replacement, surely not, but it can heal a hole perhaps. Or maybe it’s more about understanding. My mother comes into my mind every day now. I don’t think my daughter can replace her, that by becoming a mother myself, I’ll lose the need for one myself. But perhaps I can then understand her. People say that a love a mother has for her child is incomparable by any standards, so perhaps I can understand the way she loved me and even the choices she made in the end.
No, I don’t believe that she is the midwife, only that without her I wouldn’t have my two blue lines. And that 50 years to the very day of her birth, my daughter will arrive.
