Posts tagged mothers
What Is Fertility Radiance?
Everything about Mother Nature is abundant, and its infinite variation reminds us that, as a creators, we live inside a majestic and fertile reality of creation in each moment.

Everything about Mother Nature is abundant, and its infinite variation reminds us that, as a creators, we live inside a majestic and fertile reality of creation in each moment.

Fertility Radiance is the source of our power as creators. Fertility radiance is generated when two essential components of being a creator flow in optimal relation to each other: Fertility Abundance and Liberated Action

Just as our breath functions as an eternal call and response, inhale…exhale…inhale…exhale, so too do the primary elements of fertility radiance exist within an interdependent rhythm that evolves over time.  

Fertility abundance is where we all begin. Each one of us is the forward revelation of one of two million possibilities—two million microscopic eggs—forming in our mother’s ovaries while she was becoming fully human in her mother’s, our grandmother’s, womb. As women, we are also born with the same multitude of futures in our wombs like our mothers, and grandmothers, and on and on, and back and back. Our fertility abundance runs deep, and we are keepers and bearers of this holy and wondrous creative power from before we are even born.

Fertility abundance is also a state of profound consciousness, a fully embodied knowing and acceptance of our vast and continuously emerging fertile possibilities. 

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Liberated Action is the radically authentic movements, choices, and pathways we live out in the realization of our fertile possibilities. These two elements work together simultaneously and nourish the preservation and expansion of the other. When our fertility abundance is regularly and openly felt, we are more able to take liberated actions that are consistent with our fertility dreamscape. When we act frequently in alignment with our fertility and creativity dreams, we tap into larger and larger reserves of fertility abundance.

When we commit to cultivating fertility radiance in our lives, we choose freedom over fear. We choose honesty over denial. We become more resilient in times of heartbreak, despair and trauma, as we are more adept at taking the liberated actions that most align with our authentic fertility dreamscape. 

Cultivating fertility radiance takes practice and experimentation, as each day we experience perpetual change in our relationships, environments, circumstances, thoughts, and challenges. However every ounce of intentionality that we pour into increasing our fertility radiance is potent and has powerful and immediate effects on our lives. 

Fertility radiance enhances our quality of life and can have many applications in our everyday life. For the novelist who is feeling blocked about where to take her story, enhancing fertility radiance can stimulate exciting new energies in the writing process and bring her novel to life in the way she always imagined it would. 

For the ambitious intern at the firm who feels constantly overlooked and undervalued by the partners, developing a fertility radiance practice can boost her confidence, inspire her to speak more boldly and take up more space at her job. 

For the mother who feels overwhelmed with how to nurture her art while juggling her family’s incessant demands, tuning into her fertility radiance can help her learn to center her creative powers and talents so that she can integrate her mothering labors and artistic dreams with more ease and delight. 

Nature thrives, producing unique and beautiful elements every second of every day with exquisite detail, design, and function, because of the Creator’s supercharged fertility radiance.

Nature thrives, producing unique and beautiful elements every second of every day with exquisite detail, design, and function, because of the Creator’s supercharged fertility radiance.

For the woman who has already lost a baby but feels deeply in her spirit that her child is waiting to come through her, cultivating fertility radiance can activate the intuition that will guide her through all she needs to do to prepare her body, heart, and mind for conceiving a life again.

However we access and apply our fertility radiance, it illuminates and amplifies the truest desires of our soul. Choosing to nurture our fertility radiance is the first part of realizing sustained fertility wellness. 

No matter all we have been through before this now, as creators we are constantly birthing and creating new possibilities. The love and care with which we grow all these gardens—ourselves, our babies, our dreams—is sourced by fertility radiance. Keeping our source flowing freely and abundantly is the secret to realizing everlasting fertility.

 

Are you ready to cultivate more fertility radiance?
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8 Reasons We Need To Talk About Our Fertility
The pomegranate is an ancient symbol of fertility, its many seeds a representation of the many eggs in our ovaries, of the many possibilities from which we are all born.

