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postmodernfamilyblog

Multigenerational Mom Muses on Twin Toddlers & Twenty-Something Daughters

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postmodernfamilyblog.wordpress.com

I'm a mother of twin toddlers and two adult daughters. My dad says I ran the engine and the caboose on grandchildren, but I'm having a really hard time driving the potty train. (They always told me boys were harder!) I am passionate about family, football, politics, and good books, and I'm liable to blog about any one of them on any given week.

Scriptural Limitations and the SBC Vote

Well, I thought (knew) it would happen. And now it has. Church has officially attacked IVF via the preacher men at the Southern Baptist Convention. (How long ’til government follows suit?) The measure states: “Couples who experience the searing pain of infertility can turn to God, look to Scripture for numerous examples of infertility, and know that their lament is heard by the Lord, who offers compassion and grace to those deeply afflicted by such realities.”

Look to scripture.

The Old Testament discusses infertility (in terms of barrenness) far more often than the New. And as I recall, a couple times, it involves handmaids – which maybe wasn’t quite the way the intended children were to be supplied, but the Lord works in mysterious ways, isn’t that the saying? And the sons of those handmaids were blessed many times over in the bible.

Barrenness is explored in the New Testament, too. In this one instance (unless I’ve missed more), an angel appears, and promises the man a son. Always, a son. This time, John the Baptist.

So, the Baptists these days will say that children are granted if you desire them enough, pray for them enough, rely on your dreams and your prophets and your handmaids enough, maybe then, you’ll conceive.

But here’s my question: when the desire is there, but it wanes (like in fizzles and flops) then what?

Will these preacher men at the SBC also “look to scripture” when they and the men of the fold suffer erectile disfunction? Will Viagra likewise be opposed?

But then, there’s no male version of infertility in scripture. No male version of a handmaid for women to bed either. So surely Viagra’s fair game. It’s an answer to prayers, after all.

I mean, whatever it takes if you’re a man.

Dawn Rising: a Haibun

She slips into her fuzzy bathrobe with all the sleep-rimmed focus of cream unfurling in coffee. Eyes but slits, she stirs the marble mist. Shadows spin and settle; shrubbery and tree line appear. Lawn purls silver-sage, and the yearling slips from his bed to graze at the sod-scalloped hem between clearing and wood. A roll of her perfumed wrist and his coat froths cappuccino; the dogwoods don lemon lime skirts. Onward she shuffles now, gathering steam. Wiping her eyes: the limbs limn tears. Flexing her toes: the moss fuzzes stone. The yearling cocks his head to the arched swirl of undergrowth, an almost-cave of wonder and wild behind him. The sun-sprinkled lawn, bustling and bursting with civilized snacks, in front. Inward or out? he ponders in pause. Meanwhile, sliding off her slipper and sash,

Dawn lifts gold arms

to comb back the last clinging

haze from her crown.

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Your Most Diabolical Lies

I have taken out of thine hand the cup of trembling

            — Isaiah 51:22

Our minds are not yours

to have your way with.

No, not our bodies either.

Keep your key to our lives

and achievements to yourself.

You are no master of ours.

Still, you come to us with longing

and unsolicited advice:

Let down your hair and your goals

and your dangerous gender ideologies.

Be your husband’s pride and joy,

of less daring — more noble — character.

More for less.

You want us smaller

(the little woman

cowered under

Adam’s rib).

YOU COWARD.

You want our riches, but not our power.

Our diamonds, coal, cherries, oil.

You want to strip us, nail us, crush us,

pillage, plunder, f**k us.

Well f**k that.

Our world is not your oyster.

You cannot plumb our depths.

And because we will not let you,

you’re hellbent to pry the lock

and nail us to the cross you claim

we’re destined to bear ‘til kingdom come.

Your kingdom.

But how’s that old parable go?

For want of a nail, the shoe was lost,

followed by horse, rider, battle, and kingdom…

There’s a proverb for you.

You want us trembling?

We’ll give you the very cup of trembling.

