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preparing for having a baby
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"It's a Girl" This was not the first time I'd heard these words, not even the first time I'd heard them spoken in a delivery room. But it was the first time I heard them spoken to my daughter and it was unlike any other moment in my life. Just eight months earlier my daughter Kirsten, only eighteen years old herself, had shyly whispered to me that she was going to have a baby. While I smiled and hugged her, I reeled from a barrage of fears and emotions I could not share with her. I knew our lives were forever changed, and I wondered if we would stay as close as we'd always been. Was she leaving me? Could I let her go? I wanted to hold on my lap just once more before she was all grown up. But my baby was going to have a baby! Until that moment, I had not realized my own active parenting days were through. In a single sentence, I'd been catapulted to the next stage in my life: I was the mother of adult children. Pregnancy and birth; these would now be my daughter's experiences. Would she have a healthy pregnancy? Would the baby be healthy? Would she still need me? Through the months of Kirsten's pregnancy, we learned many things, and I grew up a lot. We learned the baby we waited for so impatiently was a girl. I learned my son-in-law, Gary, is a kind and gentle man on the day he actually listened to my opinion about names I like for a little girl. I learned I could have an opinion, was welcome to share in discussions about girl names, pre-natal vitamins, cloth versus disposable diapers, but the decisions would be made by a new generation of parents. I learned I liked that. I discovered I could bask in the glow of their joy, swept along for a wonderful ride, w... ... middle of paper ... ...e was a form which required a signature. Instinctively I reached for the pen she extended, while memories of notes to teachers, report cards and stitches in the emergency room danced in my head. "I think this is for me, Catherine," Gary quietly said while taking the pen. I'll always love him for putting his arm around me and squeezing my shoulder while he said it, letting me know he understood he'd taken my baby from me and we would learn these new roles together. For the next four hours Kirsten, Gary and I laughed together, made funny breathing sounds together, and even pushed together (though I don't know how much help Gary and I were in that particular endeavor!). At 6:32 p.m. the doctor, with a grin, announced "It's a girl", and Erin Colleen Lowe entered my life and my heart. And what an Irish temper that child has!
...h at the idea of carrying a new life, as well as saving an older life-when aspects of her maternity give life.
uses The Fool to be a commentator on the action of the play as well as a
King Lear is without doubt Shakespeare's most nihilistic play. It is a storm without clearing. In this version of reality, faith is absurd. The play is set in the pagan era, where King Lear loses all his faith in the gods. However, we see the need for Christian revelation in the hopelessness of the play. We also see in the character of the Fool a character who resembles the wisdom and words of the Apostle Paul "Let no man deceive himself. If any man among you seemeth to be wise in this world, let him become a fool that he may be wise."1 These words are very similar to the function and meaning of the word fool in the play. While fool in Shakespeare's plays can represent a "dupe", a "madman", a "beloved one", a "court jester", or a "victim", it means all of these in King Lear. For the Fool is the court jester, Cordelia is Lear's beloved one, and Lear, himself, is at various times duped, a madman, and a victim. Yet, when we look at the words of Paul, we see the Fool tell Lear virtually the same thing in this play. For Lear believes himself to be wise, when, in reality, he is a duped fool:
make us see exactly what he wants us to and this film is a very good
From the moment she was born I knew she was different, arriving much earlier than expected, and frightening me to death with her little surprise. Then mere seconds later, after the doctor removed the umbilical cord from around her little pink neck, I heard her soft, sweet cry. In that instant, I knew she would be mama’s little fighter. Now here we are, 10 years later, and she still manages to amaze me every day. My daughter, Alexis, has tremendously changed my life and made me a better person by teaching me patience, showing me strength, and motivating me to improve myself.
Mr. Kerney sat me down next to a piano and said, “G, F, C. See what
A new year had just arrived. I can still picture January in my mind, the mood was sullen and dark, I could feel the cold reaching my bones, but now I know that was the best feeling I‘d ever had. I had only a few weeks left to start college, which had been my dream since I can remember. My dad had already paid for my tuition, I was so exited I had promised to do my best. Then, I realized there was an obstacle in my way. I knew I needed to make a decision on whether or not keeping my pregnancy, it sounds rough, but it was definitive. I did not want to miss school, so I was definitely not taking this to the last term. I just could not think of myself being prostrated in bed for so long, as an impediment to start school. Never, nothing would make me give up on my dreams, and that was another promise I had made to myself.
