tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-35597532392460263952024-03-19T00:14:57.085-04:00The Happy Radishthe vegetable that inspired a lifestyleCaithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.comBlogger323125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-57121007501978912782024-03-17T22:13:00.000-04:002024-03-17T22:13:20.948-04:00Heard and Said<p> How old are they?</p><p>They're three and five.</p><p>Such fun ages.</p><p>Do you want to continue your pregnancy?</p><p>That's a ridiculous question.</p><p>I ask everyone that question.</p><p>You lied about your drug use.</p><p>I didn't lie.</p><p>I shouldn't have to fund her lifestyle.</p><p>I can't afford to take the kids out to dinner.</p><p>A kid's meal is 6.99.</p><p>Mama, I'm thinking thoughts <i>all the time.</i></p><p>Did you know that when a baby starts growing, it's the size of a blueberry?</p><p>I love you more than anything.</p><p>Stop playing with your fork, for the love of god.</p><p>I'm not screaming, I'm just sad.</p><p>I'm stepping down.</p><p>Is that mom or baby?</p><p>It's baby. It's in the seventies.</p><p>I don't want to go to Daddy's house ever again. He gives us time-outs there. But he's nice to us at the visitation center.</p><p>You resent me for things that aren't my responsibility.</p><p>Daddy thinks I'm a bad kid.</p><p>They were his responsibility, but they're not mine.</p><p>Come to room 309 stat</p><p>I'm coming.</p><p>Can I sleep in your bed tonight?</p><p>Everyone starts in their own bed.</p><p>Mama, I can only do the best that I can.</p><p>I'm sorry.</p><p>I'm so sorry.</p><p>Mama, are you sad?</p><p>The moon is moving.</p><p>No, the clouds are moving. The moon is standing still.</p><p>Kids only need one good parent. You know that, right?</p><p>I see water.</p><p>I see you.</p><p>You don't. Nobody does. </p>Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-87251503396284221072021-03-01T15:38:00.000-05:002021-03-01T15:38:05.065-05:00Marriage<p> The baby plays on the floor, contentedly, for how long, who can say. It's been seven minutes already. Maybe another four? Another seven? He bats a wooden crab furiously, his movements spastic, then determinedly scoots after it as it goes careening across the floor. "BA BA BA," he chortles. <i>Am I ignoring him, or fostering independent play? </i>I wonder to myself, the certainty of my mistakes is the answer, obviously, it always is. <i>If it's my fault, then it means I can fix it, </i>I patiently explain to my therapist during our weekly phone calls. Forty-five minutes each week, that I'm supposed to have to myself. Forty-five minutes, interrupted at least two or three times. The seven-year-old needs something from the room, or just wants to wave from the door. The two-year-old cries for me, wants a hug, a kiss. "Mama all done phone!" The baby is awake, needs to nurse. My thoughts, constantly interrupted, my therapist grows quiet on the other end of the line. <i>Are you there, Caitlin?</i> She is patient. I am embarrassed, infuriated, unsurprised. Then, for the rest of the day, I hear references to my "self-care" and the sacrifice involved in making it happen.</p><p>I am patient with the kids. I hold space for emotions, for tantrums. I take deep breaths. I get up with the baby three, four, six times a night. I am kind to my patients. I answer their questions about our ever-changing visitor policy and nod sympathetically while they tell me they can't believe they have to have this baby without their mother with them. I chat nicely with my coworkers, asking after their kids and their families, remembering names and ages of grandkids I have never met. I have nothing left for him. I disentangle his underwear from his pants, unball his filthy socks before putting them in the washing machine and the rage rises inside me like an erupting volcano, scaring me with its intensity. <i>I fucking asked him to stop doing this and he doesn't fucking listen. </i>I wipe up the coffee grounds he has left on the counter, again, and the rage gives way to absolute indifference, gone as quickly as it arose. <i>It doesn't matter. None of this matters. </i></p><p>I stand in the winter drizzle at the park with my best friend. Our boys run across the sopping empty playground and she says, <i>Maybe you can find a way to just coexist for the kids. Is that what you want? </i>Tears sting my eyes, unbidden, I blink as I unzip my parka to nurse the baby who looks just like him. <i>No</i>, I say, remembering the warmth of his solid form behind me in bed last night, <i>I want us to be okay.</i></p><p><br /></p>Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-11576553049745580232018-10-03T12:57:00.000-04:002018-10-03T12:57:01.336-04:00WaitingI go into your room periodically. I look around. I run my palm over the changing table and often there is a cat there, purring for a pat. The only thing missing are curtains, which I have ordered, but have not arrived yet. Hopefully you don't come out demanding curtains, but if you do, you are outta luck.<div>
<br /></div>
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I know you'll spend approximately zero time in your room at first, except to have your diaper changed. That's okay. I mostly set the room up for me. I look into your crib (which looks enormous, by the way, I feel like I could sleep in it if I weren't so hugely pregnant) and I can hardly fathom when you'll be a chunky toddler, sprawled out from corner to corner with your bum in the air. </div>
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I tap your bum a lot these days. It's one of my favorite parts of you. When you're shoving it into my ribs, I call it your squishy tushie and your dad laughs at me.</div>
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These last thirty-nine weeks have (mostly) flown by. I can't believe you will be here so soon! (Incidentally, any time you want to come out would be just fine. I'm getting a little tired of hefting you around, and having heartburn, and not sleeping, and peeing every hour.)</div>
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I watch you move inside me, and it never fails to make me smile. My belly jumps and bulges from your little knees and I'm not going to lie, it's not always comfortable. I told your dad that babies don't have kneecaps and it blew his mind. Don't be surprised if he inspects your knees when you come out.</div>
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I have dreams that you'll never be born. </div>
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The other night I dreamed I was a very tired bird who couldn't take off from the lake where I'd landed, and instead flapped and flailed in the water, waiting for some hungry creature to come make lunch out of me.</div>
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I texted your auntie about it the next day and she told me I was breaking her heart. <i>I wish you could see what everyone who loves you sees. You're going to birth your baby, I swear it. Have some faith in yourself.</i></div>
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<i><br /></i></div>
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I try to visualize you settling into my pelvis and labor starting and progressing and me not needing an induction and you eventually making your way into the world and despite my extremely overactive imagination, there are some things I just can't fathom. Maybe that's how everyone feels before they do it for the first time.</div>
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<br /></div>
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So I eat my dates every day, and drink my tea, and gently quell the anxious thoughts about induction and Cesareans, and I press my palms into your knobby bits when you're trying to stretch out in there and there's just not room for that.</div>
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You'll come out eventually, I tell myself. And then the real adventure begins.</div>
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Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-49992399713989320482018-06-09T18:40:00.002-04:002018-06-09T18:42:33.150-04:00The BeforeI waited weeks to feel you move. Weeks turned into months. I thought I didn't love you enough to feel you move. I thought it made some sort of cosmic sense, that I was too self-involved to be a mother, that I couldn't even know you were there.<br />
I <i>didn't </i>know you were there.<br />
I took a blood test at work before my period was even due, because I thought I had the flu and would make my decision about medication use accordingly.<br />
I called your dad from an empty patient room, told him quietly. We both were cautiously, measuredly happy. yay, we said, in lower case. No exclamation points. A month earlier I'd been bleeding your brother or sister into my pants at a Bon Iver concert. Life had marked us, casually, with one of its petty cruelties.<br />
I saw you on the ultrasound at six weeks, a tiny pulsing blob. I felt like I was watching someone else. I heard your heartbeat at ten weeks. I knew the risk of miscarriage was still 2.5%.<br />
At twelve weeks, I considered trying to love you, to believe you were real. I said a few words to you in the bathtub. I told some people at work about you.<br />
The next day, a patient came in at fifteen weeks along with her own baby dead inside her, and I pushed you out of my mind again.<br />
<i>There is nothing there.</i> It rang in my head as I'd try to fall asleep.<br />
I had to buy new clothes and borrow my friend's hand-me-downs. I told everyone else at work because I couldn't hide you anymore. It still felt like a lie.<br />
<i>Are you excited?! </i>people would say, <i>Yes, yes, so excited, of course</i>, I'd answer robotically with a fixed smile on my face.<br />
<i>There is nothing there, there is nothing there, there is nothing there.</i><br />
At seventeen weeks, I started expectantly laying with my hands on my belly at night. Well-meaning people at work insisted I "must" be feeling you by now. I felt nothing.<br />
We saw you on our ultrasound at nineteen weeks and your nose looks like mine. You tucked your arm behind your head, lounging.<br />
I let it go. I tried to stop worrying about you.<br />
Instead I worried about work, and my awful boss, and I argued with your dad about getting the living room painted.<br />
At twenty-two weeks exactly, I lay on the couch moping, and suddenly there you were. Unmistakably. Poking me from every which way. I laughed to myself. Watched my belly jump as you did one more spin, then settled down again.<br />
I texted your dad, and your aunties. I almost convinced myself I'd made it up, but you seem to enjoy your acrobatics now, so I don't stay convinced for long.<br />
<br />
I love you enough, by the way. I love you more than you'll ever know what to do with. I will go to the ends of the earth for you, turn myself inside out and break my heart in two for you. Just like every mother before me, and every mother since.<br />
<br />
Hang on, little boy. We can't wait to meet you.<br />
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<br />Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-75177249229055602952018-01-26T14:15:00.001-05:002018-01-26T14:15:01.846-05:00JanuaryI have a crack on my thumb, by the nail, on the right side, it radiates pain like a just-bumped bruise. In and out of lukewarm water, I wash my hands ten, fifteen, twenty times a day. Put lotion on, it starts to heal, wash my hands again, it opens up. It is miniscule. The tiniest annoyance. It feels enormous. I cradle my hand against my chest, thumb in, while I sleep. By morning it has healed. By lunchtime, it is red and oozing again.<br />
<br />
He lifts the electric kettle off before it has boiled. <i>You know, it shuts itself off when it's boiling</i>, I tell him. <i>Isn't water for coffee better just </i>before<i> it has boiled?</i> he asks. I look back blankly, a beat, two beats. <i>I don't know, </i>I tell him.<i> Do whatever you want.</i><br />
<br />
The patient starts yelling at me the second I open the door -<i> I saw what's written in my fucking chart! What the hell do you people know? You think you know me?! You don't fucking know me. I'm going to sue whoever fucking wrote that.</i><br />
My heart pounds. I oscillate - fear, rage, panic, despair. <i>Hi,</i> I say calmly, same as I always do. <i>My name is Caitlin, I'm one of the midwives.</i><br />
<i>Nice to fucking meet you</i>, she says. <i>Get that fucking thing out of my chart.</i><br />
This continues for five minutes. I stand up. I'm the picture of serenity. Inside, I am seething.<br />
<i>You can either reschedule this appointment, or you can work on calming down. I understand you're upset, but it's not okay for you to scream and swear at me.</i><br />
Miraculously, it works. She takes a breath. Apologizes. We listen to her baby. I'm forty minutes behind now. Later, her therapist calls our office - <i>what happened in her appointment? The patient is threatening to sue.</i><br />
<br />
I wake up every few hours all night long. Everything aches. By morning, my nose is running like a faucet, my lymph nodes are tender, and my throat is so sore I can't swallow. He gives me a hug as he leaves for work, kisses my forehead, tells me to feel better. <i>Don't leave, </i>I whisper. <i>Stay with me. </i>The lock clicks on his way out.<br />
