10 Ways to Stop Being a Writer

  1. Open Instagram for “just a second.” First thing in the morning is best.

  2. Google literary agents. Spend extra time on the ones way you know are out of reach.

  3. Read comment sections.

  4. Feel anxious about all the fighting in the comment sections for hours. Perhaps take that anxiety out on the people around you in various ways, such as being absent or lacking patience.

  5. Listen to podcast interviews with literary agents talking about the size of the platform they like writers to have before they will sign them. Sit with that number in despair.

  6. Brainstorm ways you can build a platform without looking like you are actually trying to build a platform, then research classes on building a platform. There’s one that’s very expensive, it’s out.

  7. Text your friend copious amounts of emojis trying to convey your distress about the reel situation you’re watching unfold on Instagram. Declare your writing career over because your life is simply not conducive to finding the time/ideas/skills to dance/do voice overs/act/be funny/be on your phone a lot/make a reel and grow your platform, because apparently Instagram robots says reels are better than pictures and agents say you need to do whatever is better and so you just decide to do nothing except text your friend and complain again.

  8. Come to the realization that you don’t even want a platform because everyone with a platform has to referee arguments in their comment section and remember that anxiety?

  9. Move your text conversation with your very understanding friend about reels to Voxer, because there is more to say. Go back and forth for an hour or so about why you can’t make reels and how much you don’t even like reels and why the heck am I giving so much of my life to this conversation anyway?

  10. Try to make a reel.

//

Thanks to Daien Guo and Brevity Magazine for the prompt. And to Ashlee Gadd for sharing.

ordinary life - June edition

I realize more and more every day just how complicated my relationship is with… many things. Social media. Politics. Aging. Regarding the last, I’ve recently started using paper mache-like cut outs on my face every night to even out my wrinkles and call me crazy, but I think they are working a little bit?

I missed fall soccer registration for my son yesterday because there’s a lot to keep track of with six kids and I’m more or less keeping my head above water most days, but all he wants to do is play soccer so there’s that winning-mom moment. Hope the waitlist works out. I offered to coach to help our chances. Funny thing is, we were actually swimming all day yesterday and everyone was having a blast but we came home very hot and tired and that’s why I missed registration, so the head above water analogy is kind of right on point here. 

Three of my boys have a very weird rash I cannot figure out. Heat? Is the lake polluted? We may never know but we’re going to keep swimming because the biggest thing on my vision board this summer is “get the kids tired before 9pm” and I find that is easier with water involved and this rash is going to have to get a lot worse before I change my vision board. 

Bray, our 16-month-old has learned to hit and thinks it’s hilarious and I learned I should have never, ever laughed the first time he did it. 

I tripped on a toy tractor today and my sweet son, Cannon, with very limited communication immediately said, “Are you ok mommy?” and I wish I could find the words to tell you how miraculous that question felt.

Beckett turned three last week and now I have two three-year-olds in the house now. That’s it. Just wanted you to know there are two of them. There's a whole mood around here. 

My husband will be seven months sober on July 6th. One day at a time.

This weekend, 13 baby birds fell into our egress window well. We did our best to help these birds who were clearly lost, not able to fly, and not faring so well stuck in a hole with rocks and dried leaf debris. I mean, we used our food chopper on worms, y’all. Alas, Google was only moderately helpful (as Google is) and at 6pm on a Sunday evening no one at any wildlife refuge desk is answering a phone. I’m sorry to report that most of the baby birds did not make it. No one was sadder about this than Jordi, whose sensitive heart wept at the sight of the ones we couldn’t save. But, every morning when it’s really quiet, and every evening before the sun goes down, I see two of our babies making their way around the yard looking for food in the company of a full grown quail. Our baby birds are decidedly not quails, that much I know. But this good bird adopted them, and they feel safe with her even though they aren’t family, and it’s so profoundly beautiful I can hardly stand it. 

I’m starting a 5-day juice cleanse tomorrow. I’ve never done any kind of cleanse and I have to be honest, I love food so much five days is feeling real ambitious right now. But I’ve also been eating a lot of sour cream and cheddar potato chips lately because all I want in the summer is chips and sparkling water. So, it’s time to show a little discipline and honestly, I just need to prove to myself I can do it. I am 37 after all, and I have to get this cleanse in before the 4th of July when I will again be eating a lot of sour cream and cheddar potato chips. 

