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Glennon Melton

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One, Two, Three

Posted: 02/ 3/2012 9:37 am

ONE
The earth shakes when the doctor places your firstborn in your arms. Your love for him is colored by terror because you are positive that he is going to die with each passing minute. You bring him home understanding that the Universe has made a mistake, that someone more qualified, more motherly will show up to retrieve him soon. So while you wait, you play house for awhile. You hold him with trembling, clutching, sweaty hands. You still do. You do not trust that he will be able to navigate his world. You eye his doctors, his playmates, his teachers, even his grandparents with great suspicion. Will they be gentle enough with him? He is so sensitive.

What you really mean is: I am so sensitive. I'm like Lazarus, fresh from the tomb, eyes burning from the sun's brightness. I can't handle the ferocity and fragility of this new love. Please be careful with us.

You think if you just hold his hand tight enough, read the right books, choose the right foods, choose the right schools ... if you just hold your breath forever ... it'll be okay. You're not sure what that is anymore. Maybe okay means you'll succeed at keeping him and the world apart forever. Maybe it just means that you'll both survive this love, this love so intense it threatens to consume you both like a fire.

TWO
Holding your second, you become human again. You are elated and concerned. Your firstborn is replaced. You can't look at or listen to both of your babies at the same time. So you look at your baby while talking about your firstborn. You say, "hold on honey" far too many times. Your guilt is relentless. How will you convince them both that they are the center of your universe? This new angel seems like a stranger at first, and then your firstborn does. Suddenly he appears to be a giant. You wonder when he'll start pulling his weight already. You are worried you'll never find your balance. What is the right division of time, love, attention, fear, worry? And then, for the first time, you become concerned with how the juggling act you're attempting to perform looks to the world. Am I doing it right? Am I saying the right things? Am I buying the right diaper bag, house, car, invitations? Are they wearing the right clothes? Am I? Do I appear to be enjoying motherhood enough??

But then again, you have your moments, don't you? When they smile at each other, when he retrieves her toy, touches her hair, tickles her feet. When you hear two giggles coming from the family room for the first time. When you and your husband look at the two of them on the floor and exchange a glance that means -- look at what we did. We're doing it. We're making a family.

THREE
Then the third arrives. And as you hold her for the first time, you notice that your hands are steady. The all-consuming fire is gone. Love is just ... love. You don't feel threatened anymore by her or the world. Because all of a sudden you see in her teeny little face that she is the world, no need to protect her from herself. And you understand now that you're not her protector anyway, she has One of Those. You're just her teacher. You're just borrowing her for a little while. You decide not to spend so much of your precious time begging God to protect her from the world. Seems silly. Because she, God, the world, they are all mixed up together inside that pink skin. They are one in the same.

Then, as you count her impossibly tiny fingers with yours, you check your heart and find no guilt there. Because you understand that you are about to present your older children with the greatest gift of their lives. Who else but a sister travels with you from the start of life's path to the bitter end? And you know, now, that if the olders spend the next few months relearning that They're Not the Center of the Universe ... well, good then. It's an important thing to know, and it's a lesson best learned early. So there's another gift to them, courtesy of you, and this new littlest one.

By now, you understand that things will get tougher when she comes home. You will sweat even more at the grocery store. You will have less money to buy her the right things. You will look far less graceful at play dates. But you will care less. Because you have listened to and spoken to enough honest mothers to understand that we're all in this together. That there is no prize for most composed. So you've decided to stop making motherhood harder by pretending it's not hard.

Then you look down at her ... your third ... and you think: what's so different about you? But before you've even finished asking the question, you know the answer. And your heart says to hers: Oh. You're not different than the other two ... I'm different. I am learning how to love without so much fear. How to relax a bit, in this beautiful world. How to let go and trust. You are helping me breathe easier, you three. One at a time, and together.

Amma, you came to me and you said: It's okay, Mama. We're all going to be okay.

I didn't know that before you told me, baby girl. I really didn't know.

I love you, Amanda Nicole.