The pomegranate is an ancient symbol of fertility, its many seeds a representation of the many eggs in our ovaries, of the many possibilities from which we are all born.

Last week I sent individual letters out to almost 100 women that I personally know, inviting them to host a Fertile Freedoms Listening Party. The listening party is an intimate, online, immersive storytelling and performance event where I share my journey of recovering my fertile radiance after a miscarriage. As I was going through the process of sending out each email one by one, I was asking myself, Why are you spending so much time on this? You could just bcc and be done with it.

But I didn’t want to send my very intimate fertility story out as a single, mass message. I wanted to take care of my story, of my words, in a way that only I can. I wanted to think about each woman and each mother I sent my story to. I wanted to remember all the details about her and her life, the conversations and experiences we’ve shared, the intimacies of her fertility stories, family, and dreams.

Each invitation felt like a little gift box I was leaving on her doorstep. I prayed that as they opened my letter they could feel the love I was pouring into this whole exchange. Our fertility is a holy thing, and when we nurture spaces to share our stories with each other we are practicing an ancient and sacred communion as mothers and women. I wanted the power of this process to reach everyone who read my words.

So in tapping into all of these connections, and preparing for the Fertile Freedoms Listening Parties, I thought it would be appropriate to write more specifically about why it’s so important that we share our stories with each other. Of course, there’s way more than 8 reasons why we need to talk about our fertility. But just to get the conversation going, let’s start with these.

#1 To author our own stories about what has happened in our bodies
The words we use to tell our stories have tremendous power over how we experience our fertility. Every word is itself a story, and the memories, emotions, and meanings behind each word support the perpetuation of that story, whether or not it is true in our hearts. Culturally, historically, and economically, our bodies and their stories have been grossly distorted as a part of a systemic need to control what we do with our fertility. Authoring our own narratives gives us control in a way that is not possible when someone else is dictating what is allowed to be said. 

Ultimately, the language we use when unraveling our stories’ layers impacts how we are able to process, heal, and transform the narratives. It is essential that we have autonomy over the words and the ways in which they come together to compose the stories about our fertility. This critical practice of finding and articulating our own words keeps us ever-present with our power, and sustains our courage to make the choices that are most authentic to our fertility dreams. 

#2 To imagine new futures for our fertility dreamscape
Just like our muscles and limbs need room to stretch, our thoughts need space to exist, shift, and evolve. Talking about our fertility gives us the ability to honor what has happened and imagine what else is possible. When speaking openly about our stories, we have a greater capacity to expand on ideas, consider alternatives, and identify the truth of our feelings. Especially for those of us who have ever felt shamed or silenced because of our story, being able to talk freely and transparently about our fertility dreams is one way we reclaim our power and our right to shape the priorities of our fertility dreamscape. 

Everything we are birthing, whether it’s a baby or a creative vision, first needs our permission to be possible. Regular, honest dialogues with ourselves and those who love us give us the necessary time to gain clarity about what we want. These rituals of communication also help us practice trusting ourselves and lead us to feel more confident about the steps we will take to realize our fertility dreams. 

#3 To increase our collective knowledge about fertile possibilities
The more we talk with each other about what’s really going on in our fertility stories, the more knowledge we can collectively access when exploring our individual possibilities. We are all experts about our lives, our bodies, our personal experiences with navigating our fertility. This expertise is sacred and when we practice sharing our stories with other women, we illuminate this deep well of our own knowing that everyone has the ability to cultivate for themselves.

There are so many ways to exchange stories and connect with others who need to hear our stories. As the author of your fertility journey, you get to decide how and when and who you talk to. Every time you open up to share from your truth, you are enriching the soil of our meta-fertility dreamscape. The more possibilities we acknowledge together, the more realities we can all consider when choosing how we want to move forward with our fertility dreams.

