Every parent has sometimes wished that they could slow down time. You can’t. But you can savour every last ‘first’.
There is a moment in motherhood when you realise that you have been holding your breath.
As if forgetting to breathe will somehow slow the passage of time, in all the right places.
It is the deep inhale as your baby settles in to sleep, buffered and bolstered by the crook of your arm, the sticky sweat at the back of his neck wetting your forearm as you move to stand up.
In the seconds before you transfer him to his crib, you notice for the hundredth time how his cheeks flush when he’s sleeping. The way that his pouty rosebud lips purse and relax in a sucking rhythm, even when he’s done nursing. The way that his little hands clench as he dreams.
You offer up silent prayers for a smooth transfer, for a soft transition, for a stretch of sleep that’s long enough to count.
But on this night, as you place him gently on his side and watch him quickly roll over to his belly, tucking his knees underneath him, your prayers are different. Your hand rests on his back for just a few seconds longer. You smooth the little curl at the back of his neck just one more time. Until finally, you allow yourself to exhale.
Memorise this, you whisper into the darkness. Memorise this, you sigh, as your hands run over your newly minted one year old’s brand new 12-month jammies. Memorise this, you silently cry, as you look around the nursery littered with board books and diaper cream and stray socks and lovey blankets and burp rags that are no longer being used.