Muuss-ings

A space for the inner ramblings of Terri Muuss

Monday, October 03, 2016

For or Against

(With grateful acknowledgement to The BeZine where this was originally published. https://intothebardo.wordpress.com/portfolio/for-and-against/)

I’ve often compared social media to a knife. A knife is a tool and, in the right person’s hand, is extremely important. How could you cut your food, whittle wood, carve an ice sculpture or make a meal as effectively without it? However, every tool has a darker side. When in the wrong hands, a knife is a weapon, a weapon used to cause harm and injury. Social media is exactly like this. The wonders of social media are that it can bridge gaps in information, bring people to events, let us know about political uprisings in countries we would never hear about on mainstream news, and help us see the need for social action in acts of police brutality and miscarriages of justice. But social media has a darker side, too. It urges people to choose sides and limits information to soundbites, squeezing people into unfortunate allegiances. It can make our world smaller (and not in the good way), our opinions less nuanced, talking points more self-assured, self congratulatory and unwilling to listen, and can break the world up into “us”and “them.”

As a white, able-bodied, educated, cisgendered middle-class American, I am highly aware of my privilege in this world. I’m also aware of what it feels like to live in a world as both a woman and as a trauma survivor who identifies as bisexual and is deeply interested in intersectionality and how we can find our way through privilege and the whitewashing of history to find commonalities between us and those we do not understand because their experiences are so different from our own. The world needs less of the breaking down of facts and thoughts into absolutes and more of individuals listening to those who have walked walks we can never understand.

Recently, with these thoughts in mind, I constructed the following status for my Facebook wall:

What I am:
Against sexism and violence against women. Not against men.
Against police brutality/abuse of power. Not against police.
Against child abuse. Not against parents.
Against racism. Not against white people.
Against homophobia. Not against straight people.
Against extremism. Not against religion.
Against black and white thinking. Not against passion and integrity.
Against occupation/apartheid. Not against Israel.
Against blind patriotism. Not against the US.
Against capitalism. Not against people with money.

I believe deeply in the importance and possibility of seeing the nuances of issues and situations and speaking out against injustice without resorting to monolithic anthems. Critical thinking is paramount to finding truth, existing productively and civilly in a complex world and letting go of cognitive dissonance.



Wednesday, April 11, 2007

You can take the girl out of New York but ...


I am a proud New Yorker. By that I mean that I am a resident of the great N-Y-C, the Big Apple, one of the best and most visited cities in the world... New York City. I have lived in "The City" as we New Yorkers like to call it, for over 15 years now and, like any relationship that goes on for that long, The City and I have had our ups and downs. After all these years, I am still passionately in love with New York even if I am exhausted by the constant energy that it requires of me. It is like an abusive lover with whom you have great make-up sex; no matter how bad The City sometimes treats me, I know that I will always be lured back once again. The lows of New York can be REALLY low, but the highs... well, let's just say there is nothing like it anywhere on earth. There is a palpable energy in the everyday hustle and flow of the city streets. Yes, it can be dirty and loud and rude, but it can also be beautiful and euphoric and inspirational. Better people than I have written so many countless songs, poems, and tributes to this remarkable place (not to mention all the important movies that would never have been half as memorable without this City's landscape as its most vital character) that it feels pointless and unnecessary to espouse all of its virtues here. New York truly is a living breathing entity full of personality and faults and emotions. She is a bold chica with whom most people feel strongly about one way or another. There is very little room for middle ground or passive feelings while in New York City.

