Some Mothers Get Babies With
Something More
Written by: Lori Borgman Columnist and Speaker
My friend is expecting her first child. People keep
asking what she wants. She smiles demurely, shakes her head and gives the
answer mothers have given throughout the ages of time. She says it doesn’t
matter whether it’s a boy or a girl. She just wants it to have ten fingers and
ten toes. Of course, that’s what she says. That’s what mothers have always
said. Mothers lie.
Truth be told, every mother wants a whole lot more.
Every mother wants a perfectly healthy baby with a round head, rosebud lips,
button nose, beautiful eyes and satin skin.
Every mother wants a baby so gorgeous that people will pity the Gerber baby for being flat-out ugly. Every mother wants a baby that will roll over, sit up and take those first steps right on schedule (according to the baby development chart on page 57, column two). Every mother wants a baby that can see, hear, run, jump and fire neurons by the billions. She wants a kid that can smack the ball out of the park and do toe points that are the envy of the entire ballet class. Call it greed if you want, but we mothers want what we want.
Some mothers get babies with something more. Some
mothers get babies with conditions they can’t pronounce, a spine that didn’t
fuse, a missing chromosome or a palette that didn’t close. Most of those
mothers can remember the time, the place, the shoes they were wearing and the
color of the walls in the small, suffocating room where the doctor uttered the
words that took their breath away. It felt like recess in the fourth grade when
you didn’t see the kick ball coming and it knocked the wind clean out of you.
Some mothers leave the hospital with a healthy
bundle, then, months, even years later, take him in for a routine visit, or
schedule her for a well check, and crash head first into a brick wall as they
bear the brunt of devastating news. It can’t be possible! That doesn’t run in
our family. Can this really be happening in our lifetime? I am a woman who
watches the Olympics for the sheer thrill of seeing finely sculpted bodies. It’s
not a lust thing; it’s a wondrous thing. The athletes appear as specimens
without flaw - rippling muscles with nary an ounce of flab or fat, virtual
powerhouses of strength with lungs and limbs working in perfect harmony. Then
the athlete walks over to a tote bag, rustles through the contents and pulls out an inhaler.
As I’ve told my own kids, be it on the way to
physical therapy after a third knee surgery, or on a trip home from an echo
cardiogram, there’s no such thing as a perfect body. Everybody will bear
something at some time or another. Maybe the affliction will be apparent to
curious eyes, or maybe it will be unseen, quietly treated with trips to the
doctor, medication or surgery. The health problems our children have
experienced have been minimal and manageable, so I watch with keen interest and
great admiration the mothers of children with serious disabilities, and wonder
how they do it. Frankly, sometimes you mothers scare me.
How you lift that
child in and out of a wheelchair 20 times a day. How you monitor tests, track
medications, regulate diet and serve as the gatekeeper to a hundred specialists
yammering in your ear. I wonder how you endure the clichés and the platitudes,
well-intentioned souls explaining how God is at work when you’ve occasionally
questioned if God is on strike. I even wonder how you endure schmaltzy pieces
like this one — saluting you, painting you as hero and saint, when you know
you’re ordinary. You snap, you bark, you bite. You didn’t volunteer for this.
You didn’t jump up and down in the motherhood line yelling, “Choose me, God!
Choose me! I’ve got what it takes.”
You’re a woman who doesn’t have time to step back
and put things in perspective, so, please, let me do it for you. From where I
sit, you’re way ahead of the pack. You’ve developed the strength of a draft
horse while holding onto the delicacy of a daffodil. You have a heart that
melts like chocolate in a glove box in July, carefully counter-balanced against
the stubbornness of an Ozark mule. You can be warm and tender one minute, and
when circumstances require intense and aggressive the next. You are the mother,
advocate and protector of a child with a disability. You’re a neighbor, a
friend, a stranger I pass at the mall. You’re the woman I sit next to at church,
my cousin and my sister-in-law. You’re a woman who wanted ten fingers and ten
toes, and got something more.
You’re a wonder.
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