โItโs not uncommon for a pregnant woman to feel disconnected from her body, nor is it uncommon for a first-time mother to find it hard to believe that there will be a baby. This is not indicative that you will be a poor mother,โ Dr. Singh says.
โShouldnโt I love it more or something?โ I ask.
He raises his hand in a gesture of ambivalence. โEh?โ he says. โAre you taking your prenatal vitamins?โ
โYes.โ
โYouโve been to all your obstetrician appointments, yes? Getting gentle exercise, yes?โ
โI take walks a few times a week.โ I donโt understand why this therapy appointment is suddenly about my physical health.
โThen it sounds to me like you are loving this fetus as much as you can,โ Dr. Singh says. โLove is an action, and all the actions you are taking speak of love.โ
Itโs my turn to shrug.
โI wanted to talk to you about your plans outside motherhood,โ he says. โYou will still be a person with dreams. You said you wanted to write a novel, yes?โ
โI wrote one.โ
โYouโre writing a novel?โ
โNo.โ I laugh for the first time in days. โI wrote one. I finished it. Well, Iโm still editing it.โ I still cry while I edit, which slows me down, but I donโt have to stop anymore because of the crying, so thatโs an improvement. And Iโm reading books that arenโt about babies when Iโm not editing. I may not be going to college this year or the next, but thatโs no reason I canโt give myself my own literature course.
โBut the story is complete?โ Dr. Singh raises his bushy eyebrows in a way Iโve never seen before.
โYeah.โ
โThat is very good. Very good.โ He adjusts his glasses. โDo you know how many people start novels they never finish?โ
โProbably a lot? Lots of people finish them too.โ
โMy son is thirty-two and has been working on his since college,โ Dr Singh says. โI think you should be proud of yourself.โ
โFinny was proud of me,โ I say.
โI canโt wait to read it.โ
Dr. Singh shifts in his seat. โI was hoping that at next weekโs group therapy session, youโll share with the others why you are there. I understood why you didnโt contribute last week, but I do hope it is a space that you can feel comfortable.โ
โYeah, maybe,โ I say. โThat Brittaney girl was kinda annoying.โ
Dr. Singh surprises me by laughing. โOh, ha! Brittaney is what my generation calls a spitfire. She is someone Iโve known a long time, or rather I once knew her parents in a professionalโWell, her story is not mine to tell, but she is someone you could learn from, Autumn.โ
I canโt help what my face does at that idea.
Dr. Singh suddenly looks old. He presses his lips together before speaking. โAutumn, she is a survivor.โ His voice lands heavy on the last word.
โOf what?โ I ask.
โEverything,โ Dr. Singh says.