
But she is an enigma. And I fear, this is just the beginning.
She is this big brain wrapped in this tiny body, morphing its way into full-blown childhood. She does math in her head, crosses her eyes to express joy and silliness, pretends not to like school because some of her friends don’t (though she still tells me about it), and would rather wear soccer shorts and mis-matched socks than a dress any day of the week.
When I stare at her, I’m overwhelmed by her potential. I can actually see the gears at work as she tries to master the world around her. She has lately become obsessed with praise – focusing intently on each ‘please’ and ‘thank you’, cleaning her dishes without prompting and protecting her little brother like she was born to do it. She has a rocket of an arm – can hit and throw (traits she clearly did not inherit from me), can do 4 somersaults in a row underwater (the gills? she DOES get those from me), and simply can’t get enough time with her friends.

Seven years and 17 days ago, I nearly died bringing her into the world. Sounds exaggerated, I know, because how many women really die in child birth these days? I actually have an answer for that. In the United States, roughly 13 for every 100,000 children born – 25% or about 4 of those are due to hemorrhage – and that’s what happened to me.

And added to my list of wishes? That I continue to have the opportunity to watch her grow, that I am given more chances to stare, and many, many more moments to tally additional dreams for her, my sweet girl.

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