Sunday, September 16, 1979
My Dearest Child,
On the opposite page, I have taped a picture of myself taken not long after you were conceived. You will have seen many pictures of Dawn and I by now, but I think this is by far the best likeness of me I have ever had taken, so I include it here. I wore glasses then, too, but as I often took them off to do important work - write, read, talk, so I didn't include them here.
We all have a mental picture of ourselves, no matter what our actual age. Our own mental image - who we expect to see in the mirrored surface of a window as we walk down the street. This picture represents how I imagined myself for years. I would have been 21 at the time, I think.
Thursday, Sept. 28
My Dearest Son, if that be so,
Today I am frantically working to find you a name. In less than two weeks, I am told, you will be born. Are you feeling confined in the womb that has nurtured you for so long? This, my baby, is not the last of these wombs, from which you must birth out.
As to your name - I am trying to find a name that will convey all the hopes and dreams I have of and for you, yet still give you the freedom to be who you want to be. Right now I am taken by the name Deror - it is Hebrew for freedom, or free flowing. Freedom is the most important thing or state of mind we can have and my hope is that freedom will always be paramount among your concerns.
Besides, having a name like Deror will set you apart, your name will have a magic which none of your peers can take from you. this being apart is a good thing, I think. It is in this loneliness that creative ability and art comes.
I hope that is not to heavy a burden for you to carry - such a name and such a setting apart. I think it will be a good one - for we all carry burdens, the rocks we push up hills only to see them fall again and again. Let us at least be happy in the struggle. You know that I love you and apropos that is a quote from Rilke:
"All we can offer where we love is this: to love each other; for to hold each other comes easy to us and requires no learning."
Requiem
But for now, my love must be nurturing and holding. And preparing.
The first thing that surprises me is that two weeks before she was due, we did not know Morgan's gender. How innocent compared to the other pregnancies, miscarriages and births, that we should know so little about what was going on in the womb. We did have a sonogram, but it apparently showed nothing conclusive. We still have it, in the fireproof box of course, with the birth certificates and other important papers. Sometimes I wonder what it would have been like . . . to have a son instead of daughters. Would I have been a better father, or worse? A better man? What would have been my expectation for my son? It seems like I was already freighting his life with my expectations. What if he had grown up to be a jock? or a stock broker? This short journal is a treasure of what ifs and the gender of my children is certainly an interesting hypothetical topic; as it was, three for three. I can only hope that if Morgan, Emica or Breanne had been a boy that I would have striven to give him the same nurture and caring; the same generosity and discipline; the same love, in other words, that I have tried to give to my daughters. . . and received in return.
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