Wednesday, December 24, 2014

To Ramona on her first birthday

I wrote and shared the following with my online support system, a group of women who have similar stories, similar lives. I've read it at least at least dozen times and each time I feel it lacking.  I have more to say, more feelings, more love, why does it feel like it's missing something, everything? I woke up this morning, not Christmas Eve anymore, but my daughter's birth and death day, and realized nothing I feel can be put into words adequately. I can write about my grief fairly well, sometimes I feel like I really put into words how the day to day feels.  The problems with friends, work, the feelings pregnancies and infants bring to the surface, but some things are beyond explaining.  There is no way to describe my love for her, the yearning that tears my heart apart, the regrets and guilt that claw their way to the front of my mind as I drift off to sleep, destroying any hope of resting my mind for just one night.

C.S. Lewis said this about his lost love:  "Her absence is like the sky, spread over everything."  That is Ramona.  She is not a tiny fragment I keep in the depths of my pocket, brought out to examine on occasion, at the 'right ' time, on the special, notable days. She is in me and about me at all times. She is like breathing, blinking, swallowing. All the things you do without thinking, that's how she lives with me. She is part of me, within me, always. There is no way to describe a love like that, it's too huge.  The best you can do is simply feel it.  I feel it today, tomorrow, infinity.  I love you, Ramona.

Dear Ramona,
Tomorrow you will be one. It is not the birthday I pictured for you. I imagined you surrounded by family and friends, laughing and squealing with your little mouth that looks just like your daddy's, unwrapping birthday and Christmas gifts. I dreamed about seeing The Nutcracker with your Aunt Jess and cousin Savannah in a few years. I smiled when I thought about your yearly daddy/daughter Christmas shopping trip and the drum kit your dad wanted to get you and your first ice skates and so much more.

This year will be silent, as silent as a year ago tomorrow at 7:51pm, when you slipped into this world without a cry.

That night a year ago, I was so afraid. Afraid to see you, afraid of my life without you in it, afraid of everything. When I saw your face, I was amazed. You were just as I pictured you, I knew you right away. Your dad and I created a beautiful, perfect little girl, death cannot change that. I cherish every precious second I was able to spend with you, forty weeks and 3 days of bliss and happiness and hopefulness. Now when I am afraid, I try to think about your face, the perfect calm I felt when I looked at you after hours of pain and sadness and fear, and you soothe me.

Tomorrow will be hard. Your family will be together, along with Aunt Jess and Uncle Lloyd and we will be missing you and Savannah, but we will also be celebrating you. You made me a mother and you made your dad a father. We will always be grateful. We will light a candle for you both, and for Wesley and all the other babies who should be here. If death is not the end, I hope you are with Savannah and others who love you. If death is not the end, I hope you are waiting for us. If death is not the end, I hope whatever comes after is where dreams come true. You are my dream, my heart, my life, my little bird.

You are our love, pure and infinite.

Love forever and ever,
Momma

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Trust

Trusting people with your grief and with your sadness is not easy.  Kyle and I have what we call our bubble.  These are the people we trust with Ramona's memory and the people who understand how much she means to us.  The people who don't question our sadness, our isolation, our anger, and all the other feelings that come when you lose your only child.

Our bubble is small, but supportive.  We are gradually bringing more people into the bubble, but in the beginning it was hard to let people in.  To let people in, you have to trust they will never question your love and your pain.  They will never question the validity of your child's life.  This is hard for people.  They want to comfort you, and they think that comfort means making it better and putting things in perspective.

There is no perspective when your child dies.  I can assure you.  It is not better that she died before we got to know her.  It did not happen for a reason.  Maybe we'll have more children, but maybe not.  Even if we do, we never get to parent Ramona.  Each day, week, month, eventually years, brings another bundle of firsts we will never experience, that she will never experience.

We go through each day with a smile plastered on our faces, because we know when people ask 'how are you' they don't want to hear 'really shitty.'  A friend asked me if I'd rather not have people ask how we're doing, and I said yes.  I'd rather they not ask.  Not unless they are willing to hear the real answer.  I'm not into small talk anymore.   

