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Staceyann Chin

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Baby, Love and Going Home

Posted: 10/03/11 07:15 PM ET

I'm writing this from my hospital bed in New York City, encased by two sturdy, raised, side bedrails and a rolling tray with ginger ale, orange gelatin, (whatever that is) and some beef broth I know from experience tastes like day-old bathwater. My glasses are somewhere around, perhaps buried in the rumpled white sheets I have managed to tangle round and round and round my bare restless legs. I am wearing the stylish, backless, cotton gown they give everyone to wear when they are admitted. Too lazy to search for the glasses, I'm squinting at the computer screen and trying not to feel sorry for myself. After all, I did this. I chose this lonely, single path to motherhood. And regardless of how certain I feel most of the time, I can't escape these moments when I am overwhelmed by the many obstacles I continue to face as I press forward, pregnant and without a partner.

This is my sixth visit to the hospital in three weeks. The nurses on duty have become old friends. We greet each other by name when I arrive at the Labor and Delivery ward at 4 a.m. or midnight or 10 in the morning or 5 o'clock on a Saturday afternoon. We make light of my knowing the routine. They rub my feet and remind me that they last told me not to come back until I am at least 35 weeks along. We all laugh, but we all know how critical it is that I come in when there is blood or contractions or any of the 900 things that can go wrong when you are in the process of making another human being to deposit onto the planet we are so rapidly trying to destroy with the amount of plastic and oil and chemicals we pump into it everyday.

It is almost midnight. I cannot sleep and I am weak with loneliness.

One set of friends dropped me off yesterday. Another will pick me up tomorrow. Yet another will spend the night to make sure if the blood gushes again in the dark I will have company to make the hurried but familiar trip to the hospital. They all make me food. Some do it well, while others can only be thanked for making the effort. No one is doing this because they have loads of time to spare. It is a labor of love, and hard sacrifices. So I only have them in patches. No one is here all the time. It is no one's duty or obligation to be here. Some people have offered rooms and beds in their own homes, but I spent too much of my childhood as a guest in other people's homes to leave my own, especially at a time when I am so prone to emotional thunderstorms. I should feel lucky I have these women who have stepped into where I have always imagined other people have family biological members residing. But their deep kindness tugs at old wounds. The necessity for them makes me ashamed of not having a family of my own. I feel in deficit somehow, as if I lack something that everyone else seems to have with no effort.

Perhaps this is why I have such unending relationships with ex-girlfriends. It is the hardest thing for me to lose people. I hold every past love in a box, deep in the recesses of my little girl's heart. I bank them as permanent, as people who loved me, as people who will always love me, as people I cannot afford to stop loving. Each of them represents an aunt, a grandmother, a mother -- someone who never left.

There is one for whom I nurse a particular weakness. I call her late at night, text her all the time, flail, weep, reach for her. Years after we severed the ties that made us mirror images of each other, we still remain connected. And in this time of great challenge I reach for her more. She, I suspect, because she loves me, is kind. But she is busy. I find myself angry at her kindness and resentful that she is so busy when I am trapped in my queen-sized bed at home, or this adjustable bed with grey rails surrounded by machines that constantly check my blood pressure and uterine contractions and the rapid heartbeat of this fetus I already love enough to make me pee my panties with fear when I think of it.

All this is heartbreaking for me to admit. Who wants to be a repeated cycle? I worry I will be like my mother, without even knowing it. I worry I will be too attentive or not attentive enough. I worry I will worry too much. I worry how much of that worry I will bequeath to my unsuspecting child. I imagine being so overprotective I raise a kid who will still need my boob to go to bed while she is a senior in college. Or one who will be so sick of my mothering that she doesn't call on my birthday or Christmas, which happens to be the same day of the year. I have flashes of my future self weeping in some old age home telling all the other old ladies how much of a firebrand I was, reeking of urine and smelling like regret.

Love has always been hard, if not impossible for me. At first, the way I love appears tsunami and scares, flatters, and finally consumes everyone it touches. Then it quietly retreats, like a turtle with its arms and legs pulled into an impenetrable shell. Sustained vulnerability is not my way. I choose always to love, but in stints. And when it gets too much I have to pull away, just so I can survive should you decide to be the one to exit first. But something tells me that loving this child is already different. I do not have the option to retreat. I wouldn't know how to do that, I think.

And so far this child has demanded everything from me. So sick have I been that I am still a bit stunned by the experience. I keep waiting to wake up from it. I can hardly work. Hence I am broke (never mind that being broke triggers all those years I was the beggar child on everyone's charity list). I am on bed rest, so no gadding about, no trips to Jamaica when I please, no exotic runs to South Africa, or New Zealand. Even a trip to New Jersey is a mammoth challenge, both financially and physically.