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The Class of 2024: Oh, How I Love Them

Every year, I write about graduation and reflect on my takeaways for the year. On how I remember these seniors. And I knew instantly and without a doubt, that I will forever remember the class of 2024 for the relationships we forged together.

I learned quickly that I would need to work hard to build connections with this group because their high school career began with the Covid virus destroying not just immune systems, but also long-established secondary school social systems.

Isolated behind masks and six feet of distance, these kiddos functioned on fractured school relationships: class sizes chopped in half, lunch trays taken to study hall, traffic patterns clearly delineated; staircases assigned to go up and staircases designed to go down (and never the twain should mix).

The traditional mix and match grab bag of cafeteria seating, club sign ups, and school dances weren’t in place. Strangers remained strangers and even friends were kept at arms’ length. They struggled to form connections with their peers and their teachers.

Things had improved to near-normal by their junior year, but even so, once I got them as seniors, they were still hesitant to put themselves out there – especially with their teachers. They had known invisibility thanks to wearing masks as freshmen, and I think they still suffered from not feeling fully seen and understood.

I’ve always greeted students at the door. Always. It’s nothing new. But what was new for me this year was making sure I said their name as I greeted them EVERY time they entered my classroom. EVERY time I called on them in class. EVERY time I saw them around town. EVERY SINGLE TIME.

Saying someone’s name is a simple thing, but such a big deal. It feels personal, makes them feel special, feel seen. It truly does help build trust.

After learning their names, I made it a point to learn something special about each kid: their activities, hobbies, favorite colors, artists, after-school jobs or after-high-school plans.

Somewhere between the greetings and the shared knowledge, they began to open up with me and with their classmates — talking to people beyond their cliques and sharing more than just weekend plans.  

We always explore real world topics in Advanced Comp. Tough world topics. And so many of these students have dealt with (or are still dealing with) tough, real world topics — more than any other group I’ve taught.  Since the pandemic shutdown, addictions, abuse, and food scarcity has multiplied, while family units and financial security has broken down. These traumas made this group starved for connection, but wary of sharing.

But through the careful building of a safe space in my classroom, students began sharing the good, the bad, and the ugly in their lives. Together, we learned about one another’s struggles, gifts, triumphs, and traumas. Yes, together.

I share too.

Because my job as an English teacher is to teach students to find, hone, and use their voices. And if I were to remain silent, they would see me as a hypocrite. As an imposter. A fake. But I’ve learned if I share my genuine self with them, they are much more likely to do the same with me.

And share we did. Our hearts and our minds, our joys and our sorrows, our goals, and our aspirations.

This year’s group of seniors is something special. And they’ve carved themselves a niche in my heart where they will forever remain. This group of kids who loves everything from chick fil a waffle fries to 3D nail designs, Patrick Mahomes on Sunday afternoons and TikTok all night, every night, the kindergarten classroom where they interned, the Atlanta Braves, the Kendrick/Drake beef, the tattoo they designed in honor of their father’s memory, the slingshot dropped and found in the dirt in Mexico, their grandmother’s bracelet, their mother’s sacrifices, being first in their family to graduate high school or attend college or both.

I am so incredibly proud of this senior class, and I cannot wait to rejoice in their future accomplishments. We are eternally connected.

Oh, how I love them

What I didn’t expect after my hysterectomy

I expected to feel less than whole. To mourn my uterus, to miss the procreant cradle where my babies rocked until I rolled them out and raised them up. To perhaps feel like I’m missing what makes me a woman. But that’s not what I felt.

I’ve felt missing completely. Lost in a head full of white static, my body lost in post-anesthetic cotton batting. Muffled thoughts floating in half-dreams and white-sheet other-worlds opened by robotic arms and pain-numbing canister snaps. So disconnected. So dejected. Missing parts and missing people.  Body blue and punctured, matching my mood. 

I also didn’t expect the exhaustion. Weights hooked and hanging at the end of my limbs, the start of my thoughts. Everything sluggish and sidelined. Everything empty. I shed a lot of tears. Felt sorry for myself. Felt forgotten and alone.

