Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Connecting the dots and healing

"...Again, you can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something — your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life....."

These words of Steve Jobs in his well-known Commencement address, came back to my mind today as I went through two overwhelming moments - one after the other and looked back on some of the most heart-wrenching moments of my life. It was amazing that both these events happened in unison today and that was perhaps the message for me......to connect the dots and heal.

Some days ago, I had been browsing one of the online forums of the homeschooling community here, and I stumbled upon a comment made by someone, who was involved with the World Breastfeeding Conference in some way. After my recent blog post on food and unschooling, I have been thinking a lot about how I had breastfed my son. This comment drew my attention, and I sent her an email with a general query. This morning I got a reply from her with an attachment to her blog post on her experiences with her daughter. I had tears in my eyes when I read that and re-lived every moment of the weaning process that I had experienced with my son. It was very painful.

Here is an excerpt from another blog post that I did earlier on Food and Unschooling, where I share the pain of the weaning process:

I breast-fed Raghav till he was almost 1 year and six months. That was the only time perhaps that I listened completely to my baby for his nourishment needs. My gynaecologist told me not to feed on demand after a few days and asked me to get him into a schedule even for breast feeding. But I did not listen, because somehow I felt that that was not right. I could not bear to think of my baby crying in hunger or thirst and deny it the only nourishment it could get then. So I followed my heart and my instinct. Raghav’s pediatrician however encouraged me and insisted that I breastfeed him as long as possible. I did until it was “time” to wean him off. People around me suggested a number of ways to do that, none of which sounded right to me – from disappearing for a few days so that he would “forget”, to being firm with him and saying no, to giving him a special cup filled with cow’s milk every time he asked to be breast-fed and many other ways.
 
That period was very stressful for me, as in my heart I could do none of those, and I did not know any better. I tried many things and none worked. Finally, I just let him cry his heart out in front of me one day, held him close to me, and patiently suggested alternatives. He would not take any alternative and chose to remain hungry. This happened for three days! At the end of it, he stopped asking to be breast-fed and refused to drink any other form of milk! I should have realised then what my son was made of – he was made of an indomitable spirit and strong will that no one else could break. 
As I write this today, even after all these years, my eyes well up and my insides churn as I relive those heart-wrenching moments that made me into a demon of sorts…..moments of despair when I thought myself unfit to be a mother. Today, however, I am ready to share my story here, because I have forgiven myself for what I did in ignorance. I would love to find out and hear other parents’ stories of how they weaned their children -  if they just gradually moved on to other foods without any effort to wean – things that I did not know and no one guided me about.

Ever since I wrote that blog post on food, these thoughts have been on my mind.....somewhere....as I had a question that I had somehow never bothered to ask anyone.....and somehow did not seek an answer too. But now, here was an opportunity to get an answer, and I kind of knew what the answer would be :) Ironically, I did not listen to my intuition and follow my heart on this one earlier!

This is what I wrote to my friend in my email asking her about breastfeeding:

I have had a very painful experience with weaning off my son when he was 1 1/2 years old. Somehow I never felt right about doing that. Then, I did not have the conviction to listen to my own inner voice and listened to the elders and everyone around me.
Just wanted to ask if anyone that you know of has done it gradually or in a different , more pleasant and peaceful way with their children. Though late now, I would like to learn a better way of doing that and perhaps suggest to people I meet the rest of my life. Will children not learn on their own, just like everything else in life, that they need to eat other kinds of food, and do it when they are ready - automatically, instead of us pushing them? That is my question.

She replied to me with a "YES!"Of course!"and sent me a link to her blog post on this. I was deeply moved and stirred when I read what she had written about her experiences with her child. I cried like a baby as I read her words and relived all those heart-breaking moments that I had had with my child. And through that I healed.

It was healing because I finally found the answer to a question I had never asked until now, in the words "She had moved on when she was ready"......a question that was part of a larger quest....of being and learning what we need to in this world as human beings.....a question that was simmering inside me for a long time and finally found satiation.....I healed because I understood that what I had done in the past with my own child, was in complete ignorance...and that I was being too harsh on myself by feeling guilty about it......I healed when I revisited those precious moments of breast-feeding my son through my memories, thoughts and feelings.

A few hours later, I stumbled upon another totally "unrelated" post by another friend on the same forum. It was about Dignity and she was sharing it from another e-group discussion. I could feel the pain that the author shared through her writing, and as she recounted the moments after the birth of her son, her lack of knowledge about birthing options, how her son showed her the way, how she got back her dignity and how she nurtured her son's dignity as her purpose in life, I remembered how I went through similar emotions too when my son was born. And how I have been healing my dignity too, like she says, when I protect and nurture his. All along, until now, my son too has been SCREAMING to me to wake up and see the world through his eyes. I perhaps see it that way more now, than I did earlier.

