Tag Archives: pregnancy

Celica Leigh.

Hannah’s actions and decisions make me sad sometimes. For long stretches I wonder how she’ll ever make it in the world.

But she is also the person through whom I have had the opportunity to know true awe and pride. (You might not know that Hannah fought and won a complicated lawsuit against the Nassau County School Board when they denied her the right to start a Gay Straight Alliance at her middle and high schools. The case went on for a couple of years and even when the high school case was settled, Nassau County intended to take Hannah to trial over her middle school discrimination case.

In the end, a settlement was reached. Would you want to go up against this woman on a witness stand?

You can see Hannah on Penn N Teller’s “Bullshit” in the following clip, starting at 1:44, putting it out there what attacking her on the witness stand would net those guys. Smart move, Nassau County.

On Saturday I watched my daughter bring her baby girl into the world free of painkillers, intervention, and most of all free of fear. She was a fierce warrior and at one point even exclaimed irritably, “I got this” when I tried to manage her.

Here is Celica Leigh.  She came into the world surrounded by love and Hannah’s chosen family, in the home that Hannah has made for herself and her family. She weighed 8 lbs and 8 ounces and was 21 inches long.

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Bake Your Way Out of a Hellhole: How to Meditate in the Kitchen

bananabread

Ed Note: As I was writing this piece, my daughter knocked on the door. She walked in, sniffed the air and said “something smells amazing-banana bread?” (it was two loaves of banana pumpkin.) Then she said “I bake all the time now! I don’t know why!” I showed her this piece, and said “this is why.”

It’s the mindfully simple act of cooking that saves me from slipping into the abyss of seasonally triggered depression in the fall, I think. Finally I can throw-ok, wrestle-the windows open some days, rainforest-like mornings of Whippoorwills and train track repairs I hear off in the distance.

After the furious routine of our pre-dawn school frenzy, I stand in the kitchen bleary eyed, performing tasks by muscle memory: a zombie brought back to humanity by pumpkin spice syrup and caffeine. This act is the opposite of mindful. This act is pure mindlessness, and sometimes I meditate on that fact alone. What is this mind body disconnect, which allows me to grind beans, measure grounds, boil water, remove a cup from the shelf, prepare the press, pour boiling water into a tube, perform the vacuum extraction in order to get coffee, flavor/sweeten coffee, milk the coffee, and clean up- all while planning the day’s kitchen tasks in the forefront of my mind?

It is this sort of half living/double living that I am working to avoid by practicing working meditation in my kitchen, yet a small, rebellious voice in my head sips my perfect cup of coffee and says “fuck that shit. CLEARLY all that advice was aimed at people who are shitty multi-taskers.”

In zen, part of the practice is working meditation. On the perfect days, I consider these tasks in the kitchen mine, often working in complete silence, arranging my bowls restaurant line-style so that I can work multiple projects at once.

I love my dishes so much, am so connected to this process, that practicing mindful cooking meditation is very difficult for me. Each recipe contains a wealth of stories, each dish springs to life as my hand touches the surface. My things don’t match; we never registered for dishes, so everything I touch reminds me of someone. Even as I type I’m thinking Oh Kaile, I ate last night from that green flowered plate you gave me! My prep bowls, nothing special, remind me of my best friend because she’s right, you can’t find any thing better for small measures and eggs. I’ve long since lost the covers.

Now sometimes you won’t need this much orange juice in the bread, Mary Jane’s voice echoes inside my head as I mix ingredients for cranberry loaves. Because the humidity sometimes makes this bread over moist. My eyes, now filled with tears, wander toward our bookshelf, scan the spines for the children’s book where the recipe lives. I wonder if my daughter can read us this book tonight. I learned to bake this bread when I was seventeen years old and every time I make it, I am in her kitchen again. I think everyone I know wishes I would really just stop knowing how, already, but I know I’ll do it at least one more year.

Wait. Mindful. Back to my task.

Deck Pie

Dabbing vanilla on my neck, I wish I had the page from that magazine where I learned to make apple pie from the essay that reminded me to always dab vanilla on my neck whenever I made one, just because it smells so good. It was the same torn out page I carried for years that reminds me, now, to put on my grandmother’s apron. Burying my hands in cut apples I’m back in a tiny trailer in North Carolina, alone and pregnant, clad in my grandmother’s apron, smelling sweetly of vanilla and cinnamon. Baking pies for my last Thanksgiving dinner as a single person, my last holiday as an unencumbered adult. By Christmas I would have a child. Goddammit. By this Christmas, My child may have a child. Wait a minute Universe, can we chat a time out? She’s still just a baby, so.