#4 To process traumatic moments in our fertility journeys
We need to talk about what has happened to our bodies in the pursuit of our fertility dreams. The practice of putting sound to our feelings, of selecting words for the images playing over and over again in our mind, of organizing the way facts are remembered—all of this is a part of the healing process. We can only begin to imagine those new futures when we have fully acknowledged our past labors. 

Women need to feel safe to revisit the traumatic parts of our fertility stories. We need gentle ears to listen to us and soft places to rest our hearts when we finally get the courage to voice the horrors we have endured and survived. The future of our fertility lives on the other side of what it is we are too afraid to say. Learning how to find our own way into the hardest parts of our stories is another way we access power in bodies and our fertility narratives.  

#5 To stimulate our creativity
Our fertility and our creativity are inextricably linked. Just as suppressing one inhibits the other, amplifying one empowers and expands the other. Talking about our fertility stimulates new thought patterns and reinvigorates energy where there was possibly stagnation or boredom. Discovering a new idea is another way to give birth, and being hyper-present with the many ways we engage our creativity strengthens our receptivity to the possibilities of our fertility. 

Our bodies, our minds, our wombs, our reproductive matter are all the site of constant creation. We are walking, talking creators, at every point of every day. It is a majestic thing to be deeply aware of our magic at all times. Holding onto the possibility of our creative powers enriches and enlivens our fertility dreamscape. We enter every moment more possible than one before it. We greet each opportunity with more passion, curiosity, and optimism, and all this positive energy leads to happier, more fulfilling experiences with our fertility and creativity.

#6 To explore multiple ways to realize our fertility dreams
Fertility and creativity teach us to love multiplicity. Whenever we seek to grow deeper in our creative practice, or get more in tune with our fertility dreams we are presented with an opportunity to look at something from many different perspectives. These labors of bending, twisting, sifting through possibilities strengthen us in a ways that are extremely beneficial when navigating the inevitable unknowns of our fertility dreamscape. 

As we learn to trust ourselves, our dreams, and our intuitive guides, we grow more adept, more flexible, and more receptive to making the most of unexpected openings when they appear. We begin to see and experience our fertile futures more tangibly and less abstractly. More accepting of the infinite variation of how our futures may unfold, we more freely bring our dreams to life. 

#7 To make safe spaces for those who need to talk about their fertility stories
Everyone of us has the power to make a safe space for someone else to tell their story. But first, we have to make our hearts, our minds, our bodies safe places to tell our own stories to ourselves. It takes however long it is going to take, but by practicing loving, gentle kindness towards ourselves throughout the labors of unraveling and untangling our stories, we grow our capacity to be active listeners who can provide safe spaces for others to open up their stories.

When we take radical steps toward vulnerability and transparency, we illuminate the pathways for more mothers and women to shed their own masks and armor. Many of us have learned from girlhood how to close ourselves off for survival, how to protect the sweetest, most delicate parts of our dreams from harsh judgements and violations. Now though, we have to find our way back to the softness where possibility begins. Our fertility dreams are waiting for us there. Creating safe spaces where everyone can share their fertility stories is one way we accelerate our own return to that sweet, loving space of surrender within ourselves.

#8 To seed and nurture a more loving fertility reality for our daughters and granddaughters
Our fertility, our creativity, our lives flourish in a window of opportunity. We know that these moments are for the now, and that we are doing our best to make the most of this now. We also know that the next generations are making their way into their fertile futures too. They are watching us and developing a sense of what will be possible for them by observing what we decide is possible for ourselves. 

The more we experiment with and expand the narratives that shape our fertility dreamscapes, the more seeds we are planting, the more opportunities we are preserving, the more power we are gathering, for those who are responsible for birthing the future of humanity. As it is now, and as it will be then, our labors are sourcing everything and everyone we are birthing. Speaking intentionally, honestly, and lovingly about our fertility has lasting implications for our quality of life, and everything we will create with these lives, for years and years to come.

