Thursday, October 13, 2011

Before a Name: Inside My Mother's Womb

Inside the center of every flower is my mother's face
          I suppose my story really started before I was given a name, because even before I was born, there were stories told about me by my parents.  Ever since I was a child, here and there, my parents dropped details about the months leading up to my birth.  By their accounts, when my mother was pregnant with me, she had symptoms of dizziness and stomach pain.  It wasn’t until she found tapeworms in her stool that she began to worry.  She went to a clinic where she was told they could do nothing for her, because she was already five months pregnant.  For months, until the day I was born, she hosted not only a fetus but also intestinal parasites that robbed her of nutrients and peace of mind.  Only after she gave birth to me, did she ingest pills to chemically exterminate the parasites.  All the while during her pregnancy she had worried about me—that in some way, shape, or form I would come out disadvantaged due to being malnourished.
Photo courtesy of Maggie C. who
carries and will birth her joy in 2012

           My parents were relieved to see that I was formed without any abnormalities and that all my organs functioned properly.  However, according to my father, as an infant I could hardly keep down my food; I kept throwing up after each feeding.  Even as a toddler, I hardly ate and often times would vomit when overly excited.  Older women would take my wrist in their hands and say, “What is this? It looks as though it’ll snap like a twig?”  Whenever my father told me stories of how any small amount of food used to induce me into gagging, my mother’s eyes would glaze over with shame.  I don't know if there's any correlation between a fetus' development and having tapeworms, but my mother seemed to have thought so and somehow this always gave her a twinge of guilt.  As for me, as a child, the story left me chagrined and apologetic toward my mother because I felt that I too was a freeloader, like the tapeworms in her belly, who robbed her of food and peace during a very trying time in her life.  It wasn’t until I became a teenager that I started to appreciate the story; I became enamored by the idea of vying for nutrients in my mother’s womb.  I thought if I could overcome tough conditions as a fetus, then surely I was prepared to overcome obstacles in life.  I told myself I was created to be a survivor.
I asked my mother to pose for a picture with this tree.
This is what she gave.  Always more than expected :)
(July 2009)
          And so, the stories, which I had heard as a child about myself inside my mother’s belly, became the seeds that would later sprout up into my life-long inquiries up to Heaven.  And on those occasions as a child—and well into my teenage years and eventual adulthood—when in Sunday school, when the scriptural reference every so often would pop up to be: You created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made (Psalm 139: 12-13a), I wondered in awe.  I couldn’t help but to ask: “God, did you really know me when I was inside my mother’s womb?  Did you know me before I even had a name?"


      

3 comments:

  1. Although I've heard you share this story before, the way you write it here brings tears to my eyes. And that is an awesome picture of your mom!

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  2. i've never heard this story before! i wanted to cry, too! a mother's love is incredible. God's love even more. you bring out both in this story. your mother looks like a young tree sprite in this picture. so lovely indeed! yes, DHK, u overcame the obstacles in your mama's belly, u can overcome any obstacle on this Earth to reach the One who knew you even before u were DHK. :-)

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  3. I still have the letter you wrote me when I moved up to 5th grade. You included this verse, and it's one that I've held onto ever since...

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