Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Empty?


I felt empty.

Steve and I had dreamt about this weekend.
We had loved our time at Keele University:
the campus, the courses, the nightlife,
and the Christian Union.
The CU weekends away with inspirational teaching, relationship building and muddy football games were an annual highlight.
We walked away after graduation both wanting to go back and impart into students at a later date.
Knowing the CU president and our return to England imminent, the stars seemed to have aligned and opened an opportunity.
We were excited and eagerly anticipated all the things we would do, the ways Father God would move.

Who would have known that we would travel to that weekend, driving away from a house shrouded in grief just less than three weeks previously.

Like I said, I felt empty.

The weekend passed like a blur.
We had planned and prepared as diligently as ever, but I looked back and questioned whether things were as creative as we could have made them,
whether we really challenged them enough,
if our words were full of Holy Spirit, or just read off of a paper.

I wondered if I had really given my best,
if we had done the right thing.

After the weekend, our Facebook burgeoned with friend requests, comments about how much our talk spoke to them. And I got the warm and fuzzies.

When you think you don’t do well,
When things are super hard,
But you step out in faith regardless,
God can do great things.

True.

But not the end.

The thing is
I don’t just want warm and fuzzies.

I don’t just want to experience the high of a temporary feeling.
To think I did something good one day
And the next
Nothing substantial has changed

More was in store:






Never would I have imagined
That out of pouring myself out
That weekend still grieving
And being open to what Father wanted to do
That now
Two years to the day later
These girls who sat on seats and listened
Politely taking notes and clapping in the right places
Now
Sit at my table
Text me
Do lunch
Talk birth
Live chat through Obsessive Compulsive Cleaners
And pour into my sweet daughter
(with Petit Filous)

I don’t have much to offer this great world
Just my stories
My inappropriate humour
My meager words
And my love for people
But offer it I will
In the hopes that my longevity
My sticking around and involved
 it makes some difference
It changes some directions
It makes Father God bigger,
more visible,
more tangible,
in more lives.


Monday, November 4, 2013

Selfie

I’ll say it once, nice and loud for you all to hear:

"I want to see your face, but I don’t want to see your face THAT much."

Some pictures of you on hols,
hanging out with friends,
trying out new make up,
and definitely with cool clothes on.

But fill my newsfeed with twenty of the same posed,
but trying to be natural shot
With sepia, willow, X Pro II and every other filter under the sun
And I will delete you.

I rarely put up selfies.

If I do,
they either contain my sidekick Zella:


Or me doing some ridiculous face:



No one wants to see just my normal face.

No one.

Putting a picture up of me,
just out there,
puts me on display.

Exposes me.

I remember being pregnant and getting requests from friends far away desperate to see my ever burgeoning bump, and I recoiled in fear, scared of comments I would get.

What if they didn’t think I was pretty?

Me with Zella? Well you have to think that’s cute.
Me with a stupid grin? Well you just have to laugh.
Me. Just me.
Well…what if it doesn’t get “likes”?

The truth is
Behind the newsfeed full of posed photos
Or the one devoid of them
There sits a woman with phone in hand
Girl with laptop
Lady staring at a screen
With a beauty to unveil
Wondering if anyone will see it
Notice it
Care about it
Love it

Bikini jumping at beach, ghetto twerking poses, inappropriate Halloween outfits
It all screams:
Do you see me?

Baggy clothes dragging, dark hair over eyes, scar marks on arms
It all screams
Do you see me?

We first became undone
That 1800s day
When we looked up from the bathroom sink
And our reflection stared back at us.

And then when the weighing scales,
that once resided so neatly on kitchen counters,
or so officially in doctors offices,
Encroached into our homes
With constant reminder
That we didn’t measure up
We weren’t the right fit
We unravelled further

My teeth aren’t straight.
I was too scared to get my teeth taken out,and so the orthodontist couldn’t put braces on, and I look at my wedding photos, and regret that moment of teenage worry that means my mouth isn’t Colgate ad worthy.

My body feels weird.
Early puberty meant that since age 11 I’ve been this size, this weight, but yet I never quite got a grasp on it, and justas I started to feel comfortable, pregnancy attacked it, and now bits have got bigger, and bits have got smaller; unwelcome visitors in a place I’d just started to feel at home with.

But I cling onto the words that my Father God continually impresses upon me:

I am beautiful.
And that is not determined by merely the outside.