 

ARE YOU READY TO CULTIVATE MORE FERTILITY RADIANCE?
JOIN THE FERTILE FREEDOMS MOVEMENT

 

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Soft Mother, Hard Mother
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I am mothering very differently from the way my mother raised me and my brothers. I think about our differences a lot as I navigate the ups and downs, the losses and the growths, the sweets and the bitters of my own journey as a mother. One of the things that stands out most about the way I grew up and the way the munchkins are growing up is that I am caring for my children nearly all 24 hours of the day, every day of the week.

This was not the case for me when I was a child. I didn’t spend the whole day, everyday, with my mother. And the more I unpack the implications of the separation—largely fostered by school and work rhythms—built into our routine as children, the more questions I have about what it means, about what it costs, that I choose to mother in such a radically different way.

My mother worked (and still works) as an engineer outside of the home my entire childhood. I was in daycare from infancy. I was on formula very early on because of a medical emergency that had my mother in the hospital weeks after I was born, and also because she had very little maternity leave. My children have been breastfed exclusively, with me nursing them at the breast, no pump, no bottles. All of their early nourishment has been from the countless hours of holding them, wearing them, carrying them around with me wherever I go so I can feed them from my body.

I went to public schools from kindergarten until starting college. In the elementary years we spent the after school hours at the library down the street from the school doing homework and waiting to be picked up (hopefully) by the time it closed. There were no cell phones or GPS trackers back then. On days they were running late we couldn’t call my parents to see if they were on the way or if we should just walk the six blocks to my grandparents’ house in the dark, the night lit up by the cars passing by and the street lights overhead. Our vulnerability as children didn’t occur to us. And my parents generally trusted that we were fine, and that they’d find us either standing in front of the library or at my grandmother’s dining room table eating a snack.

This was also an era before the after school market was in full effect. The local librarians were our unofficial minders for the post-school day, pre-dinner time hours from 3pm-6pm. Nowadays, parents who have children in school away from home often spend hundreds, sometimes even thousands, of dollars per year on before and after school care and programming. In this way we have something in common, as neither of us spent money on after school programs, but of course, for very different reasons.

In the summers the schedule only slightly changed. We were at camp in lieu of being at school, or at grandma’s house for the bulk of the day. For many years, when we were all younger, there was an annual weeklong family vacation to some place near a beach or an amusement park with my parents, my brothers, and my cousin. 

My parents had two cars and I didn’t start taking public transportation until I began junior high school, and even then, it was just for going to and from school. All the weekend, holiday, and extracurricular activities were made possible by the convenience of riding in a car. My mother never had to manage meltdowns or snack distribution or rush hour crowds on the bus or the train. She mothered us privately in the comfort of her own vehicle. 

My children experience transit more communally. We have to touch the world as we move through it. We are exposed to the greatest—nice old ladies who strike up friendly conversations with the munchkins—and the not so greatest—belligerent alcoholics who spill their 40 ounces all over mommy when the bottle explodes after being illegally opened up on a moving bus— of humanity as we navigate the city landscape on public transit. We are a car-free, “B.M.W.”—bus/metro/walk—family, and have been for most of the munchkins’ lives. Getting from here to there mostly happens in the public domain, with ample eyes and ears to witness—and judge— the loud, messy, chaotic uncertainties of mothering little people out in the world.

My overall description of my mother when we were children (and even still to this day), is that she was nice, kind, and gentle with us. She didn’t do a lot of yelling. She almost never used profanity. We didn’t get spanked as a form of discipline. My mother wasn’t strict. There weren’t hard rules, bedtimes, or fixed punishments. If we did something wrong, mostly there was a conversation, some extended dialogue space to work through whatever it was. 

I’ve been thinking about reasons why my mother was mostly soft with us. One theory is that because she had regular intervals away from direct, hands-on, mothering labors, she didn’t experience burnout or the mental exhaustion that comes from fielding every need, every question, every tantrum that comes up in a single day. Our time together was generally limited to the early morning, the evenings and weekends when we weren’t at one of our activities. Our hours and minutes were scripted to an external system that was the norm for almost everyone else around us. In the few hours each day she had to spend with us, she was generally in good spirits, and we were the happy beneficiaries of all that goodness.