Speaking of the 4th of July, have I ever told you it’s my favorite holiday? I mean, I bought patriotic nail stickers this year. Our day starts at 11:00am with our city’s parade and ends around 11:00pm when the fireworks are done. In between it’s swimming and s’mores and cornhole and too much lemonade and the greatest of friends and baby sunscreen and sparklers and I just love it all so much I can’t stand it.

I emailed our local crisis pregnancy center this morning, because there’s more I can do to show up for the women and babies and lives that I believe with my whole heart are miraculous. I also grabbed my daughter – the one I picked up in a McDonald’s parking lot when she was four days old – by the cheeks and told her for the 10 thousandth time in her life that a miracle is exactly what she is. You are one, too. Do you ever think about that? 

We bought Harper a watch that she can call and text from. Approved contacts only. No internet. A solid purchase that I am far more obsessed with than Harper is because she starts and finishes every single voice memo with “I love you, mom” and never will I ever take that for granted. 

Back to the complicated relationship thing: It is so, so important to me to honor everyone. I don’t like either/or categories. People deserve to be listened to and understood more than that dichotomy allows. And yet, I will always and only ever have one answer for anything and everything: Jesus. He came to get us because we desperately needed him to. And I find that the more I realize I need him, the more I see he’s there.

Life is ordinary and challenging and beautiful, isn’t it?


37 things I know

(from experience)
(or, at least I am pretty sure of them)
(alternative title: the story of me growing up in 37 items)

  1. Praying for lifelong friends, sisters, people who will walk with you in all of your becoming, is one of the best things you can pray for. 

  2. Wear sunscreen. I’m serious.

  3. You’re stronger than you think. See:

    • Learning how to walk again three different times

    • Moving across the country where you knew no one

    • Carrying your own furniture up three flights of stairs by yourself when the movers never showed up

  4. “No” is one of the most important words in anyone’s vocabulary. See:

    • No, I don’t like beer, but thank you for offering.

    • No, I don’t think it’s funny to overhear you talking about my body behind my back just because I’m the only woman working down here.

  5. Getting to know the baristas at your favorite coffee shop is an excellent idea. 

  6. The guy who is not texting you back, he did not just forget his phone. Or fall asleep early. You can stop making excuses for him.

  7. Long Island Iced Teas are a misnomer. Slow down, girl.

  8. Cheer, as genuinely as you can, for the people getting what you want in life, like jobs and engagement rings and babies. You’ll need this skill your entire life. Jealousy can paralyze you. 

  9. That same guy is also not worth taking a $12,000 a year job to stay in the same city as him, in case he finally texts you back. And, you really can stop making excuses for him. 

  10. College campuses are magical places. Memorize the way the library smells, the view from the window out of your favorite class, the feeling of accomplishing so much that so few people will ever see.

  11. You’re braver than you think. See:

    • Walking out of the same guy’s office and finally, finally, never looking back. And finally, finally, not wanting him to follow you.

    • Spending the summer in Bogota, Colombia, by yourself.

  12. The guy who does text you back when he says he will, pay attention to how that feels.

  13. Listen with your eyes.

  14. “Yes” is one of the most important words in anyone’s vocabulary. See:

    • Yes, I’d love to get to know you more.

    • Yes, I’ll be your girlfriend.

    • Yes, I forgive you.

  15. Start the blog. Just start.

  16. Consider just eloping on the beach with your closest people around you. Weddings are a lot of work.   

  17. Your honeymoon is more important than your new job. Ask for the full week off, not just three days. You are not impressing anyone.

  18. Scarcity mindset is crippling. Fight it every single day of your life.

  19. You’ll say “'I’m sorry” more than almost any other phrase over a lifetime so get real comfortable really meaning it.

  20. Nothing magical happens to prepare you for motherhood. You learn one day at a time. 

  21. P.s. You learn mostly by getting things wrong.

  22. For better or for worse, your children are not a report card on your performance.

  23. For better or for worse, people are not thinking about you as much as you think they are thinking about you. They are mostly thinking about themselves just like you are mostly thinking about yourself.

  24. You are stronger than you think. See:

    • Having three babies in three years.

    • Unmedicated birth.

    • Navigating the weight of an autism diagnosis and learning how to be an advocate for your son.

    • Having three babies in three years again.