Like most of us living in New York City, calling myself a New Yorker has been a large part of my identity. I have felt more proud to say I was a New Yorker than I ever did to say I was an American. We New Yorkers take pride in our status as people living in the country's most unique and often photographed city. It is a currency that pays dividends anywhere we go and say where we are from. Being a New Yorker means having weathered extreme circumstances as if they were the most mundane everyday occurrences. For example, most of us New Yorkers have at some time:

-watched rats eat out of a city garbage can
-had someone steal our cab
-waited for over an hour for a much needed subway to arrive
-found a cockroach the size of a small bird in our bathtub
-fought a landlord over heat, hot water, rent or the like
-watched numerous "crazy" people talk to themselves on the street
-been flashed by some guy on the subway late at night
-lived in an apartment the size of a large walk in closet
-been sung or danced to in a subway car and asked repeatedly for money
-listened to two people scream profanities at each other on the street for all to hear
-packed ourselves into a subway car so tight that we have had numerous people we did not know touching us in places we wouldn't let someone we did know touch us
-witnessed or been a part of a violent crime

The list goes on and on. Yes, most of us have been through a whole hell of a lot in New York. We wear our battle wounds with pride and a shrug as if to say, "Well, if I can make it here I really CAN make it anywhere." We know whatever didn't kill us here has made us stronger and we strut a little anywhere else we go knowing what it means to say we are from New York City and how what we have experienced has changed us in ways that others wouldn't or couldn't understand.

I vividly remember the day in my early 20's when it hit me, walking in midtown Manhattan, that I lived in one of the greatest cities on earth and how I much I loved it and how it had in some way spoiled me for anywhere else. Even in my later 20's, after traveling the country and visiting all the biggest cities: Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Francisco, San Diego, Seattle, D.C., LA, Atlanta and the like, I remember thinking that there was nowhere else I would want to live in this vast country of ours. And so continued my love affair into my mid-thirties and my marriage and right up to the birth of my son.

A child changes life fast in The City. The car alarms and the crazy people that used to be merely annoying become overwhelming and exhausting, and the apartment that was considered "cozy" before quickly becomes unbelievably small. Before you know it, the suburbs of Long Island don't seem quite so bad. For me, the important and difficult decision to move from this City I love so much didn't come easily and I would probably have never even considered it save for my son, Rainer, but with him I yearned for more space and my husband home more. (He is gone 11 hours a day with his commute to work on Long Island.)

The scope of this giant transition is not lost on me and it has called into question my New Yorker identity, an identity so enmeshed with my personality that I have been left way-laid at the thought of who I will be after this move. To the rest of the world moving from New York City to Long Island 45 miles away is not that big of a deal. To New Yorkers, Long Island might as well be Alaska. The "bridge and tunnel" folks, as those from Long Island and New Jersey are known, are a source of consternation and the butt of many jokes by City Dwellers. So the question now presents itself, "Who will I be when the joke is on me?"

New Yorkers are not unlike ex-prisoners or career military people for whom life on the outside is just a little less colorful or meaningful or vibrant. For these people there is always a way to get re-arrested or re-deployed so as to stay in that continually adrenalized state. Similarly, the heightened conditions of The City force some into a perpetual state of overdrive that makes it hard to live anywhere where the pace is even a hair slower or the people just a tad less colorful. So how does one live a life on "the outside?" I guess with the realization that there is in fact LIFE on the outside.

For me the identity change from New Yorker to Long Island Suburbanite and the down-shifting to a less harried life in what I will now call, in the last vestiges of my denial, the "outer-outer boroughs" is a recognition that maybe life doesn't always need to be so intense or so crazed. I have come to the realization that I don't need those giant highs and lows to feel alive anymore and that I don't have to feel like a sell-out just because I have a back-yard or a space to grow some tomato plants. And maybe after enough time has passed and I have sufficiently let go of my old lover NYC, I can find another lover in my new town of Bay Shore. Sure, the intensity of our passion might not be the same, but it might also feel good to not be so battered all the time.

And when all is said and done, I will always be the girl who lived and breathed and ate New York City in all its glory and all its flaws. And as the Brooklyn born Gershwin once wrote, "They can't take that away from me."

Friday, March 09, 2007

I Love MY MIL!!!