<br />
My dad is sick. Again. An infection gone haywire. IV medications at home for two weeks. Something wrong with his left kidney, nobody knows why. Each day, a new complication and a change in plan. I walk the dog in the freezing cold, my words garbled because my cheeks are numb, I talk to my mom, <i>What can I do? Do you want me to come home? </i>Seven hours away is too far. There's nothing I can do. I shiver in the bath, my heart pounding while I grit my teeth and will it to slow down. Fear, rage, panic, despair, rinse, repeat.<br />
<br />
January is the longest month.<br />
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<br />Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-11118023754229902332017-12-07T21:52:00.000-05:002017-12-07T21:52:21.191-05:00Eight Days<i>My period is two days late</i>, I texted my friend, late last Monday night.<div>
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I took the test in her farmhouse bathroom, the door pushed open wide by the two-year-old grinning madly, saying, "Auntie peeing. Auntie pants off."</div>
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Two lines. One faint, but definitely there. I smiled and felt tears at the same time. "Fuck," I said out loud, and then laughed. She hugged me hard enough I lost my breath. Cried too. Laughed. <i>Our kids will be little together</i>. <i>You're going to be such a good mom.</i></div>
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I ached with the fear of how to tell him. This man I love so much. So much that I want nothing more than to have his accidental baby, and so much that I quake from the thought of thrusting this upon him, too soon, four months in, we barely know some things about each other. Other things, we know so well I can't remember a time before we were an us.</div>
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<i>We have to talk</i>, I texted him.</div>
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He brought my Christmas present with him. Thought I was breaking up with him. Wanted to give me my present even if I was.</div>
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Said, <i>wow. </i>Said, <i>Seriously? </i>Said, <i>That's amazing. A baby. </i>Our<i> baby.</i></div>
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<i><br /></i></div>
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I cried again. Told him I didn't want to ruin his life. That I didn't want him to stay because he felt like he had to. That I knew how complicated his life was and that I was so sorry this happened. He stopped me. Firmly. Held my face in his two hands so I had to look him in the eye. Told me not to ever say that about our baby. Told me we would figure it out. Said we'd work even harder to make things work because it wasn't just for us anymore. Took me out for ice cream. Kissed my belly.</div>
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* * *</div>
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It was the barest sweep of brown when I wiped. I used my midwife voice on myself, told myself everything I tell my patients.</div>
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Drove myself to the hospital while I cried on the phone with my friend and she sweet talked the lab technician into doing stat labs on me after hours.</div>
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Crawled under the covers. Hit refresh on my computer screen over and over again. Felt the taste of vomit in my throat when I saw the result. <i>Is that bad?</i> he asked me. I nodded. <i>Too low. Way too low.</i></div>
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<i><br /></i></div>
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We went to the concert anyway. My Christmas present - tickets to my favorite band, a sold-out show. Excited, raucous voices all around us, a hush falling as they start to play. I felt it start, felt the dark wet between my legs like it was my aching, gasping heart sloughing off instead of a uterine lining, a minuscule placenta, a cluster of cells. My baby. Our baby.</div>
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I can't stop the tears. He wipes my face with calloused hands, over and over. Tells me, <i>It's okay, it's okay, it's okay, it's going to be okay. </i>Clots oozing out of me, cramps doubling me over, leaving me breathless. Cracks in my shell spreading, joining, my liquid insides uncontained and spilling out, blurring into a wet ocean of despair. </div>
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The singalong portion of the evening. <i>The words are easy, </i>the artist says. The audience laughs. <i>Here, try it:</i></div>
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<br /></div>
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<i>What might have been lost?</i> </div>
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Louder. A chorus around us. His arms around me, holding my shattered shell together.</div>
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<i>What might have been lost?</i></div>
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The happiest eight days of my life.</div>
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<i>What might have been lost?</i></div>
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A cell cluster. </div>
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A baby.</div>
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Everything.</div>
Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-35878910319530691632017-08-29T22:17:00.000-04:002017-08-29T22:17:37.630-04:00DetailsI stood outside the bar, my heart beating shallow rapid pats beneath my sternum. The sky was gray and heavy, threatening rain. I was on the phone with my best friend's little sister, and I was very, very late. She had just been dumped, unceremoniously and casually, by her partner of <i>five years</i> only a week or so prior. So lately, we had been on the phone a lot, sometimes urgently as she cried, and sometimes in comfortable silence while we ate dinner and browsed the internet, separate but together even hundreds of miles apart. I say my best friend's little sister because it is factually accurate, but for all intents and purposes she is also <i>my</i> little sister and I love her fiercely. Given half an opportunity, I would unceremoniously and casually crush her ex's pinky fingers beneath my SUV before sitting him down for a good long chat. Unfortunately, time was not what I had to spare that night. She had called me when I was leaving my house, which meant I had thirty-three minutes to talk with her before arriving at my destination. At minute forty-four, my heart jogging along in my anxious chest, I tried to gently end the conversation.<br />
"Sweets, I'm so sorry, but I have to go. I have a...thing I have to go to." (In my head, I chanted - <i>don't say date, don't say date, don't say date. Nothing says "fuck you and your broken heart" quite like someone else going on a first date.</i>) "How about I call you after, if you're still awake, okay?" She agreed, and I hung up.<br />
I barreled into the bar. I was officially almost twenty minutes late. I was not fashionably late. I was inconsiderate-bitch late. The bar was crowded and yet I found his face in seconds. I remember thinking, <i>Whoah, </i>and then, <i>Shit, I wish I hadn't ruined this by being late.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
I apologized and flashed my most winning smile. He accepted, more graciously than I deserved, confidently ordered a water while I ordered a beer, and proceeded to enthrall me for the next two hours. In the car on my way home, I texted my best friend, <i>Call your sister. I was supposed to call her back but I'm busy ;)</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
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In the dark last night, I held our palms together, carefully lining up the fingers. I tell him how my brain is like a library card catalog, each drawer filled with hundreds of carefully printed white cards, all containing detailed information (much of it useless): here is one with all the lyrics to the Backstreet Boys song, "I Want It That Way;" here's one with a brownie recipe, here's one with the terrible things a nursing school preceptor said to me one dark Tuesday night in med-surg clinical in October 2012, etc, etc. I imagine either the vast swaths of more useful information I could hold, or the oasis of calm that might exist in there if I could stop remembering every little thing. He tells me his brain is like a 3-D web of ideas that connect to each other in complex ways, that the small clusters connect to bigger ones, and he can see how they all relate but when he zooms in close, it's like an impressionist painting that only makes sense from far away.</div>
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<i>I don't remember details, </i>he tells me. </div>
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<i>I can't remember anything </i>but <i>details, </i>I reply. </div>
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He drops his hand to my belly and I roll over, eyes heavy. <i>I think</i>, he says softly, <i>that between the two of us, we'll figure it out.</i></div>
Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-73688281891520589852017-07-15T21:45:00.002-04:002017-07-15T21:47:48.803-04:00The Dream<i>Gonna pack up and set aside maternity clothes for you...</i><br />
reads the text from my midwife friend and my heart does a swooping leap and dive that leaves me a little sick.<br />
<br />
I delivered her second baby a week ago yesterday. She is my anchor here, our friendship having grown like a sturdy little tree over the last two years, slowly but steadily, tiny leaves of vulnerability opening up between us over the weeks and months. Her first-born can say "Auntie" now, and then grins with pride, waiting for my reaction. He is mischievous and tow-headed and I love him fiercely. He rolled over on my yellow rug at four months old when she told me, <i>We're going to have another one</i>, after swearing up and down that she only wanted one child. I smiled, unsurprised. And waited another six months with her until they started trying again, consoling her gently when periods came and went. We would laugh, saying ruefully, <i>We know too much</i>, and it's true, we do - it is both agonizing and utterly unremarkable to be an expert in all things obstetrics and women's health and then to be a pawn of fate just like everybody else. It didn't take long. That sturdy toddler is twenty months old now, learned to say "baby" and kiss her belly, not a clue what was coming. She came in at 3 AM, <i>I didn't remember it hurt this fucking much</i>, got in the tub, held my hand, walked and rested and swore, tried to manage her own labor, stopped when I snapped at her, watched her baby's heart rate on the monitor till I turned it away, smiled at me in between contractions, said quietly, just once, <i>Don't leave</i>, and eventually, laughing, pushed for all of fifteen minutes and I wept, tears coursing down my face as I lifted up her second little tow-headed boy.<br />
<br />
We were walking in the woods near her house three months ago, the dogs skipping ahead. <i>I want to have a baby</i>, I said. <i>Maybe I'll just do it alone.</i> The words hung there, terrifying and raw. She didn't miss a beat. <i>I think that's great. Then our kids can be little together.</i><br />
<i><br /></i>
It's not what I pictured. I wanted the guy (or the girl) and the dog and the house and the chickens and the babies. It's not what I got, though. Cheryl Strayed gets it:<br />
<br />
"Oh, the dream. The goddamned man + baby dream....<br />
But please remember that the dream you have of finding a long-term romantic partner and having a baby is not just one dream. It's two. The partner dream and the baby dream are so intricately woven that you can be forgiven for thinking they're one. It's lovely if it <i>is</i> rolled up into one. It's more than lovely. It's convenient. It's conventional. It's economically advantageous. It's hella good when it's good.<br />
But it isn't what you have."<br />
<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
* * *</div>
<br />
I don't have it all worked out. I still don't know most of the answers to only some of the questions. But I'm starting to think that unconventional and inconvenient might be what I've got. Because I've also got friends like her, helping me along.Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-8465679705897175502017-05-20T17:56:00.001-04:002017-05-20T18:06:05.938-04:00SolitudeI decorated the porch for this apartment. It's on the third floor, and it faces south and west and the sun slants in, warm and quiet as the days grow steadily longer. It faces a tiny patch of grass and an alley and several other apartment buildings from which I can fairly often overhear people fighting, so it's nice, but, you know, it's also the kind of porch you get off the back wall of an affordable apartment. I put up twinkle lights and chairs and a little metal side table. I filled three pots with herbs and hung a planter and a thermometer with a cheery red needle. I almost never go out there. I don't sit in the chairs except briefly, sometimes, when I get back from a run. I have never, not once, plugged in the twinkle lights. I water the herbs and the planter out of habit. The porch feels like so many other things in my life - like a stupid naive field-of-dreams-type fantasy where I imagined that if I built it, they would come - "they" being someone to share this with. Someone to sit on the porch with me. Someone with whom to install a carseat safely into my sturdy, family-friendly SUV. Someone to eat the pile of leftovers sitting in my fridge until they rot.<br />
