Tuesday, July 29, 2008

So Empty...

I had no idea that having my one and only child leave home could feel anything like this. I am not even a very good mother. I was never one to have prepared, healthy meals for my child on a routine basis. In fact a favorite line when she would say she was hungry was "Didn't I feed you just yesterday?". This has been like an amputation because I keep thinking that my "little moi" is still right here but I know she is not. I can't move around in my world anymore without feeling crippled.

Since she has left home I have had the splendid remembrances that must be similar to the crying, ancient person's memory telling them they are still Daddy's little girl. Memories so real they have snapped into my present like some weird elastic inchworm whose back legs have just hit up against the front legs, bringing with them what was. I remember lying on my bed in Hawaii and feeling her forming body in my belly and it was real. REAL. So strange to feel. Little bumps and protrusions moving underhand. My experience of this memory is as if it was yesterday afternoon.

I remember bringing her home from the hospital and wondering. Not even knowing what to wonder, but wondering nonetheless - a wandering wondering. Just a few days after we started our life together - her body outside of mine, I kept having the feeling of wanting to fling the bundle away. The bundle of this thing that must be schlepped! I can still feel how wrong and foreign it seemed that I had to carry this bundle around always. And this feeling in direct conflict with my commitment to wearing her in a baby sling as much as possible and providing nurturing contact.

It was an experience like many rights of passage for a female in my world. Dangling, bouncing, breasts that arise from wonderful, flat, secure flesh - feel so odd loosed upon our bodies and yet feel wrong snugged up in undergarments. A flow of menses let loose to stain our surroundings, to stain our clothing and leave a delta of bloody debris in our sacred space and yet to wear that peculiar object, the sanitary napkin, held in place by the odd belt with tortuous hardware - that also felt so wrong. My body becoming two bodies with such a strong, physical connection now cleaved by the departure of my girl. I know that it is the right thing to happen; it just feels so wrong.

Perhaps this is just my experience in this miraculous physical world. I have always felt as if it was all just a little to strange to trust completely and feel at one with. All of the extras. All of the extras that I have lined my nest(s) with. And now I have no fledgling in my nest and I am Raven of the Empty Nest. This is the only way I know to name the role at this time. How could I have missed out on having an inkling of what this would be like. I am so ill prepared. I look at other people whose children have flown and wonder how they can seem so happy and carefree. Childbirth was understandable and so reassuring to have that role of Mother thrust upon me with the bundle. But this me, this Raven of the Empty Nest - I don't know who she is...YET.

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