You Are Already A Mother
Life Within the Womb- by Saralee Sky
The
beginning of life in the womb is in itself a miraculous journey. As
many as 500
million sperm begin their journey together as they travel through the
vagina,
the uterus and eventually the fallopian tube. Sperm have a sense of
smell (!)
and they smell their way to the egg. Once one (out of 500 million)
sperm
penetrates the egg’s wall, it is drawn to the nucleus of the
egg. Egg and sperm
merge and become one. Conception has occurred.
I
didn’t plan my first pregnancy. After years of
wondering what it would feel like to be pregnant, the reality was very
close to
my fantasies – surges of nausea, sore breasts and the
ever-present feelings of
anticipation and awe. Mostly I was overwhelmed by the presence of
another life
inside my body. I was sharing my body with my baby. Thirty years later
it
remains the single most amazing thing that has ever happened to me.
The
moment I made the choice and committed
myself to that pregnancy, I was a mother. The acknowledgment that a
life had
begun in my womb - and my desire to hold and nurture that life - was
the
beginning of motherhood for me. The bond between me and that brand new
life
took on a strength and purpose which colored every other aspect of my
life. As
day followed day, I was more and more certain of the presence of
another
consciousness, separate from me but ever-present.
*
*
*
One day
after fertilization the egg divides for the first time. One week after
fertilization the egg arrives in the uterus. During the third week the
embryo
begins to take shape. During the fourth week, the first organ to begin
to
develop is the heart. I am overwhelmed by this thought and image: at
four weeks
we all have a beating heart, which will continue to beat throughout our
lives.
Taken out of the realm of the physical for a moment, this image
resonates with
my belief that we are beings of love, created in love, nurtured in
love, and
ultimately merging back into the source of unending love.
My
first pregnancy occurred at a time when my life
was in transition in all kinds of ways. I was moving away from a
relationship,
away from the city, away from the traditional American ideals of career
and
success. I was moving toward a more simplified existence with an ideal
of
voluntary poverty as part of the back to the land movement. I was a
hippie
living in a converted chicken shack!
As
the pregnancy progressed I trusted in the Universe
and my own dharma (destiny or path) to lead me where I needed to go, to
teach
me what I needed to learn. People who could help me with the pregnancy
and
birth began to materialize in my life. I was given the book,
“Prenatal Yoga” by
Jeannine Parvati Baker, and I began to practice prenatal yoga daily. I
found a
nurse who was studying to become a midwife. My delivery would be her
first. I
decided to have my baby at home- wherever that would be. Hopefully, not
the
chicken shack.
*
*
*
During the
second trimester – months four, five and six - the sexual
organs are formed.
The baby becomes sensitive to touch. By 16 weeks, the baby makes
intricate
movements and has an awareness of the space around him. By 18 weeks,
the mother
becomes aware of the baby’s movements, though the baby has
been active for
quite some time. Some babies open their eyes as early as 18 weeks. By
five
months – halfway to the birth – the baby is seven
inches long and has her own
fingerprints – her own unique identity. At the end of the
second trimester,
every part of the baby has been formed. At 24 weeks, the baby may
survive
outside the womb, but the lungs are too small to take in enough oxygen.
The
baby takes in all nutrients including oxygen from the umbilical cord.
The
second trimester was simply fantastic for me. All
the doubts and fears about being pregnant during this unstable time in
my life
receded into the background. What was front and center was a feeling of
inner
strength and the belief that I could do anything I needed to do in
order to be
the best mother to this child I could possibly be. I started taking
charge of
my life in a more conscious way. I met a spiritual teacher (guru) who
gave me a
mantra to repeat as I rubbed my growing belly. I was on my way.
I
started making decisions with a strength and a
certainty I had never felt before. I severed my relationship with the
baby’s
father so as to be able to concentrate on getting ready to be a parent.
The
relationship had essentially ended before we knew a pregnancy had
begun. We
needed to go our separate ways, and I didn’t want him hanging
around out of
obligation. While I had initially been afraid of being alone and
pregnant, I
was now reveling in my new-found strength and comfortable with being on
my own.