<br />
And yes, through it all, I am <i>fine</i>. Painfully so. I am really good at being alone. I cook healthy food and I pay all my bills and I work my ass off and never call in sick. I'm open and friendly to cashiers and patients and coworkers. I take the dog for hikes and I go to concerts and I go out to dinner and I go see movies in the theater and I read epic novels from the library and watch interesting shows on Netflix and I talk to my parents and I nurture my friendships and contemplate relearning Spanish - and I do it all alone.<br />
<br />
A colleague and I made small talk last night at a going away party. He asked me about why I take my dog to daycare thirty minutes away when I'm at work. I looked at him steadily. We've been friends for almost two years now. <i>Because there's no one else to take care of her for twenty-four hours at a time</i>, I said. He blushed. My perpetual singleness embarrassed him. He had married (way above his station) and had two beautiful children by the time he was my age.<br />
<br />
I told my therapist about Richard. About our relationship and how tumultuous it was, how I felt like I was always guessing at what to do and how to be. <i>Why did you stay with him for so long? </i>she asked me. For a lot of reasons, some of which I mentioned. But mostly because I worried - rightly, as it turned out - that he was my last shot at having a partner and a family on the approximate timeline I'd envisioned.<br />
<br />
I change the radio station in the car when love songs come on. I drag my dog into the bed with me most nights, bending myself around her warmth. I cry, briefly and hard and then stop, telling myself savagely, <i>The world doesn't owe you a partner. The world doesn't owe you a single fucking thing.</i>Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-32540609135448700622016-09-25T20:35:00.001-04:002016-09-25T20:37:43.876-04:00Moments<i>We look good together</i>, he says, laying his arm next to mine. His is like copper and milky coffee. I thought I was a little tan after this summer, but next to him, my skin practically glows, its luminescence seems to pulse.<br />
I feel his hand on my belly, and I think idly about how flat it used to be and isn't anymore. I ask him about the work he has to do tomorrow, we joke about the cat calmly sitting at the end of the bed, taking a bath. <i>Privacy is hard to come by around here</i>, I tell him. He doesn't seem to mind.<br />
<i>I like you</i>, he says, and bites my neck, just until it hurts, and then stops.<br />
<i>I like you too</i>, I tell him.<br />
He goes home. I go to sleep.<br />
<br />
The chlorine makes my nose twitch. It takes a total suspension of disbelief to get in, every time. It is good practice for work. I know how awful it will feel to get in, and still, I snap on my goggles and push off from the pool wall into the freezing cold. It is the worst thing I've ever felt and it lasts less than ten seconds, I'm already warmer as I stroke down the pool. Nothing feels as good as the first lap, slicing through the water, the fastest I'll be all day. Except maybe the last lap, worn out, my lungs raw, my mind blank but for <i>stroke, kick, breathe; stroke, kick, breathe. </i>It takes all my concentration to remember what lap I'm on, there is no room for anything else. <i>Eleven....eleven...eleven</i>, I chant with each out-breath, the bubbles streaming from my mouth and nose. And then, <i>twelve...twelve....twelve. </i>I am so tired when I get home, I fall into bed, my legs feel leaden and hollow and delicious.<br />
<br />
My midwife friend and I, we go to a festival today. It is the most New England affair - the sun is like whiskey and a few leaves fall. In the shade, I'm glad I wore a sweater. We wander through vendors selling handmade wool blankets, delicate watercolor paintings of local flora and fauna, we step over hula hoops left on the lawn for anyone to use. A ragtag group of dreadlocked people play something vaguely bluegrass-sounding, and all of a sudden, she remembers the massage slot she signed up for in the shiatsu tent. She hands me the baby and runs off. He sinks into my shoulder, gums his thumb, and hooks the other hand around my neck. We wander like this for twenty minutes, he is sleepy, sun-warmed, and content. It's been ten months like this, him and me. <i>Auntie Caitlin is here! </i>they cry to him when I come over and he grins, reaches for me, scoops out my beaten down heart and offers it back.Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-6036100127807191062016-07-09T11:39:00.000-04:002016-07-09T11:39:04.617-04:00Anywhere but here<div>
It is so hot, the air is like a blanket over the house, this town, this lush green valley. The fan whirs dully and the lurid, waxy dreams cling to me like sticky cobwebs as my mind tries to surface from sleep. My limbs are heavy and damp, there are hot animal bodies pressed into me as I fight to open my eyes against the effects of the sleeping pills that blur the shift from night to day. It feels like giving up, admitting to my doctor that I can't sleep, that the sounds of fetal heartbeats, <i>bump....bump.....bump</i>-ing along at sixty beats per minute, half the rate it should be, that this is the soundtrack of my nightmares, playing on repeat over a looping reel of blue, slick, flopping babies pulled from bodies, silent. </div>
<div>
She listens calmly, makes a case for therapy and hands me a prescription for Ambien, which I fill, defeated but exhausted.</div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<br /></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
* * *</div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<br /></div>
<div>
She'd just gone to the bathroom and as she climbed back into bed, the anesthesiologist was on his way, she wanted an epidural for this fourth baby's labor which was speeding along and leaving her breathless in its wake.</div>
<div>
The nurse moved the fetal monitor all over her belly, her eyes found mine and time started its elastic stretching and pulling. </div>
<div>
Seconds that lasted hours of silence and then occasional beats heard, way, way too slow. </div>
<div>
She's on her hands and knees now, head into the bed, the oxygen is cranking at 10L a minute, I hear the angry hiss and I feel like I'm floating as I hear my voice ask for gloves, I apologize as I fit my whole hand inside her, feeling for a cord and all I can feel is the baby, her cervix, fluid.</div>
<div>
<i>Call the team, page the OB, open the OR, </i>I hear my voice saying and there are four nurses now, we're wheeling the patient down the hall, she's on her back now, I pull her gown over her belly and feel silly for caring that the construction workers don't see her exposed because it will be the last thing she cares about if her baby is dead.</div>
<div>
</div>
<div>
Her eyes find mine and I tell her calmly that she needs to keep taking deep breaths and that she's being very cooperative and I'm so sorry that this is happening but that her baby is telling us he needs to be born this very moment and so that is what we're going to do. </div>
<div>
I scrub for half the suggested time, the OB is here, her eyes are piercing as she checks the patient and the scrub tech dumps an operating kit onto the table with a crashing clang, someone slops half a bottle of iodine on her belly and it splashes the floor and stains dark brown. <i>She's fully now</i>, the OB says and makes a split second decision and I'm holding her legs back, I put my arm under her head and say, <i>Now, you need to push like you've never pushed before. </i></div>
<div>
<i>Deep breath in, that's right, chin to your chest, push with everything you've got. </i></div>
<div>
<i>That's right, again, big breath in, no you're not contracting, we can't wait for the contractions, you've just got to push. </i></div>
<div>
<i>They're putting a vacuum on the baby's head to help you, come on, one more time, yes you can do this, I know you can. </i></div>
<div>
<i>Big breath in again, and now, GO, PUSH, NOW.</i></div>
<div>
<i><br /></i></div>
<div>
The baby takes a few tentative breaths and whimpers. I hold her hand and tell her calmly and quietly, <i>Can you hear that? That's your baby starting to cry. The pediatrician is making sure he's okay. You need a few stitches, so the doctor is going to give you some numbing medicine first. That's right, deep breaths, it's over now, you did it. You did such a good job.</i></div>
<div>
She looks up at me and the tears start in both eyes, running backwards into her ears on the operating table, she tells me with her words in a rush, <i>I am so glad you were here.</i></div>
<div>
I hug her, hard, her sister weeps into my shoulder and all I can think but would never say is, <i>I want to be anywhere but here.</i></div>
<div>
<i><br /></i></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<i>* * *</i></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<i><br /></i></div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
It's not entirely true, of course.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
I love being a midwife. Most of the time.</div>
<div style="text-align: left;">
But I wait, every time, for the time it doesn't end like this. </div>
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DISCLAIMER: whenever I tell work stories here, they are conglomerations of multiple patients and I change details such that the actual stories no longer resemble any one patient's individual story. Yeah, HIPAA.</div>
Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-73463454206411899372016-05-11T21:45:00.002-04:002016-05-11T21:48:22.899-04:00If it gets any worseI am awoken from a feverish dream regarding field hockey and a girl I worked with at camp two years ago whose photos I was stalking on Facebook the other day. The pager is unconcerned, it BEEP BEEP BEEPs with cheery insistence while I blink my scratchy eyes and read the text: She's thirty-nine weeks pregnant and wants to talk about some cramping she's having. I sigh a little internally, but note with relief that the migraine I've been nursing all day has retreated to a dull roar by my nap, which has also left me with damp cheeks and sweaty hair stuck to the side of my face. <i>It's gotta be eighty degrees in here with the sun peeking under the shade</i>, I think. I gulp water while I pull up the patient's chart and dial her number.<br />
She answers, breathless and tells me about having cramps "a few times an hour" for the past few hours and she doesn't know what that means, and it feels different than the cramps she was having the other day, and she doesn't think her water has broken, and most importantly - what should she do?!<br />
<br />
I speak slowly and calmly and we talk about all the things that are reassuring about her situation - about how she's not bleeding, and her bag of water is almost certainly intact, and it can be very, very normal to have some cramping and some contractions at thirty-nine weeks pregnant and the best thing she can do is drink fluids, and maybe take a bath, try to sleep, and wait for real labor to start.<br />
<br />
<i>So...you're telling me to just...wait? Wait for things to get worse? </i>She asks me, a little incredulous.<br />
<i>Yes,</i> I tell her gently. <i>You can call me back at any point if you feel worse or if you have questions. I'll be here all night.</i><br />
<br />
<div style="text-align: center;">
* * *</div>
<div style="text-align: center;">
<br /></div>
She hangs up and immediately my phone rings and it's my mom, telling me that the worst I had feared is true, that my dad's infection is not getting better, it's actually getting worse and that he's going to be admitted to the hospital for stronger antibiotics and so they can try to figure out what's going on.<i> </i><br />
<i><br /></i>
<i> </i>I was just there, I drove fourteen hours round-trip for a two day visit and it was worth every second and yet now I sit, three hundred miles away, feeling utterly helpless and missing them both so much that a lump rises in my throat even as I tell myself - calmly and rationally - that it's just a UTI gone haywire and ceftriaxone is a wonderful and effective drug and that the chances of him being fine and the chances my patient is not in labor are roughly equal (i.e., approaching one hundred percent).<br />
<br />
<i>So...I just need to be here. And wait. Hopefully for things to get better, not worse, </i>I tell myself, and I feel paralyzed. Stuck too far away from the people I love, but in a job I adore and a life that is starting to feel like a soft t-shirt that fits just right. <br />
<br />
The words are easy, I've already said them once today, to my patient earlier, and now to my dear mama - <i>I'll be here all night. Call me if it gets any worse.</i><br />
<br />
It feels like the most useless thing I've ever said.<i> </i><br />
