A sound sleeper and early riser, your small cries woke me in the wee hours before dawn. I yawned, stretched and, resigned to my fate, rose to gather you in my arms.
Your room seemed cavernous; 12-foot ceilings decorated with exposed pipes at odds with the softly flowered crib bedding purchased months before you were born, a bright spot in my time of mourning your grandfather and what could have—what should have—been.
You lay on your back, huge eyes glassy with hunger and tears. The tears had only just come. Before, your weeping was waterless. When the raindrops started to decorate your face, there was nothing I wouldn’t do to stop them. Still, today, even when your cries are manufactured and meaningless, my heart clenches in a painful rhythm: fix-it-fix-it-fix-it.
That spring morning you were just five months old. Old enough to smile and grace us with a giggle, still too small to sit on your own or scoot forward to retrieve a toy just out of your grasp.
I don’t remember, my darling, what you wore. I’m certain it was pink, and soft. I’m certain it had small pockets for your feet, and that it made your milky skin glow in the gloom. I’m certain that I picked you up and pressed your satin cheek to my own, hot against cool.
We padded upstairs to the living room in our strange, upside-down home. Being above ground level gave our space the feeling of a tree house. Green leaves, as new as you were, rustled in the early morning breeze, streetlights peeking through here and there.
The city was coming alive with garbage trucks and commuters, windows in the apartment complex across the street golden and silhouetted. I held you up to see the view, whispering softly: It’s morning-time, baby girl. See the green trees? See the people?
The bottle cooled in my fist and we sat. You fed, I dozed in the flickering blue light of an old movie. I watched as the actors moved their mouths, sound muted in hopes that you’d return to your slumber. You sighed, sated.
The dawn’s light, pink and orange, played on your face, caught in your lashes, kissed your rosebud mouth. I turned you in my arms, bringing you close to me. Breathing in, I kissed you then, square on the lips, rubbing my nose on yours.
I pulled back to look at you; you leaned into me, turning your face to my own like a flower to the sun. I kissed you again, and you smiled. Enchanted, I kissed and kissed and kissed you, imprinting your heart with my love. Your lids heavy now, you closed your then-blue eyes and slipped away, into a land populated with fairies and laughter.
I held you tighly, heart aching and heavy with adoration. In that moment, my darling girl, I knew you were mine. And you knew that I am yours, then, now and forever.




{ 21 comments… read them below or add one }
Wow! If I could put the words together like you, I would say the same thing for my daughter!
Ms. Chicken, you are gifted.
That is lovely… They get all long and bony and smelly, so quickly! I miss those little bundles of cute. But I don’t miss the early mornings, no siree. Or the endless nights. Or the non-stop days. Or the … Well heck! Bring on teenagehood!!!
Nan’s last blog post..Those Drums!
This is absolutely beautiful. I so feel this way every early morning that I rise with my Ellie.
Beautifully written. Thank you for sharing.
Michelle’s last blog post..How I rate
I think it’s very brave of you to declare your love for your child so openly on your blog. I could not have done it when my child was little, even though I had those feelings. I would have been embarrassed to. Now that she’s a grown up, I would not do it for fear of embarrassing her. I’m glad you took your chance and did it now, when she can’t protest and look at it fondly when she’s a grown up. Children never know how much we love them, not even when they have their own children. They can’t imagine that we loved them with the same intensity. Thanks for this post. I must let my daughter know somehow.
Irene’s last blog post..Je n’ai pas d’argent….
Perfection. Really.
Lisa Milton’s last blog post..a side of kindness (I’m running away with my T-Mobile call center rep)
And I fell in love with my daughter, my son and my last baby all the same way. Lovely, that falling in love.
Heather’s last blog post..Standing by Washing Machine on a Sunny Morning*
my new favorite.
still wishing i had just a pinky full of your talent for words.
amanda’s last blog post..you know like the scene from ghost
Tearing up on a Saturday night…
Kerrie’s last blog post..Priority Panic: Part II in the No More Somedays Series
beautiful, my friend. Just beautiful.
pgoodness’s last blog post..Huh, damn, sigh
You’ve captured those incredible moments with your child that we so often take for granted but should emblazon on our memory for the day when our cherub becomes the obstinate,defiant teenager that makes our head spin…so lovely, thank you.
wow. beautiful.
Yo’s last blog post..light reading
Universal, isn’t it? Baby love? Beautiful.
binkytowne’s last blog post..You’re Welcome
Good memory.
I already don’t remember. That’s why I’m so glad I started blogging when The Boss was young. And it’s why I’m glad to have woken from my blogging coma. I’m sorry I’ve been gone so long.
Binky’s last blog post..100 Things About Me – Part IV
What a lucky girl she is to be able to read these words from you someday. That was beautiful.
oh, my god, my heart.
my ravaged heart.
i can just smell that baby head right now. you conjured it up beautifully.
“…imprinting your heart with my love”
YES YES YES!!!
oh I love reading your words.
MammaLoves’s last blog post..Dear Small People in My Bed
hell yes, woman. hell yes.
jen’s last blog post..guess what’s coming to dinner
You have been writing heartbreakingly beautifully this month, Mrs. C. I’m catching up after a tough couple of weeks, and you take my breath away over and over again.
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