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مونتيسوري مصر- تقدمها مروة رخا

CAMPUS MAGAZINE: PREGNANT … I AM PREGNANT!

 

PUBLISHED IN CAMPUS MAGAZINE – NOVEMBER 2010

PREGNANT … I AM PREGNANT!

 

February 2005: I found out that I was ill; best case scenario was that I could not have kids and worst case scenario was that I was dying of cancer.

March 2005: My first article was published … and I never stopped writing since then.

May 2005: I taught my first class at the AUC … and I never stopped teaching since then.

December 2005: I made it to my first training … and I have been a trainer since then.

October 2005: I wrote this (published in Egypt’s Insight)

I was lying on the white bed as my eyes moved back and forth between the monitor and his face. He was so quiet and tense and I could not understand anything from the images on the screen next to me; I have never seen the inside of my body before but from the look on his face, the doctor was not very pleased with what he saw. I summoned my courage and I asked in a faint voice what was wrong, but he replied vaguely that something was not right. He asked me a long list of questions inquiring about things that I did, felt, saw, and wanted, then he handed me a long list of tests to be done, and asked me to come back in a month with the results. I looked him in the eye and asked if it was cancer, he looked away and said maybe. I left the clinic with an odd mixture of feelings that ranged from absolute numbness to a merry-go-round of fear, anger, and warmth; I wanted to go home and hug my cats, call my friends, hit all my exes, hide in the closet, and finally, I just wanted to cry.

After the initial shock, I decided to pull myself together and to think of how to deal with what the doctor told me. In my very systematic head I began a thorough analysis of the situation where I eliminated, weighed, and accepted options. I made up my mind not to tell anyone, not to take the tests, and not to think of death. I decided to look at the bright side of this dark scenario and I chose to look at this as a wakeup call not as a death bell. We are all going to die – there is no surprise here – but how we lived our lives is what will determine how we will feel about death. One thought led to the other and I found the missing part of the puzzle; the thought of dying did not bother me but the thought of dying as though I never lived drove me crazy. I wanted to leave a legacy; to make a difference; to have some sort of an impact. Suddenly the anger and the fear that I felt earlier were gone and I was full of warmth; I was driven by a strong urge to share and to give.

The easy part was on the professional level; I decided to share my experience with young minds that are hungry for knowledge. I will leave a clear print on their present and future, and that alone gave me an immediate sense of satisfaction and a "raison d'etre". I knocked the right doors, said the right words, and got the right assignments to help me build my legacy. I built bridges of trust and respect that went beyond a classroom or a workshop. So whether I lived a day, a decade, or a century I will know that I affected so many lives, touched many hearts, and shaped many minds. I know now that with my little words I made a big difference and my existence matters, will matter, and will have once mattered.

January 2007: My first TV appearance on OTV

January 2008: My first published book

June 2008: My first Arabic radio show on Horytna.net and my first English radio show on Nile FM

From March 2005 until July 2010, I have successfully killed every little notion of motherhood inside of me; I have programmed my mind to overlook anything that is related to babies starting from articles on the internet, to books, toys, and maternity shops. I have consciously stopped myself from holding my nieces until they were at least one year old for fear of awakening the motherhood monster that I have sedated.  I made peace with the two scenarios – being barren and cancer – and moved on with my life.

July 2010: I got married! (who and how) – more details HERE

I always felt depressed, tired, sleepy, numb in the head, feverish, and nauseated. I cried for no reason and developed a weird sense of aversion towards my husband and other men – I just could not stand him! I cancelled all my outings, relationship counseling appointments, work opportunities, and missed all my friends’ birthdays. I just wanted to stay home, cry, and sleep. My inbox filled up with unread emails from people seeking advice. I have a long queue of unpublished books. I just cannot function properly. 

I thought it was the cancer! I thought that it was the end! A part of me suspected that I was pregnant but I pushed the thought away for fear of awakening the monster.

August 31, 2010: I found out that I was pregnant! Instead of the cysts and tumors that I saw five years ago, I saw a pulsing fetus on the same screen! I saw my baby! I still cry every time I remember seeing that little bean throb inside my uterus.

My dear baby, please hold on to me! Please hang in there! Please do not let go!

 

من هي مروة رخا؟
مروة رخا: موجهة مونتيسوري معتمدة دولياً من الميلاد حتى 12 عام. Marwa Rakha: Internationally certified Montessori educator from birth to 12 years.

بدأت “مروة رخا” رحلتها مع “نهج وفلسفة المونتيسوري” في نهاية عام 2011 بقراءة كتب “د. ماريا مونتيسوري” عن الطفل والبيئة الغنية التي يحتاجها لينمو ويزدهر. تلت القراءة الحرة دراسة متعمقة للفلسفة والمنهج مع مركز أمريكا الشمالية للمونتيسوري

“North American Montessori Center”