I’ve officially reached the third trimester of what is most likely my last pregnancy ever. Maybe knowing that this baby will be my baby of “lasts” makes me view everything through a bittersweet lens. Maybe because she came as a little bit of a surprise, I didn’t have time to prepare to enter the phase of “lasts”. Maybe it’s just this particular blend of hormone cocktail.

But for whatever reason, I’m not sure my heart can handle it all.

I’m not sure I can handle loving another human when I already love my first two so much.

I love my two daughters more than words can even say. I am in awe of these lives I get to witness.There are so many days where I feel like I’m balancing on the edge of insanity–that I can’t let the full weight of this love in or it would destroy me. It’s the kind of love that fills every corner of my being and threatens to pop my precious balloon of reality. How can that possibly stretch to hold another child?

I’m not sure I can handle the drain on my energy and sanity. 

Let’s be honest: raising two children isn’t exactly an easy job. Heck, raising one child isn’t exactly an easy job. Kids take energy. They slowly sap your sleep and your willpower and your sanity. Don’t get me wrong, they also feed your soul like nothing else on this earth. But parenting is not for the faint of heart. There are a lot of days where I don’t feel like cooking or doing laundry or playing barbies or loading up the crew for a day at the water park. There are a lot of mornings where I wish I could have just one more hour in bed.

But I suck it up anyway. Because these two little humans need me. But THREE? I used to joke that God only gave me two ears, two hands, two feet, and two eyes so why would he give me THREE humans to care for. But here we are. I feel blessed beyond belief. But I’m also terrified. How will I find the energy and the sanity to give all of them the love and attention they deserve?

I’m not sure I can handle the lack of time.

Let’s just say for a moment that I do find the energy and sanity to give them all of the love and attention they deserve. That doesn’t solve the ever-impossible dilemma of time. There are only so many hours in the day. There are dance classes and dentist appointments and laundry and cooking and baths. Not to mention in order to keep up with it all I need to set aside some time for self-care like exercise or writing. Or, heaven forbid, sleep. How on earth can I possibly have time to truly sit down and see each of them–to know them and cherish them and still do all the other basic tasks of keeping them alive and well?

I’m not sure I can handle the risk.

Raising kids isn’t just stressful because of the energy it requires. It also comes with the intense risk of having your heart broken. And I don’t mean heartbreak like losing your first love. I mean the kind of heartbreak that destroys every piece of you to the point where you can’t begin to recognize the pieces to put them back together. It breaks my heart when my oldest falls off her bike and begins to think she can’t ever learn to ride without training wheels. It breaks my heart when my toddler cries when I leave.

But those are small tragedies compared to what is possible. Nothing in this life is guaranteed. Families suffer through the loss of a child. Children suffer through the loss of a parent. It is a risk you take when you let yourself love this way.

I’m not sure I can handle the world they are growing up in.

Something about this pregnancy has made it impossible for me to watch the news. Even social media has become a minefield. It seems that almost every time I am mindlessly scrolling, I find something that makes my heart hurt. And I can’t take it. More than ever before in my life I find myself scrolling a little faster, trying to unsee all the heartbreaking tragedy, so much of which involves children in one way or another. How can I send my babies out into this world that is so full of hurt?

I’m not sure I’ll be able to let them go. 

At the risk of making this post even more depressing than it already is, I’m about to say the most morbid thing yet: when it comes to parenting, the worst case scenario is that we have to let them go, and the best case scenario is that we have to let them go.

It sucks and it’s true. Even if we make it through the adventures of raising children to be independent human beings, in the end, we still have to let them go. After all, that is the whole point. No matter how desperately my heart wants to keep them wrapped safely in my arms and protect them from everything that scares me, I can’t.

But I do know that with all of this fear and uncertainty comes the greatest wonder and deepest love that I never even imagined until I experienced it. It’s a love that makes me scared but it’s a love that also makes me strong.

Because even though this life can be hard and this world can be scary, even though hurt will inevitably be one of their teachers, and even though mom may not always be able to handle it all, at least we will have each other. I can’t protect them from fear and uncertainty, but  I can show them the kind of love that makes it all worth it.

 

 

5 thoughts on “I’m Not Sure My Heart Can Handle Another Child

  1. Wow. You beautifully describe the intense emotions and risks and realities that come with loving and raising a child.

    I imagine one feels much of this with each child. For me, my husband and I are open but by no means set on the idea of a 3rd, so I really don’t know if this is likely to be my last pregnancy or last baby or last birth. Sometimes I wish I knew whether this would be my so I could cherish it as such, but then I think, I should be as present and thankful for each as I can anyhow.

    When you were having #2 did you think you’d be having more after?

    1. After #2 I wasn’t ready to say I was “done” but I also want ready to have another one right away. If I had been planning it we would have spaced #2 and #3 out a little more but someday I’m sure I’ll love having them so close together. 🙂 It was definitely a surprise to find out 3 was on her way but I feel like I would have spent too much time overthinking the decision to have another–this way the decision was made for me. Lol 🙂

      1. Ah, so it sounds like you had a strong inkling you’d have a 3rd, just not so soon.

        I’m really unsure… Hubby and I both say “we’ll see how 2 is and go from there” and estimate the likelihood of a 3rd at 50/50. There are parts of parenting I love so much I can’t bear only getting to do them twice, and other parts where I think “how crazy am I?” I get so tired already!

        1. I totally get the tired thing! I wonder how I would have felt if we had made it to the time to make a decision. Our 2 was a pretty easy baby. I joke to my husband that she is a “trick” baby because she would make us believe we could handle another one. 🙂

          1. Haha. Yeah I guess a lot will friend in what #2 is like! I think our #1 was on the average to easy side, not a great sleeper but at least no colic or major gassy or fussy times, but a very tough toddler. So if the next one is like her, I’ll go through the baby part thinking I could do this again, and then get to toddler years and be like, um, maybe this is enough…

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