  25. Keep writing. It matters.

  26. Use the library. Amazon gets expensive and you will run out of room for books. 

  27. Except do buy the handful of books that change you. Make room for those ones. Read them again.

  28. “Yes” is still one of the most important words in anyone’s vocabulary. See:

    • Yes, we’ll take the baby girl who needs a safe home tonight.

    • Yes, we’ll adopt her.

  29. Cheer, as genuinely as you can, for the people getting what you want in life, like typically developing children and book deals and vacations. You still need this skill your entire life. Jealousy can paralyze you. 

  30. Talk to your friends every day. Every single day. God’s been answering the prayers you’ve been praying for decades in them.

  31. Accept help. With meals, with laundry, with your kids, with your marriage.

  32. Life surprises you in beautiful and devastating ways. Don’t try to make too much sense of it all when you’re in the middle.

  33. “No” is still one of the most important words in anyone’s vocabulary. See:

    • No, I can’t commit to that right now.

    • No, I’m not interested in that opportunity.

    • No, I’m not going to quit.

  34. Find a counselor. 

  35. Keep writing, it matters.

  36. One day at a time. One day at a time. One day at a time.

  37. The gospel will prove, over and over again, to be the only thing that truly makes sense about life. (This one, I’m the most sure of.)

Here’s to 37. And a lifetime of making a longer list.

s'mores

I said no for months. I didn’t want the mess, the smell, the extra responsibility that I was sure would fall on me.

But she was so persistent, watching videos, learning from other pet owners, making lists with prices. Assuring me over and over again she could do it, she could clean, so could do extra chores, she could be responsible for a pet.

And then finally, after she made breakfast for her siblings and asked me a dozen times if I needed help on an evening I was stressed, Alex and I looked at each other and thought, “she’s ready.” We surprised her after school last Friday with a cage and then took her to the pet store to pick out her buddy.

Meet S’mores. He is a guinea pig, eight months old, given to the pet store by a family who could no longer take care of him, so we adopted him into ours.

And dang, he’s pretty sweet. I kinda like him.

Isn’t everything sweet and worthwhile right on the other side of that thing you don’t really want to do?

beach lessons

Last week, we packed up the back of our van with seven suitcases, a pack-n-play, a double stroller, a wagon stuffed full of towels and blankets and toy shovels, a cooler, and three kites. It’s a big van, y’all. We made the seven-hour drive to the Oregon Coast in a little over nine hours, because we’ve learned to stop for picnics and google the nearest park to let the wiggles out at least every three hours. No rushing the road trips in this family. 

We pulled up to our adorable rental with only one truly unhappy toddler, and as soon as the front door was unlocked, the kids were running through the house exploring their new surroundings like little puppies who’ve just been let outside. I get this bed! I call the top bunk! This room has a tv in it, mom! 

Once the suitcases were unloaded and the dinner we brought from home was in the oven cooking, I was itching to go to the beach. Our house was just a few blocks up from the shoreline, and since there are at least six years between me and the last time I heard the waves close up, I couldn’t wait one more minute. Jordi and Beckett came with me while the rest of the crew stayed at the house, and as we got closer and closer to the water, my boys’ anticipation took over their voices and bodies. There it is! There’s the beach! Beckett squealed. Mom! It’s the ocean! Jordi pointed. The wind was truly wild, so fierce that you nearly had to turn your head away from it to keep your eyes open. But it was their first glimpse, their first taste of something so vast one can barely comprehend it. And it was magic.

After a morning looking at starfish and playing in the low tide, a day trip to Cannon Beach and flying kites at Haystack Rock, then a fun morning at the Tillamook Cheese Factory where we had amazing grilled cheese sandwiches and big bowls of ice cream, our last night came quickly. It had rained most of the morning and into the early afternoon, but just after we had pizza for dinner, the sun finally made her appearance. Anyone want to go get one more look at the ocean with me? I asked. Cannon and Jordi were in, so we put our shoes on and headed out. 

It was another windy evening, and the waves were strong, but nothing could stop the boys from playing tag with the water rolling onto the shore. Their confidence grew with each narrow escape, but before I could even warn them, a stronger wave rolled in quickly. Cannon was able to mostly outrun it with only wet ankles, but Jordi was not so fortunate. The wave caught his feet, then his knees, then knocked him forward completely and my six-year-old, who had walked to the beach with me fully clothed, was suddenly under water up to his neck with a wave still rolling over him. The whole scene was much funnier to me than it was to him.