A 1900s girl,
without the trappings of adverts and angst,
described herself
based on her character
her skills
her attributes.

She was not to be described as merely the sum of her body parts

So on Saturday afternoon,
humbled with a clumsy hot chocolate wetting through my lap,
the girls and I wrote,
the beauty we saw in oneanother.

This is my real selfie:


The irony that the same teeth that repel me,
Are seen by another as “beautiful smile” 

And that what makes a difference
In the lives of others
What makes the permanent change
In communities
Is not the colour of my eyes
The outfit I wore last week
My waist size

But my personality
My gifts
My heart

So girl with photos
Cluttering my newsfeed
You won’t get deleted today
Because 
just like me
You just want to know you're beautiful. 


Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Ceasefire

A comment I recently posted in a mum’s Facebook group received more than 50 "likes" in the hour following my scribing of it.
At my last check of it, it had exceeded 100.

We are a lazy bunch in the Miller household.

Steve’s alarm goes off at 6am (when he actually gets up is debatable) but Zella and I are only awake before he leaves if thereis a feed to be done or a poop explosion to clean. Some days 8, some days 9, on the lucky ones 10am is the hour we make it downstairs.


I still breastfeed Zella, in spite of her clamouring on top of me as if I were some gymnastics apparatus, and the occasional nip from the four teeth she has recently acquired. I am more than happy feeding her in public: on the bus, at cafes, at others houses, in parks, and, if the moment arises, while running to catch a train.

Some days, we hang out and play with the toys, some wooden, some with batteries. Often the only toy she’s interested in is my phone or the video baby monitor. I know I use technology around her too much because she can swipe the Mac and change my screens, and enjoys sitting back and looking through the morning’s Instagram offerings. I do try and do reading everyday as well, to make sure she is a book geek like me.

Sometimes we head to the park, or go on the swings. Yesterday we did this on the way to Tesco. That Tesco trip where I brought more than I could carry, and had to pile the buggy high and carry Zella home. Which wasn’t a problem…until it started to rain and I had to fashion a covering for her out of the shopping trolley seat cover I have because I don’t want her to get germs. Because for me, the germs in Tesco on the carts are far worse than the germs from the raisins I let her eat off our living room floor. I have also unknowingly taken her to this den of bacteria when she had a viral infection. I'm clearly going for mum of the year. 


Often we go clothes shopping. I often get caught out and spend far too long shopping and socialising in town and am suddenly faced with a screaming babe. I hastily feed Zella the baby snacks and pouches of puree, trying not to condemn myself for not preparing an organic feast fit for The Savoy. At home, dinner times are a happy chatter amidst of baby-led mess; our kitchen tiles’ the loser, splattered with the disregarded and thus flung regurgitations of our child.


And on our favourite days, we hang out with other mums and babies. A year ago, I didn’t know anyone in Birmingham with a young child, but classes and playgroups have grown our circles wide. One mum and her son live nearby so we often meet spontaneously and talk about cloth nappies. Another mum teaches and is full of advice for Steve as well as support as she has carried on full-time breastfeeding. One mum is ten years older, a classically trained musician and a highly disciplined individual; on paper we should have nothing in common, but she makes me laugh hilariously and we have great conversations.



The reason my comment on that post
Seemed to resonate with so many others
Was because I attempted to speak out
Against, what I saw, as an unfair judgment of amother

Breastfed vs Formula
Baby-led weaning vs Purees
Co-Sleep vs Cot
Cloth vs Disposables
Baby carrier vs Buggy
Pacifiers vs Thumbs
Staying at home vs working outside of the home

In our attempt to make ourselves feel better about our choices
Often others are put down for theirs
We draw battle lines and the mama wars begin once again
With angry and judgemental words
The media provoking and antagonising
This fervent fire

A fire that causes another mother to weep
Pushing back the waves of post-natal depression
As at her most vulnerable
One hand cradles her babe
While the other shields her heart and mind

Why do we choose “versus”
Rather than “and”, “with” , “or” ?