Glennons Child

 

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ONE The earth shakes when the doctor places your firstborn in your arms. Your love for him is colored by terror because you are positive that he is going to die with each passing minute. You bring him...
ONE The earth shakes when the doctor places your firstborn in your arms. Your love for him is colored by terror because you are positive that he is going to die with each passing minute. You bring him...
 
 
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03:43 AM on 03/31/2012
Expecting my 3rd. I'm 43.
04:18 PM on 02/27/2012
This was beautiful. As a mother of one, I could see myself so much in what you wrote, and I feel so hopeful that one day I'll get to "three", and maybe before having three children. Thank you for all your posts.
06:59 PM on 02/24/2012
Glad I am not the only one teary after this one - love this article :)
02:53 AM on 02/14/2012
This is one of the most beautiful articles I have ever read on HuffPo, brought tears to my eyes! Thanks for sharing your experience of motherhood, I'm glad to know I'm not alone in the way I feel!
01:49 PM on 02/11/2012
"We're all going to be ok....what about Henry Evers!!!???"
12:11 AM on 02/06/2012
Years ago, I read a little blurb which summed it all up perfectly.

The first child is made of bubbles, the second of china, and the third of rubber.
10:24 PM on 02/05/2012
I have 3 kids, a 14 year old, 7 year old and a 5 years old. My experience is sooo much like the author's experience. At this point my husband and I have let alot of our insecurities go and we are just Living and Loving our three Rugrats.
10:15 PM on 02/05/2012
Great! So true. I have four children. I was 19 when my first arrived. I was to totally terrified!!! Of course by the 4th I was a pro. My children are now 56, 55 52 and 46 years old. What memories this article brought back. Thanks.
09:34 PM on 02/05/2012
I have 3 kids. The first two are 2 years apart with the 3rd coming 4 years later. With the first, I was a little nervous--I read lots of books and relied on my teenage years of babysitting for guidance. When #2 came it was great--I was a pro. The only difference was that #1 spent a little more time with the grandparents to give me the relief in the early months of #2's life. When #3 came was the best. #1 and #2 were fairly self-sufficient by then and I didn't need the grandparents' help so much. #3 was not an attention hog and was a very good baby all around. I was well practiced by then and had all the answers to 'babycare 101'.
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hadafaone
09:19 PM on 02/05/2012
My first child is a liberal, I bought into the whole child, raise with confidence crap, you are smart, you are the best... and gave him everything he wanted... he is 24 and is still very needy and feels entitled.
My second child is a moderate.. since my oldest was used to the all the attention, she found her own way and needed little guidance. She is much stronger and more disciplined and may ask for loan, promptly paying back.
My third child is a conservative independent. So busy with 3, he is the most mature, organized and self sufficient and self reliant. He is definitely the old soul with plenty of wisdom just from watching his siblings.
I love my diversified family....
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madeye1
I cahoot with no one.
12:09 AM on 02/06/2012
That's crazy - you just described my family only the other way around, with my oldest being the conservative independent. Maybe that's why it's easy for me to see everybody's side.
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hadafaone
08:23 AM on 02/06/2012
:) Whether first or last... we love them right? Each bringing their beautiful and uniqueness to the forefront. And if we admit...we see a little of ourselves in them as well.
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dugandob
09:16 PM on 02/05/2012
By the time we got to our third, we knew that this would be out last. I do know that I made sure that I enjoyed each day as much as I could because I knew that our third would be our last. I loved being a full time mother. I know that some women enjoy working and being a mother, but for me I felt that I was put here on earth to be a mother. That was my gift to be as good a mother as I could be, and I think I was and am. I have no regrets, I was there for every little incident that took place in all our girls lives. Now they are grown and I feel a sense of Peace. Now I am in the Grandmother place and this is all new. I don't want to over step my boundaries, but I want to be there for all of them. I fill that my life has been full and that I have been Love Well. Wish that we could have had more children but I didn't have my first until I was almost 30 and I had problems getting pregnant. Their is ten years between our first and our youngest.
01:08 AM on 02/07/2012
