My Last Baby's First Haircut
The
first of the curls dropped in almost slow motion to the floor over 25 years
ago. He was 2 and they were oh-so-brilliantly blonde. It was the late '80s, so
I left just one long curl until my Father bribed him with a new toy to let him
cut it off. Those first goodbyes to our little one's curls take a little bit of
our heart each time, and I didn't know then just why. Maybe I was just too
young to understand. Maybe it was because my first baby's independence would be
essential to mine. We were growing up together. His not needing me was an
accomplishment for him and a little bit of freedom for me. There were two more
first curls, some golden and some brown to hit the floor, each one carefully
preserved and marked "first haircut," and each one with a stronger
twinge of an almost physical pain as my babies slipped away. They never come
back, those first curls. Those quiet nights and those exhausted mornings with
only the smell of milk on their breath fade away too quickly.
Older
now, I was more aware of the special moments, wanting them to last forever, and
knowing that the end goal of this whole motherhood thing concludes where it
should. It ends with grown and independent people whom we hope we have raised
right, and we hope will come home to see us, although sadly, they come less and
less frequently as the years roll by. As I grew older, the desire for freedom
had been slowly and unknowingly replaced with a comfortable sense of the duty
of motherhood. The juggling of the laundry, the cooking; the shopping for
everything from groceries to clothes to school supplies, costumes and the
never-ending stream of birthday party gifts. There is the driving, the school projects,
the countless hours waiting in line for the Dumbo ride in 100-degree heat (a
ride that's over in three quick minutes), recitals and that darn full-time job.
There have been hundreds of Christmas presents wrapped and mountains of
wrapping swept away, Easter baskets filled and hidden, countless boo-boos
kissed and hundreds of Band-Aids applied. I have been doing this, after all,
for more than 27 years. By the time I am "done" raising children, 40
years will have gone by.
Let
us not forget, although sometimes we do, that there is a spouse who needs you
too. And with marriage and motherhood, the part of you who puts herself first
just slips away. But you don't even notice or care, because your heart is
filled with this huge love that makes you believe in God or Karma or faith in
mankind.
But
sometimes, let's be serious, sometimes we just get through the day. Sometimes
we wait for the minute they all just go to sleep and we leave the mess, well,
everywhere. The sometimes "just get through the day" kind of
parenthood came to an end the day Ella came along.
That
morning, I got the kids up, fed and off to school. I was on my way to work
(where else) when I had the accident. My world turned upside down quickly with
the realization that what we had taken for granted in this whole parenthood
journey might be taken from us. In the dark of the night, they took my child
away to the place that would save her.
She was not breathing on her own,
her delicate skin almost translucent. She had no eyelashes or hair. She slowly
recovered, first in minutes, then hours, then days. It took years for her to
speak or for her hair to grow. The months went by and the years and the doctors
and the therapists and the time and devotion and love given to her because she
simply needed all of us. We celebrated her life and understood without a word
what family now meant for us and to us.
Our
sense of family is so big now, so strong. Full of so many people who loved her
and strangers who prayed for her. She taught us that to love means to risk
losing it all. She taught us to stay when it is hard, when it hurts, when you
are tired; so tired you feel drunk and maybe a little crazy too. She taught us
all to sacrifice for love -- my strong and never -complaining Husband, even my
sweet little ones who went without stories or snuggles they were used to, never
really begrudging their tiny sister. It was a lesson for each of us. She has a
keen instinct into the pain of others that no one really can explain. Out of
nowhere, she hugged our waiter the other day and his response was, "Wow, I
really needed that, I was really missing my niece today." Ella knew that
he needed that hug, she always knows. She is beautiful inside and out, her big
brown eyes look straight into your soul. And as she grows, her hair falls down
in sweet brown curls around her face. I love her face. If you softly stroke her
hair, she falls gently off to sleep; her soft breathing is not a worry anymore.
She
loves her long hair, and she is Elsa and Rapunzel, or the princess of the hour.
It is hours of enjoyment for her sister to play with and an excuse for new bows
and ribbons and headbands. It is a sign she is now healthy, with few outward
traces of her struggle to live. It makes me feel safe. In her new-found
independence, typical of a 5-year-old's, she has made fast friends with a much
more grown up big kid of 6 next door. This little friend had flowing locks of
her own, until she didn't one average day last week. Her mom let her locks
fall, not for the first time, and for her luckily not the last, as there is
still a smaller one with first wisps of baby hair to snuggle. But now, Ella was
asking for her hair to be cut "just like" her sweet friend. It
happened so quickly, and off broke another piece of my heart, a big huge piece.
So the last curls to hit the floor
will be Ella's when I finally summon the courage to take her for that haircut.
I will try to smile as I see her look in the mirror with pride and love for
herself and "the whole world even people she has not met yet." I will
save them in a box labeled "first haircut." I will pack away the
tiniest clothes and the pain, and hope there is a place to store all the
memories, good ones and the hard ones to pull them out anytime I need to be
reminded that in this life there is more joy to be had. It is even sweeter when
we remember the pain. There will be more firsts. I just hope she still smells
like cookies a little while longer.
© Krista Barth, 2015
© Krista Barth, 2015
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