Mom! Help me! He yelled. And as the wave began to roll back where it came from, I walked over and lifted his soaking body up from the sand and stifled my giggles. It’s not funny mom! He said to me. It was scary.

I’m sure it was, bud. I was watching though, you were ok. The ocean is strong, isn’t it? I told him.

After a few deep breaths and an assurance of safety, he started smiling. Yeah, it knocked me right over! He giggled. 

It sure did, bud. I’m glad you’re ok.

Me, too. I’ll be more careful next time, he tells me.

I smile at him and send him back to his game, my little but getting bigger boy with the bluest eyes you ever did see. I’m so glad you learned that, I think to myself. Because we are all, always, learning what to do differently next time.

punching the air

Last week, I took a boxing class through my Peloton app. I have never in my life been attracted to boxing, nor have I ever hit something. Or someone. (Thought about it? Maybe.) But when I saw that Peloton was featuring the music of Eminem in a 30-minute boxing class, I felt like the Lord gave me a gift, for two reasons: One, because I’m definitely feeling angsty enough to hit something, and two, because a little known fact about me is that I deeply love Eminem.

On the surface, I’m sure that raises some eyebrows from the saints. Eminem is, like all of us, a flawed human being, with questionable standards for his content and certainly lyrics I don’t want the kids to hear. 

However.

Put on “Lose Yourself” and tell me your head isn’t ever so slightly moving left to right, eyes narrowed in solemn intensity as the music starts with the piano and then transitions to the guitar, imagining yourself on the brink of something fantastically hard and you’re about to take it the hell on. The way the music builds and the cadence speeds up in just the perfect rhythm, you can’t not feel like you’re capable of doing the hardest thing possible right in that moment.

Or maybe it’s just me.

(But I don’t think it is.)

I digress. Back to boxing. For thirty minutes I clumsily followed the instructor’s directions and I swung at the air as hard as I could, picturing an invisible enemy in front of me like I was directed, on my toes and squatting to duck whenever she yelled at us to. When it was over, I felt proud, my sweat and red cheeks both signs of a great workout, and you already know I loved the music.  

But it wasn’t until the next morning, when I could barely lift my arms, that I realized just how great a workout it was. From my triceps to whatever muscles make up the area around the shoulder blades, it felt like everything north of my belly button yelled at me whenever I needed to move. Which, of course, means it worked. Punches, jabs, upper cuts, they all activated muscles I don’t use all the time, and that was the whole point. 

Still, as I moved around that day, feeling the soreness every time I lifted a toddler or turned the steering wheel, I couldn’t help but think about the irony: that 30 minutes was such a hard workout, but all I did was punch the air.

//

You’ve seen Finding Nemo, I’m sure. (If not, come on over to my house on any given weekday and there’s a fifty percent chance it’s on.) But I’m sure you remember, Marlin the clownfish loses his son Nemo, and he teams up with the forgetful fish, Dory, to travel the ocean and find him? It’s one of my favorite Disney movies, hands down. Witty and charming and characters that make you love them. I still remember seeing it in the theater with my high school boyfriend and laughing so hard I cried (this reveals so much about me as an 18-year-old, I know. But, as admitted, that same teenager was singing along with Eminem so suffice it to say I’ve been a study in contradictions for a long time).

At one point on Marlin and Dory’s journey, Marlin breaks down in exasperation. They have been through so much and still haven’t found Nemo. He’s frustrated that all the other fish can so easily ignore him as he swims around asking for directions, or for any help at all, and they all just go on with their lives. Finally, in a moment of anger, he says, “But it doesn’t matter, because no one in this entire ocean is going to help me!”

Then Dory, ever so sincerely, says, “Well I’m helping you.”  

It’s a whole moment. A wake up call of sorts.

For some reason, Dory’s help wasn’t enough for Marlin, because she was forgetful or not getting him where he needed to be fast enough or who knows. But when Marlin looked around all he saw was an ocean full of fish that weren’t helping him. He didn’t see the loyal, willing friend right next to him. 

Marlin, I get this.

//

Right now, my husband is nine weeks into a fifteen week addiction rehab program. An addiction I did not know about, well, until I did. Without a doubt, and for many reasons that are only for me and the Lord, this has been the hardest nine weeks of my life. But I can tell you that solo-parenting six children – one with autism, two potty-training toddlers, one baby, and two who are excellent observers but terrible interpreters of what’s going on in their family – is not for the faint of heart. Doing this while navigating my own hurt has been enough to make me want to stay under the covers on many mornings. 

