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Birth, Childbirth, children, creation, Evolution, Family, grandparents, inspiration, Live, Love, Mothers Day, parents, personal, rebirth, self-transformation
When my granddaughter was born my heart fell apart and I became a new thing.
We’re astounded again and again by the miracle of life, the birthing of a brand new being, although its occurrence is older than eons, as common as pollen dust carried on butterfly wings, more numerous than grains of sand washed by countless waves, more prolific than the bursting of billions of stars.
Even so, there’s something so breathtakingly tender and heartbreakingly sweet in the newly born. Each tiny finger, each soft sigh, each rose petal ear, seems a miracle that melts us.
How did she, how do we, come to be? Is there ever an end to our becoming? Was there a beginning?
“Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting,” writes Wordsworth in “Intimations of Immortality. “Not in utter nakedness, / But trailing clouds of glory do we come / From God, who is our home.”
This is but an echo of Shakespeare’s thought when he wrote “we are such stuff as dreams are made on: and our little life is rounded with a sleep.”
When the morning stars first sang together, did we sing with them, as scripture implies?
Is our “little life” the whole round of creation, beginning with the birth of the cosmos, as so beautifully imagined in the film The Tree of Life?
Do bursting stars and the splitting of a single human egg each set into motion a whole panorama of evolving life?
All I know is that the whole world was changed with the birth of this child. A whole new universe of possibilities opened up. Her birth forged bonds and relationships that will forever be a part of our becoming.
The birthing of a child is the rebirthing of man as a father, woman as mother, parents as grandparents. Another child becomes brother or sister, siblings become aunties and uncles. A whole new set of relationships and shared histories evolves.
No one is quite the same as before. Nothing will ever be again as it was. The whole universe is slightly skewed to make room for this one child and infinite number of changing possibilities that occurs with her birth.
They say the stirring of a butterfly wing can set into motion a string of events that lead to the creation of a hurricane of the other side of the planet. Surely the birth of a child must have an ever more stirring effect on the remaking of the world.
We live in a universe of relationships in which everything is connected to and influenced by its surroundings. We are all tumbling together in the wash of time and space, breaking against and polishing each other. Shedding what we were in becoming what we will be.
What if all we are is a constant becoming with no end in sight, with endless sights and sounds and relationships and experiences to sculpt and renew us? Birthing and rebirthing each other, over and over, ad infinitum, in potentia.
It’s not hard to imagine. After all, I remember not at all my time in my mother’s womb. Huge potions of my childhood self are largely forgotten, sloughed off as I became something new. The woman I was as a young lover, a new mother, I am no more.
The strands of my becoming are still unfolding, surprising me day by day, even as this newborn child breaks my heart and takes my breath away.
We hold each other in our gaze and see faraway in each other’s eyes our own evolving selves.
A brand new thing has burst upon the world in the birthing of my granddaughter, and nothing will be the same again.
But I cannot help believe that in some deep and unfathomable way she is not new at all. She has lain in wait in the womb of the universe, tucked away in the folds of time and space with the singing stars, quietly biding her time as the world evolved around her leading to the very moment when she emerged into our midst and recreated us anew, her very presence here a rebirthing of us all.
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Hello
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Hi back ☺️
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Hello 👋
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What a beautiful post and perspective on birth, life, and becoming. Welcoming a grandchild or child is a gift that I have not experienced. Congratulations Deborah.
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Thank you, Brad. That grandchild is eleven now, and still so precious, and so much fun watching her becoming the woman she’ll be one day, but always I hope carrying the child with her as she grows.
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Deborah,
This is so beautifully written and aptly titled! Perfect for Mother’s Day!
Congratulations! Becoming a parent, and now a grandparent, are truly magnificent milestones in one’s life. You’re right, your lives will never be the same. Sharing photos and this post are ways to memorialize it. Something your granddaughter may one day read and also relate to, and cherish, especially since it came from you.
BTW, I noticed a typo here where ‘of’ should be ‘on’ at the end of this sentence: “on the other side of the planet.”
They say the stirring of a butterfly wing can set into motion a string of events that lead to the creation of a hurricane of the other side of the planet.
Enjoy your extra special day today.
Ken
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Thank you, Ken! I hope she will read this someday. Also thank you for the typo heads-up. Always not so easy to catch. Hope you have a wonderful day too.
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Happiest Mother’s Day! 👩🌹♀️
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Hope your Mothers Day is wonderful too, Cindy.
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Lovely – and poignant. Your inclusion of Father & daughter newborn photos is especially .touching.
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Thank you Laura. I love those photos.
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This is beautiful, poetic and wise, the photos so expressive! The existential/metaphysical direction you’ve traveled in here resonates with my own worldview and intuitive sense. I love how you move with sweeping grace from the pollen on a butterfly’s wings to a tiny baby girl with the wisdom of the Universe in her being, to that Universe itself, the Whole being greater than the sum of Its parts. Magnificent!
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Thank you for these kind words, Camilla. I feel humbled. Sometimes the writing seems to bubble up from an inner spring and spill over. It’s the kind of writing I enjoy the most.
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It’s always best when it’s inspired, I agree!
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Poetic musings you’ve placed before us.
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“Ode: Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood” is one of the best poems ever written.
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I agree! I don’t turn to Wordsworth too often but always feel immensely rewarded when I do.
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Yes, I hope you enjoyed it.
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