<br />Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-55651811860654054842016-01-04T15:40:00.001-05:002016-01-04T15:40:28.864-05:00New Year's 2016<b>1. What did you do in 2015 that you had never done before?</b><br />
Worked as a midwife.<br />
Drove across the country (and back).<br />
Ended a relationship like an adult. <br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>2. Did you keep your new year's resolutions, and will you make more for next year?</b><br />
I had a goal of running a certain amount of miles in 2015 and nope, I didn't do this. I ran some when I was in Arizona, but I petered out, kinda how I always do. I am deep in the throes of trying to figure this out about myself - how to set goals wherein I celebrate the path of accomplishments on the way to complete "success," rather than going halfway or more and feeling like more of a failure than when I started. Helpful comments from the peanut gallery will be warmly welcomed. Please, I have no idea how to do this.<br />
<br />
<br />
<b>3. Did anyone close to you give birth?</b><br />
Yes! Two people! My good friend J. had a baby in July and I adore him and am aching now that they've moved to the West Coast but I am determined to go visit as often as I can. My new friend from work also had a baby in November, and while we are new friends (colleagues-becoming-friends?), her baby is a joy and I've been relishing all the time with them I can get.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>4. Did anyone close to you die?</b><br />
No, not this year.<br />
<br />
<b>5. What countries did you visit?</b><br />
The Navajo Nation is technically a sovereign nation, so...<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>6. What would you like to have in 2016 that you lacked in 2015?</b><br />
Rootedness. A sense of home. A love that nurtures and supports rather than criticizes and constrains.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>7. What dates from 2015 will remain etched into your memory and why?</b><br />
The day I drove away from Tuba City was a hard, but wonderful day. Breaking up with Richard was gut-wrenching and painful and ultimately a huge relief.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>8. What was your biggest achievement of the year?</b><br />
Graduating grad school, passing my boards, finding a job as a midwife were all big. But the biggest one was definitely the daily perseverance of being a new midwife. This shit is hard, guys.<br />
<br />
<b>9. What was your biggest failure?</b><br />
Failing to communicate my needs. Not planning for predictable troubles or difficulties ahead.<br />
<br />
<b>10. Did you suffer illness or injury?</b><br />
No, I've been (physically) lucky.<br />
<br />
<b>11. What was the best thing you bought?</b><br />
My car. Love it so much that I can nearly forget the pain of monthly payments.<br />
<br />
<b>12. Whose behavior merited celebration?</b><br />
My parents', more than ever. They picked me up and saved me, over and over again.<br />
My puppy's, smartest cutest dog in THE WORLD EVARRR. <br />
My new colleagues', who have wrapped me in love and support and curse words and bad jokes and endless reassurances that <i>yep, this shit sucks and you'll get through it. </i><br />
<br />
<b>13. Whose behavior made you appalled and depressed?</b><br />
Richard's, to some degree. My first MA landlord, for sure. Donald Trump's, as a general rule.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>14. Where did most of your money go?</b><br />
Yale. Moving expenses. Gas.<br />
<br />
<b>15. What did you get really, really excited about?</b><br />
Getting a puppy.<br />
Passing my boards.<br />
Getting a job.<br />
<br />
<b>16. What song will always remind you of 2015?</b><br />
Same Mistakes, by The Echo-Friendly <br />
<br />
<b>17. Compared to this time last year are you</b><br />
<b>a) happier or sadder?</b><br />
Happier in general, I think - I feel so grateful and relieved to be settled and working through the toughness of where I am. I am sad to be "alone" again, but working through that too. And I am riding the waves of intense and near-daily anxiety and coming to terms with what I have to do about that.<br />
<br /><b>b) thinner or fatter?</b><br />
Thinner. Perpetual anxiety has shaved about 10 pounds, seemingly permanently, off my frame. <br />
<br />
<b>c) richer or poorer?</b><br />
Well, I have an income now. But it all goes back to Yale, so who can really tell.<br />
<br />
<b>18. What do you wish you'd done more of?</b><br />
Running. Speaking freely. Sleeping. Standing up for myself.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>19. What do you wish you'd done less of?</b><br />
Procrastinating. Panicking. Driving. Staring at my phone.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>20. How did you spend Christmas?</b><br />
I worked. And caught a sweet Christmas baby right under the deadline, at 11:30 PM.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>21. Did you fall in love in 2015?</b><br />
I fell so dramatically and quickly out of love that it made my stomach hurt. Then I turned around and ached with the falling in love of my patients and their babies and this awful and wonderful and terrible job of mine.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>22. What was your favorite TV program?</b><br />I'm still working through Friends, in order, on Netflix. I'm in season 5 now.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>23. Do you hate anyone now that you didn't hate this time last year?</b><br />
I don't have the energy to hate anyone. Pretty much ever.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>24. What was the best book you read?</b><br />
Etta and Otto and Russell and James, by Emma Hooper<br />
Station Eleven, by Emily St. John Mandel<br />
Safekeeping, by Jessamyn Hope<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>25. What was your greatest musical discovery?</b><br />
I loved Brandi Carlile's new album. Also, without shame - Taylor Swift's 1989 album.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>26. What did you want and get?</b><br />
To be done with school.<br />
To be a midwife.<br />
A dog.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>27. What did you want and not get?</b><br />
A relationship that could become a partnership.<br />
<br />
<b>28. What was your favorite film of the year?</b><br />
I liked The Martian. I can't remember if I saw any other movies in theaters this year...<br />
<br />
<b>29. What did you do on your birthday and how old were you?</b><br />
I turned 27 in Arizona and felt more lonely than I ever had before.<br />
I worked, and I caught a baby girl and tried to convince them to name her after me.<br />
H. sent me a cake and Richard sent me nothing at all. <br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>30. What one thing would have made your year immeasurably more satisfying?</b><br />
Not being so far from the people I love.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>31. How would you describe your personal fashion concept in 2015?</b><br />
Less leggings, more pants. I also cut my hair pretty short just recently.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>32. What kept you sane?</b><br />
My pup. Hiking. New friends. H., always. My parents, forever. Baths.<br />
<br />
<b>33. What celebrity/public figure did you fancy the most?</b><br />
I'm a Bernie Sanders fan.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>34. What political issue stirred you the most?</b><br />
Always, women's access to healthcare and abortion rights.<br />
Our country's deplorable attitude towards refugees makes me sick.<br />
<br />
<b>35. Who did you miss?</b><br />
Richard, every single day, until abruptly, not at all.<br />
My family, like a fresh wound that never heals.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>36. Who was the best new person you met?</b><br />
All my new coworkers.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>37. Tell us a valuable life lesson you learned in 2015.</b><br />
You really don't need gloves on to catch a baby.<br />
Wine and peanut butter is a perfectly reasonable dinner.<br />
You deserve to be loved without hesitation, deeply, and kindly. In spite of - and maybe especially because of - how hard it is to love yourself in this way.<br />
You will fuck things up. And you will apologize, and do better the next time. <br />
Sobbing in the dark in the bathtub feels like shit, but it's better than the following alternatives: hard drugs, alcoholism, unsafe sex with strangers, binge eating and/or purging, quitting, breaking things, and online shopping when you have no money.<br />
<b><br /></b>
<b>38. Quote a song lyric that sums up the year.</b><br />
<i>I remember one night, a drizzling rain<br />Round my heart I felt an achin' pain<br />Fare thee well, oh honey, fare thee well.</i><br />
<br />
<a href="http://happyradishblog.blogspot.com/2015/01/new-years-2015.html">2015</a><br />
<a href="http://happyradishblog.blogspot.com/2014/01/new-years-2014.html">2014</a><br />
<a href="http://happyradishblog.blogspot.com/2013/01/new-years-2013.html">2013</a><br />
<a href="http://happyradishblog.blogspot.com/2012/01/new-years-2012.html">2012</a>Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-24173482859293757832015-12-24T19:58:00.002-05:002015-12-24T19:58:17.785-05:00Mary's MidwifeI hope that Mary had a midwife. I hope that when the innkeeper sent them to the barn, he woke up his sleeping grandmother or great-aunt, some wise woman who, maybe grumbling a little as she wiped the sleep from her eyes, sat up and got to work. I imagine her sending her dithering grandson of an innkeeper to start boiling some water and gathering herbs while she pulled on her sandals and headed to the barn.<br />
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I imagine Joseph, scared and uncertain, wringing his hands while his young wife was wracked with pain. I hope the midwife set him a task and squeezed his hand while she rolled up her sleeves. I am sure that she wiped Mary's brow and felt her belly and watched her face and told her to breathe.<br />
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I imagine her pushing firmly into Mary's lower back, swayed and rocked with her while shooing inquisitive animals out of the way. Maybe she held a cool cloth to her temples and wrapped Mary's fingers around her gnarled hand and told her to squeeze as hard as it hurt and then when it was over to breathe, just breathe, and rest until the next one.<br />
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I imagine how scared Mary must have been. Young as history predicts she would have been. Riding a donkey in early labor. In exile with a husband who she probably barely knew, running from the law and turned away from every door.<br />
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I hope that when she felt like she was being wrenched in half, and she called upon her God and heard nothing but the sound of her bones being ground to dust by the force inside her, the midwife looked into her eyes and told her she was safe, told her it was almost time for her baby to be born, and to be strong for just a little longer. I imagine her speaking the words that cross cultural and linguistic lines - <i>just give me one more push</i><br />
<i>you can do this</i><br />
<i>breathe now, deep breaths</i><br />
<i>it's almost over</i><br />
<i>this is the hardest part </i><br />
<i>here he comes</i><br />
<i>reach down, Mary, and take your baby.</i><br />
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Words that I say. Words I will probably say tomorrow. The words that midwives have been saying for millenia.<br />
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I don't even know if I believe in God. I believe in goodness, and being kind, but I can't wrap my head around some magical palace in the sky where we go to live when we die, that some people get into and some don't. But I do believe in birth. I believe in how it opens people, both literally and figuratively. I believe in the transformative power of doing the impossible task, of women being an island of one, the only person who can birth their baby, buoyed up by support and love and faith and warm hands and cool cloths. I believe in who I am when I am there. I believe in midwives, and partners, and mothers, always mothers. I believe that that which breaks us is the only thing that can truly heal the darkest parts of us. I believe that peace on earth begins with birth. <br />
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<i> Merry Christmas, everyone.</i>Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-66290072518645576162015-10-25T21:53:00.002-04:002015-10-25T22:15:41.336-04:00Can's and Can't'sThere are lots of things that I can't do. Ski, for instance. Run in high heels. Watch a scary movie without having a full-blown panic attack. Grocery shop without buying at least one thing not on the list. Finish a knitting project.<br />
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There's a whole other list of things that I can't imagine I could possibly do until I find myself doing them. Moving, for instance. Moving again, that is. (If you're keeping track at home, this is move number 5 in the last 11 months.) As I empty these rooms that I so recently put my stuff down in, I tell my brain <i>shhhh </i>and I turn up the volume on my audiobook. <i>It's no use getting upset about it, just keep loading up the car and moving your shit, and repeating steps 1 and 2 until you are out of here and into there and please god let this be the last time for awhile</i>, I tell myself.<br />