But the truth is, we have had more love and support than I can even name. When I let people know what was going on, the hands and feet moved in within minutes. Best friends booked plane tickets. Strangers from the internet sent me coffee money or Uber Eats gift cards. Friends I haven’t talked to in years overnighted gifts to my front door. People in my daily life dropped meals and soft blankets off on the porch. For the first few weeks especially, I was completely and totally overwhelmed with kindness and tangible love from so many people. 

But here is another, much uglier truth. As the weeks have gone on and the shield I felt around me started to fade as everyone continued on with their lives, I’ve started to notice something: I get angry at things I can’t even see. I will start thinking about who really hasn’t said anything, who never offered to drop a meal off, who hasn’t checked in. I’ll start to scoff when I hear people complain or ask for prayer for this or that thing in their own lives, as if there is a who has it harder? competition going on. I’ll feel jealous when I see other people living their lives, going on their vacations, acting like my whole world didn’t just have an enormous seismic shift – as if they should have felt it, too. 

Before I know it, I’m in a tailspin of bitterness. 

Because when you’re hurting, or scared, or anxious, I think you deflect that pain in all sorts of sideways manners, to all sorts of places it’s not going to be helpful to point it. In times of grief, the human heart can go from feeling like they have all the love and support in the world in one moment, to no fish in this entire ocean is going to help me the next. And the enemy loves it when we do that, because then we can’t see all the ways God is saying, or showing, ever so sincerely, “Well I’m helping you.”

//

Two months of the darkest days I've ever experienced have shown me many things, but this is one of them: the only way through is through. I have to go through this. And I am so blessed that I do have a sister-friend who checks in every single day, and I do have people bringing us dinner three days a week, and I do have co-workers and teammates and family and friends on the internet telling me all the time that they are praying for us. 

I am so, so helped. 

And still, on the days it hurts the most, when the anger rises up in my heart, all of that love is not enough to take away the hard. I still have to go through this – like all of us do in difficult seasons – ultimately, alone.

But when I don’t want to feel that, when I don’t want to live in its reality, I blame. I put my pain somewhere else, mostly on people who I am demanding more from than our relationship even merits. It’s just easier, more automatic to me. I start swinging at the air in frustration, at the anger I can’t even see, at the stories that live in my head and, not surprisingly, grow in correlation to my hurt.

And let me tell you, from what I hope is the other side of this now, I think it’s those invisible fights that leave our hearts the most beat up the next day. 

//

There is hard work to do in our lives every day, one foot in front of the other kind of moments that we have to show up for even when nothing in us wants to. 

But If I blame my pain on the things that didn’t cause it, I’m only giving myself more to heal. Some of the hardest battles just might be the ones we don’t even see, the thoughts and the bitterness and anger that keep us from the work we have to do. I think the enemy would love for me to stay in that place, swinging at the air and not making a bit of progress walking in grace, keeping people on the hook I very likely unfairly hung them on to begin with. 

I’m not going to. I’m going to make it the only way anyone makes any journey: through.

Take it from me friends, if you’re going to swing at nothing and wake up exhausted, make it a boxing workout to the tune of Marshall Mathers. Your arms will be sore, but your heart won’t.



Katie Blackburn Comments
I love...

I love the first sip of coffee, libraries, freshly painted nails, people who love my children, and the edges of brownies.

I love 85 degrees in the afternoon, 65 and a light sweatshirt in the evening.

I love being home when my kids aren’t, my son’s therapists, watching my husband mow the lawn as he listens to music, and watching my toddler son follow behind him with his toy lawnmower.

I love college campuses, warm sourdough bread, curious people, when a book keeps me up late at night, vacuum lines on the carpet, airport reunions, high waisted leggings, sage green and soft peach in a color palette, and campfires.

I love when my daughter catches her reflection in the mirror, and smiles.

I love the group Voxer thread that keeps me in touch with the four friends I talk to everyday, that my five-year-old’s belly laugh hasn’t changed since he was a baby, how small I feel next to the ocean, the smell of the air right after it rains, and how my husband looks in his scrubs.

I love being invited to sit on someone’s couch, and then offered a blanket to cozy up with.

I love catching my kids in their imaginary play, the feeling when you finish a bowl of warm soup, a drop of peppermint essential oil in the shower, and when my slept-in hair still looks good (enough) the next morning.

