Though I was her labor nurse for three of her four children I do not know her well. I knew the set of her broad shoulders, the shine of her beautiful brown hair and the lilt in her voice  but when I saw her walking down the hall  to room 279 I did not know that her daughter was in labor.
I only knew her now-grown children through their medical care.  First immunizations and well baby check ups. Later, appendicitis and pneumonia. And now, labor. 
I went to greet her.  She looked tired.  Determined, but tired.  And happy to see me.  Mothering a laboring child is a tight rope walk.  You must be strong but tender. Compassionate but not timid. And not a sissy.  Being in labor yourself is easy compared to a tending a laboring daughter who is frightened and in tears. 
Yes, she was happy to see a familiar face, the face of another mother.
 I rubbed her shoulders as I smiled my hello. She smiled her beautiful smile back at me as she returned to her daughter and the labor nurse who would tend her. 
It was a long day. Others gathered to wait. A woman, older than I, who would become a great grandmother this day, sat on a stool out side the hospital room door.  She was fervently willing birth to come, and, finally, birth did come.
 It is a beautiful sound, the sound of labor ending and a new life beginning. 
I heard it from the hall.  I went in to see a pink cherub of a baby lying in the crib surrounded by an exhausted mother and grandmother, a relieved great grandmother and a room full of siblings that I had seen come into the world. 
Three generations standing at a bedside gazing at a baby.  Happy. Life is good.
 
thank you for writing this... it is nice to see an outside prospective. This was the scariest & best day of my life...
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