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I didn't think I could resolve a shoulder dystocia, either. In my head, I was screaming to myself, <i>I can't do this, oh my dear god, I canNOT do this, please oh please, let this not be my job, </i>and meanwhile I had told the patient to flip over, NOW, and stuck what felt like half my arm inside her and pulled her baby's hand past its shoulder hard enough that I thought I'd break it, all the while knowing that a broken arm is better than a dead baby and then out he flopped, wailing and snatching his arms away from me and it was over and nobody died, not even a little bit.<br />
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I still don't think I can live in this body, in this life, forever without always longing for something just outside myself. My patients, every. single. solitary. day, asking me, "Do you have kids?" and I say, <i>No, </i>and smile. I used to say, <i>Not yet</i>. <br />
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I look down at myself and squeeze a series of concentric circles on my palms and try to slow my breathing as I idly imagine what it would be like to not feel such an intense disconnect and dysmorphia with my own physical self. Would it be like the moments just before falling asleep, or just after having sex with someone you love, or right in the middle of a run - would it be like those moments but all, or most of the time, rather than these mere flashes of feeling right and whole? I am both wildly curious and utterly disregarding. It is so foreign to me, I cannot even imagine it.<br />
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But then again, I couldn't imagine moving again, or being a midwife, or driving across the country, or camping by myself, or living on a reservation, or ending a relationship without once begging to be taken back, or house-training a puppy, or stitching a repair, or a million other things that I have done, am doing, will do.<br />
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The running in heels, though. I don't really care if I never figure that out.Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-68965988662942887992015-10-01T19:26:00.002-04:002015-10-01T19:26:29.458-04:00One Month InI got to see an old college friend last night. She wants to be a midwife too, and so she went to my alma mater for an info session and then trekked even further north to grab a glass of wine together and camp out with me for the night. I had worked all day on the floor and I was beat. I caught a woman's baby who from the moment I walked in her room at 8:00 AM, I knew she was a survivor, and it was going to be a tough day. There is something so gut-wrenching about trying to help a woman who has survived sexual assault, abuse, and/or rape experience labor and birth and it will, I am sure, remain to my dying day one of the worst and hardest and most important parts of my job. It is exhausting and soul-sucking and deeply unsettling and scary, and a million times worse for her. By 8:00 PM, I wanted to lay down and die. She had had her baby, against huge odds, and I just wanted to go home. But I rallied and went and saw my dear friend and we drank wine and ate some french fries and even though I was so, so tired, I could feel my heart slowly filling by being with her.<br />
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She is so excited, and passionate, and worried she won't get into midwifery school, which I can only scoff at because she is at least doubly more qualified than I was, and I somehow managed to trick them into admitting me. I watched her gesticulate and talk faster and faster, with bright eyes and a big smile, about why she wants to do this with her life and what she thinks being a midwife means and is all about, and how desperately sick of waiting for this thing to start she is, and I thought, <i>wow</i>. Because that was <i>exactly </i>me, four years ago. To the absolute letter of it all. And even after the terribly hard day I had had, I felt such a swell of gratitude that I teared up a bit sitting in our old college haunt of a bar, in my clunky midwife clogs and giant wool sweater with my sweaty tangled hair tied up on top of my head.<br />
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I still can't believe that I get to do this thing, every day. This thing that is <i>so </i>hard but that I love so much. I am learning more than my brain feels it can hold, every minute of every day. I am grateful to have decades of being a midwife ahead of me (God willing), because it will take me three times as long as that to learn all there is to know.<br />
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I sit with women while they cry about how they don't know what to do, because this baby is not their husband's, and what should they do?!<br />
I look into women's eyes while they tell me I'm lying to them when I tell them, <i>give me one more push, she'll be here soon.</i><br />
I laugh with patients when they hear their growing baby's heartbeat for the first time, a sound so joyful that if all I heard was that for the rest of my days, I would die happy.<br />
I cry with patients when I tell them that their baby doesn't have a heartbeat anymore.<br />
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I come home to my empty house, snuggle my fur-babies while we all adjust to the single life, and I still, sometimes, feel like I want to curl up and die. But most of the time not. Most of the time, my heart is full of the sweet downy fur of baby heads and the bone-crushing grip of labor, and the love and support I can feel from the amazing colleagues who are mentoring and teaching me every day. I don't eat quite enough. I drink maybe a touch too much wine. I fall into bed, exhausted, every night. But I'm figuring it out. Slowly but surely, I'm finding my place here. It's a good place to be, and one I could barely have imagined four years ago.<br />
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I know, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that my friend will get into midwifery school. I know it with the same certainty that I know all babies come out and that you can always push a little harder than you think you can and that commanding a uterus to clamp down and <i>stop bleeding </i>is not something to laugh at. I know it because I did it. I know it because this world needs a lot of things, and one of those things is more midwives. <br />
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Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-39154754616287286452015-08-11T21:51:00.001-04:002015-08-11T21:51:31.726-04:00The Same MistakesWhen Richard and I had been dating for a couple months, we took an overnight trip to New York and went to the MOMA. I had never been, despite living there for two years, so I was excited to go. I was excited about this new guy I was dating, too - he was different than anyone I had ever known before, and I was giddy with the newness of dating someone post-Alix. I felt like an adult - Alix and I were so young when we were together, and this felt different. Look, we were going on a trip to New York! Like a day-long date! It felt like a big deal.<br />
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The museum was packed. We started on the top floor, and I wandered happily from painting to painting, reading the descriptors of some but not all of them. I would catch his eye periodically, and we caught up to each other before going down each subsequent floor. I was happy. Anxious, yes - mostly because of how crowded it was and because I was starving but still too freaked to eat in front of this new person (yes, really) - but happy. On the first floor, we sat down on a bench and I could feel the waves of tension and...anger? rolling off of him. I was perplexed. I asked him what he was upset about, I couldn't think of anything that had gone wrong. He turned to me and told me <i>When I asked you out today, I thought we'd be spending it <u>together</u>. You just walked around the whole museum without me and I just don't understand why you'd do that. </i>I was baffled. I stumbled through some messy mix of an apology and a defense of the fact that I usually just wander through museums and if he had wanted us to look at each painting together, he should have said something...? He was pissed. I clearly didn't care about spending time together. It was obvious that the point of going to a museum was to look at stuff together. I should have known that. I got pissed back. I said he needed to communicate something if he expected me to know what the hell he was thinking, that I wasn't a fucking mind reader and that if this was really something he was going to get bent out of shape over, then he could leave.<br />
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So he did. He got up, and he walked away. I sat in stunned silence on that bench, my heart pounding and my empty stomach now clenching with nausea. I took some deep breaths. <i>I'll call Jess, </i>I told myself. <i>I'll call Jess, and I'll go stay with her and Scott tonight, and I'll take the train back myself tomorrow. It'll be fine. I can do this. What the hell is wrong with him, wait, no, what the hell is wrong with me? Is this it? Are we done, him and me? I'm so confused. </i>I got up, prepared to walk out the door and head to Brooklyn. I felt better. I felt like maybe, just maybe, I had dodged a bullet.<br />
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But there he was. He'd turned around and walked back. He apologized. He said he shouldn't have left like that. I mumbled that it was okay and we went and ate lunch and we never spoke of it again.<br />
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He and I broke up about a week ago, after three years of communicating just as poorly as we'd done that day in New York. I loved him - I still love him - so fucking much. Every day now is a messy mix of anger, shock, depression, guilt, failure, and gut-wrenching loneliness. There is so much more to us, to him, than I've ever written here (out of respect for his and our privacy). There are deep and beautiful things about the person he is and the people we were together. And all those wonderful things couldn't trump the problems we had. His version of this story is undoubtedly different. That's part of the problem. The stories we each have - about who we are, about what we planned, about what's important - don't line up. They don't match. It hurts a lot right now and I miss him.</div>
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I feel like I'll never get this right. How can I love the people I love so deeply, and still keep fucking it up so profoundly?</div>
Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-8321058912116355762015-07-28T09:43:00.003-04:002015-07-28T09:43:34.767-04:00Moving. Again.Moving makes me act like a toddler. In Target last night, I saw a stuffed pirate octopus and commenced carrying it around the entire store before purchasing it. Don't ask me why I need a pirate octopus. You know the answer is that I don't. I think it's a coping mechanism for all of the strenuous adult-ing that moving requires. For instance, it's sunny and 91 degrees here in New Haven today. At 9 AM. The only thing enhancing the sweat that has already started collecting between my boobs is the cat hair that's adhered itself because Tucker is so anxious about the missing furniture and piles of boxes that he's attached himself to my person, in spite of the obnoxious heat. The effect is only improved by the reproachful looks he keeps giving me, as if it is my own personal failing that it is so warm and I am so sticky.<br />
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On the other hand, moving puts you in touch with all sorts of sympathetic souls. I went to U-Haul this morning to rent a dolly, thinking it'll vastly improve the experience of hauling my worldly possessions from a basement in this heat. The man said <i>Sure, we rent dollies, here, come with me.</i> He took me around back to a virtual breeding ground of dollies (U-Haul in a college town, eat your heart out.) and handed me one. I asked him how much and he smiled. <i>I'm trusting you not to steal it, so you can have it for free. </i>Seriously? I asked. <i>Seriously</i>, he said. <i>I take pity on you guys. Good luck with the move and bring it back when you're done. </i>I might be the first person to ever skip with a dolly.<br />
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The octopus, and the buckets of iced coffee, and the nice man with the dolly - it's all a distraction from how hollow my heart feels about leaving this place. I love this house. I love how the sun slants in through the playroom windows, how the toilet and tub are so close together you have to pee sitting sideways, how we'd stand over the heating vents in the winter and let the warm air whoosh up our pajamas. In spite of myself, I even love this town. I love the patients and families that tolerated my fumbles and missteps, the pizza places and markets we walked to hundreds of times, the trails and parks that wore down my sneakers with the many miles I ran. I love our neighbors, the little boy who calls me Auntie Cait and steals my heart with his towheaded grin. I love that I fell in love here, and that I can walk by the place he and I met ten times a day because it's quite literally around the corner. <br />
