IÂ’ve been noticing recently that my husband is taking a few more minutes to
recite Birchas Hashachar (morning blessings). Of course, he has good
reason for the extra concentration. I am expecting, G-d willing, our sixth
child. I know that his thoughts are focused on praying for the health and
welfare of his growing family.
But there is one blessing, in particular, about which I wonder: Does he now
pause over it for an extra moment of contemplation? Have its words taken on a
deeper significance to him, as he recites, “Blessed Art Thou...that You have not
created me a woman".
As he watches me struggle with my bouts of nausea and lassitude, with my
raging hormones and assortment of pains and discomforts, surely he cannot help
but feel gratitude to be exempt from this burden?
These days, my world has changed drastically. While I am thrilled with the
wonder of a life growing inside of me, and while I am filled with anticipation
of this new soul about to make its debut and join the ranks of my children, the
long wait is achingly difficult.
Not long ago, I used to wake up filled with eager energy to tackle the
novel challenges of a brand new day. I would look forward to confronting new
projects at work, implementing new strategies, devising new programs,
formulating new ideas. I reveled, too, in taking care of my home, frolicking
with my children and inventing new activities of interest for them. Nowadays,
however, my mornings begin with sickness which progresses into burdensome
heaviness, lethargy and immobility. My days revolve around simply trying to
survive one hour after another until a nightÂ’s fitful sleep provides some refuge
from the tormenting moments of sickliness.
This is how my days pass, week after week, month after month. I no longer
feel in control of anything. My brain and body seem to be working hand in hand
in a grand conspiracy against me. Any thought with the slightest degree of
complexity is too straining to tackle. My burgeoning body is growing way out of
control, pounds heaping upon pounds, collaborating against my remaining agility.
Energy is a word of the past, as the slightest exertion is burdensome, an effort
beyond my capability.
Yet in this state, somehow, a new realization has also dawned – as if a
new space of awareness has opened up within me. IÂ’ve come to realize, quite
simply, that my situation and circumstances are not in my hands to control.
While I do the small bit that I can and put forth whatever effort I am able to
muster to order and run my life, there is an underlying realization that
everything – projects at work, my health, the activities or issues in my
children’s lives and even my own thought process – are no longer mine
alone.
As IÂ’m forced to relinquish my reigns of control, usually such an
integral part of my personality, I am faced with a new reality. I am compelled
instead to fall back on You and Your control. And as I fall back, relegating it
all to You, I find that the fall is surprisingly not hard, that there is a
cushion of a new pillow of faith and comfort.
So my husband futily empathizes with my pains and discomfort and he tries
to offer practical assistance. He davens on behalf of me and our family with
extra concentration and devotion. And he thanks G-d with a measure of relief for
not making him go through this physiologically debilitating and emotionally
draining condition. As a man, he can participate in the birth of a new child
without the need to be so transformed and so wrung out in the process.
As for
me, as I try to focus my unfocused brain on my prayers, I too spend slightly
more time on my morning prayers.
And I too thank You, G-d. I thank You for all the good in my life. I
thank You for my husband and children. And I thank You for the blessing of a new
life developing within me. Perhaps I should be able to thank You for my aches
and pains too – knowing full well that the end result will make it all
worthwhile – but quite honestly, I cannot. Perhaps it is because I can’t really
fathom why such absolute joy must be marred with such sickliness. Or perhaps
simply because, in the meanwhile, G-d, it hurts.
But the genuine thanks that I do offer You is for the realization,
through all this, that this pain – and with it all the suffering in the world,
all the good and bad that You have chosen to intermingle in Your creaturesÂ’
lives – is happening exactly according to Your plan, exactly according to Your
wishes.
I thank You for the awareness that You are fully taking care of me.
It eases my mind to know that You are working it all out, exactly as it is meant
to be.
And falling back into that space, that comforting pillow of faith, in
realizing that You are controlling it all – whether I appreciate it or not,
whether I understand it or not – makes me say my prayers with slightly more
conviction.
I take a moment to pause in reflection as I read the prayers that
women have traditionally recited instead of the one my husband just read. And I
think with absolute and honest conviction, “Thank You, G-d, for making me – and
Your world – exactly as You want it to be.”