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Merle Huerta, an army chaplain's wife, is the mother of a blended family of thirteen children. During her husband's combat deployments, she co-authored articles appearing in the Jerusalem Post and National Review. She has a Master�s from Columbia University in Instructional Media and Technology and a Certificate in Nonfiction from The Writers Institute at CUNY. She lives at the U.S. Military Academy in New York. "Tuesday Mornings" is her first solo publication.
More from Merle Huerta
Literary Reflections Archives
Writing Prompt: A Work in Progress
By Merle Huerta
April 4, 2010
Each month, we post a writing prompt tied to the current month's essay.
Please email your responses of 500 words or less to lmreflections (at) literarymama (dot) com
with the words "writing prompt" in the subject line so that we know it's not an essay submission.
Submissions should be in the text of an email (please do not send attachments).
We will accept responses until the 15th of each month and offer our feedback
on each response privately before the end of the month. We hope you'll take
this opportunity to get inspired, share your work, and find community with other
writers! We'll post our favorites on our blog.
In this month's essay, A Work in Progress, Jennifer Itell remembers that after her son's birth, she had to come to terms with some preconceived notions. She writes: "I wept my way through the first couple weeks, as the parenting books warned I might. I wept because of hormonal changes and lack of sleep, because my newborn had insomnia, and try as I might I couldn't get him to sleep for more than a few scant half-hour stretches a day. I wept because I'd spent months imagining what a perfect mom I'd be, but now that Alex was on the scene I kept doing things that proved otherwise."
Before children, what fantasies did you construct about childbirth and parenting? How did you come to terms with the disparity between your dreams and reality?
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