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I will miss this house. I will miss this home. And I will miss the girl I shared it with most of all.Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-49304344872505431762015-05-14T21:03:00.001-04:002015-05-14T21:03:04.727-04:00Growing ThingsHere in Connecticut, it is <i>so</i> green. So much is growing, and without effort. Frat houses have green lawns and the rhododendron that grows outside the crack den on the end of my street is covered in pink buds.<br />
It's also so humid. It's rained twice in two weeks. The sidewalks are damp afterward and my hair curls obnoxiously into a halo around my head. The dog steps warily around puddles and shakes excessively in the merest drizzle.<br />
I have to check the weather again. It is no longer 75-85 and sunny every day with a low of 45 at night. Three days ago I woke up sweating with the fan on full blast and this morning I woke up shivering under a pile of blankets. New England, what.<br />
I watched three cars run red lights during one errand this morning. Two people cut me off and a third honked maniacally when I signaled to turn left. Yesterday, a man yelled obscenities at me when I walked across the street in a crosswalk, with the light. He said something so nasty that it's not fit to print and made me gag a little bit. <i>For crossing the street.</i><br />
There is internet everywhere. And cell service. And cars. And people. Everywhere, there are people. There are men, catcalling and staring and so fucking obnoxious that I realize just how good I got at tuning them out before I left and didn't have to hear it once - not once! - for four months. I walk with my keys tucked back into my fist, sharp edges out. I walk quickly, with my gaze in the middle distance. I only let the dog say hello to dogs walked by women. I had forgotten, so briefly, what it is like to be a woman in this world. I was just an outsider in Arizona. I was an outsider, and I was white, and that was enough.<br />
I babysat my neighbor yesterday - two-and-a-half now, he is a muscle-y, squishy, tow-headed toddler who leaps into my lap for "a snuggly hug for Auntie Cait" and my eyes will not stop filling at every little thing. The man who handed me my cap and gown this morning at pick-up told me "Congratulations," and I almost burst into tears, again.<br />
It is both the biggest relief and the most enormous discomfort to be back here.<br />
Here where I also don't belong, where someone else is living in my room and I have to remember to shut the door when I'm peeing and oh yeah, flush afterwards. Here where the apartment is being shown every other day and every little thing reminds me that I am leaving, have already left, should never have come back.<br />
Here, though, where my dearest friends envelop me in tight hugs and eat nachos with me and tell me <i>it's okay that it was hard out there </i>and<i> you don't ever have to go back</i>.<br />
Who sit in endless dressing rooms in four different stores to help me find a graduation dress while I struggle to accept a body that has grown smaller again, except without me starving it, but simply by eating less takeout and hiking with a dog at 7,000 feet every day.<br />
I feel useless and uneasy and anxious and blessed. I drink iced coffee on the sun-warmed grass and the sheer abundance around me feels almost pornographic compared to the barrenness of where I have been.<br />
I feel like this has all been a sham, but then when I'm halfway between sleep and waking, I dream of babies. Heads emerging, mothers moaning, and the way my hands work separate from my brain now. Sure of themselves, flexing and easing life out, corralling pudgy slippery limbs and handing them over, her belly an oasis, her hands reaching. I may not belong here, but I surely belong there.<br />
I feel like a midwife.<br />
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<br />Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-45826159986274614892015-04-02T14:59:00.000-04:002015-04-02T14:59:01.846-04:00ThornsSometimes, everything here feels wrong. The plants are all so <i>sharp</i>. When I walk the trails to the reservoir, the spring winds blow sand into my eyes and my feet still slip and slide over the shifting dirt and I tramp through plants that leave me swearing in pain as they attach themselves to any exposed bit of soft fabric or skin.<br />
The effort it takes for all of us to survive out here is not lost on me.<br />
I feel for these plants, in their mindless effort to leave some mark on this world, even as I curse them and pull their thorny spikes from my continually scratched and bloody calves and palms.<br />
It feels like <i>work</i> to live here.<br />
It's rained once since I got here, and despite that, the reservoir seems to be ever more loosely contained by its banks and so even though I have walked the same paths for weeks, I'll occasionally find myself suddenly unmoored, looking around for a familiar scrub brush or boulder (spoiler alert: they mostly look the same to me) because the water has overtaken yet another path and forced me to tramp through yet more spiky, desperate plants and when I finally lift my sweaty head it is only to realize, yep, I'm lost again. <br />
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My car is on its last legs, a cruel joke I feel the universe is levying against me while I am 2,500 miles from all my worldly possessions and my former home and my school to which I must return in order to graduate and pass an enormously expensive test to be given the papers which legitimize this thing I've worked so hard to become.<br />
I skim an email from FedLoan Services while I speak on the phone with the mechanic. He tells me this next repair will be around $100 (the last was $500), but that my car will probably not last another six months. He recommends I start looking for a new car. I make noncommital noises of agreement while I try not to tally the amount of money I and my parents have poured into this car in the last year.<br />
FedLoan Services encourages me to perform my exit interview for the loans I have received so that I may know my "total loan commitment" and begin preparations for paying back the more than six figures I borrowed.<br />
I sip on a $4 cup of coffee that I bought in order to use the free wi-fi that doesn't extend to the reservation, and I am awash in the irony of the entire situation. It's so funny that I fight back tears and when I shift position, something unbearably sharp digs into my foot and I gasp. I reach down and pull a thorn out of my shoe and leave behind a flaming red spot of blood on my heel.<br />
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I think that I've learned to stop expecting things to be a certain way, but then I find myself exhausted by the seemingly endless labor a woman who is having her fifth baby endures. <i>There are no guarantees</i>, I tell myself while she shifts positions one more time, and I tell her, again, that I believe in her and that she can do this, and in my head, I ask God to <i>please, for the love of all your creation, turn this baby face-down</i>. She stands, and cries, and I rub her shoulders. She tries to pee, again, and I hand her ice water for a small sip. She sways, and cries some more, and I press hard into the small of her back, and it's been long enough that I need to call the doctor if we're no closer. She lays down, I check her again, I'm losing faith. She pushes twice more, the baby has turned and comes surging out, yelling on a wave of meconium-stained fluid and reaching, reaching for her mama and I am grateful, all over again, for this crazy place and this crazy job, and for the moments that make me forget the shambles my life feels like it's become.<br />
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<br />Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-7942472149124485812015-02-18T23:55:00.002-05:002015-02-18T23:55:18.410-05:00CopingWhen a woman is in hard, heavy labor, asking her what her pain level is is the equivalent of asking to be slapped. It's high. Really fucking high, and your stupid zero to ten pain scale doesn't really work for me, thanks very much. Instead, we ask her how she feels she is coping with her pain. It's the same idea, and yet the complete antithesis. Usually, people can tell you very genuinely how they feel they're coping, and it almost never has very much to do with how much objective pain they're experiencing. As a midwife, I spend a lot of time explaining labor pain prenatally, and trying to encourage women to let go of our evolutionarily honed reaction to pain (Run! Fight! Escape!) because <i>this</i> pain is different, and productive, and is bringing their baby closer to being in their arms. We talk about being in the moment, about being only in this contraction and then letting it go. Don't think about the ones that have already happened, or the ones ahead of you. Just be here now. And then sometimes, none of that works and a patient can't or won't push because it hurts just too, too much and I have to put on my no bullshit voice and say, "Yep, you're right. It does hurt. It hurts so, so much and you still need to push because that's the only way it's ever going to end." Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.<br />
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When people ask how I'm doing out here, it feels like the "what's your pain level" question and I don't know how to answer. <i>Shitty</i>, I think, or <i>It's fine</i> if I'm feeling polite. Some days, I'm too anxious to eat and my stomach is in knots until I walk out of the hospital and the knot loosens slightly, until I walk into this house that is not mine and so far from anything familiar and a new knot forms and I fall into bed, exhausted, at 8:00. My patient last week bled a bucket of blood while we watched, rivers pouring out of her while we tried everything we could to make it stop. A different patient had a baby after being raped by a friend and had a panic attack about going home because she couldn't wrap her head around loving this baby while hating how she came to be. A third patient spent forty-five minutes of her first prenatal appointment telling me why she hadn't presented for care until she was twenty-three weeks along, why none of her other five kids live with her, and why oxycodone is the only thing that works for her sciatica and how she really, really needed some more.<br />
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So I come home, after days like this, and I watch Netflix movies, and apply to jobs, and drink endless cups of hot tea. On my days off I drive to the canyon so I can lay in the sun on the warm rocks and read in the total silence but for bird calls. I drive with the window open and I take pictures of cows. I drink more tea. I make biscuits to go with my vegetable stew and then eat two bites of stew and two giant biscuits and then I'm full and have to wrap up the stew and tell myself I'll eat it tomorrow. I look for puppies on shelter websites and reread the cards and letters I've been sent, and feel them like warm hugs wrapped around me.<br />
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The pain is still there. The loneliness, the isolation, the unknowns, and the anxiety. But the coping is there too. I'm breathing through it all. I'm doing okay. Just don't ask me to rate it from zero to ten.<br />
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<br />Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-83735132277091043812015-02-08T01:45:00.001-05:002015-02-08T01:54:50.533-05:00Gaining Ground<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">
I turned 27 the other day. I told my sister on Skype the night before that there was no going back now, that "late twenties" is almost thirty and I just don't know how I feel about that. When do you stop having existential crises on your birthday? I'm genuinely curious. </div>
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I was trying to be very calm and matter of fact about being alone on my birthday which was all well and good until I just absolutely fell apart about it the night before and sobbed myself into a snotty mess for twenty minutes. Washing my face after and peeling my contacts off my red eyes, I knew that it wasn't really about my birthday at all, it was about being more deeply and achingly lonely than I've ever felt before, and something about the supposed significance of the following day was just clanging that particular bell.<br />
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It's an interesting space, existing in this loneliness. It's just here. It is here, and I am here, and we exist together, my loneliness and I. All that said, I am glad I am here. I am fiercely proud of taking this leap. Most days, I feel brave for doing this. Sometimes, I just feel like an idiot. And then I see things like mountains and the sky and I learn about a plant called "Mormon tea" and my mind unfolds a little bit more and the loneliness backs off just a touch.<br />
