I’m not a Mom, but….
Originally published on the blog, Chasing Creation
A few months ago I was at a full moon circle, a small event where women gather to let go of the things that aren’t serving them and to make space for what they want to create. We ended the night with a type of meditation called breathwork.
As I lay there, focused on my breathing, one sentence kept playing in my mind: I never knew real love until I had a child. I’ve heard this or variations of it many times over the past few years and it haunts me. Because if it’s true, it means that all the love I have in my life isn’t “real” but the shadow of something greater that I can never experience.
I thought of other hurtful statements I’ve heard: that parents have a greater capacity for empathy; that having children is the meaning of life; that people without kids are selfish; that God blessed them with children or a miracle baby; that you aren’t a “real” woman until you’ve given birth; that having kids is what makes you a family.
Then, in contrast to the mashup of awful thoughts swimming in my head and with tears streaming down my face, snapshots of my life came into focus.
My mom taking on my grief, crying with me during life-shattering moments. My husband’s face when I make him laugh and the way his eyes look when he’s worried about me. The overwhelming awe and joy I feel when I see my nieces and nephews. The themed sleepovers my dad would plan when I was a kid to make weekends at his house special. The weekly Mario Kart battles I have with my brother where we talk and drink for hours. The warm, engaging conversations I have with my brother-in-law and his wife. The way my sisters can always make me laugh. My friends that are so close they have become family.
If this isn’t real love then I don’t know if I want real love. Because the love I have now is so strong, so powerful that it already feels hard to contain. The beauty of it overwhelms me. If I am fortunate enough to sustain this level of love throughout my life, I will die knowing that I loved deeply, wholly, and was loved that way in return.
In that moment, I decided to start telling myself a different story. I’m sharing it here because it is just as true for you as it is for me.
I am not a mom,
but I know real love.
I am not a mom,
but I am a powerful source of creation.
I am not a mom,
but there are endless ways I can contribute to this world.
I am not a mom,
but I have the ability to nurture.
I am not a mom,
but anyone who identifies as a woman is a “real” woman.
I am not a mom,
but I have a family, some members by blood and some I chose.
I am not a mom,
but I am empathetic because I have felt a wide range of emotions inherent to the human experience.
I am not a mom,
but I have the power to create a life that is meaningful to me.
I am not a mom,
but I am full of love and energy that I can choose to invest as I wish.
As I was repeating these mantras in my mind, the woman leading the meditation walked over and placed her hands lightly on either side of my hips, her fingers across my pelvic area where my womb used to be. It felt comforting and a little spooky since I had never met her, she knew nothing about me.
When the meditation was over, I asked her if she had touched other women in the circle that way and she replied no, just me. I asked her why and she said she tries to stay open to the energy of what each woman in the circle was needing. I still am not entirely sure how to process this experience, but I like to believe it was the universe sending confirmation that although I am not a mom, I am enough.
~Katy Seppi