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From the Womb to the World: Ready for Birth

8 month fetusYou looked something like this drawing while you were in your mother’s womb, waiting to be born into the world – though you had unique and wonderful differences.  You took this time of waiting to practice blinking and breathing, preparing your still not quite refined lungs to breathe air.  In the last 11 weeks of your life in utero, your weight doubled!  The extra layer of fat you developed protected you from the change of temperature in the transition from the womb to the world.  If all went well, you initiated your own birth.  In the last phase of life in utero, you dropped lower in the womb in a head-down position and then triggered labor to begin.

At any moment in the last two months of your mother’s pregnancy, you could have been born.  Perhaps, you were premature.  Today’s advances in medicine allow very premature babies’ lungs to get what they need.  Many babies born a whole month early need very little extra help at all.  The only change for babies after birth, whether premature or not, is a change in external life support – then, mothers provided through the womb; now, survival is helped outside of the womb.

Nothing magical happened to you when you were born that made you human.  You were always human from the moment of your conception!  You didn’t change after you were born, except in the way in which you received oxygen and nourishment.  You were always growing, developing, and striving to survive and to thrive – and you continued this growth, development, and quest for survival while being born, as well as after your exit from the womb.  You are still developing, surviving, and hopefully thriving, today!

Parents can experience something wonderful in the moment when they first see their baby’s eyes, and, so, it’s natural for them to feel the most awe after birth.  Newborns themselves, however, cannot see very well.  But they can hear, and were listening – and even learning – for months before birth, as fetuses.

As a newborn, you yourself readily recognized the voice of the woman who carried you for the first nine months of life and preferred that voice to all others.  Stories read to you and lullabies sung to you in utero were still recognized by you after you were born into the world.  You had been hearing them, learning their particular rhythms and cadences, and growing familiar with them.  So, it’s only natural that you preferred them to any new story or lullaby introduced to you after birth.  Scientific research proves this.  And, yet, you may still be amazed by the facts.  Why?  Do you not know that you were you, unique and wonderful you, at the instant that you were conceived?

Before God formed you in the womb, He knew you.  Our Creator knit you uniquely together.  By Him, you are fearfully and wonderfully made.  Created in His Own Image, you are His beloved creature of flesh and spirit.  Your body is amazing and beautiful, but mortal.  Your soul is even more amazing and beautiful – and immortal.  Body and soul, you are one beautifully amazing human being!  You were lovingly created by God to know, love, and serve God in this complex and amazing life – and to be happy with God forever in the next.  You were created for a reason, for you have a divine mission that only you can fulfill.  May you always remember that your life here on earth has divine purpose – and that eternal bliss waits for you.  Rejoice and be glad!

What was true on your very first day of life in utero is still true today, no matter how old you are or in what kind of physical circumstances you live: it is good, it is very good, that you are here.  And God blesses you as you strive to be the person of love, truth, and goodness that you were created to be.

Every life is sacred.

© 2016 Christina Chase


Sources:

Web M.D.: http://www.webmd.com/baby/guide/third-trimester-old

The Endowment for Human Development:

https://www.ehd.org/dev_article_unit18.php

https://www.ehd.org/dev_article_unit19.php

The Archdiocese of Baltimore, Respect Life: http://www.archbalt.org/family-life/respect-life/spiritual-adoption/upload/Bulletin-announ-w-baby-images.pdf

Psychology Today: Fetal Psychology

Genesis 1:27

Jeremiah 1:5

Psalms 139

Baltimore Catechism part 1

Christina Chase View All

Although crippled by disease, I'm fully alive in love. I write about the terrible beauty and sacred wonder of life, while living with physical disability and severe dependency. A revert to the Catholic faith through atheism, I'm not afraid to ask life's big questions. I explore what it means to be fully human through my weekly blog and have written a book: It's Good to Be Here, published by Sophia Institute Press.

5 thoughts on “From the Womb to the World: Ready for Birth Leave a comment

  1. Thank you for this set of posts, Christina. We spent time with our grandson today and yesterday; he’s almost one and a half and enjoys life so much. Something new every day. I’ll have to go back to learning Polish, since his Dad talks to him in Polish and he prefers some Polish words to the English. Were you that way with French?

    Keep up the good work,

    Will.

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    • Isn’t it wonderful to see the world anew through the eyes of a little one? I want always to be so filled with wonder.

      There were just a few words that I knew only in French and not in English (and I still use a couple of them). But, my mother really wanted to better her English, which was still a bit broken when I was young. As a result, we really didn’t speak French in the house – and I’m sad about that! I think it’s wonderful that your family is helping your grandson to know two languages!

      You got me thinking… my mother always sang us a lullaby in French, and our bedtime prayer was in French, too. As my sister is a little less than three years older than me, I am sure I heard these words while I was still in the womb. And, you know, I still find French to be the most soothing and comforting of languages/sounds, even when I don’t know what is being said. My mother and I just gave a new kitten a French name that we love – and we’re sticking to it even if others can’t pronounce it! 🙂

      Always glad for your visit,
      Pax Christi
      Christina

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  2. Hello Christina, thank you for your wonderful work. This is such a beautiful piece and all the pieces that you had this series thank you so much. But I have to say whatever you write anything is wonderful all your posts. This is a true blessing and we need to hear these facts and know that the Lord Our God has made us we are not junk. You never said that I’m saying that. He he he sorry. What a blessing you are I was so grateful thank you so much take care God bless Donna Marie

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