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I caught a baby girl on my birthday. I campaigned hard for them to name her after me, but no dice. I told her mama it was a good day to be born while she laughed as she saw my whole right leg was soaked in the wave of amniotic fluid that had followed her baby girl into the world. The next day in clinic, one of the midwives, upon hearing it had been my birthday the day before, began dissecting my personality via my star chart. Patients walked by the open door, charts piled up around us while she told me matter of factly that I was a chatterbox, that I had strong friendships, that while I was meant for a career in "birth, death, and transformations" (duh), I was also aloof and way too analytical. My loneliness makes me feel raw most of the time. I've lost a layer of buffering between me and subtle cruelties, and the tears welled in my eyes when she said I was aloof. <i>Am I? </i>I wondered. <i>Probably, I mean, she said so</i>.<br />
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I tried to tell the story like it was a funny little lark of a tale the next day, while I helped a different midwife pack up her UHaul to leave this place. I tried to say it all lightly, like I didn't care what she had said about me. "Aloof?" this other one asked skeptically. "I don't think you're aloof, if anything, I thought you were way too forward when I met you."<br />
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How do I keep forgetting how raw my edges are, before I open my mouth?<br />
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I slept, finally, last night. Today I spent a day doing homework in a sunshine-filled coffee shop, bought myself a scarf, ate pizza with a med student who leaves on Monday, but whose company has been a tiny anchor in this sandstorm. She sent me a <a href="http://markmanson.net/not-giving-a-fuck">12-minute read</a> about how to not give a fuck and I felt a weight lift from me when I read it tonight. I'm being more careful about where my fucks are given. Not to people who don't know me who say things that cut my tender edges. Not to this house that doesn't feel like home, but is ultimately temporary.<br />
To my patients, battling through their darkest moments in front of me - yes.<br />
To the puppy I might take home from this desert land - yes.<br />
To trying to find a job that pushes me and also respects me - fuck yes. <br />
To the people who love me from so far away, but whose kind words and gestures and gifts reach me even here - always yes.<br />
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Because this is all that I am.<br />
I exist in the space where it all bleeds together, the sand running in my bones, my edges sharp and raw, tender and bruised, healing back together stronger than before. I proudly own my thousands of imperfections and trace the seams of where I have put myself back together over and over again, badly broken by things much worse than idle words. Getting up, stubborn, coming here and ignoring their words, reserving my fucks to be given with care. This is 27.Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-85732993953055075862015-01-24T18:15:00.004-05:002015-01-29T01:14:50.822-05:00TrustThe dogs here are teaching me. They are teaching me that dogs are descendants of wolves and that until knowing these dogs, I have not really known dogs at all. They wander the Rez, in twos and threes, with dirty sandy fur and mats around the burrs stuck in their ruffled necks, their keen brown and blue eyes calculating me coolly, warily. We communicate through a series of agreed upon movements and gestures; words are meaningless. I squat down, turn my palms up and wait. They crawl towards me on dusty bellies and I rub under their chin and over their ears and they lick my chin and roll over in almost aggressive displays of submission. A few of them join me on my runs, usually. They find me on the trails, often so quiet behind me that they make me start when I look down and see their dark noses pushing into the backs of my knees. They run ahead of me, their white-tipped tails leading the way. They circle back around me when I have to walk, exhausted by the sandy, slippery trails and the 5,000 feet of elevation that my lungs are still protesting fiercely. If they are strays, they are smart ones, but mostly they are pets in the Navajo way of thinking. Only we crazy white people invite animals into our homes and into our beds. These dogs are animals. They are fed, and watered, and cared for, but they are not furniture-shredding, barking, insolent creatures. They are a self-sufficient pack, and they are teaching me a whole new order to the universe that depends sorely on paying attention. One wrong move, one tiny lip curl, one uplifted ear, and I could be seriously bitten out on the dark sandy trails. So I pay attention. And I learn body language like I've never learned it before.<br />
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I walk into clinic rooms and hospital rooms and feel my whiteness like I'm naked, like a brand on my face, like a sign around my neck. I am so cautious, I am constantly second-guessing what I say. I take deep breaths and speak quietly and try to tell myself that if I can figure out dog body language, I can do this too. The words feel strange in my mouth as I learn new ways to counsel and consent people that are all in the passive and third person voice. "A woman might ovulate and conceive a baby before her period returns. It can be difficult for a woman's body to become pregnant again so soon after she has had a baby. Would you like to hear about options a woman might have for birth control?" No, she would not. Not her body, and not her baby, certainly, because that's as good as inviting it to happen. So I shut up. And I give her condoms and Plan B and talk about lactational amenorrhea and do a breast exam without lifting her gown, learning to trust my hands more than my eyes in order to protect her modesty. I watch her face when I ask her, barely above a whisper, if she feels safe at home. Her husband is on the other side of the curtain, silent, holding their new baby. I look for the slightest twitch. "Yes," she says quietly and I move to the other breast. "What a beautiful baby," I say when we're done. Her husband smiles at me and nods. "Yes," she says simply.<br />
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I am learning to trust. I trust the dogs not to bite me. I trust my hands to find suspicious lumps without the aid of my eyes. I trust my voice to convey my intentions, even when my words are clumsy and wrong. Above all, I trust my patients and their deep and abiding ability to survive in this desolate and barren desert, their children loved and adorable, their hands worn and calloused, their eyes still bright and happy.<br />
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And the more I trust, the more I can see.<br />
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Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-88355767349971460062015-01-12T23:10:00.003-05:002015-01-12T23:10:28.043-05:00From East to WestDo you know how big the continental United States is? Because I'm learning. And it's enormous. It feels oceanic, glacial, expansive - I've run out of adjectives. The bigger it feels, the safer my car interior and my nightly hotel room boxes begin to seem. I sit for whole minutes in my car, the engine off, gathering my courage and my wits in order to get out and move my tiny insignificant self from one safe port to another and then back again. I have never filled and emptied my gas tank so much before (it feels). I'm still shocked every time that the nozzle clicks off and the total reads $19.01, $18.49, $15.12. The last time I remember seeing gas for $1.79/gallon, I was in high school.<br />
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Indiana and Illinois are the flattest things I have ever seen. I felt like an ant in a gymnasium. The horizon never seemed to move, and had my gas tank not been steadily emptying, I would have thought I was suspended in a floating, unmoving bubble rather than covering miles of ground.</div>
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Outside St. Louis, Missouri, I got into a fight with Siri. She was so calmly telling me to exit at an exit that wasn't there until, whoops, suddenly there it was and her crystal clear self telling me to "Exit now," was too much for me and I told her she was an idiot and that she needs to <i>warn</i> people <i>before</i> the exit, because that is <i>literally the point </i>of having Google Maps with navigation features. She told me to drive six miles further and get on I-44W another way and it worked so I calmed down and felt badly for yelling at her so I and asked her to tell me about the St. Louis arch and she placidly read me the (entire) Wikipedia page about it. (Dear Tom Hanks in Castaway, with Wilson - I understand you now.)</div>
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Illinois is home to the world's largest wind chimes. Betcha didn't know that was even a thing. Oh, but it is. And across the street from this gem - which, by the way, I pulled the rope for and made it chime and it was the single best moment of my day - is this other gem:<br />
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Coming soon! Maybe I'll catch it on my way back through.<br />
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The further south and west I go, the less and less variety there is on the radio. Christian music, country music, and Christian country music are my three options. The commercials are for tractor sales and during the news breaks, DJs discuss the price of soybean seed at the local auction house. I feel sometimes intensely foreign, like my bright blue Connecticut license plate is a kind of nakedness that I can't cover up. Other times, it just feels like a flatter, more expansive version of the farmland I grew up in. Then I'll see a hand-painted sign that says, "OBAMA LIES," or two billboards stacked on top of each other, the top demanding, "DO YOU KNOW JESUS?" with a phone number to call (<i>Hello, Jesus? Yes, I have some things I'd like to discuss with you...</i>), and the bottom directing me to the closest "ADULT SUPERCENTER STORE, 2 EXITS AHEAD." And then I feel naked again, with my HRC magnet and my Coexist bumper sticker, and I have to take deep breaths before leaving my car and remind myself sternly that by and large, people are good and kind and wish me no harm, and the dead bolt is locked, and my phone is charged, and I am safe, I am safe, I am safe.<br />
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<br />Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3559753239246026395.post-66082298365162020982015-01-01T12:00:00.000-05:002015-01-01T12:00:01.157-05:00New Year's 2015<h3 class="post-title entry-title">
New Year's 2015
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<b style="background-color: white; color: #4d4d4d; font-family: 'Trebuchet MS', Trebuchet, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; line-height: 1.4;">1. Wh</b><b style="background-color: white; color: #4d4d4d; font-family: 'Trebuchet MS', Trebuchet, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; line-height: 1.4;">at did you do in 2014 that you'd never done before?</b><br /><div class="post-body entry-content" style="background-color: white; color: #4d4d4d; font-family: 'Trebuchet MS', Trebuchet, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
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Caught babies.</div>
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Camp nursing.</div>
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Was more kind to myself than unkind (I probably was capable of this pre-adolescence, but it's been a long time, so I'm calling it a new development.)<br />
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<b style="line-height: 1.4;">2. Did you keep your new year’s resolutions, and will you make more for next year? </b></div>
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Last year, I said I would...</div>
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<i>1. Be consistent with fitness. </i>Short answer = no. Long answer = let's be honest, I'll always be working on this. I have a plan for 2015 that I'm not writing about because it'll jinx it. I'll write about it once it happens.</div>
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2. Nurture the relationships and friendships I am blessed with - stop
being lazy about Skype, phone calls, and emails to the people I care
about. </i>I think I did better with this. Communication is hard, but god if loneliness isn't harder. I had some rough times this summer, feeling so cut off and alone. But then I'd write a letter and inevitably, get something awesome in return. Richard, Hallie, my mom - they all wrote me fantastic, loving, hilarious letters and cards that brightened my days.</div>
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3. Less screen time. Books are awesome, even my textbooks.</i> I was definitely more proactive about turning screens off this year. I've been reading a bunch this break.</div>
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I need to give myself credit for other things I did this year that I never planned to:</div>