I try my best to be the soft, gentle mother. And on days when I have ample food (read: plenty of snacks for bribing…er…incentivizing…) in the house, and when there aren’t any major financial calamities on the horizon, and when I don’t have any sick little folks to tend to—I am very much that soft mother of my dreams. 

But sometimes resources are tight, my patience is thin, the weather is dreary, the children are cranky/bored/tired/frustrated with the limitations of the moment. On these days I find I am more of the hard mother. I yell more. I restrict freedoms more. I am less playful. The normal volume of their ruckus from self-directed explorations seems too loud and I am asking for unreasonable amounts of quiet, calm, stillness.  I have to demand food be eaten, or else people will be hungry asking for more food that we don’t have. I don’t believe in spanking them, but I may send too many munchkins to the corner too many times, or take away the tablet for too long on days when I feel overwhelmed by my labors and under-supported. I may deny too many requests for sitting in mommy’s lap. There may be too many tears that fall and too few hugs to soothe hurt feelings.

I don’t particularly like the hard mother, but I understand her now more than ever. As a child when I saw other friends’ moms who seemed very strict or mean, I was always thankful that my mother was so nice and laid-back with us. It never occurred to me that maybe the harshness in my friend’s mom’s tone was the culmination of her making it through the day as best she could. Maybe she was short on the rent and someone’s birthday was coming up. Maybe she was dealing with a difficult or abusive partner and deciding whether to stay or to leave. Maybe she was tired from being the only person on-call for all her children from sun-up to sun-up, and in this moment she’s got nothing sweet left to give. Maybe she only had beans and rice for dinner and she didn’t feel like dealing with the headache of feeding children who don’t want to eat the only food she had in the house.

Tucked cozily into the backseat of my parents’ cars, or my grandparents’ cars, or my aunts and uncles cars, I was oblivious to the ways in which having to commute on public transportation as a family alters your capacity to be gentle and receptive to the perpetual, insatiable needs so natural to day-to-day living with little people. Growing up in a relatively stable and privileged environment, I couldn’t appreciate that maybe that other mom who is snapping at her kids in the grocery aisle has only enough money to buy what’s in her cart, and she can’t entertain all these extra requests for candy and treats—even though she wishes she could—without feeling like she’s going to lose her mind. And after all the whining and complaining in the store, this same mom might be in for an epic tantrum as she hauls heavy bags and disappointed children home on a crowded bus. Meanwhile, we used to drop all sorts of extras into my mother’s shopping cart, and rarely did she ever make us take them out. Then we’d pile into the car, happily munching on our snacks of choice as my mother loaded groceries into the trunk.

I think my mother would have been a very different mother if she’d opted to be at home with us, if she’d chosen to homeschool us, and essentially be our full-time caregiver as well. I don’t know if I would have experienced her as a soft mother if she had been constantly juggling shifting resources and fluctuating finances. I don’t know how she would have managed having small children so close in age like mine are. We were all 4 and half to 5 years apart. She had years of recovery between each birth that I have yet to experience. I don’t know if she would have had the mental, emotional, or physical stamina to deal with mothering us every single moment of every single day—and still be so soft, gentle, and accommodating. 

This reflection brings me deep pause, especially when I am having a rough day with the munchkins and I am wishing I could access the softness my mother had for me. This is when I have to acknowledge the implications of my choices, the weight of my world as it is. Within my very intentional practice to be home with my children, to facilitate their education through our family learning lab, to run our family business, to spend as much time together as a family—also exists the very real costs to this life. There are times I don’t have all I need to go gently through the day. There are moments when I’m too spent to be the soft mother. And I am getting better at celebrating the hard mother for showing up any way, even as she wishes she could be someone she can’t access right now. Because a hard mother is still better than no mother at all. 