I love being a teacher.

I love being a learner.

I love how excited my kids are to see their dad when he gets home from work, tulips, a good workout, kissing baby cheeks, when my toddler slows down enough to snuggle for just a minute, opening all the blinds in the family room, wood fired pizza, and telling old stories with friends.

I love taking pictures of people smiling when they have no idea I’m capturing them, my daughter’s notes, when the kitchen is finally clean at the end of the day, and when I have all the ingredients for dinner on hand.

I love having written.

I love when I throw a toy from across the room and it actually lands in the basket, watching my kids jump on the trampoline with their dad, that all four of my boys have the most beautiful long eyelashes.

I love Matthew 9:20-22. 

I love shoveling the snow from the driveway when the rest of the neighbors are outside doing the same, how I can’t eat a raspberry without thinking of my papa, that my friend Kelly brings me cherry tomatoes from her garden every August, when my kids are excited to show me something they are proud of, and cheese and crackers.

I love when I haven’t seen a friend in months, but we get together and it’s like no time has passed at all, and when friends know you well enough to tell you “no.”

I love how Cannon gets a big smile on his face when he says something that we understand.

I love finishing.

I love when the house has been quiet for a bit too long and you go look for the kids expecting the worst, but find them playing together.

I love finding old journal entries and realizing as I read them that God is always, always doing more than I could ask or imagine.

I love the first few weeks of a baby’s life when they sleeps peacefully on your chest for hours at a time, and I also love when they are finally old enough to be held on my hip with one arm. 

I love watching athletes win a championship, and then go find their mom in the crowd to sob happily into her shoulder, and I love watching athletes lose a championship, and then go find their mom in the crowd to sob sadly into her shoulder, knowing the result didn’t matter to her anyway.

I love when I’m nursing Braylen and he looks up at me to smile, and a little bit of milk dribbles down his cheek.

I love when I get the giggles in a place that it’s really not appropriate to have the giggles, that a baby has to laugh when they are tickled, and that all my kids want to watch and wait for their brother to get off his special bus after school.

I love that my husband was brave enough to get help.

I love how Harper loves to help her younger siblings, taking communion, picnics, finding a dollar in the pocket of a coat I hadn’t worn since last year, and when strangers stop to help.

I love that when my husband comes home from work and I apologize that the house is a mess, he says, “I don’t care, babe.”

I love when my closest friends still read my words, highlighting, and whispering “I love you” into a dark room and closing the door of the last child awake for the night.

I love how Jordi runs toward me after school with his big backpack bouncing up and down, and jumps in my arms.

I love Christmas lights, and the small houseplant on our fireplace that was a birthday gift two years ago and is still thriving.

I love that the lilac bush in our backyard is always in full bloom around Mother’s Day, jumping off the dock with my kids, and cozy jogger pants.

I love that whenever my dad drops me off at the airport, he still takes out his wallet and hands me $20 in cash for some “walking around money.”

I love my Nona’s spaghetti recipe, and that my mom makes it every Christmas eve.

I love when a sweater hits me right in the middle of my hands, so that I can wrap my fingers around its edges.

I love that Alex calls me every day to tell me how good his leftovers are for lunch, watching Cannon draw castles, iced salted caramel lattes, when all the laundry is finally folded, and how Beckett says “ah-course” when he’s happy to do something I’ve asked him to.

I love Phoenix, Arizona.

I love that we can hear the train ever so faintly in the distance when our house is really quiet, marveling at how the human body can heal, the wall full of family pictures in our living room and how when I make eye contact with Braylen from across the room, he smiles.

I love cheering wildly for others, and being wildly cheered for.

I love being a mom, but not being only a mom.

I love that writing 100 things I love showed me I have a few hundred more to write.

*This post was inspired by Courtney Martin. Want to read more? Here’s some lists from my friends (the ones on that Voxer group!), Ashlee, Sarah, & Sonya.

Katie Blackburn Comments
not ready, just surrendered: Braylen Kai's birth story
IMG_3460.JPG

We put on the hypnobirthing playlist to fall asleep to every night when I was around 32 weeks pregnant.

I started eating dates everyday when I was 35 weeks.

At 37 weeks, I added raspberry leaf tea twice a day.

At 38.5 and with some steady contractions going, I put 2 tablespoons of castor oil in my smoothie. It wasn’t as bad as I had always been told, but it also didn’t do much for me.

