When she went to sleep she prayed that a calming peace would enter her body, a body bloated with the potency in her first pregnancy. The Holy Ghost that she prayed for swirled in her dreams like a wispy cloud, golden tendrils enveloping her with energy and imagination.
Finally she got to sleep only to be awakened after midnight by me delivering to her the pain of labor she shouted to her honey beside her startling him awake and out of bed to get her up and grab the suitcase.
Darkness enveloped her and fear, foreboding and near panic. By three a.m. she was in Our Lady of the Lake delivery room and I was on my way out of her to greet what would be a clear cool morning for July in southern Louisiana.
Little did she know what she would endure from this screaming squirming little boy…
still habitually in motion eight decades later.
I can hardly believe I’ve lived this long but I am glad I have, because I still have so much to learn and enjoy and, yes, to get through. I can only imagine what my mama, Inez, went through delivering and caring for that squirmy tiny tyke whom she would watch grow as tall as her husband, my daddy Cameron.