When you think of the title "mother-in-law" your mind immediately goes to overblown sit-com characters, joke greeting cards, and late night comedian monologues. From the way the comedy world is structured, Polish people are stupid, women are all gossips, everyone's husband is lazy, and you can't like your mother-in-law. Needless to say, I think all that stereotyping is a load of hooey! (A quick shout out to my good friends Jacek, Julia and Kate - all from Poland and three of the coolest and brightest people I know!) So much hooey in fact, I am here to publicly state that I LOVE my mother-in-law!!! And what's not to love! She is bright, kind, wise, un-meddling, generous, supportive, and well, she loves me like a daughter, not an "IN-LAW". And I love her right back.

This is not a cold shoulder to my own mom. There is no substitute mommy thing going on here. None of the "My mom is mean to me so I have adopted my husband's mother" kind of thing. No, I love my own mother fervently and there is no replacement for her in my life. She is a rock star mom who is always there when I need her, just as generous, just as kind and loving. I just got this cool EXTRA present in my life in the form of my MIL and I couldn't be more grateful. I genuinely love doing things and spending time with her. My husband, son, and I even took an 8 day trip out west together with her and my also amazing father-in-law and we are in the process of a move into a two-family home with them both. When I tell people this, their eyes get wide for a moment until I add, "Oh, no, I love my in-laws. I'm excited about the move." "Really??" their eyes seem to say.

I've heard all the horror stories, read the articles in Vogue and Cosmo about dealing with the "difficult" mother-in-law, and I know how genuine that experience is for so many people. I just don't know what to say. I guess I'm lucky. Or, maybe luck has nothing to do with it. Maybe if you meet an awesome guy, like my husband, there is bound to be an awesome mom connected to him. Or - and I am not trying to give myself the credit here - I just never bought into the stereotype in the first place and made room for the possibility that we could have a great relationship.

Mostly, I think our relationship is a testament to her bravery as a parent. She was, from the very beginning, able to really let her son go into this marriage and never felt like she needed to compete with me for his love or affection. She knew that she didn't lose him to me, but rather that their relationship would shape-shift and flower into a different, more vital arena, one where their love for each other stayed the same and her role in his life could never be replaced, but that the day to day priorities in his life would have to.

I, for one, hope I have half as much of her grace and courage when my own son finds a partner.

Thursday, February 22, 2007

The Medicalization of Birth

To change the experience of childbirth means to change women's relationship to fear and powerlessness, to our bodies, to our children; it has far-reaching psychic and political implications.

-- Adrienne Rich, Of Woman Born, 1976





















Despite what many women have been conditioned to believe by the health care profession, birth is not a medical issue. Giving birth is a natural occurrence that the medical establishment has taken over to make money and disempower women. This makes me very angry.

Most people know a natural birth is better. Better for the mom's recovery, for the baby, for breastfeeding, for having your baby skin to skin ASAP after the birth (proven to lower blood pressure for both mom and baby and promote bonding), and the list goes on and on. And a midwife/doula birth is the best way to ensure having the natural birth you want. Midwifes have been helping women have natural births for millennia. They are the wise women and sages of the ages.

The story of my own labor and birth is not told how I originally envisioned it being told. I really wanted a natural birth and even labored at home till I was 8 cm before getting to the hospital.I instinctually knew that once I got there I could kiss good-bye all my best laid plans. Needless to say,I had a very unplanned C-section that I believe I did NOT need but because of hospital red tape was "forced" or at least bullied into having. I think this happens way too often in hospital settings and with doctors either because they are afraid of getting sued or because they don't get paid to sit around and watch you labor and sometimes just get tired of waiting. The hospital environment is in itself an unproductive place to advance your labor and give birth. Here are just some of the many reasons why:

1) Fetal Monitoring.
Hospitals demand that you put on a fetal monitor the minute that you get there; the problem with the fetal monitor is that if you're looking for something to be wrong you'll find it. They've done studies that prove that the rising rates of c-sections directly corresponds to the rising rates of fetal monitor usage. Fetal monitors hurt the way you labor, as they make it impossible for you to move around and squat - they force you instead to lay on your back. Which brings me to...