But that was far from the truth — was all the fallacy of post-surgical funk. Because I have had so many people rally around me and my family. So many people shower us with love. So many meals delivered, texts sent, pickups and drop offs completed, prayers spoken. I grow weepy (with gratitude this time) just thinking about it.

And today, the cobwebs and cotton batting are limned in a see-through-the-murky-to-better-days brightness. I feel like I’m closer to the other side now – the side where my family is, my friends are, where energy pours like sunshine and waterfalls. It’s shimmering there in the haze like the northern lights I missed the weekend of my surgery. The shine is returning. I’m nearly there. 

And it’s all thanks to a little help from my friends, my family, my people, my village.

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Lines Written a Few Hours Before Tintern Abbey Departs 

(Or Cleaning out My Pocketbook)

 

Five more hours with my uterus 

tucked inside me like a coin pouch,

calcified stones rattling like spare change, 

making their presence known.

 

For nearly 58 years she’s been with me, 

snug above her pelvic foundation,

inside alabaster birthing-hip walls,

and a flying buttress of ribs,

my pear-shaped cathedral, 

host of clutch and caul,

of four miracles total —

once (deep in her aged patina splendor and

a glorious display of gothic revival)

even two at a time.

Yes, she’s always been there.

 

And now, just five more hours 

with my clutch built for precious cargo.

(Well, more like four-and-a-half now.)

She’s been a dedicated little pocketbook,

sloughing and sluicing, building and producing

and though she’s more paunch than pouch these days,

more crumbled cabin than cathedral,

she’s a part of me —

and bruised and battered,

torn and tattered though she is —

I will miss her.

 

Her Haiku

Shimmering bright but

She’ll crumble like eye shadow

if you touch her. Don’t.

Feeling Salty?

There they stand, pretty maids all in a row.

Salt of the earth #tradwives, wrapped in aprons

and humility, baking sour dough rolls

and buns in ovens since two became one.

The glory of their lord shines all about,

pillar cocked and smoking, an inferno —

a raging reminder of what’s been vowed:

be fruitful and multiply, trust and oh-

babes, you’ve let the laundry pile up and re-

sentment rush in, gathering here, drifting

there, coating your once-fertile crescents in

barren grains of sand. Your mindsets must shift,

be pliant, dutiful, beautiful, not

lost shakers of salt, defying your lot.

…I mean how much good could should would truly come from plumbing your depths beyond the breadth of your womb your tomb your lead balloon waking shaking breaking (no mistaking it) free willy-nilly I mean really from your perimeter placement on the parched and patterned pages of that aged staged staid and time to be waylaid patriarchy?

by Heather Peters Candela

Photo by Lorena Martu00ednez on Pexels.com

Spotted

Like

a calico kitten or a Dalmatian pup?

An appaloosa’s flanks or a speckled green toad?

Ladybug shells or butterfly wings?

A giant giraffe neck, a ginger’s freckled chest?

Cheetahs? Leopards?

A lantern fly nymph?

Or more like

Blueberry muffins

Or chocolate chip scones?

Or more like red-capped, warted

mushrooms? Poison hemlock stems?

Or spotted like

Cruella Deville’s floor-length fur coat?

Daisy Buchanan’s skittering pearls?

Desdemona’s strawberry handkerchief?

The sleep-haunted hands of Lady Macbeth?

Gertrude’s black and grained soul?

Or spotted like

The hiccupping sun’s surface,

Brewing disruption in planet-sized

Storms of magnetic mayhem…

Pretty much like this thing

Spotted

There on the monitor,

Blooming like Rorschach’s inkblot

Amidst the hollowed-out, round, sound-

Waves spinning didgeridoo vowels amidst

Rumbling, bubbling bowel sounds.

A shifting, sizable storm cloud.

A pale and pockmarked moon.

A shadowy, seething portent.

Marring the vault of a once

procreant cradle.

A dappled dollop of disorder.

Spotted.

Get it out, out.

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