Flexibility is the name of the game when you're pregnant (and in life in general) and I'm proud to say that aside from the occasional stressed-out moment of overwhelming desire to have control, flexibility has been a regular practice for me, one that I'm getting better at each day. I'm finding that it actually comes relatively naturally to me! (No one's more surprised by this than I am.) It has resulted in even more gratitude and reasons to have faith in the future. I'm hopeful that being flexible now during pregnancy bodes well for my ability to adjust as a parent.

I don't think my husband and I were adequately prepared for the amount of stress and tension that differences of opinion about child-rearing could cause within a family. Since this is the first grandchild for both of our families, we delightfully focused on absorbing the excitement and joy that followed our pregnancy announcement. But in the blink of an eye, weeks and months have gone by and we're finding family members have more to say on the subject of parenting as we inch closer and closer to our due date. It's natural to hope and dream that a new addition to a family would bring nothing but bundles of love and happiness, but it's also realistic to recognize that new arrivals can dredge up long-standing disagreements and hurts between its preexisting members. Knowing how to sensitively and lovingly address these issues is especially challenging when my first priority is preparing to be responsible for a helpless newborn. She will arrive among us in a completely innocent state; none of the pain or anger that may hover around the family from previous conflict will be her fault.
I recently heard a coworker use the phrase "radical acceptance." I don't think he meant to use it in a profound way at the time, but it stayed with me. After all, what is acceptance if it isn't radical? Acceptance of any circumstance beyond our control is likely to be a challenge that requires a leap of faith, perhaps even placing our own understanding on the back burner. Another person's perspective is dependent on a lifetime of experiences and interactions, many of which we may know nothing about. Therefore, I'm wondering if it's possible for me to exercise radical acceptance of those perspectives, particularly if I wish to maintain loving relationships with the people who hold them. (It doesn't mean I have to agree with them-- just let go of the desire to change them.) Perhaps that's the best way to cope with troubled relationships at a time when the most significant relationship in one's life is just on the cusp of beginning: the relationship between parent and child, with all of its responsibility and wonder.
I pray that God would allow me and my husband to continue our journey of openness, grant us experiences of radical acceptance for the sake of nurturing love within our families, and help us to teach our daughter to do the same.
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