I would love a third!! But am hesitant only b/c I feel too old...(going to be 38 in 3 months)....had my first at 32 and my second at 36......same thing....hard time getting pregnant.....what do you think? THX :D
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dugandob
09:21 AM on 02/07/2012
I think if you want another and you feel that you will have the energy and the money to have another, another child, by all means have another if you can conceive. I think the older I got the better mother I was. My sister in law had her last baby when she was 37. She had two girls and had always wanted another but had problems conceiving. She was going into surgery to have a hysterectomy because of tumors along her fallopian tubes and her ovaries Of course they always do a pregnancy test, and guess what she was pregnant. She thought that she would probably miscarry because she had miscarried several times. But this time she didn't their is 18 years between the last and the middle and 20 years between the first and the last. They have a wonderful family. Now the baby is in middle school.the oldest just got married, and the second just got engaged. Life is Beautiful.
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dancerctry
I love Gardening and Decorating
08:56 PM on 02/05/2012
I'm a NY GIants fan reading this in the middle of the super bowl after the Patriots got a second touchdown. I have an anxiety disorder and needed a distraction. Here's the irony....I'm much more nervous now then when my son was born, He's my only child. It took 2 years and 3 miscarriages to get him. I was pregnant unknowingly with the last Giants superbowl in 2008. I said "If the giants win I don't care if I'm pregnant" it had been 18 months of trying. I had my third miscarriage a few weeks later. We got pregnant 6 months later on the giants week off. He's 2 1/2. I wasn't nervous when he was born. I don't know why I am anxious,scared and worry a lot over other things. Funny, as I finish this the Giants are doing an encouraging drive. This is good preparation for his teen years. He's in preschool now and I suprisingly wasn't nervous about that either. In my case, I put my trust in God. I had to after those miscarriages and it's worked so far. This game might kill me though!!!
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madeye1
I cahoot with no one.
12:31 AM on 02/06/2012
Congratulations on the Giants win! I thought it was a great game!
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dancerctry
I love Gardening and Decorating
07:55 AM on 02/06/2012
At one point I got so nervous I actually cried, then they won. After reading this I did the only thing I could do, the same thing I did with my High risk pregnancy, labor and my son's whole life. I put my trust in God. I couldn't sleep last night (With General Anxiety Disorder your mind never shuts off anyway). It was a great game. Thanks. My son watched the whole thing (in a Bradshaw jersey of my husband's it's so cute he didn't want to take it off). He was mezmorised and handled the dramatic part better then me. It was like a horror movie at times and I can't watch those either!) Now we have the Yankees, Devils (Hockey he's named after Zach Parise), Nets (Basketball) and Red Bulls (Soccor).
08:55 PM on 02/05/2012
This was a wonderful story and made me cry. We have two children who are teenagers and are trying for a third. Becoming a mother to a newborn in my middle 30's I know will be totally different then when I had my first two. And I know when I look into that third babies eyes I will be thinking they are my entire world. Thanks so much for sharing your story. It really touched my heart!!
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madeye1
I cahoot with no one.
12:18 AM on 02/06/2012
My two older children were 12 and 9 when their baby sister was born, and I was mid-30's. At the beginning, it was like having the first all over again! But when she got older, I relaxed considerably. We were a lot more lenient with her. Cool thing is, they all three are doing a great job being adults!
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hman570
07:13 PM on 02/05/2012
First babies get all the attion, by the time you get to the secfond and third you have learned what to do and how to handle things better.
06:54 PM on 02/05/2012
I am on number 2 right now, just had my 2nd 4 months ago, and maybe another now! But have to say that this is already just like my life, I can remember looking at my wonderful, handsome husband and smiling while we watched our 2 boy's play!! My oldest almost 5 now!! But this story I don't think she is trying to relate to everyone but this is how a lot of mom's feel, I can relate!! Too cute! And wonderful to know I am not the only one whom goes through the things I do, because I can say am not proud of some of my actions, but I see they are not too bad that it's normal!! I am a GREAT mom!!