The walls were a nasty pale rose color filled with marks all over it from the baby carts that would scratch up against them. In the bed I saw my mom, her face was pale, her hair was pulled back into a low ponytail, and her face was without makeup. But her smile was still as bright as ever as she looked down at the baby in her arms. My mom passed Madison around the room, and everyone took their turn holding her, besides me. Everyone had their full attention on Madison which made me mad because no one was paying attention to me. What was the big deal with a new born baby anyways?! My mom wanted a picture of me holding Maddy, so I put a fake smile on and held the little thing. When I looked down at her, her eyelids were closed ever so gently. As they slowly crept open her dark blue eyes stared back at me. Her thin dark hair was covered with a pink hat, her delicate skin was a soft rose color, and her chubby little cheeks squished up against her eyes. I could feel my eyes start to tear up, not because I was mad and not because I was not getting the attention, but because I realized how precious she was. I felt bad for all the terrible thoughts I ever thought about her. I swore to myself to never think like that again. My mom smiled at me as I gently handed Madison back to her. I knew that my mom will still love me as much as she always had, and she will never forget about
The fool is one of the first character archetypes that any student of literature learns how to analyze. Despite his seemingly light or even pointless chatter, the fool usually manages to say some fairly important things. Upon further study, the student may perceive that it is because of his penchant for silliness that the fool is given leave to express even offensive truths about the other characters. What happens, though, when one fool encounters another? Fools are not used to being subject to one another’s wit; this experience of being held up to a sort of mirror is generally reserved for the characters who must undergo some change to further the plot. Touchstone and Jaques manage to break that rule, and merely by coexisting seem to compete. Both live up to some part of our expectation of the fool, but neither manages to fill the role entirely. Which one comes closer is a matter worthy of some debate.
I waited there for three hours, until the baby came. After that I was finally allowed in my sister's room. When I opened the door the first thing I saw was the bundle of joy swaddled in a little pink blanket. I was the fourth person to hold her, the fourth person experience her purity. She had blue eyes that were completely filled with innocence, and little hands that were untouched by darkness. She knew nothing of this world yet, but she looked at it with amazement, she looked at me with amazement.
Oh yeah, I forgot to tell you that I was 7 months when I found out that I was pregnant. My mom thought it was time that we told the rest of the family I was scared cause I didn't want them to think that I was a bad person, but my mom said who cares what they think if they think negative she already here and there is nothing that we can do about it now and It was also my fault for doing what I did. We drove to Wichita and went to go visit the family and go and tell the family that I was having a baby girl. We got to the house and talk for a little and see what was going on with them and stuff. We found out that my cousin Briana was having a baby boy as she told me that my mom said, “ guess who's having a
By the time I woke up, it was suppertime. I took a shower got dressed
This maternal state of mind determined my priorities and thoughts. Taking care of my baby was my primary goal. Everything else did not seem as important anymore. The beauty of the maternal state of mind is that this is an enormous change of one’s own identity but it is all centered around this human being that weighs only eight pounds and will forever continue to grow. My previous mental state will forever be in the background and my only motivation in life is to create an environment in which my children can thrive. This motherhood state of mind will last throughout my entire life. I will never be the same person I was fourteen years ago when I had my first had Narek. My maternal identity emerges even more when it is my child’s first day of school, when Narek or Erik caught a cold, or when I’m doing simple things like treating them to a muffin from Whole Foods so I can see the blueberries smudge over their
...y reveals much of that friendly connection that the audience is asking for. Therefore, for all these reasons, I believe that the character of the Fool should not be taken out of the play even though it doesn't have a role in the two major plots of the play.
The big question was when my baby was going to be due. The doctor told me that the only one who knew that answer was me. I was very afraid because I didn’t know how I was supposed to know that. My worries were that if I took a bad decision would harm my baby, but the day finally arrived. On December 29th, 2007, my carnival baby was born at 7:00 a.m. bringing a lot of happiness and love to our family. We named her Gabriella like our angel Gabriel. That was one of the perfect days I ever had. Three months ago we were waiting for someone we were not expecting and she has been