Intimate Odyssey
On modern motherhood and the birth narrative.
On modern motherhood and the birth narrative.
Julia Cooke Virginia Quarterly Review Jan 2021 25min Permalink
My husband’s struggle with postpartum depression was my struggle, too.
Aubrey Hirsch Gay Mag Sep 2019 20min Permalink
Forgetting a child in the backseat of a car is a horrifying mistake. But is it a crime?
Gene Weingarten Washington Post Mar 2009 35min Permalink
The death of an infant lands his father on death row in Louisiana.
Rachel Aviv New Yorker Jun 2015 25min Permalink
A story of brutally honest parental thoughts.
"Actually, we believe the pediatrician is right. The baby would be fine, she’d work it out on her own. In the morning, when we enter her bedroom, guilt-ridden and spent, our daughter would smile her smile of delight—her oldest and best trick—the smile she offers to anyone who shows her a bit of interest, but most of all to her parents, who are most in need of it. She’s a narcissistic insomniac, prohibiting others from sleeping if she cannot. A sentimental whore, refusing to sleep alone in her own bed. The most grating of alarm clocks: no radio option, no snooze button. But here are her trump cards: she smiles as if she herself had discovered joy, and she never holds a grudge."
Polly Rosenwaike New Delta Review Dec 2013 15min Permalink
Two parents contend with a grotesque, rapidly growing newborn; from the author of Don't Kiss Me: Stories, published today.
"Daddy and I had heard of ugly babies, of unnaturally big babies, we’d seen a show once where what looked like a 12-year old boy was in a giant diaper his mother had fashioned out of her front room curtain, sitting there with his legs straight out in front of him like he was pleased to meet them, his eyes pushed into his face like dull buttons, and the mother claiming he wasn’t yet a year. But Levis wasn’t on the TV, he was right there, his eyes following Daddy across the room, those eyes like gray milk ringed with spider’s legs, and at two months Levis had chewed through a wooden bar in his crib, splinters in his gums, him crying while I plucked them with a tweezer, me feeling that nail in my gut, me feeling something less than love."
Lindsay Hunter Everyday Genius Apr 2010 Permalink