I like coming up with titles and labels for things. Sometimes I’ve played around with the term intensive mothering, meaning a mother who is with her children all day, and laboring for them and from her own body—breastfeeding/babywearing/homeschooling/being primary caregiver—all day and all night—co-sleeping/nursing through the night—too. I’m not settled on the terminology, but I think you get my meaning. In this current day reality when so few mothers in this country experience their children for extended periods of time beyond the first 6 weeks of life, this path I’m on is often fraught with loneliness, anxiety, and chronic depletion. It takes time to discover an authentic way to sustain your sanity, especially when those on the outside looking in perceive your children to be your biggest obstacle to sanity. 

But no, I don’t believe that at all. In fact, I’ve spent these first 6 years of motherhood undoing the cultural programming that has tried so hard to convince me that peace of mind is only accessible through the calculated separation of mother and child. Rather, I’ve been experimenting—and stumbling, and crying, and feeling defeated at times—with a more collaborative process between a mother and her children. How can we craft a life that holds space for all our needs? How can I, as mommy, access more softness for my children and myself, without having to labor against myself—working on someone else’s clock—or outsource my children’s nourishment, primary care, and education to another person or system?

I don’t yet have all the answers to these questions. I still feel like I’m very much at the beginning of my mothering journeys, even though I’ve got some solid years in this work too. The deeper I grow as a mother, the more I appreciate my mother, and even the ways in which I am still very much like her. There are elements of her that have penetrated deeply into my practice. It’s just sometimes tricky to identify them because structurally our mothering realities are oceans, worlds, galaxies apart. 

In the meantime, this concentrated unraveling of soft mother/hard mother has me being more intentional about finding and celebrating moments of being soft and gentle with myself, of choosing compassion and forgiveness over being so critical or angry about a mistake, of moving slowly through our days and not feeling pressured to keep up with speed of capitalism. The more I learn, the more I practice, the more I see that the softness I wish to share with my children begins with me. 

As with most things I’ve been exploring as a mother, I don’t have a blueprint or guidebook to follow. In many ways I am mothering from scratch, feeling for my way through the unknowns as I grow. I know there are many moments of softness and gentleness that I already share with my children, as evidenced by their general happiness, bubbly energy, and enthusiastic curiosity about their world, the future, and the everything it will bring. I trust they are reflecting back to me the best parts of my mothering labors. I trust I’ll grow better, stronger, and softer with time.

 

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In Search & Praise Of Our Forward Fertility
Sculptures by Kwame Akoto-Bomfo, Source

Sculptures by Kwame Akoto-Bomfo, Source

When I was growing my daughter in my womb, I was often overcome with visions of a pregnant mother shackled to the bottom of a slave ship. I would see glimpses of this nautical hell, of a massive vessel, transporting hundreds of captured African peoples at a time, sailing somewhere between home and never-going-back-home. The Middle Passage—a system of torturous trade routes zigzagging across the Atlantic Ocean, spanning multiple centuries and coastlines—in all its fullness and mystery, the Middle Passage continues to haunt a significant part of my beginnings as an African-descended mother born in America, and also the beginnings of my own children. This passage, this portal, is where a grand rupture of my ancestral, cultural, and mothering identities took place, and also where alternate, more tangible realities began to initiate and take root. 

Along with these images that came to me when I was pregnant, I would often hear negro spirituals, and be moved to just start singing them. A voice that did not feel like my own would emerge, large and luminous, as if it was made of its own wings, and could carry me back across the relentless tide to the very mother who first uttered these same weathered and bruised tones. I come from such a people, I know. People who sang because the only remaining access to their freedom were the notes erupting from way down deep in their core, pushing up through the throat, and finally emerging from tongue and teeth as these soul-stirring hymns. Lasting long after their physical beings were beaten and discarded, these aural memories retained the truth that even though their bodies be caged, not every part of them was able to be bound. 

