The Tottering Teacup

January 31, 2021

Labor started on a Monday afternoon in Chipotle. I was halfway down the assembly line about to ask for pico and cheese when I found myself unable to get out the words. I sagged against the countertop, eyes squeezed shut, and waited for the contraction to pass.

“Are you in labor?” the Chipotle worker asked, eyes wide above her mask, one hand hovering over the cheddar. 

“I think it’s starting!” I smile-grimaced back, hoping to sound more chipper than dramatic.  Already I could feel the line of curious eyes behind me and my own face turning red. Tommy’s hand settled on my back. “You okay?”

It was the last lunch for just the two of us, before we became three of us, and I was determined to see it through. Sentimentality, not curiosity, will kill this cat. 

A long afternoon and evening passed, followed by an even longer night, and then a car ride at six in the morning to the hospital. Jack Robert Lyvers arrived at 2:34 in the afternoon, all beautiful 8 pounds, 3 ounces, and 21 inches of him. I sobbed when the nurse laid him against my chest, marveling at how warm and soft he felt. That blond hair! Those long fingers and fathomless blue eyes. He was an undeniable copy of my husband, but somehow also half of me. A miracle. 

Before Jack’s birth, I tried to imagine what I’d feel as a mother, whether joyful or tired or overwhelmed. But nothing could have prepared me for the intensity of it all – physical pain and exhaustion clashing against emotional and mental exhaustion. Water wearing away at rock. Motherhood is far more complicated a picture than I could have envisioned, with the depth and nuance of a van Gogh painting rather than a paint-by-number.

The days pass so slowly and so quickly in a blur of feeding and rocking and diapering and trying to string words together without sleep. In the days since coming home from the hospital, I’ve resented that the strongest emotion I’ve felt is anxiety, rather than contentedness. 

There’s been a newly released fountain of fear inside of me. I suppose it’s a fear that has always existed yet dormant until now. Fear only awakened by a love unparalleled in its immediacy and its purity. Until now, I’ve learned to love something. There has been a measure of choice involved when I fall in love. But with Jack, there was never a choice. It arrived the moment I learned of his existence, like a letter in the mail.   

Jack feels like a slippery teacup in my hands. The harder I try to maintain a firm grasp, the more he seems to slip to the edges of my fingertips, teetering and tottering and dangerously close to falling. Only he isn’t a piece of glassware but a china-fine, fragile, eight-pound being with squishy cheeks and no head control. Delicate. Breakable. 

Already I want to hold him close forever. Fight for him. Shield him against any bad thing that could ever happen to him. But in the very moment he was born, I lost the ability to shelter his body with my own. In that very moment, his world became distinct. 

Although he is never more than a few feet away from me, he lives outside of me now, exposed and unguarded. That’s been a source of anxiety for me, if I’m honest, because I’ve lost a degree of perceived control. 

In these early days, fear has threatened to steal my calm and my joy. I’ve dreaded the thought of someone else holding my son or, heaven forbid, sneezing in his direction. While still in the hospital, I found myself unable to sleep stressing about other babies going hungry or pregnant women laboring in countries without adequate medical care. There have been no bounds or rules to my anxiety. Fountain of fear overflowing, I felt the crushing weight of brokenness that extends across this world, all of it outside of my scope to change or heal in that moment.  

Life bears its pretenses of control remarkably well. We can nearly trick ourselves into believing we’re the ultimate commanders of our fate, that we decide where we go and what we do. Some days we even think we can control what happens to us. We can hardly stand to face how little control we actually muster. How life so often fails to play by our imposed rules or how it seems to careen into a mortal tailspin under the slightest breeze.

In these days of fierce anxiety, a verse from Psalm 94 came to mind, something I must have memorized years ago. 

“When my anxious thoughts multiply within me, Your consolations delight my soul.”

Over and over, I’ve repeated this to myself until it has pressed itself like a drum beat into my subconscious. When I’m anxious, when I’m afraid, when I have doubts – that’s when You’re there. 

There are other teacups in my life besides Jack, other lives I cherish that I can control no more than I can control the sea. Life is painfully fragile in a world with COVID and car crashes and cancer. I can’t carry them all. I can’t understand the why behind them all. It crushes me to try. 

At the end of each day, God asks me to sleep, and He asks me to give it to Him. Even without seeing the future. Even with finite eyes that can’t see the breadth or scope of life on this earth, He asks me to trust that when I wake up in the morning the world will still be spinning.

So tonight, I will tell God about my fountain of fear. I will tell Him about all of the teacups I love. I will ask Him to use me however He will to care for, love, and protect these teacups.   

And I will sleep. 

More about Elizabeth Lyvers

14 Comments
    1. Thank you for sharing these challenges and personal insights from your new part of life. This is a humbling reminder that we cannot control what happens outside of us and we must trust God, always. Love seeing the picture of Jack!!!

      1. I can only imagine what it will be like when little Jack grows up and reads this musing by his mama. Such incredible writing from a beautiful heart.❤️❤️❤️

    1. I understand exactly! I will pray for you! You can pray for me because I still get anxious for my adult children!❤️🙏

    1. When my grandmother came to the hospital to see my beautiful son, she looked at me and said “You will never know another day without worry.” I did not understand, now I do. A mother’s love is eternal, regardless of the age of a mother’s children, the worry and anxiety for their well being never ends.

    1. Until now your race has been mostly on the beginner lane. Now the lane is more unpredictable and the choices seem arduous. Parenthood is one of life’s defining times when you choose how to run your race. Follow the signs, get help as you require, and run in a true line. See you at the finish line!

    1. Relatable writing! How honest and open you share tender personal experiences.

      🎶And like a flood His mercy reigns🎶

      With His charge, He will equip you.

    1. Beautiful expressed. I am so glad to share in bits of your life reflections. Love to you both and to precious Jack. Please give him a cuddle for me. Praying for you.

    1. LIFE: 2=1, too marvelous to comprehend, too precious for words. This unfathomable gift from God the Creator of life draws us into a new intimacy with Him whose grace is overwhelming; a new chapter in your book of life. God’s blessings to you all.

    1. Thank you for this. My children are grown and I still carry those fears, giving them to God and then taking them back. Thank you for the verse. I have written it down to display in an area where I will see it…and remember…..love you!

    1. Absolutely beautiful depiction of the intense love and fear solely unique to motherhood. This is something I’ve struggled with, but continue to realize how increasingly small I am and how great our God is. I gave each child to Him when they were born, but it’s a decision I have to recommit to weekly, sometimes daily!

    1. You write so eloquently. It’s a joy to hear your thoughts! We are human and imperfect. I love your honesty!

    1. Every mother can understand what you are going through. I too had much anxiety as if my child’s life depended solely on me and me alone. But now looking back (my girls are 30 &33) I can say as I did many times throughout their lives God is Faithful. He has a plan for Jack Robert. He loves him even MORE ( if you can imagine and even if you can’t) than you love him.

    1. Such beautifully expressed thoughts. Yes, my children are the things I have the HARDEST time holding loosely to the LORD, but as you said, it’s a perceived control in the first place. He is the Creator, and knows and loves them better than we do.

      So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts to wisdom.
      Psalm 90:12

    1. My mama always prayed God would “fill in the gaps.” That prayer has stilled my fumbling, grasping fingers time and time again. Fill in the gaps, Lord. Protect where we cannot. Heal wounds we cannot see. Love in ways we cannot fathom. Father in ways we cannot parent.

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