My sister has two kids, Lily and Judah, and I love them as though
they were my own. I only have one sibling, Amy, and she only has two
kids, so I’m not discriminating against other nieces and nephews. They
are my only ones and
I love them the entirety of who I am.
Judah was a summer baby, born just three Augusts ago. Since I have
been staying with my sister for the majority of the summer for several
years, I was around for her third trimester with Judah. We spent the
summer cleaning the house, painting murals, redecorating, and going to
birthing classes every week. Apparently, there are requirements for
choosing a midwife over a hospital and education is part of the deal.
Who knew?
Every Thursday of that summer was spent traveling to the Goshen
Birthing Center and back, which is a 45 minute trip each way. The way
to Goshen would usually be spent singing songs, talking, smelling the
odd farmy smells of the Midwest, and entertaining my niece. The way
home, on the other hand, was time spent discussing the birthing class.
One of the most distinct memories that I have, something that forever
altered the focus of my internal lens, was when Amy told me about
worldwide cultural birthing practices. She told me about when giving
birth in rice patties, in hospital beds, in homes, and in bathtubs. She
told me that (all things being equal) every baby, in every situation,
in every culture, in every country, from the beginning of time, has
entered the world the same way. They come out face down and immediately
flip their bodies to be face up. This isn’t taught or practiced or
forced. It’s the way that babies instinctually know how to enter the
world.
Face down. Flip. Face up.
I started to think about this, really think about it, I mean. I
started to wonder how we can be so different, so unique, so opposite,
yet our first moments of life on the outside were exactly the same.
What causes someone to pick up a gun? What drives someone to
self-medicate? What pushes someone to a particular belief system? Or
away from one? What inspires a person to create? Or to love? Or to
dream?
Obviously these are complex issues. Obviously there are factors
beyond our instinctual natures that contribute to the story of who we
are. Obviously.
It just seems like it should be less complex. It seems like we know
how to act, but we learn to operate in opposition to what we know. I
came into the world the same exact way that John d. Rockefeller, Abraham
Lincoln, Mother Teresa, Sojourner Truth, Michael Jordan, Dorothy
Sayers, Adolf Hitler, and Osama bin ladin came into the world. We were
face down. Then we flipped.
I thought about this fact again today. I looked into the eyes of the
kids in the bateyes and thought about their first moments of life. I
thought about how they were the same as mine. The same as all of the
other people in the world. I watched them create self-portraits and
draw things that they care about around their portrait. They were
sprawled all over the floor in our created safe space. I could see my
niece and nephew in them, having done the same type of art at the
kitchen table instead of a cement floor. I could see that their lack of
ability to hold a pencil came from lack of exposure, not lack of
ability. I wondered about their hopes, their dreams, and who would
eventually pick up a gun.
They were artists, these little ones,
creating and expressing, reminding me of all that binds us, and all that
wedges us apart.
Thinking of how we all start the same way.
Face down. Flip. Face up.
If only it would stay so simple.
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