It is black
outside. Soft pits and pats against the window…rain…and I pull the
blanket closer, sinking back into the arm of the recliner. A hot
cup of tea rests at my elbow. It is my favorite time of the day.
In the darkness,
I think back to other special mornings, twenty years ago. Wrapped
in my green plush robe, rocking back and forth, it was many a quiet
dark morning when I would slowly sense the presence of another
person. My son, a toddler of three, had padded into the living
room, up next to my chair, with his small eyes fixed on me.
Wordlessly, in
agreement that the peace of the morning was large enough for both of
us, I would open my robe. Knowing what to do, he climbed onto my
lap, and I pulled the robe around us, a snuggling of two. In many a
dark early morning, so many years ago, we kept the peace together.
Snuggling…it’s
hard to know the best part. Is it the dark, the quiet, the soft
touch of a hand on the shoulder? Is it protection, comfort,
acknowledgement, relationship? Safety? Is it the promised
assurance between human beings that what happens to you will happen
to me because I share your heartbeat?
I was jarred to
attention last week. I was asked to consider the first time I ever
snuggled, my earliest snuggle of life, and the question brought me
up short.
Was it inside the
warm white blanket wrapped around me as I was laid into the arms of
my mother in the hospital? Or was it later…close against her as she
nursed me, her firstborn? Maybe my father was the first to snuggle
me, peering intently, measuring the smallest eyes and lips of a
baby…his…held in the crook of his arm.
Maybe…but the
magic of science has opened the window on snuggling, and I think it
must surely have been weeks, even months before my birth, when I
knew I was safe, a knowing of safety available to all living beings
even before they can explain it in words.
Surely, weeks
before birth, wrapped into a bundle of baby, between my bursts of
pushing and kicking against the walls of the womb…surely there were
quiet moments shared with my mother where we snuggled and dreamt.
Already at this stage I had fine hair, teeth, and eyelash fringes
around eyelids that opened and closed...and opened again…for infant
eyes that looked around. When she spoke, I knew my mother’s
voice…outside…serenading me as I waited my time.
Certainly, even
weeks earlier, when the womb was large enough for me to swim and
stretch and turn somersaults, I took time to rest and sleep and
snuggle. Inside my mother’s quiet belly, worn out from my infant
gymnastics, curling my toes, I would have stuck my thumb into my
mouth and felt the safety of darkness…protected and safe.
One thing is
certain. I know I snuggled long before I made my first appearance
under bright hospital lights. No matter what some want to claim I
was back then…a blob, a mass of cells, an embryo, a fetus…a product
of conception…I was, without a doubt, a flourishing child of my
parents, thriving and growing.
Today, cloaked in
a battle of terminology, creating labels devoid of humanity, there
are those who wish us to forget that we once snuggled in the womb.
They will not have their way with me.
I claim my
existence, refusing to be dehumanized at any stage of development.
Supported by the miraculous development of four-dimensional
ultrasound, doctors and parents can follow the development of babies
like me. At eight weeks, I was fully formed, a human of one inch in
length, every organ present, with a strong beating heart.
At nine weeks, my
fingerprints were already engraved, and my fingers were ready to
grasp an object placed in my palm.
At ten weeks, my
body was sensitive to touch. I squinted and swallowed. I puckered my
brow and frowned.
And then I
smiled…at eleven weeks. And if I could smile, it is certain that I
smiled because I felt safe, snuggled inside, nurtured and
protected...my life ahead to be enjoyed and cherished.
So many years
later, watching the dawn break on the mountains outside the window,
I follow the beads of rain that trickle down the glass. Another
beautiful day outside, crisp and damp. The garden will sparkle when
the sun breaks through the clouds. I take a sip of tea and pull the
blanket up under my chin.
My son is grown
now, and I must snuggle alone. It’s enough, but it’s not the best
there is.
If there really
is a best thing to snuggling, this would have to be it…revived by
thoughts of long ago…a bundle wrapped together, two of us sharing
the morning…the best thing of all surely being the promised
assurance between human beings that what happens to you will happen
to me…because I share your heartbeat.
*************************************
DEDICATION
This column is
dedicated to the many committed educators who are not afraid to
teach our children about their earliest days of life inside the
womb. May these faithful teachers be encouraged in their work.