I trusted in the universe to bring me the people I needed to help with
the
pregnancy, birth and parenting of this baby.
*
*
*
By the
seventh month the sense organs are mature. Strong smells can come into
the womb
through the amniotic fluid. The baby’s eyes open and close.
What does he see
when his eyes are open? Sounds are now heard from outside the womb. The
mother’s voice is carried through the amniotic fluid as well
as from outside
the womb. In addition to hearing and smelling and
‘seeing’, the baby is also
aware of and affected by the mother’s mental and emotional
state. The mother’s
heart rate and blood pressure change as a result of her mental and
emotional
states and this change in heart rate and blood pressure is filtered
through the
placenta. The baby is thinking and feeling right along with his mother
in a
very elemental way. Practicing a form of daily meditation and/or
contemplation
can help keep both mother and baby calmer and able to withstand the
unavoidable
stresses and strains of daily life.
I
knew in some deep, primal way that my mental and
emotional state affected by baby. And as he grew, his consciousness
also
affected me. I was able to stay calmer and more centered as a result of
his
influence and presence in my life. We were a team and we went
everywhere
together. I was growing bigger, but I was young and strong and active.
I never
felt more comfortable in my own body than I did in this third
trimester, as
least until the last few weeks.
I
have pictures of myself (and Joseph) at this stage.
I am tanned all over and very pregnant, breasts and belly swollen and
huge. I
look like some native-hippie-earth-woman – young and strong
and brimming with
life. I was living solidly within my physical body and also aware of
the way my
consciousness emanated out from the physical into other etheric realms.
*
*
*
During the
third trimester, the baby prepares for life outside the womb. She will
triple
in weight and double in length. She will spend 90% of her time sleeping
and 10%
of the time awake and alert. She has a startle reflex to a sudden
noise. She
learns to swallow and shows a clear preference for the right or left
thumb – a
preference which will stay with her for the rest of her life. At eight
months –
33 weeks – the baby responds to her mother’s voice
and patterns of speech. The
baby’s cries will have similar patterns. Babies at this stage
also have REM
sleep, an indication that she is dreaming in the womb. Already she has
her own
dreams, her own preferences, her own dharma or path. The birth of the
baby is
not the beginning of her journey. She has already traveled through an
amazing
path of development while in the womb.
The
process of birth and the early weeks of parenting
were a crash course in getting to know this baby of mine, this being
who felt
old in soul as well as new in body. The strength of his will and his
desire to
survive, grow and develop were awesome to behold. I had to learn to get
out of
the way – to be there to love and nurture him, but also to
trust that he knew
what was best for him at any given moment. He knew when he was hungry,
tired,
uncomfortable, happy. His connection to me was fierce, and his desire
to grow
up and away from me was just as fierce.
*
*
*
National
Geographic recently produced a program for
their television channel entitled, ‘In the Womb’.
This remarkable program featured
4D pictures of babies in the womb. They defined 4D as 3D sonograms in
real
time. I watched as a 30 week fetus yawned and played with its nose.
Seeing the
babies grow and develop in the womb reinforced my belief that we are
already
parenting these beings well before they are born.
Looking
back over 30 years I know that my first
pregnancy started me on my path of support and nurturance for mothers
and
babies, pre and post partum. A few years ago, I named my new business
Womb To
Grow. I now see it as an even more accurate name for what it is we as
mothers
do. We are growing right along with our babies as we create, sustain,
nurture
and give birth to another being. We can trust our babies to teach us
how to be
the best mother to them. All we need to do is pay attention, starting
from the
moment we choose to become mothers during the early phase of pregnancy
and
continuing on through the rest of the pregnancy, the birth and the
early years
of parenting. From the moment we welcome the pregnancy into our lives
we are
already on our way.
Saralee
Sky, M.A., has 30+ years of experience with children, as a mother and
grandmother, as a therapist for abused children, as the director of
three
nonprofit agencies serving children, and as co-owner and manager of
Womb To
Grow LLC and http://www.babynut.com.
Babynut provides natural, organic and alternative products for
pregnancy,
adoption, childbirth, parenting, babies and toddlers.
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