These two events in quick succession in one day, were SCREAMING to me too.....to connect the dots and heal! I realised how my son too had screamed to me loud and clear, even when he was a baby, to be mindful. He would cry and kick and make loud sounds if  I talked to anyone or did anything else, while breast-feeding him.  He also disliked being fed in public and in a place with lots of people - he would calm down and feed properly only when it was quiet and when he and I were alone. There were so many lessons there on living!

My son also dislikes being "taught"anything in his life, and like she says, this quote of John Holt has been my compass too:

"Next to the right to life itself, the most fundamental of all human rights is the right to control our own minds and thoughts. That means, the right to decide for ourselves how we will explore the world around us, think about our own and other persons' experiences, and find and make the meaning of our own lives. Whoever takes that right away from us, as the educators do, attacks the very center of our being and does us a most profound and lasting injury. He tells us, in effect, that we cannot be trusted even to think, that for all our lives we must depend on others to tell us the meaning of our world and our lives, and that any meaning we may make for ourselves, out of our own experience, has no value." ~ John Holt

Today, I understand the way he sees the world a little better...and try and see it with his eyes as much as possible....this unschooling way of life has made me trust that the dots will connect in the future....it has allowed me to live in the moment, while connecting the dots backwards....to walk on a path of self-guided, free learning as collaborators and heal our past wounds - TOGETHER.



4 comments:

  1. Your story and words made me shudder, Priya. Really....I was sitting erect, my eyes alert and my mind racing as I read this..
    My heart goes out to you for the emotions you've felt and are feeling right now as you choose to be healed by connecting the dots. I know how this unschooling journey has opened up our eyes and mind and heart and soul and is making us see things in a completely new light.
    I go through such reflections - from when Pari was born or she was a toddler and what I may have done out of ignorance that make my heart wrench. I feel like I need to heal from those experiences that I did not understand then.
    About the weaning process, the breast feeding experience with Pari - thankfully - has been the most satisfying journey into motherhood. I had ZERO inout/knowledge about how to do, what to do, for how long etc. But, my heart told me my daughter and I are into this bond for as long as she wanted. As far as i was concerned, I loved every moment of feeding her..so I wanted to continue for as long as she was ready. So, I breast fed her exclusively for one year. After that I introduced some solids but continued to feed on demand till she was 2. At 2, since we were traveling quite a bit and across country, in flights etc. she slowly weaned herself. Again, like your son, she would want the feeding time to be wholly between her and me. Honestly, I wanted it that way too. I would just watch her, we'd lock eyes with each other, I loved listening to the sound of her suckling, or would day dream... I'd not even read a book or be browse computer as some do/suggest. It may sound like too much but I enjoyed every moment of being with her skin-to-skin. I'm sure those two years laid a strong foundation of our relationship....
    Thank God, I listened to my instincts and hers. For, the doctor/gynaec/pediatrician/elderly family members kept saying that I need to introduce solids sooner; I need to make her independent and myself too.
    One of the things that supported my conviction was the La Leche League site. After 6 months of exclusive breastfeeding, when people started telling me to introduce solids, I was not convinced this was the right thing to do since Pari was so not ready (and neither was I). That's when I started reading online and among all the contradictory advice, I came upon the La Leche League site/forum, which supported on-demand breastfeeding. Plus, there were other places/stories that convinced me that there's no hurry to introduce solids.
    I feel a lot for you and have tremendous respect for you as a mother. Being a mother for the first time and being bombarded with divergent ideas/practices from all directions, it's tough to reamin true to your instincts. And yet, the fact that you breast fed your son for 1.5 years is not a lesser proof of your being a thinking, intentional mother. And more so, the fact that you feel the pain today as you reflect upon the weaning part, tells me how much of a compassionate and tender human being/mother you are...
    I'm glad you're going through the healing by reflecting and listening to the stories of others...

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  2. Thanks for taking time to share your thoughts Rashmie.....they are valuable to me and will be to many who may stumble upon this blog I am sure. Loved reading your story too and thanks for being a part of my life in this most inspiring community of homeschoolers! Hope to see you soon!

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  3. Dear Priya, You are brave, generous and compassionate to share your story here. Your reflections will give strength to others. Breastfeeding and weaning were one of our first experiences of natural learning and like you, I learned so much from those times, now so long ago.

    I wrote a bit about it:
    http://askamma.wordpress.com/2011/10/27/weaning-and-free-learning/

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  4. Thanks Aravinda for your thoughts....and thanks for sharing the link to your blog about this....one of the reasons why I want to learn so much now about attachment parenting is to heal myself and perhaps some day some time, help someone else who needs it. I love the passion with which you speak about these things and have learned a lot from you. Thank you for touching my life!

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