2)Lying on your back for most if not all of labor.
How can you use gravity to your advantage with birth if you are on your back?!! I mean come on, our bodies weren't meant to give birth laying on our backs - for ages women have been squatting, and there's a reason for that. It helps the baby move through the birth canal. A midwife allows you to give birth in any position you feel best, unlike doctors in a hospital setting who have been trained to deliver in only one position - the worst one for the woman.

3) The immediate and ubiquitous IV.
The minute you so much as sneeze in any hospital for any reason, they hook you up to an IV. I remember going to the emergency room for severe back pain and cramps that would later prove to be a bad UTI and the nurse giving me an immediate IV. I asked her why and what was wrong with me and she said they didn't know but regardless, I needed the IV. There are two major things wrong with an IV during labor and birth. One, the adrenaline of getting an IV slows your labor, as adrenaline stops the flow of oxytocin, which makes labor possible. And two, an IV even filled with just electrolytes and water to hydrate you is going to affect the baby's blood sugar level when they're born. Many hospitals will say after a baby's born, if they're over 8 lbs, that they need formula because their blood sugar can't handle just breast milk. Not only is that not true, but the blood sugar level dips because of the IV the mom received during labor.


4)Breastfeeding is affected negatively

Two of the La Leche principles that demonstrate the connection between hospital births or births with any drugs and breastfeeding problems are as follows:

a)Mother and baby need to be together early and often to establish a satisfying relationship and an adequate milk supply.

b)Alert and active participation by the mother in childbirth is a help in getting breastfeeding off to a good start.

How can these two things be allowed to happen within the hospital setting of tests, drugs, and doctor intervention. As my good friend Liz once wrote, "I think it's no coincidence that a lot of the scary birth stories that ended in horrible breastfeeding problems were births with lots of medical intervention. The birth stories that end with maternal satisfaction are the ones with little to no intervention." And hospitals can do nothing but intervene. Liz goes on to write, " OBGYN's are surgeons. And if there's one thing I've learned from watching SCRUBS it's that surgeons LLLLLLLOOOOOOOOOVVVVVVEEEEEE to perform surgery." Well said. You don't go to a hardware store for flowers. Why go to a surgeon for a natural, intervention-free birth!

For my next birth, I am planning a midwife VBAC (vaginal birth after c-section) at HOME. This is just my personal choice. For me, I see now that birth is NOT a medical issue but a natural thing. I know that home births are scary to some, but having been through a birth where all control was stripped from me, lived through the horrible dysfunctional world of the hospital - even armed with lots of information beforehand - I see that no matter how wonderful a doctor is, they still exist within the western medical system that is founded on treating birth and pregnancy as illnesses and women as too weak to handle them. I am choosing a home birth because it:

1) Allows labor and birth freedom

2) Promotes family bonding

3) Allows mother and infant bonding

4) Allows the mother to be more comfortable

5) Allows the baby to be more comfortable

6) Prevents unnecessary medical intervention

7) Promotes a less painful labor

8) Produces emotional well-being

9) Provides as much as or more safety than a hospital

10) Is much more convenient!

(reference- http://www.nchomebirth.com/art-whatMakesHBdiff.html)


I know that a home birth for many will not be their option. The next best thing after that... a midwife in a birthing center, although, birthing centers are in hospitals and do have the hospital culture still embedded deep in their philosophies and practices. If you are set on a hospital birth, then I just urge you to really check into your hospital. What is their C-section rate, their policy on skin to skin between mother and baby immediately after birth, even with a C- section, their position on breastfeeding, etc.? And then after you have carefully selected your hospital, get yourself a great doula! No one thinks they need a doula but with a hospital birth, they're imperative, as they're the only way to have a liaison/advocate between you and the bureaucracy of the hospital. I thought my husband and my mom could be my doula, but they just didn't have the savvy and the experience of the hospital situation to be able to advocate for me in the way that I needed during that heighten moment in my life.

