Sunday, December 21, 2008

A Birthday Wish List

A birthday wish list for my precious son, who is one-year-old today: health, happiness, love, and wholeness.

I love you, baby boy. Happy first birthday!

Cavemama off to nurse her yearling.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

"Where did you come from, baby dear?"

"Baby" is a lovely little poem by George Macdonald. I happened upon it while pregnant with my son, whose first birthday is tomorrow.

I can barely remember life before my son came into being, before I knew he was growing inside of my womb. I feel he has been with me always, and I love him with my entire being. On this, the eve of his first birthday, I find my mood both elated and melancholy. What joy my son brings to my life! What sadness I feel for every moment I did not fully appreciate during this past year...

Read Macdonald's poem. It will tug at your heart.

My son's eyes are not blue, and his forehead is not "smooth and high," but I marvel at him just the same. And I often wonder, "Where did you come from, baby dear?" Now, I know all about the birds and the bees. What I mean is that I wonder about the essence of my son-- his personality, his character, his soul.

He amazes me, and I wonder how he came to be and how he came to be ours: "But how did you come to us, you dear? God thought about you, and so I am here."

I don't think there's much more that I could possibly add to that.

Cavemama off to dry her eyes and love on her baby boy.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Desire Births Energy

Desire births energy.

I saw this phrase on a sign in front of a church some years ago. I was curious, so I called the church. I politely introduced myself, explaining that, although I was not a member of the church, I wished to speak to someone about the meaning of the message on the sign.

I wasn't quite sure what it meant, but I was certain its meaning would hold some significance for me. I was told someone would call me back. Well, no one ever returned my call, and two days later, the message on the sign was changed to something less cryptic.

Desire births energy. I often ponder this, especially now that I'm a mother. My nursling is almost a yearling, and we're expecting #2 in June. Translation: What energy? Cavemama tired.

Could it be this simple: If I want something badly enough, then I'll do whatever it takes to get it, achieve it, or make it happen?

Desire births energy.

Hmm...

So... desire gives life to energy? Does desire cause energy? Is desire a conductor of energy? Simple, right? Heh. Most days I feel like I don't even have the energy to desire anything more than, well, more energy.

But how much thought, power, effort, and skill could desiring possibly require? How much energy does it take to wish, to want, to crave, to long for something? And why don't I have the energy for desiring? Do I lack the desire to desire? Am I, perhaps, too pragmatic? Or maybe I just think too much.

Tangent: If desire births energy, I wonder what births desire... Creativity? Dreaming? Imagination? Experience? Memory? Or... is desire eternal?

Ugh. Cavemama off to think less, do more. On second thought, I'm too tired to think OR do. Cavemama off to simply BE.

Friday, December 5, 2008

What makes it feel like Christmas to you?

Decorations? The Christmas tree? Presents? Baking cookies? It's a Wonderful Life? Christmas dinner? Spending time with family? Christmas music?

I was just reading about how to let go of holiday stressors, relax, and enjoy Christmas. One suggestion was to figure out what makes it feel like Christmas to you, and in turn, what you can live without this Christmas season.

So, what brings you joy? What makes it feel like Christmas to you, and what are you going to do to relax and enjoy this Christmas?

I'm going to prioritize, let go of expectations, spend time with loved ones, reconnect with why I celebrate Christmas in the first place, and simply BE.

Merry Christmas to you and yours!

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

My Wait is My Portion

I used to read the Henry James novella The Beast in the Jungle every year. I read it to renew myself, to remember myself, to remind myself to remember him, John Marcher: egocentric, stagnant, lonely as he watches and waits for something to happen.

Marcher believes that "[s]omething or other lay in wait for him, amid the twists and the turns of the months and the years, like a crouching beast in the jungle" (James Ch. 2). Marcher is convinced that he is fated for some gravely significant event, or that some gravely significant event is fated for him. Obsessed, he watches and he waits for the “beast in the jungle” to spring; his friend May Bartram watches with him.

I never wanted to be like him. I desperately do not want to be like him-- not now, not ever, but I have forgotten myself, holed up in my cave, caught up in learning how to be a wife, and now, a mother. And so I forgot him. I forgot John Marcher...until now.

At first, the memory was imperceptible, a faint echo in the interior of the cave set off by Practicing Happiness. Thus incited, I turned to Henry James and read The Beast in the Jungle for the first time since my husband and I were married in 2005.

The memory-echo grew stronger and clearer as Mr. Marcher and I got reacquainted. In a moment of piteous illumination, Marcher understands "the truth, vivid and monstrous, that all the while he had waited the wait was itself his portion" (James Ch. 6).

The memory-echo crescendoed.

Aha!

My moment of illumination is anything but piteous. My moment of illumination is filled with joy and hope and gratitude: My wait is my portion. Before marriage, before motherhood, this was my mantra!

My wait is my portion, and what a portion indeed! I am blessed with a beautiful family—a loving husband and a happy, healthy baby boy. For the most part, our needs are met and our wants are rightly ordered. We have a generous extended family and the kindness of those who reach out in the spirit of friendship.

If you don’t know John Marcher, perhaps you’ll consider getting acquainted. You’ll find him, “the man, to whom nothing on earth was to have happened,” at May Bartram’s grave, looking upon “the sounded void of his life” as he realizes with profound horror that “[t]he escape would have been to love her; then, then he would have lived” (James Ch. 6).

It’s back to the cave now, to watch and to wait as I live—and love—my portion.