I am more than aware that I’m not theperfect mother
I write my daily choices to show they are
Both good and bad
But am learning
Steadily
To rejoice in the fact
I am a mother
With healthy child
Who delights in my face
Who delights in our life

I look at so many of you and think you are thriving
Although you may only see your flaws and failings
But the truth is
We are all doing our best
Serving them best
Teaching them best
Loving them best

And our best is more than good enough

Though we act like these decisions
Are life and death
Denying child a place at Harvard or Oxford
In countries near and far
The abuse of children is far more abhorrent
Than the outcome of these differing views

For my friends
With babes unborn
Uncreated
Unfertilised
Dreams in your head for the future
May you carry the baton
Of freedom in motherhood
And support and love
In the face of this torrential storm ofwords

May we be free from the judgement
Free from the lies
Free the tangled webs of the enemy
That would convince us otherwise
Of the simple fact

You, my precious fellow mother, are doing a phenomenal job.

And as gummy smiles and toddler eyes reveal
That we are succeeding
May we take these words
And be a blessing to others.


Thursday, May 9, 2013

Natural

Last December
A seed was sown
A journey began
A new life started
As tiny Zella grew from plum to mango to watermelon then out
Another growth coincided
Changing me from the outside in

I remember the day
Two months short of my 13th birthday
My mum, aunt and godmother
Gathered busily in the bathroom
Reading box instructions intently

It was my time
My coming of age:

My first relaxer.


 

For those not versed in afro-politics
And wondering why so much fuss
What the big deal is
Relaxers take those tight, dark, young girl curls
And stretch them into
Straight “big woman” tresses

I looked in the mirrored eyes of straight haired me
And I felt beautiful
Gone, now, were the days of sitting betweenmy mother or grandmothers legs
With comb tugging and pulling resistant curls in intricate plaits
I was now in control
And would have hair like all my other lighter-skinned friends
Who wash and go’d in the mornings

Dutifully I did my time in the hairdresser's seat
The 2, 3, 4 hour process
Of white thick cream
Waiting for the burn
But letting it soak in some more
so that it was super straight


And although I had
bad reactions
burns and bumps
patches that didn’t grow
and awful breakage that robbed half the back of my head of growth
like a dog returning to its vomit
so was my foolishness in going back

For me
It was the only way to be pretty

Sold a lie by
Beyonce
Oprah
Janet
Tyra
That to fit into culture
I had to tame my mane
I took out the essence of my hair
And lost more of the essence of myself

As pregnancy hormones dictates
I gave up the “creamy crack”
Letting the natural roots grow out
And as my baby grew inside of me
And I excitedly wondered about the beautiful curls
that would no doubt come
I looked at my straightened ends
And wondered if I’d ever be able to look them in the eye

How would I encourage them to be natural
To love their own body
To be comfortable in their own skin
To marvel at their God-given wonder
If I was suppressing my own?

When precious babe was revealed as precious girl
Faced with the female perils
Of low self esteem and insecurity
I realised that if I wanted her to be confident in just who she was
Born just perfect
Then I needed to show her me
Just the way I was born
Just perfect



There is this wonder
With afro hair
And its curls and twist
Braids and locks
That makes it unique
And daily I now embrace


And so it grows
The afro puff
The 4c curls
My old hidden now rediscovered healthy mane



Surprisingly more upkeep
Surprisingly educating
Surprisingly freeing










Thursday, April 18, 2013

Are


When you look in the mirror at home,
You are fine and happy with what you see.

The problem is when you step outside of the home.

That's where the mirrors reflect something else.
Something other.

Gathered in a room of girls,
Silently competing,
"Fine and Happy" suddenly isn't cutting it.

That skirt you thought was fetch,
Their eyes squint at it, but then smile up at you betrayingly.
You look down,
And its newfound ugliness pierces through you.



And yet again,
That ugly deceiver rears its head

Oh no,
Not envy.

We are aware of envy's danger, it's hold, it's wrath.
We are wise to envy's game and the lies of the grass being greener.
So it sends, instead, the coy and looming face of its partner:

Comparison.

I remember the night,
Months previously,
As I did my far too regular trawl of Facebook,
I saw a mother describe how her bundle had finally cracked it and was getting to sleep at 6:30pm and sleeping through the night.

The words grabbed me.

My sane brain left, and my over achieving mind took over.

It started off being happy and pleased knowing the rest a mother needs,
The difficult season the early days of babies are,
And the relief her soul must feel.

Then like a snake it winded cunningly down another dark path,
One where I, once again, questioned my mothering skills:

"Why cant I get my child to sleep?!"
"What am I doing wrong?!"
"'Am I not a good mother?!"

The path weaves further, leading to an ugly pit:

"Why isn't Zella like that child?!"