If I can write one thing that people will take away with them, regardless of where they choose to give birth or how, it is to TRUST your body. You can have a drug-free birth if you want it. I'm not going to tell you that labor is a picnic - it isn't. But the minute it's over, you forget the pain, biologically and chemically. Your body doesn't allow you to remember it. My first birth experience was not at all what I wanted and I am still, 14 months later, in a mourning period over it. I mourn the c-section, the 4 hours before the nurses and doctor would let me hold my son saying I was "too tired", and the sterile hospital environment and all the crappy things that were said to me like, "Oh relax, you have your whole life to hold your baby!" I think it's appropriate to have some anger over the desire of the medical establishment to control women and their bodies. My biggest hope and wish for any pregnant woman is that regardless of how difficult, painful, or complicated your birth may be, that you have no regrets. I think that is more possible with a midwife and/or a doula. Again the wisdom of my friend Liz needs to be shared here. She recently wrote, "I strongly believe that just being a mother is being an activist. The little choices we make every day do shape our world. It can be really empowering."




some reference to check out:

Websites-
http://www.llli.org/llleaderweb/LV/LVFebMar04p11.html
http://www.babycenter.com/refcap/pregnancy/childbirth/168.html
http://www.gentlebirth.org/ronnie/homesafe.html
http://www.midwiferytoday.com/articles/homebirthchoice.asp
http://www.mothering.com/articles/pregnancy_birth/pregnancy_birth_main.html

Books-
Immaculate Deception II by Suzanne Arms
Ina May's Guide to Childbirth by Ina May Gaskin
Thinking Woman's Guide to a Better Birth by Henci Goer
The Nature of Birth and Breastfeeding by Michel Odent
Silent Knife by Nancy Wainer Cohen & Lois J. Estner
The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding - La Leche League International

Thursday, February 08, 2007

Soulmates in Cyberspace



My husband, Matthew, is my soulmate. Now, I know how trite and overused that word is nowadays, but he truly is mine. Yes, yes, I know all about the images in storybooks, the false "ever-afters" and the need to be rescued that trip up so many people in their pursuit of a life partner. I would never say that Matt "completes me" - that terrible Hollywood movie line that made millions of women sigh and perpetuated unhealthy beliefs in what a real and lasting relationship or marriage is based on. No, I know very well that no one person can be everything to another person and that one must be completly and fully in love with one's own self before ever even dreaming of fully loving and feeling complete with another person. I know all that stuff from Relationships 101, and thus do not use the word "soulmate" lightly.

I am a woman who has done tons of work on myself, had years of therapy, and gone through the hell of self-hatred and back to find out that I am a pretty interesting and inspiring person, with my own merits and my own accomplishments. So when I say that Matt and I are soulmates, I say it with the gravity and sobriety that those words carry. I mean to say that our souls are those that most mirror and connect to each other, making it possible for us to be our best selves when we are with each other and when we are in the world, souls unfettered by the shackles of jealousy, possession, and a need for control which dominate so many relationships.

The position of soulmate was not an easy one to fill in my life, believe you me! I spent years searching for someone with a similar mix of passion, artistry, humor, and sheer nerdiness to be able to walk with me down the road of marriage, children and an unknowable future. "Okay, okay... do tell," you say, "Just HOW did you meet this soulmate - the being who most makes your heart sing and ignites your secret dreams, desires, and passions???"

I met him on an internet dating site. Yes, unbelievable, but true.

Okay, so here's the story: I broke up with a guy that I was with for three years and really thought I would marry. I wasn't even interested in dating till a year later. The relationship and subsequent break up really snapped me in half. I had no interest in internet dating but so many close friends keep pushing me towards it. Even my therapist was in on it. So finally I thought, "What the heck... it can't hurt, and if nothing else it will shut them all up."

