Dear Luc,
You went wine tasting like a true Californian.
We went on a hike along the scenic Spring Lake Regional
Park, and you marveled at all the greenery surrounding you. I think green is
your favorite color; you love the sight of leaves dancing in the wind.
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At Spring Lake Park |
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Daddy & Odin |
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Part of the Circle of Life |
We also went to the Charles Schulz Museum, who illustrated
the Peanuts comics. We found your American twin, bald and round-headed Charlie
Brown.
You tried solid food for the first time, starting with rice
cereal and then avocados, peas, pears, peaches, sweet potatoes, cauliflower,
and mung beans. Mommy would spend her weekends steaming, baking, and pureeing
food for you, and you delight in many new flavors you got to taste.
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Trying Sweet Potatoes |
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Baby Food Stash |
This month marks a huge transition for us, Luc. Mommy went
back to work after being away for five months to bond with you. It’s the first
time we’ve been apart for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week. As a working mother, I
am a woman divided and torn. I could not work the hours I used to work
before, my days interrupted by pumping breaks, my evenings spent rushing home
through traffic to see you again for the night. I could
not be the mother I used to be to you, tending to your every need, being there
for you when you open your eyes from naps, being able to hold and kiss you
throughout the day when I miss you so. I am missing your milestones as you
continue to grow, that it wouldn’t be me who watches you crawl for the first
time, take your first steps, utter your first words. I could not be the
full person I used to be, the friend responsive to emails and up for an evening outing, the pet mommy who
used to walk daily with her fur baby and tend to his hygiene with care,
the well-rested woman who gets enough sleep to tackle each day with fresh
energy.
Each day gets a little easier with leaving you in the
morning and not being so wistful when I see you
pushed in your stroller for your morning walk with your grandparents, knowing
that I will not see you again until the end of the day, changing clothes for work in a
house hollow with a silence I have not known for the last four months. During work
breaks, I’d look at your pictures saved on my phone, remembering your shrieking
laughter, hearing in my head the snippets of the lullabies that I used to play
for you at home. I miss our simple days together, just sitting in the yard so
you can watch the leaves sway in the wind, our daily walks around the quiet neighborhood, our snuggles and
naps together as spring sunshine streams through our bedroom window.
This is one of the last pictures I took of you before I
returned to work.
I love watching you sleep, the way your little fingers curl
tight around my shirt, soothed to dreamland by knowing I am close by you. One
day, you’ll be too eager to break from my grasp and run on your own. One day, you
may impatiently shove me away as I hug you. Parenthood is about letting go,
supporting each other’s individual journeys, but being strong without each
other, too. We gradually teach each other how to live with this separation. But
sometimes, we look back to these simple days when we hung on to each other, the
world moving rapidly around us, and we were content in our stillness:
skin-to-skin, hand-to-hand.
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