
Everyday as I move about my house I walk past crib parts. It has been many years since my one and only son (who is now 10) has slept on that mattress. But I haven’t been able to bring myself to give the crib away because I’m still holding onto hope that I might still have another baby.
You may be wondering why I walk past crib parts everyday.
Well, we don’t have a lot of storage in the old farmhouse where we live. So, we use our enclosed back porch to store what used to be in the garage or attic in our last home–including crib parts.
This porch also serves as a major thoroughfare in our home, so I end up walking past the crib parts many times a day.
Most of the time those crib parts fade into the background–the way things often do when you go past them everyday.
But sometimes a June bug will dive-bomb that way and call my attention to the crib parts. Or I might have to retrieve an item from that storage area and I’ll notice the crib parts idling there.
Even when I do notice them, I don’t always feel moved to write about them. But I noticed them today and it punctuated a lot of what has been on my mind lately.
With the Hobby Lobby verdict about contraception coverage becoming such an uproar, the idea of “conception” has been on my mind a lot.
As a differently-fertile American, I want to go on record as stating that I am pro-conception. My challenges in conceiving lead me to confusion–even lament–that contraception is considered “essential.”
I know, I know, family-planning is very personal and I’m not begrudging anyone the option of using contraceptives. All the same, having this issue in the center of public discourse has triggered a lot of feelings for me.
Added to that was the realization a couple weeks ago that it was 11 years ago this month that my son was conceived. I know the exact date of, um, the act that led to the conception because I was tracking everything fertility-related back then. As that “anniversary” came, my mood–my heart–sank.
Then, I was bummed when my “cycle” started last week. I started taking better care of myself and my cycles resumed last fall. So that made me think that maybe I might be able to have another baby.
So, I keep hoping that this will be the month my cycle doesn’t start on account of becoming pregnant!
Each time a new cycle starts it is a mix of good news and bad news.
It is good news that I am having regular cycles because when I wasn’t as healthy I wasn’t having my cycles.
But it is bad news because it means I’m not pregnant. Again.
So when I brushed up against the crib mattress today, I thought about the crib. And I thought about my ambivalence about having more kids.
I have thought many times about giving away the crib. I have slowly given away nearly everything baby-related over these 10 years of my son’s life.
But the crib is the single most expensive item and it was a gift from my mother, so I don’t take lightly the decision to give it away.
Several months ago I was ready—really ready—to find a new home for the crib.
I was sure I was done with babies. I was certain I was content with a family of three.
In fact, I was leaning toward thinking it would be better to not have any more kids.
I remember the first time I felt such certainty—such peace with the size of our family.
I shared this revelations with dear one who also faces fertility-challenges.
“I’ve been there,” she told me.
But I was confused because she still talked like she wanted more.
“No, I really mean it,” I assured her.
“I meant it too…then.”
“Oh, I’m really at peace with this. I’m sure I’m okay with a family of three.”
She tried to explain to me how she had gone from certainty to longing and back again more than once.
I thought to myself, “She can’t really have been certain.”
I’m sorry, dear friend. I’m so sorry I didn’t believe you—that I didn’t listen.
I couldn’t hear you then.
I had to protect my heart because if I really knew then that this longing would keep creeping up on me…well, I didn’t want to hear that. I couldn’t hear that. My heart couldn’t bear the thought of it.
And so, despite my “certainty,” I have held onto the crib. And in my longing I am glad—even when it is a painful reminder of how inconceivable another baby has been.
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