I started by putting my profile on Match.com and after about 15 minutes had over 65 responses. I was overwhelmed, but carefully and methodically narrowed the emails down. Slowly, I started having some phone conversations with a few of these suitors and then went on a BUNCH of dates. Okay, actually a slew of them. Now I was on a mission. I WOULD meet a soulmate! I would not rest. I would tire. I would drink pots and pots of peppermint tea and thwart many obnoxious advances just to be able to hold hands with the man who could be the father of my children.

After a while, I was going on so many dates that I had to keep note cards with the guy's name, job and relevant information on them so as to keep it all straight and not embarrass myself on the date. "Tonight is Bob. He is a musician. We talked about politics and favorite kinds of chewing gum on the phone last week," I would coach myself before entering the restaurant. Something had gone terribly wrong.

Needless to say, the dates were all bad. I am not exaggerating. I mean, really, really bad. One guy's only deep conversation was to ask me if I thought I was more like Ginger or Marianne on Gilligan's Island. I told him I was like the Professor. Next, there was the guy who after hearing I was a self-defense instructor, told me that he "could kick my ass if he wanted to." Then there was the man who reached across a table, took my hands in his own, and said, "For such a pretty girl, you have such ugly hands." Oh, there are many more such horror stories, but I will just leave it at that. You all have great imaginations, I'm sure. Those bad dates went on for about 3 months!!!

I changed internet dating services and checked out Dreammates.com. It was mostly the same thing for a while, except the guys and the dates weren't nightmares; they were just "not right for me" kinda guys. Maybe it was the site change or maybe my screening process had just gotten a bit better, I don't know. Either way I was still VERY defeated and about to give up. Soulmate on the internet? What was I thinking? I told an acquaintance of mine who had suggested the internet dating thing that I was taking my profile down. She said, "Terri, don't do it! Just wait two more weeks and if nothing happens then you can take it down. I have a feeling you are close to meeting someone special." I was like, "Yeah, right... meeting a psychopath!"

I don't know why I listened to her but I did, and a week later I got my future husband's email. We had a 100% match, and that wasn't even the half of it. We e-mailed back and forth, then we talked on the phone for hours. When we met for coffee for the first time, we talked for 8 hours straight. A friend of mine thought I was abducted or dead when she didn't hear back about how it went after the first two hours. Our next dates were 12-14 hours each, and this continued for 2 months until we finally HELD HANDS! By then we were already in love with each other so when the first kiss happened later that night... well, let me just say that "knees getting weak" is not just a metaphor for people in love. It is a reality.

I promise you that although I was searching for one, I never really believed deeply that soulmates existed until I met Matthew. It all sounds so corny I know, but now there's no doubt in my mind that they exist. Our first date was 6/1/03, first kiss 7/27/03, we were engaged 11/23/03, and married 8/21/04. And our beautiful son arrived on 12/15/06. Every day with my family is just an amazing gift. It is phenomenal to think about where I was and that I almost never met this man because I was going to give up or not even post on ad on-line. I can't imagine my life without him now.

I know many people are skeptical about on-line dating, and I think that is with some good reason. I know it is difficult, time consuming, and sometimes even costly. Going out to eat a few nights a week can take a toll on your budget for sure. I know also that there are a lot of "bad" dates out there in the way of meeting the "right" person. I know there are risks and vulnerabilities, but when you juxtapose it with the abundance of blessings and love and trust and true companionship that could be waiting there for you if you risk it, then it is a no-brainer. Really! If I can meet my soulmate, on-line no less, then truly anyone can. Most people know me as a very picky, intensely passionate, opinionated, and high-strung woman with a past full of bad relationships and some icky baggage. How liberating it is to be loved despite it all or, even better, because of it all. Matthew has taught me that.