Sometimes I get home from work and my face hurts from forcing a smile for nine hours.  My heart hurts from the people who back away when they ask how the baby's doing and I tell them she died. My hands hurt from clenching to restrain myself from typing something I don't mean to people who text or email and don't mention Ramona's name. The one thing I told people brings us comfort when they asked what they can do for us, they can't do.

Her first birthday should be in two weeks.  Some days it looms in the distance, a dark volcano we're slowing moving towards with no way of turning back.  Part of me is nervous that no one will remember, that we'll get the usual cheery "Merry Christmas" messages without a mention of Ramona.  I hope people know better, I hope they remember her and say her name.  Trust is the hardest part about grief.  Trusting people will remember your child, trusting that there is something good on the horizon, trusting the world holds more than suffering. 

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

A Room

I've been thinking about minimalism and simplicity lately.  If you saw our house, you would probably wonder how that's possible.  We have a lot of emotional and consumerist clutter.  I'm pretty picky about what I keep, but sometimes it's still hard for me to get rid of birthday cards and gifts I don't have use for.  My husband is worse.  He still has a movie ticket stub collection.  Thankfully it's still at his parents' house, because it is not coming into our home.  I love him, but a woman's got to have a code.  That code is 'No ticket stubs. Ever.'

I like the idea of minimalism.  After moving last year, I realized how much useless junk we have.  I don't necessarily want to have zero possessions and all white walls, but I do want less junk.  Less of what I don't love.

This feeling stems from that closed room upstairs.  All the clothes she didn't wear, the toys she didn't play with, the books she didn't read.  I know they are just things, but they are things I'm not willing to part with.  Not now and maybe not ever.

I do not like keeping things simply because they have an emotion attached to them.  One of the first gifts my husband ever bought me was a printer for my digital camera.  It was an amazing gift that only worked for about a year and the supplies were crazy expensive to boot.  I couldn't get rid of that thing for years.  It sat in closet after closet until I realized I would always remember the feeling of opening such a perfect gift from someone so important regardless if I had the printer or not.  I remember it now, eight years later.  He knew I loved my camera and taking pictures, so he gave me this amazingly thoughtful gift.  That's why I love him and married him.

It's different with Ramona's things.  They are just things.  I know this.  She didn't wear the clothes, she didn't play with the toys, I didn't read her the books.  In my rational, practical mind, these are all reasons to not keep them.  The emotion behind them is too strong, though.  I made memories in that room and with her clothes and toys and books.  I washed her dresses and onesies and socks and hung them up and folded them with her inside me.  I rearranged the furniture and debated where to put her blankets and what to put on her shelves.  The top drawer of her dresser was organized to the nth degree with dividers and I was so proud of that drawer.

The night I went into labor, when I thought she was still alive and would be coming home with us on Christmas Day, I went into that room to get my bags.  I was giddy from excitement and fear, the way a first-time mom should feel.  I can faintly remember that feeling.  It bubbled into my chest and I couldn't stop laughing. 

I hold on to the memories of her alive and safe now.  The memories attached to her things were not the memories I thought we'd make, but they are all I have.  So out goes the ugly wrought iron baker's rack, and the faded Beatles glasses that turn our hands black.  I need room for my daughter. 

The good memories are starting to peek through the dark clouds of my mind.  For the longest time all I could remember about her were the darkest, saddest moments, so when I can grab on to a good one, I hold tight.  While her room is just a room, and her things will not bring her to me, I need them more than anything else I possess.  A room that is empty but not. 

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Left behind

I did something today I haven't done in a long time, so I thought today would be a good day to return to this blog.

We're doing a diaper drive at work, so I went into Ramona's room to get some packages to donate.  We received a lot as gifts, but they've been sitting in her room for almost a year now and I figured it's nice to donate some in her name. It's also better than going to the store and buying some. I hate the baby section.

While I was in there I straightened her things and threw some things away. We still have her stroller box and lots of gift bags I need to recycle.

It is bittersweet to be in her room. The yearning I feel for her is unbearable, but remembering how wonderful it felt to arrange her room and fold and hang her little clothes and the anticipation of meeting her is sweet. I'm glad I have those memories.  Cleaning and straightening today made me feel slightly normal for a few minutes. After that feeling fades I'm alone in the house again, missing her.

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Good Things

This week I had a better conversation about Ramona with a six year old than I've had with most adults. 