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1. My dentist scolded me, so now I consistently brush my teeth twice a day. And I floss every day (I've been doing that since I was a kid, but I know a lot of people don't, so I'm taking credit for that one, so there.)</div>
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2. My midwife scolded me, so now I take calcium every day. I also take magnesium, zinc, and melatonin to help me sleep and whether it's the placebo effect or not, it works more often than not.</div>
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3. I take my contacts out every night. Boom. No exceptions. My eyes love me.</div>
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Resolutions for 2015:</div>
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1. This running thing I can't tell you about.</div>
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2. Keep reading for fun, even when I'm busy.</div>
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3. Be patient. With Richard, with myself, with the world. <br />
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<b>3. Did anyone close to you give birth?</b><br /> </div>
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Yes! My oldest friend had a baby in April and <a href="http://happyradishblog.blogspot.com/2014/04/when-its-someone-you-love.html">it was magical</a>. Another close friend is due in July and I am all of the happy (and also all of the when-is-it-my-turn).<br />
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<b>4. Did anyone close to you die?</b></div>
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<b><br /></b>No, and for that I am grateful.<br />
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<b>5. What countries did you visit?</b><br />
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Not a damn one.</div>
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<b>6. What would you like to have in 2015 that you lacked in 2014?</b><br />
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I would really, really like (nay, need) to be working as a full-time midwife and be done with school. I would also like to live in the same place as my boyfriend. The long-distance thing is wearing me down.<br />
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<b>7. What dates from 2014 will remain etched upon your memory, and why?</b><br />
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March - went to a good college friend's wedding (the first from our friend group)</div>
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April 10 - Bailey was born</div>
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July - Bailey's mom - my oldest friend - gave me a week's notice about her wedding that I flew home to go to, and I am so glad I did.</div>
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November - had the shift I've been waiting for, left the hospital and cried happy tears in my car and remembered why I wanted to be a midwife in the first place </div>
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<b>8. What was your biggest achievement of the year?</b><br />
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Keeping going.<br />
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<b>9. What was your biggest failure?</b><br />
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Doubt. Scary, gut-swallowing, soul-eating doubt.</div>
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<b>10. Did you suffer illness or injury?</b><br />
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I had a bad cold over Thanksgiving. That was it.</div>
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<b>11. What was the best thing you bought?</b><br /> </div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Plane tickets to be with the people I loved - last-minute, planned, cross-country, whatever. My people matter. </div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>12. Whose behavior merited celebration?</b><br />
<br />
Richard, always. He keeps the faith when the floor falls out from beneath me.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
H., again. She knows the soggy rotting bottom of my hollowed-out heart.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
My parents, forever. They love me not in spite of my imperfections, but because of them.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
My patients, no matter their circumstances. Birthing babies is hard. Every one of them made it to the other side. </div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>13. Whose behavior made you appalled and depressed?</b></div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
I quietly unfriended a lot of people on FB this year. <br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<b> </b></div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<b>14. Where did most of your money go?</b><br />
<br />
Yale. Until I die.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>15. What did you get really, really, really excited about?</b><br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Catching babies.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Working as a nurse.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Being done with classes.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Looking ahead - with terror - to integration.<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>16. What song will always remind you of 2014?</b><br />
<br />
</div>
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"Middle Distance Runner," by Sea Wolf</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>17. Compared to this time last year, are you: a) happier or sadder?</b><br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Little of both. I'm happy about the possibilities the future holds, but I am sad to be moving so quickly away from the past that I know and love.<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>b) thinner or fatter?</b><br />
<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Maybe a little fatter? Don't really know.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>c) richer or poorer?</b><br />
<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Poorer. Always.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>18. What do you wish you’d done more of?</b><br />
<br />Breathing very slowly. Running very fast. Sleeping. Swimming. Loving without expectations.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<b>19. What do you wish you’d done less of?</b><br />
<br />Getting angry. Doubting. Eating takeout. Worrying about the future.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>20. How did you spend Christmas?</b><br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Here on the lake at my parents'. Richard came for a few days, and I remembered that home is how his chin fits on my shoulder, not in an empty room in New Haven.<br />
<br />
<b>21. Did you fall in love in 2014?</b><br />
<br />
Every day, for the rest of my life.<br />
<br />
<b>22. What was your favorite TV program?</b></div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
I watched a lot of Gilmore Girls with H., some Grey's Anatomy, and some Biggest Loser. I also went on a 2-week SVU binge that gave me nightmares every night so I had to stop.<br />
<b> </b></div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<b>23. Do you hate anyone now that you didn’t hate this time last year?</b><br />
<br />
No, but I did have someone tell me this year that I was a terrible, cruel person. I consider it a personal accomplishment that I don't hate them.<br />
<br />
<b>24. What was the best book you read?</b><br />
<br />
Being Mortal, by Atul Gawande</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Still Points North, by Leigh Newman</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Far From the Tree, by Andrew Solomon</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>25. What was your greatest musical discovery?</b><br />
<br />
Radical Face<br />
<br />
<b>26. What did you want and get?</b><br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Being almost done with this grad school thing.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Another year with the one I love.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
My parents' health.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>27. What did you want and not get?</b><br />
<br />
A baby, still.<br />
<br />
<b>28. What was your favorite film of this year?</b><br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Mockingjay, Part 1 was fun.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
The Fault in Our Stars left me gasping through sobs. But in a good way!<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>29. What did you do on your birthday, and how old were you?</b><br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
I turned 26 and skipped clinical, flush with the knowledge that this is the last year of my life that I can even remotely do something like that. My mom and aunt came to visit the next weekend and I loved showing them around New Haven. I felt exactly the same as 25 and I missed Richard in a way that felt like a bitter taste in my mouth.<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>30. What one thing would have made your year immeasurably more satisfying?</b><br />
<br />
Seeing Richard more.<br />
<br />
<b>31. How would you describe your personal fashion concept in 2014?</b><br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
This was the summer of blue camp shirts and wearing the same pair of shorts for four days in a row. The rest of the time, I wore a lot of sweaters and boots and scarves.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>32. What kept you sane?</b><br /> </div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
The cats. Richard. Hallie. My family. When babies cry right away. Sleep. </div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>33. Which celebrity/public figure did you fancy the most?</b><br />
<br />
The new <a href="http://www.nice.org.uk/news/article/midwife-led-units-safest-for-straightforward-births">NICE guidelines</a> that recommend out-of-hospital, midwife-attended birth for healthy women! (So I know this is a stretch, but I'm admiring the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and calling it a celebrity/public figure.)</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br /></div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<b>34. What political issue stirred you the most?</b><br />
<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
I was stirred, in multiple and complex ways, by the deaths and court cases this year (Michael Brown, Eric Garner).</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>35. Who did you miss?</b><br />
<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Richard, every damn day. </div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>36. Who was the best new person you met?</b><br />
<br />
Bailey. She was so brand new, we were all thrilled to meet her.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
<b>37. Tell us a valuable life lesson you learned in 2014.</b><br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
The perineum is sometimes shorter than you think it is.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
If you think a mom sounds grunty and like she's pushing, you should trust yourself.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Babies come out. Big babies, little moms, crazy midwives - doesn't matter. Babies come out.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
You'll know when it's a hemorrhage.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Exercise helps with bad feelings.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
There are unknowable depths to the people we love. This is a good thing.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Never underestimate the power of an ice pack.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
How we die matters just as much as how we are born.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
It's okay to be scared.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<b>38. Quote a song lyric that sums up your year.</b></div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<br />
Ships are launching from my chest<br />
Some have names but most do not<br />
If you find one, please let me know what piece I've lost.</div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
</div>
<br /><div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
Long post! Congrats if you got through it all!<br />
<br />
<i>Here's to a happy, healthy 2015 for us all!</i><br />
<i></i></div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<i></i></div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<i><br /></i><a href="http://happyradishblog.blogspot.com/2014/01/new-years-2014.html">New Year's 2014</a></div>
<div class="post-body entry-content" style="line-height: 1.4; position: relative; width: 648px;">
<a href="http://happyradishblog.blogspot.com/2013/01/new-years-2013.html">New Year's 2013</a><br />
<a href="http://happyradishblog.blogspot.com/2012/01/new-years-2012.html">New Year's 2012</a></div>
</div>
</div>
<span class="post-author vcard"></span>Caithttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00957920877842979647noreply@blogger.com2