Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Fullness, Resolve and Hot Air Balloons

We stood in our new house and knew that this was the home we would raise our family in. The stars had finally aligned and the time was finally right to add a little one to our family. We were, at long last, both ready. And, this house felt right. It even had the most perfect little nursery. In fact, from the moment we laid eyes on that room, we knew that it was meant to be our baby's room. It wouldn't be long until that cozy, beautiful, joyous room was filled with the cries and laughter of baby.

Month after month, the room lost more and more of its beauty, its joy, the coziness that a baby would have brought. Instead, it slowly became cold, empty and taunting. We stopped calling it "the nursery" and referred to it as "the purple room." We decided that it might be less painful if it were less empty, so we started storing some things that that might otherwise have found their way to the attic. That made it less empty, but nothing more. It still silently taunted us.
On the day that we got the toughest news of our journey so far, I decided that it was time to take a stand. I could no longer take the silent taunting. There was that voice from somewhere in my head, that the nursery seemed to symbolize, that said we wouldn't be parents and this would never be a nursery. It was time to find a symbol of my own. I would, in my own quieter way, stand on the rooftops and proclaim to the Heavens that this would still, one day, someday soon, be a nursery.

My next act required nothing less than the effort of climbing to the rooftop...a trip to the children's department at Ikea....to buy a crib mobile. There were many things about this that seemed crazy. How weird it is to buy a crib mobile for a room without a baby, much less a crib.

And yet, this symbolic act, on this toughest day, was so powerful for me. I chocked back tears as I walked through the cribs, stuffed animals, changing tables and high chairs. But, I got all the way to the checkout line and then all the way home without tears, without a breakdown. It was all so raw, in the wake of our first bad news, that I had yet to be able to cry. I had yet to mourn the loss of our chance at a natural conception.

I got home and was grateful to find that I had the house to myself. I paused at the door to the nursery, mobile in hand, and took a shielding breath. I didn't bother doing anything special to hang it. Why did it matter where it hung if there was no crib to hang it over? I found a random nail the old owner's had left in the wall and hung in there.

As soon as it was hung, I fell in a heap on the floor and cried. For the first time, I cried about the emptiness, the stillness, the left-behind feeling, the loss of "conception by romantic evening," and, mostly, the unknown. I sobbed. And then, when I had cried all I could cry, there was nothing left but resolve. I said, aloud to this empty room--to the baby that will someday, somehow call it home--that we would not give up until our baby, from whatever path was necessary, found its way here.



The nursery still serves as a halfway point to the attic, rather than a haven for baby. It is still absent the sounds of babies' laughter or tears. But, it taunts me less than before. Mot days, it's less of a cruel reminder and more of a source of determination. Most days, I smile at the dreams my mobile represents, rather than cry at the empty room. This lone baby item, my hot air balloon crib mobile, is a silent reminder of what will be. In many ways, that room is filled will our hopes and dreams and everything we want for our family.

As it turns out, our nursery isn't quite as empty as it once seemed.
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This post is brought to you by Geohde's Great Cross-Pollination. Can you guess the author? You can find my Cross-Pollination post for today at Lin's blog, Our Someday Family.

10 comments:

Searching for Serenity said...

Hope in a hot air balloon. What a beautiful post. Reading it brought back all the feelings we all have experienced at one time or another. We too built our home with plans to raise our family here. 5 years later our "storage room" has finally become a nursery. Here's to hoping that all your dreams come true and that room is filled with giggles and cries soon.

And now I'm off to visit your blog and read Jendeis' post. I don't think I've visited before, so I have no clue who you are. Not for long!!

Anonymous said...

wow

just wow... this post almost brought me to tears...

Lorin said...

That was a very moving post. Thank you for sharing.

Rambler said...

You wrote this entry with such style and grace. I am amazed. I found your blog from Lin's cross pollination posting and couldn't wait to visit and read more postings. Thanks for sharing and for writing something that obviously took a lot of strength.

Quiet Dreams said...

What a beautiful gift to yourself.

If you haven't already selected posts for Creme de la Creme and Golden Haiku, this would be a phenomenal entry.

Geohde said...

This. Post. Is. Brilliant.

g

Rotten said...

I hope as well that your room will one day house lots of giggles and the sweet smell (well, not always sweet) of a baby. I think the mobile was a great idea and you are a stronger person for doing what you did. :)

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Karen said...

This is a beautiful post - I wish this were all easier for you. I know how hard it is.

Much love (and I'm sorry I missed seeing you on Sunday).

Bobi AKA Stacey said...

I had to share, i just found your blog today and i am going back and reading some things.
When we bought our house i imagined a high chair and toys. And the one bedroom i knew how to design was the nursery, with a playroom/walk in closet. I have had almost 18 months of dreaming about this room. We have been trying 20 months.
When after a year we did not get a baby, i made it an office. After last march when we were told, "clomid" and given a list of all the things preventing me from getting pregnant (hypothyroidism, pcos, endometriosis, etc.) i left the office. My laptop rests on a tv tray in the living room. I cant stand that room anymore. I dream of it filled with happiness, since it was my favorite room in this house. It has clothes that i bought in my ignorant days before miscarriages, and toys i plan to give to a child, but the room is so empty to me, no matter what i put in it.
Maybe someday I will go in, and clean it, and then paint, and then put in a crib, and so on. Until then, my 3 bedroom dream house is 2 bedrooms in my eyes.
Bobi