Her name starts with an M, too, and she's been hanging out our desk talking our ears off.  She always looks thoughtful and constantly asks, "Why?" 

She saw that we were putting stickers on things and wanted to help.  While we were stickering, she told me her brother had died.  It was unclear as to how old he was or other details, I could tell that she loved him very much, though.  After a few minutes of talking she asked if I had any kids.

It's hard for me to know how to talk about Ramona with kids.  Some understand 'died' and take it in stride, others might not understand or become fearful.  It makes me sad, because I don't like to lie and say, "No, I don't have any kids."  It's not true, but what do you do?

At first I told her no.  She said, "My neighbor doesn't either, and she says I'm like her kid." 

I smiled, and thought for a second. 

"Remember when said I don't have any kids?" I asked.  "That's not true.  You know how you told me your brother passed away?  I have a daughter and she passed away, too.  So she doesn't live in my house, but she lives in my heart."

She nodded very seriously and said, "My brother who died talks to me and tells me to do good things.  My other brother doesn't believe me, but it's true.  He tells my head and my heart to do good things."

She made my head and my heart feel good that day.

Monday, July 21, 2014

New

Last week we had our first encounter with a new aspect of grief.  Kyle's best friend told him she is pregnant.

She is a kind person.  A good person.  She was by our side when Ramona died.  She raised over a thousand dollars for our March of Dimes fundraiser.  She sent me a necklace I wear every day, an infinity charm coupled with a letter R charm.  Yet we can't be happy for her right now.

We both feel terrible about it, but there is no joy on our end.  We are just too sad, jealous, and angry at the universe to celebrate a child that is not ours right now.

It just happens that she is pregnant on our timeline with Ramona, too.  Not good.  At all.

The hardest part about dealing with other people's pregnancies is the attitude that there will 'always be pregnancies and babies.'  So that means we should suck it up and deal.   We can't stop people from getting pregnant, so let it go.  I wish it was that simple. 

In the weeks after Ramona died, we watched a lot of TV.  Mostly Seinfeld reruns.  We watched Community again in it's entirety.  There's an episode where one of the characters, Britta, has to be restrained from hooking up with an old boyfriend named Blade.  It's assumed Blade must be amazing in some way, so one of the characters, Jeff, decides he must know the secret to Blade's desirableness.  It turns out Blade is brain-damaged.  He literally has no shame and therefore does not care what anyone thinks about him, that's why women desire him.  Before this is revealed, Jeff grills Blade about his name, and why doesn't he change it, and Blade utters a line that is my new motto:  It won't change how mustard tastes.

Pregnancy, babies, and parenting are part of my everyday life.  I work with kids and parents.  My cousins all have young children.  My friends all had babies within a six month span of losing Ramona.  Yes, I am confronted with this every day, but it doesn't change the way mustard tastes.  Grief is still a bitter taste on my tongue today.  No matter how often I see a baby carrier, no matter how many cute stories people tell me about sons, daughters, grandkids, nieces and nephews, no matter how many pregnancies are announced and how many pregnant bellies are in my face, each instance is still a slap in the face and cause for anxiety because my daughter is dead.  

Pregnancy is a part of life.  Babies will always come.  Friends and family will become parents and never know the pain of losing their own child.  These things are all true, but they don't change the way mustard tastes.   

I will always be thankful to the people who celebrated Ramona with us while I was pregnant.  The people who were excited, who sent gifts, who told us what great parents we'd be.  I can't return the favor, though.  Not right now.  I cannot celebrate another pregnancy.  Mainly because I'm selfish, I'll admit that, but also because pregnancy is not a promise.  Pregnancy does not equal a living child.  Pregnancy is a gamble, a risk, and we know that first hand now.  Before anyone tells me that statistically I'm one of the few, please tell that to every person I have met face to face, the people I cling to online, the countless faces of loss.  I can't celebrate something equivalent to Russian Roulette, not when I've come out on the losing end.  That bullet is lodged in my brain forever.   

Monday, July 14, 2014

Who I still am

I used to love those questionnaires on Myspace back in the day.   Back when my life was so easy and  wasn't all sadness and anger and jealousy.

These days I can't stand when people ask me how I am or what my summer plans are.  I'm terrible and nothing, thanks for asking.  And yes, they mean well.  I know.

