hueman domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/jwhite/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131The post How to Feel Change in Your Bones. first appeared on Jennifer S. White.
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While I’m not one to complain about the weather, I’ve noticed how much my body—how much the depth of my bones—responds to these heavy, damp mornings.
My arms have goosebumps, where the fine hair stands on end. The tip of my nose feels cold and my loose rings turn on my fingers. I turn the heat up in my house, only to turn it back down, because I realize that what I want is to fully experience this spring chill.
After all, it’ll be hot and sticky and humid soon enough.
The backs of my legs will stick to my car seat. I’ll have imprints on my thighs from the wooden bench where my daughter and I like to sit after getting ice cream.
I feel a fullness in my belly and in my breasts that normally aren’t there.
My daughter sits in my lap and leans back as I read her a story; it’s getting uncomfortable for her to do this.
I go to yoga class and modify poses that I’d love to sink deeply into. The sweat beads on my upper lip and shoulders and instead of letting it drip sensuously down my back; I take child’s pose so as not to overheat.
Yet I’m not desiring that this period slips by, so that I might return to my typical life—I’m already shocked at how far along this baby is.
And I know that when my infant arrives, it’ll be an entirely new season.
Fall will be dawning and winter on our only slightly distant horizon. I’ll need a jacket to cover my now-empty abdomen. (I remember vividly the overwhelming urge to place my hands on my child in utero, only to remember that she’s now lying in the gentle nook of my arms.)
So when my bones feel heavy and my heart longs to follow—when the damp spring days seem unending and, yes, even annoying—my tendency to either wallow or become agitated is, thankfully, often squashed by a tender recognition of this moment’s impermanence.
I place my hand softly on my belly, where I’ll begin to feel movement nearly any day, and I feel intense pleasure, peace and satisfaction at being grateful for where I sit, right now.
Photo: martinak15/Flickr.
The post How to Feel Change in Your Bones. first appeared on Jennifer S. White.
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