After my 39 week appointment, I went home and pumped until I got a contraction, paused, and started again until I got a few more. 

I drank all the water. We had all the sex. I walked laps and laps around our indoor mall. Squats. Cat-call positions on my hands and knees. And prayer, a whole lot of prayer. When you are very pregnant and your varicose veins are very swollen and you have five other very busy children to keep up with, the last few weeks of pregnancy are a long, long wait. I was so very ready to have this baby.

And I’m not saying you cannot prepare your body for labor, or that there is nothing you can do to get ready. I am saying that no matter what you do on your own, babies just don’t come until they are good and ready. 

//

On Saturday, February 20, I called my parents and asked them to come watch our oldest five so that Alex and I could go for a walk. It was Braylen’s, our sixth, due date, and while my contractions were nothing more than they had been for several weeks, I was so physically and emotionally spent that I needed a break from the kids and some fresh winter air, and a walk was the perfect excuse for both. Alex and I ended up walking just over 2.5 miles, until the contractions were good and steady, like they usually got after a walk.

But this time, on his due date, they didn’t stop when we got home. 

Around 6:30pm, we checked into the hospital, where the admitting nurse told me I was 3cm dilated and 90% effaced. She was… not gentle in her checking efforts, and I cannot say I was sad about the shift change at 7:00pm, when Emily - who would become our angel of a nurse - walked in and introduced herself. By 9:00pm we were back in a labor and delivery room, I had my IV antibiotic for Group B strep (which I have been positive for all five of my births) and I was in the bathtub letting things progress slowly and steadily. 

Around 10:30pm, Emily checked my progress and I was between 4-5cm dilated. She called my midwife, Lisa, to update her, and within an hour Lisa was at the hospital to check on me. What Emily and Lisa did so well from the beginning of my labor was to remind me that my body knew exactly what to do. Things were not moving quickly, but they were moving. My contractions were consistently 3-4 minutes apart, strong but not too painful, and I was still feeling very in control of myself (i.e. I was not a feral animal, yet). I wanted to stand and squat and bounce on the birth ball to keep things going, but Emily encouraged me to just lay down and rest until the first dose of antibiotic was done, and then we could reassess. 

So I did. And with consistent contractions I still slept on and off for nearly two hours, breathing and remembering the instructions from my favorite doula (who could not be with us during this birth) to keep my forehead relaxed. “As soon as your face starts to wrinkle around your eyes and forehead, relax them.” 

It sounds strange, but worrying about my forehead wrinkles actually got me through the rest of my labor.

A little after 2:00am, I got my second dose of antibiotic and with it, the green light to have the midwife break my water. Once she did, contractions started getting stronger, and quickly. I got back in the bathtub and found the most comfortable position to be on my hands and knees -- so that is where I stayed for the next two hours. Alex got in the water with me, and every time I had a contraction, he pushed my hips together and all I can say is how in the world it took us five labors to figure out how amazingly helpful that is I do not know. I breathed, he pushed on my hips, I kept my forehead wrinkle free as much as I possibly could, and I swear I could feel Braylen slowly slowly slowly making his way down. It felt like he and I were working together. In an hour, I told Alex I was starting to feel a ton of pressure and to grab Emily, our nurse.

“You’re at 8cm, Katie, let me call Lisa,” were basically the best words I’d ever heard.

I don’t know exactly what time they came back in, and I was so focused on the forehead wrinkles that I didn’t do much chatting with them. But things were moving fast at this point, everyone could tell. Lisa asked me if I wanted to stay in the bath or get back in bed, and I told her as long as I could get back on my hands and knees I’d get in bed. She was so calm, so reassuring, so soft spoken and measured. “Absolutely. Your body will tell us what to do.” The exact right thing for her to say in that moment. 

So I climbed in the bed and -- because you don’t always lose all your dignity in labor -- I immediately requested my black cotton bra. I have nursed five babies, friends, and when you are on your hands and knees with no bra, well, let’s just say that fact is very obvious, and I didn’t like what I was seeing. Once the bra was back on, I could focus on the forehead wrinkles again.  

I knew Bray was so close, because with each contraction I felt like I could not possibly do one more. I’m not an expert, but in my three experiences with unmedicated births, it really is at the point that your body is so close to giving up that you are also so close to having a baby. The most incredible joy and relief is right on the other side of the most unbearable pain. As I groaned and tried to keep breathing and begged God to allow Braylen to come soon, Lisa stood on my right side and gently kept her hand on my lower back, repeating over and over again, “You’re doing great, Katie. Your baby is doing great. Your body knows exactly what to do.”