That's where comparison grabs you,
To that place where even those you love,
Those most close,
most vulnerable,
Risk being attacked.

If I play that evil game,
With my precious babe at just 4 months young,
Then where will I be in 4 years or 14?!
How bruised and damaged will her self-esteem be??
For isn't the root cause of the too-skinny
Too-fat
Too-stressed
Too-overworked
Too-drugged up
Too-overachieving
Lying naked and stripped at the feet of comparison??

The saddest thing of all,
The true travesty of the situation,
Is that comparison steals your joy.
Steals your now.
Steals the things of beauty,
Laid before you in this moment.

At present, my favourite thing about Zella is the way she is with people.
Long did I imagine, hope and pray for a child who would not just be ok with others,
But revel in the wonder and fun of new people.

As our dear friend came over and sat on our sofa Sunday night
Zella played with her face
Smiled brightly
Burped responsively
Cuddled tightly
And brought more joy to an individual than I ever thought she could as such a young thing.

And as we travelled across the Atlantic
She took her spirit of woo
Of charm
Of love
At the airport check in desk
Sweet smiles to the security guards
Passengers apprehensive about her small life and potential cries
Were enveloped into her grin and giggles
And as each friend in Texas called her name
She reached arms swung wide open
Almost falling into their embrace
To stroke their face and nuzzle close





If I stand in the place of looking at others side-by-side to her,
I miss seeing her as she sits, just as she is, on her own, as her own individual.

I cannot and will not compare myself to another.
And I most certainly cannot and will not compare my child,
my kin, my babe, fruit of my womb,
To any other.
I will not buy into that silent lie,
That breeds bacteria of discontent.

She, just the way she is,
Like husband, just the way he is,
Like me, just the way I am,
Is more than enough.
Just right.
Complete.

These words will I speak into her,
Over her,
Through her,
With her.

"Zella, you are fine and happy, just the way you are."





Monday, April 15, 2013

Poop


I've never been one to do things in order.

I can distinctively remember being in one of my favourite places in the world, Whole Foods grocery store in Arlington, Texas, perusing the aisles, when they caught my eye.

Steve and I had been married little over a year when I came home declaring that I had found "it." The items that we did not need at all, but I tried in vain to tell him we needed to buy in advance:

The nappies we were going to use with our baby.



Previous to that fateful store trip, I had never been particularly interested in cloth nappies. I'd always thought of them as old fashioned, bulky, stinky...but you know me: put something in bright colours and make them sleek and fashionable, and I'm all up in its grill.

Roll on three years, lots of convincing of a husband, immense researching of the site, testing out at The Baby Show, and one gorgeous princess later, and we are avid users of gNappies: gParents, cloth nappy people, the hippies who buy disposable inserts to go in them that we then add to our compost heap for extra roughage.

Feel free to come over in the summer to sample veggies fertilised by Zella.
It will be better than when we served salad to a guest last year, and we discovered we served her an earwig.

Rather than the simple throwing away of disposables, after each change, time must be spent in a more labourious cleaning up job.

As I leant over the bath last night, showering off the mess, the colours swirled amidst the waters, revealing more of my very self.

Cloth humbles me.

I take the soiled, wet, stained garments, and with bare hands scrub, rub, and make new.

Regardless of how I feel, how the day goes, I have to put the effort in; laying aside my self to provide for my child's most intimate need.

This mess is none of my doing, but it is mine to sort out.

My pride must consistently and constantly be pushed to the edge, as I endeavour in the dirtiest job in my house (besides the bins).

And I needed this.

I need to be humbled.
I need to be put in my place.
I need to know there are others needs beyond my own.
I need to know that I'm not above anything.
I need to be reminded that there is more than "me" in this world.
I need that quiet time of pondering to evaluate who I really am throughout the day.

Do I think that everyone should use cloth nappies?
Yes, because landfill sites are filling up, nappies create a lot of waste, it can save you lots of money, they are great with sensitive skin babes, and there are some really awesome options out there.

Will everyone?
No, and that's ok because each family needs to make the choices that works best for them, and that's the way it should be.

Do I think everyone needs to be humbled?
Definitely.

Consumerism rages.
The customer is always right.
We push and fight and wrestle to be top dog.
Not realising the importance of the worker bees.

We all need a place of self-reflection.
A place to serve others.
A time when we aren't first, second or even tenth.

By the nappy bucket
with soap suds and poop
is mine.

Where is yours?