spiritual practices with newborns: comforting

As a mother comforts her child,

so I will comfort you…

Isaiah 66:13

The poor babe is sick. Gift of a cold from his big brothers, generously passed along a week after they finished hacking and sniffling and crying for us all night long.

Neither of them were ever sick so small, and it breaks my mama heart to see his tiny newborn face turn beet-red as he struggles to breathe when he coughs. And when baby is only a month old, there are no cold meds to clear his congestion, no Tylenol to help him sleep. We can only watch and wait for the cold to run its course.

But all I want to do is comfort him. Every cell in my body screams out, hard-wired to cuddle and cradle him. To try and help what I cannot heal.

. . .

When we pick up a crying baby, we revert to the rhythms which comforted us as children, too. The most ancient rhythms – snuggle and rock, cuddle and coo. The body leads and the lullaby follows: knees soften, hips sway, arms cradle, hands rub, lips hum, eyes close.

There isn’t much to comforting a baby. There is only everything. The filling of the moment with the emptying of the self.

Has it been 10 minutes or 2 hours since we started rocking in this chair, or pacing the path of the upstairs hallway?

And who are we becoming in the process?

. . .

The thing about having a baby and older kids is that you realize how the same soothing rhythms stay with us. One kid wipes out on his bike, and he comes flying around the corner, wailing for a hug. Another’s nose runs like a leaky faucet, and he cries out in a most pathetic plea – I just want you to hold me!

I cradle them with the same sway that rocks their baby brother whenever he wakes. The same rub of the heaving back. The same murmurs whispered low. The same lingering kiss on the sweaty forehead. All the instincts that quiet the newborn give comfort to the big kids, too.

Perhaps deep down we are all always this small soft child. Crying out to be seen, soothed, loved.

Shouldn’t soothing be the simplest subject? Something about it is so instinctual that even our 4 year-old starting shushing in his baby brother’s ear the first time he held him.

But all week I’ve been struggling to write this. Not only to steal away enough time to fill the page, time away from rocking and holding and cuddling and nursing.

But also because it seems like a saccharine subject at first glance. The spirituality of soothing? It’s convenient to conjure up a God who comforts. Isn’t that the stuff of the opiate of the masses – creating the God we crave?

Yet I believe comforting is not simply some handy attribute of the divine. It’s an imperative at the heart of faith. The catch with Christianity is that we are called – even compelled by our very nature, created in God’s image – to comfort in turn. And there’s the rub indeed.

Because it’s hard work to comfort. It aches the back and tires the arms and rasps the throat and wearies the head. Comfort is not just about the calm, but the storm.

Sometimes when I’ve held an inconsolable newborn, on one of those crying jags that pound in your eardrums and pulse in your blood, I’ve wondered how God could possibly stay with us – all of us – through our own shrieks and screams and sobs. The only answer I can find is that this practice of love is about deep faithfulness – not some token pat on the back, not mere temporary relief.

Behold, I am with you always. As a mother comforts her child.

. . .

And it’s so sweet to soothe these small ones, too. So undeniably full of love and loveliness – to have the sleeping head finally loll onto your shoulder, to hear the smooth steady breath that once was ragged, to watch the peaceful eyes stay closed when you gently lay the baby back down.

Both sides of soothing – the challenge and the comfort – whisper something about who God is and who we are invited to be in turn. Consolers. Lovers. Peace-makers.

The ones who stop and stoop and scoop up to soothe. The ones who murmur quiet words over the wails and whimpers. The ones who keep watch over the sick, the weak, the wounded.

Come to me, all you who are weary. Christ like a father who crouches down and opens arms wide to embrace the sobbing child, the smallest who comes seeking only one thing, the desperate need in the painful moment.

So I will comfort you. God like a mother clasping her child to her chest, wrapped in the most intimate embrace, beating heart to heart.

This is love with skin on.

. . .

For a new twist: next time you’re comforting your children, remember who has comforted you through past hurts. Have you been blessed to know someone who comforts as God comforts?

Where do you need comfort in your life? What comfort are you called to give?

Check out the rest of the spiritual practices with newborns.

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10 Comments

  1. Kaydee Kirk on 21 June 2014 at 2:38 pm

    Hi, great post as usual! We have a 3 week old so all your writing is so especially relevant for us right now.

    Somehow I cannot access the comments for this post. Could you let me know when it is up and accessible?

    Thanks! Kaydee

  2. Natural Mama Nell on 20 June 2014 at 2:45 pm

    Beautiful.

  3. Katherine Turpin on 19 June 2014 at 6:58 pm

    Laura,
    I’m loving these tender, wise posts about practices of mothering. So beautiful.

    • Laura on 19 June 2014 at 10:16 pm

      Thanks so much, Katherine – I’m touched to know that you’ve enjoyed them.

  4. LauraMarieForLife on 19 June 2014 at 4:04 pm

    This is so beautiful! It’s so true that no matter how old we get, we all need comfort sometimes. Filing this away for the future!

    • Laura on 19 June 2014 at 10:16 pm

      Well said, Laura Marie! And thank you for stopping by!

  5. Rita on 19 June 2014 at 1:18 pm

    Laura, I love this. Beautiful, beautiful. Our children are adopted, and they met us as toddlers, so we comforted them as children who didn’t even know us, holding them as they cried, even though we could offer only ourselves, our warmth, our love, our safety, and the same sounds and movements anyone offers while comforting. It made me realize that sometimes as a mother you offer comfort and hold a child even when he’s not sure he wants to be held by you. And so you give and give. Hope your baby is feeling better soon!

    • Laura on 19 June 2014 at 1:26 pm

      Rita, this is such a beautiful perspective you remind me of – that no matter when we start parenting our children, the ways we comfort them are the same. And even when they don’t want to be held, we let them know the love is still there. Thank you for this!

  6. Abbey @ Surviving Our Blessings on 19 June 2014 at 12:19 pm

    Laura- this is beautiful. You are on a roll with this whole series. I’m saving them all to reread when my own little guy arrives in a few weeks.

    (Also- I’m loving the added connection of seeing your small ones’ names in your posts. I’m so glad you made that choice.)

    • Laura on 19 June 2014 at 1:14 pm

      Thank you, Abbey – so glad you’ve enjoyed reading them! I can’t wait to hear when your little one makes his big debut.
      And thanks for the affirmation re the kids’ names. It does feel good to make them more “real” in this space that means a lot to me!

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