Alex was still pushing on my hips with each contraction, and when I felt Bray’s head crowning (and maybeee let out a good yell), Lisa quietly replaced Alex, and I heard the chorus of three people -- Alex, Emily, and Lisa -- encouraging me to keep pushing. It took two minutes and three of everything-I-could-give pushes, and Lisa had our baby boy in her arms. She cleared his mouth of mucus, and then said, “Katie, here’s your baby!” I was still on my hands and knees, and not wanting to waste a second getting Braylen into his mama’s arms, she handed him to me right through my legs, then she and Alex helped me roll onto my side and squeeze him close. 

Understatement of all understatements: this moment is miraculous. The unbelievable pain that was there just moments before is gone. The little person that has been kicking and hiccuping and growing inside your belly is now crying and moving and breathing outside of it. It is unlike anything else in the world.

Braylen Kai made his arrival on February 21, 2021, at 4:17am. He weighed 7 lbs. 4 ounces, and was 20 inches long. I think back often to the day I found out I was pregnant, how unexpected and impossible that reality felt. How not ready I was for another baby. And then he was there, in my arms, right when he was supposed to come, and a dozen times a day I asked him if he knows he’s a miracle, and tell him that he is my reminder that you don’t always need to be ready, you just need to be surrendered.

what was, what will be
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It was the year 
Her baby girl got her last name
Her children were home
Her church family fractured
Her womb grew
Her husband broke

It was the year
She was told “no.”
She put her own words away for a while
She buried scripture in her heart
She got comfortable with quiet
She begged God to help her unbelief

It was the year
Her selfishness was clear
Her repentance was necessary
Her priorities changed
Her world got smaller
Her intentions grew deeper

It was the year 
She let the kids blow bubbles in the house
She watched her oldest child think deeply
She laughed with her toddlers
She rejoiced at progress
She realized she was the witness, not the source

It was the year
Her motives changed
Her dreams learned submission
Her husband began to heal
Her children gave her grace
Her heart held the paradox of it all

It will be the year
She says “Lord willing”
She chooses surrender
She rejoices at the ordinary
She shows up joy 
She remembers where hope lives

//

#rhythmwriting2021

*Rhythm membership is closed for the year, but I hope to see you back in 2022!



Katie BlackburnComment
let me tell you
let me tell you 3.jpg

If you were to crack open my worn, paperback journal Bible, you would see the date March 16, 2020 written at the top of John 1. Today, I am parked in John 16, reading the same scripture about the Holy Spirit and prayer over and over, challenging myself to believe and live the words.

For those who did the mental math in your head, that means I have spent a little more than 9 months in just 16 chapters of God’s Word. 

I have read only 7 or 8 books, start to finish. Listened to a few on Audible.

I have tried maybe 4 or 5 new recipes.

I have had time for less than a dozen podcast episodes in their entirety. 

My point: the amount of content I have had the bandwidth or time to take in has slowed to a trickle. So why, dear friends, have I been trying to create a monthly content collection that I convince you to sign up for?

Let’s be honest, If you are looking for that, I am the last person you should be looking to. Because I have to tell you nine months out of the year that I am still reading the book of John, that I don’t have any books to recommend right now, that I am longing for a little bit of quiet in my day so I rarely listen to podcasts, or that no one, not one person, in thirty-five years has ever asked me where I buy my clothes.

I’m learning I have to be confident enough in the writer I’m not to move forward as the writer I am. 

So I am changing how I steward the people who choose to follow my words and my stories. Psalm 66:16 has, for years, been the sentence I have wanted to define my work: “Come and hear, all you who fear God; let me tell you what he has done for me.” 

Every single person who hits that follow button, who puts their email address in the subscribe box, who opens the link to an essay, is a real person, with real fears and real hopes and real questions. I cannot consistently offer that person a curated list of things I am loving. I can, however, consistently tell you what God has done for me, because he shows up every single day with more grace. 

That, friends, is my whole story: I am rescued by grace. I’d love to share with you what that looks like from here. 

Let me tell you - No. 1 - goes out in January. It’s about fear, but mostly, it’s about Who I am trying to turn to with it.

You can subscribe right here.



Katie BlackburnComment