On the eve of Valentine's Day - a holiday invented to sell greeting cards and stuffed bears and make single people want to jump off buildings - I say to all the singles out there desperate to find their soulmate, what do you really have to lose? A little dignity? A few Friday nights? Just make your profile honest and specific. Everyone is looking for someone who is nice and fun. Go deeper than that! Oh, and talk and/or e-mail with anyone BEFORE you agree to meet them. My only advice. Beyond that, try to stay positive and have fun. A soulmate in cyberspace? Anything is possible. Truly.

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Oh the places you'll nurse....



Hi all! Just back from a whirlwind tour of many western National Parks with my husband, in-laws, and one year old son. This trip just confirmed how much easier, stress-free and just out and out fun nursing a toddler is on the road. No bottles to bring, heat, or keep chilled. The milk is always fresh from the tap!

On this amazing trip, I was thinking about the diversity of places that I have been able to discretely nurse my hungry, tired, or fussy son. So here is a short list of places I have nursed... from the mundane to the picturesque...Enjoy!

PLACES I HAVE NURSED

1. in the airport
2. on the plane
3. at the Hoover Dam
4. in numerous hotel rooms
5. while hiking (in a sturdy, soft carrier)
6. on sofas
7. in restaurants
8. at the Grand Canyon during sunset, sunrise and the middle of the day
9. at Bryce, Zion, Arches, Canyonlands and many other National Parks or National Historical Sites
10. while typing this blog
11. while eating a grilled-cheese sandwich
12. in the park
13. in bed while sleeping
14. while writing emails to friends
15. anywhere my son was hungry, tired or fussy

I guess my purpose in writing this blog entry is to break the stereotype of the nursing mom who is chained to her sofa, unable to do anything except generate milk. I have felt so much freer to just grab my little guy, throw him in a front facing carrier and let him nurse happily while I go about the business... or in this trip's case... the recreation of my day. There is so much misinformation out there about breastfeeding; so many stories scaring women into believing that their body will not be enough ("you won't make enough milk", "It will be too hard, painful", etc) or that they will have no freedom. The truth is your body is more than enough and the freedom of nursing vast and filled with endless possibilities if you have the patience and creativity to persevere. In the final analysis, I guess I am just too damn lazy to deal with heating, mixing and maintaining the temperature of bottles. Viva La Boob!!!



Thursday, December 21, 2006

Zen and the art of breastfeeding



Most of my days are harried. There are always dishes to do, meals to make, diapers to change, phone calls to take, emails to send, and errands to run. Even the best and most enjoyable part of my day- the part that involves my son Rainer- can be exhausting. We play, we eat, we struggle to get down for naps, we read books, and he tries to redecorate the apartment while I follow him and try to put things back into place. I sometimes wish I had a pedometer to track all the walking I do in a single day just following him about. I bet you I walk the equivalent of 8 miles a day!

There is, however, one part of my day that is consistantly relaxing. So relaxing in fact that I can only compare it to a spa trip, a massage, the after sex glow or a shot of tequila(not that I have had any in the past ten years but I have a memory!). What is this amazing event? Nursing sessions. Yes, those few stolen moments with my crazy toddler when we sit in a darkened room, his body stretched across mine nursing are some of the most relaxed, spiritual, happy, and meditative parts of my day. I might go as far as to say of my life, as I am one of the most high-strung and constantly busy people I know. But it is that incredible. While nursing, I relax more deeply than I ever have, come to bigger realizations than I might have before, and am more centered and spiritually open than I thought possible for myself.

What makes this all happen? If I didn't know any better, I might assume that it was all just about rest, finally getting a second to sit in the dark and allow my body to come to repose. But I do know better. I know it is about much more than that. I know how magical breastfeeding really is in every way, including physiologically. Yes, breastfeeding in and of itself is a calming act. Sitting or lying down several times a day while you are snuggling the baby you love is sure to make even this hyperactive person slow down. But the most high-strung of us may need nature's other little benefit...the drugs. Oxytocin and prolactin anyone? They should market this stuff. I really don't know how mothers who don't nurse do it. I for one need those drugs daily.

