but they tell me it won't last forever.
pregnancy has to end sometime
(although the third trimester feels like years).
i think about female elephants
and how they are pregnant for about two years
and i don't know how any being could do that
(and yet, these last months feel like years).
[all pictures by Karyn and Jacob Tucker]
when i was an undergrad at byu,
one of my professors
(a woman teaching british modernism)
mentioned that the time her body
had been commented on the most
was when she was pregnant.
being pregnant during the pandemic
(my own kind of "confinement," i suppose)
i have not been out in public as often as
i would have in regular times.
thus, there haven't been as many comments on my body.
but these past two weeks
as i've gone to the library of congress--
either walking on cooler days,
or taking the metro when it's much too hot
for anyone (let alone pregnant women)
to be out and about--
i have heard the comments.
some of them are welcome,
some are not.
the pregnant body is a spectacle,
i suppose.
normal, and yet, not normal.
two bodies in one.
four hands
four feet
two pairs of lungs.
i breathe for both of us.
being pregnant
giving birth
is both universal
and individual.
but it is an experience
everyone seems to have an opinion on
(some opinions are welcome,
some are not).
but here, this is my body.
(stretched, aching, and unfamiliar
to me, it still gives life).
and yes, this was my choice
(and an act of faith,
my hope for the future--
not just mine, but for the world).
i give and i receive,
i hold and i believe.
and when i am very still
i watch for his movements
across my belly
like shooting stars across
a darkened sky.
Eager to give you and Sam a hug and to hold little one for a long time. Beautiful thoughts.
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