The singing would overtake me especially when I was dancing and couldn’t find the right music for the moment on my playlist. Shuffling through hundreds of artists, thousands of songs, and sometimes I still wouldn’t be able to feel a vibe that matched what my body needed. At some point I would stop searching, and just allow the silence—or the chatter and bustle of my munchkins—to be there. As I would just start to move my limbs, my hips, my spine slowly inside that non-musical space, a song would come to me. Sometimes like a moan, sometimes a whisper, sometimes a full on cry—

Swing low, sweet chariot
Coming for to carry me home—

And I wouldn’t question the intensity of the words, or wonder about how they landed in my mouth without having heard or read them in so long. I would just sing, feeling the presence, the magnitude of all those many mothers before me who sang themselves through the darkest of times with these same rhythms, maybe even these same words, sounds that gave them the room to both mourn and to hope. 

Swing low, sweet chariot
Coming for to carry me home—

I sense deeply that somewhere within the etchings of my ancient strands of DNA, these charged melodies reverberate from one of my faraway grand-mothers. If we were to travel across the parallels of time, we would find her there, still singing in this moment, bound on her back, a belly rising defiantly against the forces of violation and devastation. Everyday she comes to the point of no return, and must make the same choice: Will we live or will we die? 

I look over Jordan, what do I see?
Coming for to carry me home—

Just when she thinks she’s endured all she can, she considers the final way out of this despair: the next time she chokes on her vomit she could simply not gasp, and writhe, and fight so hard to clear her throat. She could just lie there and let the airways close once and for all, protecting herself and any futures she holds from any continued miseries. But always she comes back to the baby growing inside of her. She knows she will never see her other children again, separated from them three moons ago when the slave traders ravished her homeland and stole all the people from the interior, transporting them to the coast, handing them over to the strange men with ghost-like skin and no color to their eyes. All this they did in exchange for more gunpowder, to be more successful in causing more destruction to more families who would not hear them coming until it was too late. 

A band of angels, coming after me
Coming for to carry me home—

She aches for them all, says their names one by one so that they can feel the remembrance of their mother, even as she is unable to save them from the sure terrors they have all encountered by now. A grieving mother, the only child she is sure to ever see is the one becoming fully human within the soft wonders of her womb. It is this opportunity to mother again that propels her to choose life every time she could choose death. And in choosing to remain a part of the living world, and offering her labors and her baby into the uncertainties ahead, she continues the succession of biologic matter, the sacred formation of the next mother’s eggs inside of tiny ovaries. These are the radical, loving acts of a distant ancestor mother of mine, making a way for the many futures of her children, and her children’s children’s children, one uterus to another. Her seemingly simple labors protected the possibility of my existence, a single echo of life surviving slave ships and auction blocks, plantations and whipping posts, Jim Crow and sharecropping, lynchings and redlining, water hoses and police dogs, voter suppression and discrimination—surviving all that so that one day a light such as me could expand inside my own mother’s womb.

Swing low, sweet chariot
Coming for to carry me home—

I know that my existence is a precious gift of that long-ago, enslaved mother’s forward fertility, of her courageous labors and those of many more like her. A holy council of unnamed and undocumented mothers, each one of them choosing to birth various components of my potential even though they had no assurances that the future would be any sweeter. 

Swing low, sweet chariot
Coming for to carry me home

I see my fertility choices as a birthing mother in today’s world as so much more vast and privileged than many of my foremothers. It is from this space of immeasurable reverence and gratitude that I anchor my own faith in my fertility dreams. If I am here because countless, enslaved mothers decided that the possibility of my life was worth surviving all their unspeakable horrors, if they were able to access the beauty and majesty of bringing life into the world amidst so much terror and loss, then I too can insist on preserving and supporting the futures of my children and grandchildren through the labors of my own body. I too can rally for the lives of the coming generations that are now more possible because of who I am allowing to come forth through me today. And I too can find eternal threads of opportunity, celebration, and love with which to weave together a bright band of tomorrows for all my babies. 

This has always been the work of the mothers, to see more when there is nothing yet to see, to pour our whole selves into realizing dreams that the future will not promise us. To trust—above all else, and in the midst of whatever turbulence we might be facing—in the abundant blessings of life even if there is no one but us who believes our children should be, must be, born.

 

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