-If your mother dies,
people don’t say “You can always have another mother.” Then why is it all right
to say you can always have another baby if your baby dies?
I recently pulled one of my when-you-lose-a-child books of
the shelf because I'm emotional and weird and went through and actually wrote
down all the quotes I had highlighted in the book right after Max died. These words spoke to me then
and now.
-“Can I bring him back again? I will go to him
one day, but he will not return to me.” ~ 2 Samuel 12:23
-I’m not looking for answers anymore, but for
something to remember. Merrit Malloy
There is a chapter on getting pregnant again after a loss
and finally I can read it with it being true. The book covers feelings and
reactions to expecting that all BLMs go through.
-You may defend your
desire to get pregnant immediately by saying “I am totally aware of my baby
that died, I don’t for a minute want to pretend that he never existed or that
he can be replaced with another child. I just want a baby.” Probably a more
honest statement is you want to be a mother. After physically and emotionally
preparing yourself for these many months, you are eager for a child so that you
can fulfill this role of mothering.
What is meant to be a
special time in a woman's life may take on quite a different reality for you
once you have suffered the loss of a child. You may look back to the former
pregnancy and remember how thrilled you were with every new change in your
body. Pregnancy was a wonderful time filled with idealistic dreams of the
larger family you were soon to become. But all that is past now. No more do you
approach each stage of pregnancy with a sense of wonder and excitement. Instead
of reveling in the joy of an unfolding miracle, you may find yourself treading
cautiously and fearfully-one step at a time- feeling nothing but relief as each
step brings you closer to the end.
None of us know ahead
of time how long we will have a child with us. It may only be for the span of
time that the child is growing inside. It may be for only four days after the
birth, or four years. We just don’t know. But if we can learn to appreciate
what we do have while we have it, at least we don’t have to regret that we can
think of nothing positive to remember about this little person’s
life-before-birth. This baby you are now carrying also deserves to be
remembered warmly for the joy that s/he brings you while still inside you. And
because the tragic conclusion of your past pregnancy will tend to cloud your
experience with this and future pregnancies, you will need consciously to make
happen what came more naturally before.
Of course you won’t be
able to make this experience exactly like the earlier one. But if you are
willing to give up the notion that nothing can replace the experience you had,
you will find that in this subsequent pregnancy life can unfold in ways that
are new and different- and every bit as positive.
Those are words I am going to have to remind myself of this
time around. This baby is different. And (she. My guess) deserves to be loved
fully and I shouldn’t be afraid all the time and it’s not fair to compare (her)
to Max all the time and with every new milestone. This baby is its own person
and no one likes living in the shadow of their siblings.
-You just had a
wonderful visit with a friend you know you are not going to see again for a
long time. Just as you are about to say your goodbyes some other good friend
that you’ve been anxious to see arrives. Your loyalties are divided. Your
goodbyes with your friend are shortened. You find it difficult to immediately
transfer your thoughts and interest to your newly arrived guest; you find
yourself still preoccupied with the first visitor.
I still talk to Max sometimes, and think about him all the
time. And have referred to the nursery more than once as Max’s room. I need to
remember him but I need to stop wishing a different outcome, or dreaming of
what could have been. It’s impossible not to remember he would have been a
month old right now. I would have been exhausted and elated at having a family.
Instead of being at square one with Gummybear.
-I found myself telling
a friend that I felt I was luckier than a mutual friend who was unable to get
pregnant. I had experienced the joy of being pregnant and giving birth. She
hadn’t. It surprised me to realize that finally the joy of his too-short
existence was greater than the burden of grief.
My doctor’s appointment is coming up. Next Wednesday finally.
I have a long list of needs and wants to go over. Like extra monitoring, no
tech ultrasounds- doctors only. I feel almost like I am gearing up for a fight
with the doctor over my wants. I have (most likely unneeded) arguments in my
head already prepared for “well I think you’ll be fine,” and “we are going to
stick with a normal scan schedule.” I doubt the doctor will tell me no to
anything I want but sadly I’m already defensive. And the fact that I’m going to
be irrational no matter what statistics the doctor throws out. I’ve already
been on that losing side.
-“But I know someone
who smokes and her baby was nine pounds.” That’s right. And some people walk across
the street on a red light and don’t get hit by a car.
What books are those quotes from? Seems like a good read or two... I have to remind myself the same things and I definitely still call the nursery "Zachary's room"... Maybe always will!
ReplyDeleteThey are Still to be Born by Schwiebert and Kirk and When Hello Means Goodbye also by Schwieber. One is a booklet and the other a small paperback. Warning they are tear jerkers!
ReplyDelete