I am always in bed. That's it. Lying on either side of my body, because I cannot lie on my back or stomach, wondering if pregnant women get bedsores. I could Google it, but I have put myself of restricted google privileges. Knowing too much can be as bad as knowing too little when consulting with Dr. Internet. I cannot watch movies; my ability to concentrate is severely compromised, so I am left to wander through the inane and often sexist world of sitcoms.

I keep track of the Occupy Wall Street Protesters. They inspire me, but I'm still not sure what they are protesting. Every interview breeds new reasons. Some of them actually say they don't know. But I admire their gumption. I wish I was well enough, or brave enough to go get arrested on the Brooklyn Bridge with them or to be pepper-sprayed for a belief not even concretized in my brain. I feel old next to them. Navigating this process of pregnancy makes me feel ancient. My body feels like any day now it might atrophy from the lack of movement.

I am not in control of what is happening here and I don't know what to do. My body has never failed me so miserably. It has always done what I have asked of it, and without much fanfare. I am not a person who visits hospitals, nor lies in bed because she has to. If I am not making love or sleeping or lazing, I am out traveling or courting or creating a rumble somewhere. This quiet immobile grey threatens to stretch longer than a night, and I am frightened of how much I am committed to doing it. And even more terrified of how much want this baby. I wish I could control how much I want a safe arrival for my little warrior. We've had so many mishaps. And every time, the ultrasound reveals its' heart beating fast and furious, fueling blood and vitamins and minerals across the amniotic divide that connects our separate ecosystems. That connection, that divide makes mush of me. I cannot explain why the tension of our separation, or togetherness, leaves me unsettled, but willingly so.

I am not used to such tenacity in the face of such adversity. Literally, this kid has dug its heels into my guts and is holding on for dear life. Usually, after this much frazzle and fuss, the women I have loved leave. I expect them to leave, and they do, unwillingly, but they eventually leave; that I know how to survive. It is this staying that makes my heart palpitate and my breath twist like a hungry tapeworm in my intestines.

The 38/40 weeks of preparation that mothers are given to contemplate the arrival of a child is either brilliant design or torturous madness. In the 25 weeks that I have been pregnant I have examined every decision I have ever made. I have gone over every mistake, triumph, and missed opportunity. And I am here, long past midnight, wondering if I have what it takes to raise a happy, well-adjusted human being. Every failure highlights itself as proof that I am ill-equipped. Every friend who has not shown up for me makes me question my judge of character. In these moments I wish I had someone with which to share these questions, these concerns, these fears that only become more and more real with every week I spend expecting.

Was I a fool to do this alone? Was I naĆÆve to think that what I need would materialize? My closest friends are oceans and oceans away. Skype and phones and all the other clever inventions of our age are not good substitutes for flesh and fellowship and food given freely in the wingspan of a hug, or a pat on the hand, or a history co-piloted for decades in a culture common to people who have lived it all their lives. I miss my island home. In this my time of greatest uncertainty, of wanting something I do not yet know that I will have, I so long for my Jamaica. Quarrel or no, homophobia and poverty, violence and corruption, I miss the place where my grandmother lived and worked and delivered me and died. Grateful as I am for the freedom of my voice, and my career and the room to chase some of the most beautiful women in the world, I ache for mangoes that do not taste chalky when I sink my teeth into the orange flesh. I yearn for the commonness of dogs meandering unfettered from yard to yard, for children who yawp the language I first spoke when I began to question the world I was born into. I miss the too-loud speakers on the sidewalks, the men who drink rum more than they drink water. I miss the texture of the culture I know I am romanticizing. Deep inside me, I know the answers to these questions will take years to come. And I know they do not all lie in the place I am from, but tonight I am eight years old again, feeling lost and wishing things were as easy as wishing, as simple as walking some yellow brick road towards the familiar. Tonight I want these answers to find me now. From this sterile hospital bed in New York, I wish I could click these heels gone soft with inactivity, and take my child across these troubled waters to find both our hearts at home.

 
 
 

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I'm writing this from my hospital bed in New York City, encased by two sturdy, raised, side bedrails and a rolling tray with ginger ale, orange gelatin, (whatever that is) and some beef broth I know f...
I'm writing this from my hospital bed in New York City, encased by two sturdy, raised, side bedrails and a rolling tray with ginger ale, orange gelatin, (whatever that is) and some beef broth I know f...
 
