At the Threshold

I’m sitting on the edge of the king size bed where I labored through the birth of my one and only son.  It’s seven years later and the same comforter covers its frame, though its mandala of colors are faded and the bed is now housed in the converted garage my son’s father calls home.  Years ago when we divvied up possessions, he inherited the bed and its linens.

It’s days before Jeb’s birthday and Rex and I are recounting the night my water broke as Jeb sits back, in a rare chance to play video games and listen to his parents reminisce.

“You would not wake up.  Do you remember that?”

“I woke up.”  He’s smiling.

“Rex.  It was crazy how hard it was to wake you.  It was 1am, my water had broken and I just remember nudging you again and again, telling you, ‘wake up’ and you just wouldn’t.  It was like you knew that once you woke up, it was on.  Everything would change.  And you just wanted to stay asleep.”

Rex smiles and chuckles the way he does when exposed.  “Yes, well, once I did get up I was there for you as much as I could be.”

“You were.  Would have been nice if the midwife would have been.  How crazy was that?”

A home birth.  Water breaks at 1am.  Midwife is off-island.  By 3am I’m fully in labor but she won’t catch the first plane to till 6.  Rex is apprehensive.  Birthing support is absent.  I’m in a banana patch in a school bus/house standing at life’s gateway feeling just a little bit alone in it all.

Seven years later with a healthy, growing boy, Rex and I can now laugh and marvel.

“Birth is really intense,” he says.  “You know in the old days, I don’t know if you guys would have made it.  At least one of you might not have survived.”

photograph by Jessica Dofflemyer (all rights reserved)

“It’s true.  I’m not sure what would have happened if we were in a different time.  We were lucky.”

“We sure are.”  He looks over to Jeb who is pushing game buttons while smiling at our words.

“Your experience of the whole thing, must have been so different from mine,” I say.  “In that, you saw me and what I was going through.  I was just so in it.  I have no idea what it was like for you.”

“I was just trying to be there for you.  Let you feel my support.”

“I don’t know where I was.  You know, I think when a woman gives birth she’s like this doorway.  On one side is life and one side is death.  And she is the threshold through which either may pass through.  It can go either way.  She’s just right there, the gateway between worlds.”

“Yeah, I can see that.”

I glance to the wall and notice a calendar hanging, the top two corners curling and folding in upon themselves.

“Rex,” I smile.  “Your calendar says September 2009.”

“Yes.”  He’s revealing that exposed smile again.

“Rex, it’s almost 2011,”  I tease.  These qualities about him are nearly humorous now that we no longer share a life together.

“I won!”  Jeb beams from his video game.

“Ok.  It’s time to go,” I say, rising from the corner of that historic king size bed.

Days later and thousands of miles away, I am under stars in warm water on an isolated coastline, all alone.  It’s day one of my solo retreat and the official date that commemorates my passage into motherhood.  Seven years ago my pregnant belly was immersed in a kiddie pool laboring with Rex and my tardy midwife.

Seven years ago I was the threshold through which a child passed into Life.  Seven years ago that birth pushed me beyond my own inner threshold, transforming me forever.

Alone with the stars, I send Jeb a quiet birthday wish.  Give thanks for his precious presence in my life.  Float my body in the healing waters and wonder at the female form’s capacity to serve as a portal to this world.

15 Seconds of Grace

photograph by Jessica Dofflemyer

It’s day four in my feel-good place and everyone is coming unraveled.  Grown ups climb trees, businessmen dance unconditionally and poets recite rhymes of blooming roses.

I speak with the Ambassador in the Big Sur sunshine.  This is a man who appreciates metaphors and has the endearing habit of telling people what he loves about them.

He’s been here for over a decade.  I cast my eyes to the curving coastline and ask him, “Do you ever take this place for granted?”

“I don’t think I do…”  He pauses taking in our surroundings then points up in the mountains behind us.

“My house is up there and I start the mornings with this little ritual.  I’ve got this coffee maker, you know the kind that stops and lets you take the pot out before it’s completely done brewing?  So I’ll have gotten out of bed and I’ll be standing there at the coffee maker in my kitchen…in my house in the morning – it’s kinda cold – so I’m shivering a little.  And then when it’s ready, I’ll quickly get my first mug of coffee and hop back into bed.  It’s warm under the covers.  And I have this view…and I’m looking out my window, holding my warm cup of coffee…and I’ll just be filled with this gratitude.”

I smile at the Ambassador through watery eyes.  The days here have softened me to a liquid pool of tender feeling.  Simple words swell my heart to overflow like a fountain.

“Every morning, there in my bed I’m just washed with this feeling.  It’s like 15 seconds of grace.”

“Every morning?”

“Every morning.”

Perhaps it is the grace he speaks of that overtakes me.  I am like a gushing river that will flood its banks if my throat opens to make a sound.  I can only look down and breathe as tears slide down my face.

“I can see that you are really touched by what I’m saying.”

I nod and speak quietly, “I really love this place.”

“Come here.”  He gestures me to standing and wraps his big arms around my frame.  My face presses against the stitching of his t-shirt on which is embroidered the name of our locale.  It’s as though the land itself is hugging me, the Ambassador embracing me on its behalf.

For a moment I am enveloped.  Enfolded by deep valleys.  Held by old trees.  Soothed by cold springs.  Surrounded by succulents.    Grace.  Heart.  Home.

Big Sur Love

Art display at the Big Sur Spirit Garden
Art display The Big Sur Spirit Garden
Art display at The Big Sur Spirit Garden
Heart Beat Gallery, Big Sur
The Big Sur Spirit Garden - photograph by Jessica Dofflemyer