Okay, this is the way it is described on breastfeeding.com. "Your baby's sucking stimulates nerve endings in the areolae, which send messages to your hypothalamus and pituitary gland (in your brain), causing them to start releasing oxytocin and prolactin, breastfeeding hormones that will begin to calm and relax you." Tell me that isn't cool?! Nature really knows what the hell she is doing!

So beyond the physical and emotional benefits- the bonding, the higher IQ points, the protection against allergies, asthma, eczema, gastroenteritis, ear infections, obesity and diabetes, and the antibodies which offer protection against tons of viruses- you also get the relaxation benefits too! I couldn't be happier.

So maybe the next time you hear someone say, "I need a drink" or "I need a vacation", you can tell them what they really need... to breastfeed! :)

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Rainer's third granny - an apple named Smith!




My son Rainer and I had a lovely morning together yesterday! We SHARED a granny smith apple! Nothing earth shattering or mind blowing... just apple sharing. It was very cute. After reading one of his books that has different kids dressed as adults in different professions, he flipped back to page two where the little "farmer" girl was eating an apple and smiled and pointed to her. Then he pointed at the apple and said "Yum" (a new word of his) and did this lip smacking sound that he does when he is hungry. I quickly got out a perfect organic granny smith apple and took a bite and made a sour face. This made him laugh and then he took it and bit into it and made HIS sour face and we both laughed. From then on he took bites and then held it for me to take bites while we read books and played. He shared this apple with me alternating bite for bite the whole time! When he would hold it for a long moment and forget about sharing, I would make MY lip smacking sound and he would give me more. It was simply the best! Might sound silly, but it really was.

Yesterday for the first time in a long while, I was just happy to be a mom and be home with him. I didn't need to be or do anything else. The dishes could stack up, the house could go to pot, and the emails stay unanswered. And I didn't feel the pressure I usually am surrounded by that tells me that I should be MORE than just a mom. That crazy voice that makes me feel as though I am not fully realizing some kind of potential or something. Yesterday, I could just enjoy him and enjoy the gift of being in the presence of this amazingly beautiful and open soul. What an important job I have! Raising a human being. I could just allow myself to feel happy and lucky and blessed to be with this child every day who teaches me so much. Will this feeling last? I don't know, but for now I have rediscovered that I am happy. I quess I always have been but just didn't allow myself to fully take it in and acknowledge it. As if I didn't have the right to be happy being 'just a mom." As I wrote that last line, Rainer blew a fart on my leg and laughed... guess that is my cue to go play again! Maybe this is how one gets their own childhood back.:-)

Tuesday, December 12, 2006

My son's one year birthday and reflections on the year


I know this will sound cliche or predicable or whatever, but I simply can't believe that my son will be one year old on Friday. It seems as though just yesterday I was carrying him home from the hospital in a green and orange striped hospital blanket listening to the sound of his breathing.

My son Rainer is just more than I could have ever imagined. He is vibrant, inquisitive, bright, funny, soulful... and mine. Well, as much as he can be anyone's. He truly is his own person, body and soul. I had been thinking about the connection of belonging and children one day after hearing so many moms in my circle of mommy friends refer to "my son" or "my daughter." I was thinking are they ever truly ours? I wrote this poem after thinking about all of this as he was sleeping for the first night in his own room.

2:06 AM

you are asleep
in the new room
across the hall
miles from me
while I caress the
impossibly flat shell
my belly
as
the great moon of your face
rises inside
the pool of my eyes

the minute you were
formed
a germ
floating in the
cosmic ocean
of my womb
you were
not mine

floating freely
you developed into
an element of the world
a fragmented
promise of yourself
surfacing ever so
gradually
away
from me
your mother

my child:
the prickly truth of
your becoming-
you were part of me
yet
never really were.

4/26/06

Well, until next time...