 
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03:35 PM on 10/17/2011
So much emotion is running through me. How we experience love. How it changes. How I have practiced leaving with only little emotion. How I am afraid to need. Afraid of not being enough. We have learned we are not enough. Keep writing, keep working it through. You are your child's mother. The only thing I need from my mother is to know I have a place there. That she held everything when I didn't know where else to put it. You will cry with your child. Have screaming contest. Silence. Tension. Slammed doors. But I am 26 now and human because I had a space to fail and still be fed, and still be sang to, and still be prayed over. This is worth writing. Write. Please keep writing.
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Tracey Ricks Foster
Breaking News Constantly
08:27 PM on 10/16/2011
I just came across this commentary....I am, as always, awed and yet, inspired by the voice of Staceyann. I have always admired her and her book THE OTHER SIDE OF PARADISE is STILL on my nightstand. One of my favorite reads. I am thrilled that she is embarking on the journey of motherhood. A journey that I have been on for twenty-four years. I know what it is like to be pregnant, going through serious complications, without a partner. It is heart-breaking and bittersweet at the same time. It is a roller coaster ride of many emotions. It is life. The only thing that counts is the love that will surround this new light as it enters our universe. With love and support from Staceyann and the extended family I am sure will play a pivotal role in this little one's life, everything will be as right as rain. As a new mother to be, it is sometimes difficult to grasp the picture in its' entirety because living in the 'present' is a necessity, However, it is important to never lose faith, hope or courage. The impossible is always possible when we believe!!!
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Teresa Williamson
Author of FLY SOLO
09:34 PM on 10/10/2011
My darling,

I too am a new mama without a husband. Being pregnant was the hardest thing I have ever done - so lonely. I wish I was near to wash your feet and rub your lower back. Thank you for your brutal honesty. I get it. Please let us know when your little angel arrives.
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chinpoet
Author of The Other Side Of Paradise
07:45 AM on 10/11/2011
Thank you for your kind comment. In the face of some of the more unkind comments I am grateful and deeply moved by your sharing. Loads of gratitude and love. Staceyann
08:00 PM on 10/06/2011
@Chinpoet, actually my intention is to commend you on your writing. I believe it effectively permits the reader to experience the constellation of events, emotions, failures and triumphs you experience(d) with your audience. I am a person that seeks to understand the phenomenon that has more and more women of all faiths, creeds and colors embracing out of wedlock pregnancy and birth. Your situation is particularly significant as you are also a Lesbian, which adds another layer to the situation. I have no axe to grind on your lifestyle nor your desire to procreate. I just wonder how and why so many females feel that men need not fully buy into the decision to procreate with them specifically, at that time and how the single parent statistics on probable obstacles and risk of problems do not dissuade the trend.
07:45 PM on 10/06/2011
@Veronika 3.
I did not seek an argument with the author nor did I want to shame her. I sought to gain an understanding on the reasons for the growing incidence of women choosing to be unwed mothers without full participation of the male in the decision pre-birth and the rearing process after birth. It now seems that most of the attention that post-birth, unmarried women pay to the man is in an effort to force financial indemnification from a man that was not on solid financial footing in the first place.
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Tracey Ricks Foster
Breaking News Constantly
08:35 PM on 10/16/2011
Staceyann is NOT in the category of which you have implied. You do NOT know the ins and outs of her decision to become a mother, so seeking answers to the questions you have raised from Staceyann is pointless because they do not relate to her. As Dr. Phil or Maury. These two could probably help you.
04:20 PM on 10/18/2011
@Tracey, honestly, you don't know her "in's and out's either. That is why questions were asked. And she most definitely is in the category that I stated as she is not only unmarried but had to seek non relationship involvement to conceive in the first place. So keep the Dr. Phil or Maury comments to answer your questions or soothe your psyche.
07:45 PM on 10/06/2011
@Veronika 2.
If you approached this issue in a rational and reasonable manner, you would examine why there is a decline in the number of marriages across religious and racial lines; you would question why the automatic assumption of increased parental fitness is given to females even when the father seeks to be in the childs life and presents with a more secure environment; you would rail against state laws that find in favor of females shown to have falsely identified men as their child's father (by DNA) but continue to receive child support under chattel of the marriage statutes or don't have to return the funds to the men falsely accused; you would be incensed about women having the availability of safe havens or adoption to surrender the child to and escape all further financial responsibility for them but men can't do the same; you would protest the ability of women to have babies as a business when they were fully aware of their inability to financially provide for the children they birthed even with the fathers help; you would tear your hair out when you heard instances where child support was determined not by what the child needed but rather by what level the father could pay because of the relatively high disproportion of income between him and the mother. See, it is possible to continue the insanity to the exteme without solving anything.
07:44 PM on 10/06/2011
@Veronika, unlike you, I don't profess to know how all men or women think. Your EVERY woman comments clearly show the blinders you are wearing. You also display your intimate connection with inappropriate assumption by trying to discern facts from a set of responses that defy the political, ethnic or other demographics of their author. But you elevate the art of the fatal debating/deduction mistake by then accepting your errors as fact and then drawing conclusions from them. Your estrogen is showing. As for the rest of your rant, both males and females are delinquent in child support payments with FEMALES having the higher percentage of default(the percentage would be higher if there wasn't the automatic granting of physical custody to the female); most children go hungry because they are born into financial settings where neither parent could afford another mouth to feed, clothe or house; the predominent group living below the poverty line are single, poor, female head of households who had children they could not afford to have, many of whom have more than one child after the first placed them in financial peril a.k.a poverty; your attempted connection of the number of Congressmen and CEO's is laughable as they bear no direct relation to the discussion at hand.
07:03 PM on 10/06/2011
@Veronika, As for Chinpoet's emotional state? SHE'S PREGNANT. Her sorrow has absolutely nothing to do with "the approach" she used. She's not wishing for a partner in that post. That is your response. I will all the words of the article to prove you wrong, hence: It is almost midnight. I cannot sleep and I am weak with loneliness.

