So many times
along this journey, I’ve had to stop and simply ask “why?” But probably
not the why most people would think. It’s not “why hasn’t this worked out the
way we planned,” but rather “why am I putting myself through this physical hell?” and
“why is this emotional and psychological turmoil worth it?” and “why should I
keep playing the waiting game month after eternally long month?”
I’m a great
believer in experiential living, in the idea that what we expose ourselves to
greatly shapes who we are, who we will become, and what we ultimately value as
essential parts making up the whole of what we call life. (Excuse me while I
wax philosophical.)
So when I ask
myself why I want to be a mother, why I am trying so hard to create a family, I
turn to the experiences of my life. And when I experience something that
adds another layer to living, I remind myself that this is why I want to have a
child.
Now, I am no
stranger to such trekking. My parents enriched my and my sister’s lives exponentially
with every summer they packed us up in the truck (small though it was, and
smaller though it seemed to get) and herded our little family in a general
direction. These two-week trips took us all over the western United
States. We hit the big ones – Yellowstone, Mount Rushmore, Disneyland,
the Golden Gate Bridge, and the Grand Canyon. And we stumbled upon the more
obscure – Dinosaur National Monument (VERY cool for the budding post-Jurassic
Park paleontologist), the Rocky Mountain Oyster Festival (quite fascinating and
extremely gross to the 6- and 10-year-olds), and serene Flathead Lake (soul food
for an introspective and moody adolescent who decided to pick up a camera one
day).
But we also
experienced the countless in-between moments – driving across Utah's Bonneville
Salt Flats at sunset, our feet hanging out the open truck window; or trying to
guess the mileage between points A and B along the incredibly sparse and
surprisingly long straight-stretches between Reno and Vegas; or escaping the
flash flood at that KOA in South Dakota, taking shelter in the Twilight Zone
rec room above the campground office; or the record Arizona heat toasting our
bread before we had time to make the sandwiches; and especially the countless
inside jokes we still laugh at from time to time (“Slow down!” and “Let me
out!” come to mind).
Let’s back up
even further. There is a minor phenomenon circulating Facebook world
these days – it is the “30 Days of What I’m Thankful for in November”
phenomenon. And as I’ve seen friends post their thoughts each morning, I have
noticed, without exception so far, that every beatitude comes down, at its
core, to family. When you’ve gotten lucky in family, what else is there,
really? And here is yet again, another bittersweetness for me. My
childhood was filled with family, and the older I get the more thankful I am for
that – and for them. I want to create a life that will one day look back and be
so grateful for its family and for the life its parents have crafted and
nurtured and pined for. What greater way to honor your family than to reflect
that love – that pumpkin-spice, cinnamon-stick, hot-chocolate comfort – onto
your own children. Pay it forward (can I use that cliché) and create a new
generation of happy, grateful human beings who will want to emanate life and
love around them. That is why I want to be a mother.
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So it comes back to these experiences – to living life interestingly. To knowing that my children will have full lives and all the opportunities I’ve been blessed with – if only we can achieve that final blessing. All in all, I’ve led a very rich 29 years and 2 months. And if I’ve learned anything, it’s that life is not meant to be spent in solitude. And life also should not end. Now, I’m not advocating immortality. But we should live on through the imprint we make on those we leave behind. It is my strong desire to leave my imprint on my child, as my parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, have left theirs on me. I want to create a life of happiness, fulfillment, opportunity, and pristine experience for someone new to this world. That is why I want to – need to – be a mother.
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