It’s not working. I sift the apples through my fingers, I concentrate on the grit of brown sugar, try to BE the silt cinnamon and imagine that my daughter’s baby is born on its due date which is identical to the due date predicted for my daughter 18 years ago. As if on a separate track in my head I remind myself not to make out of town plans for Christmas even as I feel myself beginning to notice that the kitchen is 150 degrees and I have started breathing incredibly fast. Why are the FUCKING windows open when obviously the air conditioner needs to be on.

Maybe French onion soup. I hate onions, the mess, the aroma, all that slicing and peeling. I can lose myself in the task of caramelizing onions and the payoff is arguably worth every cursed second. But a burnt onion does not forgive you, and neither does a Christmas dinner table full of hungry family that’s been promised World Famous French Onion Soup.

The onions act almost as well as a tranquilizer for me. Here we go: sliced onions cascade into my thrift store cast iron dutch oven, doomed to roast into a pitiful show of my labor, but sweet, so sweet. Now back into a pan on the stove with red wine to reduce; I want them sweeter. This is where sometimes the onions and their company calm me down even more, if you know what I mean.

In the meantime, I’m using every excuse to fire up my workhorse of a blender. My vita mix emulsifies spices and vegan beef flavored broth base with boiling water. I get lost in the pulse function. Back and forth between my reduction pan and the blender I go and by now, January is a million miles away because I’m sneaking spoonfuls of onions and sips of wine.

One day, will she call me for these recipes  like I called my mother when I was ready for a truce?

There I go again. FUCK.

I get out the flour and consider making several loaves of bread.

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Stop Talking to Pregnant Women. Just Stop Saying Anything At All, OK?

Most explosively rude comment ever. Yelled- nay, screeched- across a parking lot:

“That HAS to be twins! Oh, maybe triplets! You’re having twins or triplets, right?”

“No. There’s just one in here”

“NO WAY! Are you SURE!? That’s GOT to be twins”

-No, I’m not sure what’s inside my own pregnant body, you fucking idiot, because this is the middle ages or “I Didn’t Know I Was Pregnant” or I DON’T KNOW, YOU ARE SMARTER THAN EVERY DOCTOR I’VE SEEN FOR THE LAST SEVEN MONTHS.

Guys. GUYS. This kind of talk is never funny, good-natured, or ingratiating.

(loud commentary to her friends at the table about how incredibly huge I am and how miserable I must be at this moment)

She didn’t ask my due date. She didn’t ask my name, or otherwise engage me further.

PSA: Here is how these conversations should go:

First you’re not obligated to comment when you see a pregnant person. Really. We know we’re pregnant. We know we’re large, or small, or glowing, or shiny, or whatever. We have mirrors, and families to tell us what we look like. If you must say something: if you just cannot allow a pregnant person to pass you by without some comment, just ASK THE DUE DATE. If, that is, you’re willing to take the risk that you’ll be asking a person their due date when they might not be pregnant. Be careful. It happens. 

When you hear the due date, swallow WHATEVERTHEFUCK you were going to say, and just say this: (Are you ready? Burn this into your memory, Internet. Make sure you never forget it)

“Oh! Congratulations! Have a great rest of your pregnancy! Good Luck!”

I would say vary this statement, but evidently the public at large cannot be trusted to improvise when it comes to commentary to or about pregnant women. So just fucking memorize the above and use it every single time, please.

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On Funerals

Free association about funerals:

Tears are contagious.

And also…

When people die, I spend days processing other deaths in my life. And part of what I resent about being obligated to show up at a funeral (and in this case, sit at the fucking front of the church, where the cheap insensitive funeral people didn’t think to put Kleenex on each pew) is that my grief is on public display. And since I’m processing every dead person I’ve known, and every sappy commercial I’ve ever seen, and every sad TV show I’ve watched all week, my grief is usually inappropriate to the situation. As it was today.

I had to leave the service of course.

Why is it not approrpate for me to grieve privately, in my own way?

Anyway. It’s over. And I only had to say “yeah, I know! I might not make it! I feel huge, too! Yeah, place your bets!” and assorted other gracious responses to “you’re due WHEN? OH MY GOSH! YOU WON’T MAKE IT THAT LONG!” about 200 times. Today I even got the “wow, I’m surprised you don’t just topple right over!” which I haven’t yet heard.

Now I’m not leaving my house for the next 8 weeks, mmmkay?

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