Friday, August 15, 2014

Acceptance

Two nights ago, I decided to test Sloan, my 17-month-old daughter.

At bedtime, after her bath and her PJ’s and a kiss “night-night” from Daddy, we went into her quiet, dark room and sat on our chair, snuggled in, and I gave her a bottle.  I didn’t pull up my shirt and offer her my milk.  Instead, I offered her a bottle of her almond milk that she loves.  There was a glimpse of uncertainty as she tasted the milk, but it vanished before I could really even recognize it.  She drank the bottle happily, and quickly.  So quickly, that when she was done I eagerly looked around for more, as though I could just make it appear and make the moment last longer.  But she was happy.  She started wiggling in the way she does when she is trying to tell me she wants in her crib, she is ready for sleep.  I didn’t want to let her go, this new night-time routine happened way too fast, it was not normal.  We normally had 10 to 15 minutes of nursing and cuddling before I laid her down.  This was over in one minute flat. 
Reluctantly, I walked over to her crib and placed her in, expecting a cry out, a whimper, or something to indicate that she was not ok with what had just transpired.  Nothing.  She rolled over, cuddled her bear and bunnies into her face as she does, and closed her eyes.  Typical behaviour.  I stood there for a moment, bewildered, until I finally accepted that she was clearly ok with this, turned around and tiptoed out of the room, silently closing the door behind me.
When I came downstairs, Jaime looked at me in surprise, with the empty bottle in my hand.  “That was it?” he said, confirming to me that it was definitely as quick it felt.  “Yep” was all I replied.  That was it.

I poured myself a glass of wine and sat on the couch, as an inexplicable feeling of numbness set over me.  That was it.  I am no longer breastfeeding Sloan.  And it happened so easily for her!
When I gave her the bottle, I truly didn’t expect her to take it.  It was a test, that in my heart I knew she would not pass.  So when she happily accepted the bottle, I was surprised and honestly quite sad.

Everyone talks about how fast they grow.  Savour the moments, they say.  Before you know it they will be grown, they say.  They don’t say, “the last time you nurse your child feels like you are taking their tininess and instantly making it big”. 

She runs, she plays, she is beginning to speak.  She eats real food, she laughs at funny things, she climbs everything in sight.  She is a child.  She is not a baby.  Why does this make me sad?  Every day I enjoy her, I love seeing her grow, I love seeing her learn.  Every day with her gets better.  I don’t yearn for her infancy, I look forward to her future.  I enjoy who she is with every day that passes, and I look forward to seeing more of her tomorrow.  There is no sadness in that.

Two nights ago, after giving Sloan that bottle, and I was sitting on the couch with my glass of wine and not knowing what to do with myself, I pulled out my phone and scrolled through Facebook.  I came across a link to this article, which struck me something fierce (http://www.brainchildmag.com/2014/07/now-i-mother-from-a-distance/).
She said it best when she said: “Now there is a person I can’t wrap in a swaddle blanket and protect from the world”.  She nailed it. 
My bedtime nursing routine kept me holding on to her infancy.  It was the one time of the day that she allowed me to hold her tight, cuddle her hard, stroke her cheek and her arm and rock her sweetly as she lulled off to sleep.  Perfectly safe.  Perfectly content.  I know I can still do these things with a bottle, but the truth is, I now know she doesn’t need it.  Jaime can finally put her to bed, which is something I’ve claimed to want for months and months now.  It’s only a matter of time before the bottle is weaned off as well.  Will she still want bedtime cuddles?  How long will it be before she no longer fits “baby-style” in my arms?  Sometimes I feel I am only a breath away from report cards and sleepovers.

Despite my reluctance, I am accepting of these changes.  It’s called humanity.  It’s called life.  She will continue to grow, she is a person who is evolving into herself each and every moment of each and every day.  It is truly a wonder to see.  It reduces me to grateful tears more often than I could ever measure. 


I was once asked what the meaning of true love is.  At the time, I didn’t really know.  I thought of all the typical things, like patience, understanding, compromise.  I thought of my husband, who I love very much and who loves me.  But I still wasn’t sure how to define it.  But now I know.  True love is acceptance.  Motherhood has taught me that.