One set of friends dropped me off yesterday. Another will pick me up tomorrow. Yet another will spend the night to make sure if the blood gushes again in the dark I will have company to make the hurried but familiar trip to the hospital. They all make me food. Some do it well, ...It is no one's duty or obligation to be here. Some people have offered rooms and beds in their own homes, but I spent too much of my childhood as a guest in other people's homes to leave my own, especially at a time when I am so prone to emotional thunderstorms. I should feel lucky I have these women who have stepped into where I have always imagined other people have family biological members residing. But their deep kindness tugs at old wounds. The necessity for them makes me ashamed of not having a family of my own. I feel in deficit somehow, as if I lack something that everyone else seems to have with no effort.

See you are so hyped up on your protect the woman rhetoric to actually read with comprehension.
08:50 PM on 10/06/2011
You so missed the whole point. Which of course you would because to get the whole point you kind of have to not hate women.

I'm so sorry for whatever woman treated you so badly that you think ALL women assume a victim state to get attention. Clearly, your lists and lists of how wronged men are having nothing to do with playing the victim.

Oh and before you say it. No, I don't hate men.

Just stupid men.

I'm out.
02:53 PM on 10/07/2011
Stupid know no gender bias. Haha.

Let's all hope she's as skilled at organizing her child's birthday party someday as she is at organizing this pity party today. ;)
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
01:26 PM on 10/06/2011
wow. this made me tear up immediately. open honest real gorgeous. thanks for writing and sharing this.
09:57 AM on 10/06/2011
I may be a young one, but I am a bit wise due to my troubled short life. Do hang in there, your body is not failing you, I think its testing you, and it has more strength than you think to pull through this. We are all stronger than we think. Even from bedrest, make the most and best of everyday, and keep that child right in the front of your mind always, so you know why you are doing this. Stay well, for you are someone who deserves the world. :)
Randybostonterrier
Calling Republicans down on their BS
07:35 AM on 10/06/2011
Just remember this was a choice. You had an urge to be a mother and became it, it is not a necessity or a right. I'd have the same opinion if it was a heterosexual woman. Life has ups and downs and nobody is ever even 80% all the times. Living 4 1/2 decades on Earth I'm more realistic about what life really is - no fantastic thrill ride with super duper happiness guaranteed 24/7.
12:51 PM on 10/05/2011
I appreciate you sharing your experience with us. I love reading your pieces here and stop everything to read them! Hang in there. I soon hope to soon embark down the same road you are on (hopefully with my spouse), and each article you share really inspires me. Thanks for sharing that with great happiness will come moments of sadness. Please keep sharing. I will keep you in my thoughts and prayers.
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chinpoet
Author of The Other Side Of Paradise
12:34 PM on 10/05/2011
After this blog was posted, I considered revising- to make it happier/funnier, less sad. But after seeing how many people are uncomfortable with the nuance of sorrow, of moments when the questions are larger than the answers, I now know it was the right thing to do. Life is filled with moments like this, and people's discomfort with reading about it shows that we perhaps need to live more fully along the entire spectrum. I was sad. I was sad. And it was perfectly fine for me to have been sad and overwhelmed. NO APOLOGIES. In fact I may just be a little proud of this piece of writing...
04:35 PM on 10/06/2011
"I was sad. I was sad. And it was perfectly fine for me to have been sad and overwhelmeĀ­d."

Absolutely. There is more truth in that one line than in half the stuff that is plastered around websites nowadays.
08:55 AM on 10/05/2011
What I like about Chin's writing is that she has the ability to take something like a difficult pregnancy and make me, someone who is not in the same situation, understand and relate. It takes a very talented person to do that. People should read her autobiography and check her poetry out on youtube.
07:30 AM on 10/05/2011
As a lesbian mother to a 7 mo old baby girl..I feel for you. It is rough at times, but when it's all done..and you hear and see your baby's cry out as he/she enters this world..it's so worth everything that we as mother's and mother's to be have to go through.