I know I am more than grief, and that the pain will ease eventually, but it's hard being someone other than Baby Loss Mom.  Sometimes I don't want to be known as anyone besides Ramona's Mom.  It's the most important thing about me, I feel.  There is more, though.

So here's 10 things about me (grief aside):

If you could have dinner with anyone in the world, who would it be?
Groucho Marx.  I used to dress up as Groucho for Halloween every year.  I think he is amazing.

What are you reading right now?
I have a stack of five books on my desk right now.  It's hard to narrow them down when you're surrounded by books all day.  I think the one I'll focus on is the fourth book of the Jacky Faber series.  I love badass sailor chicks.

What is your favourite colour?
Purple.  When my husband were getting to know each other I found out his favorite color is purple too.  Meant to be.

Your favourite book?
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. It's weird being able to relate to Sissy, though.  I used to feel terrible for her, and now I know how she feels, even if she is a fictional character. 

What are you passionate about?
I am passionate about reading.  I'm a children's librarian and I think children and adults alike should take time to read something every day.  Reading is the foundation of all knowledge.  I could never understand people who claimed they hadn't read a book in years.  Pick one up, dummies.
 
Favourite movie?
I find this harder to answer than my favorite book for some reason, and I love reading more than I love watching movies.  Three I can watch anytime are L.A. Confidential, Master and Commander, and Cold Comfort Farm.  OH, and the A&E Pride and Prejudice.  I will watch that every damn day.

Hobbies?
I'm a big crafter.  I'll try anything once, knitting, felting, beading, whatever.  I'm also into fitness.  I love yoga, biking, weights.  I don't really have an awesome body to show for it, but it did wonders for labor. 

Any bad habbits?
I'm an unrepentant nail biter.  I've made my peace with it.  My nails are ugly anyway.

What have you been procrastinating on?
My best friend and I are making prayer flags for the Day of Hope and we haven't bought any supplies yet.  We really want to do it, but it's hard to get motivated to do anything lately.  Sigh.

What is your perfect idea of a night in?
We rarely go out, so a night in is our thing.  I would have to say take-out sushi, wine, and a good tv series.  Right now we're watching Twin Peaks.  I've never watched it before and it is cracking me up.


I am still standing in memory of Ramona.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

It would be nice

It would be nice if Target didn't constantly post baby shit to their 'pins you love' board. And if my friends and family didn't post baby shit on pinterest.  It would be nice if no one got pregnant ever again. It would be nice if I could figure out what to do about our infant car seat recall.

Difficult week.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

At least

Ramona would be five months old this Saturday, and apparently that's the time when people start saying weird shit.  I had my first 'at least' comment this weekend, followed up with 'everything happens for a reason.'  I've heard about them, but had yet to hear someone use that phrase.  I need to get a speech ready, because it seems people think it's a comfort.  It is not.  Definitely not.

I'm surprised that people think using phrases like 'at least' and 'everything happens for a reason' are helpful or comforting.  There is no 'at least' when it comes to your child dying, and whatever the reason is will never be good enough for us.  Our baby died and you mean to tell me you think there was a good reason for her death?  Fuck that.

What I find hardest is the people who say these things are always the nice ones.  They want to comfort us, they want to help us.  I can't help but be offended and hurt, but I know they mean well.  The Well Meaning.  Good band name, bad commiserators.  My husband tells me over and over again to ignore the worst of the comments, to understand that people care and sometimes can't express it well.  I understand this, I do.  I don't want to sit quietly as people question my motherhood or the validity of my child or whether or not it's better that she died before we got to know her anymore, though.  I will not do it. 

What I wanted to ask this woman, this sweet woman, was what 'at least' would she be willing to accept if one of her children died tomorrow?  What level of comfort would she receive from 'at least?'  What satisfactory reason could be given to explain away the death of her child?  Or if I was feeling particularly harsh and honest, ask her to think about her child and think about him dead.  That's what we have to live with for the rest of our lives.  A life, however long, lived without our child. 

There is no 'at least you didn't have to get to know her and then lose her.'  That's exactly why the grief is so consuming.  We hoped for, dreamed about, imagined a life with our baby girl.  Our whole life was stripped bare like a skinned rabbit in a matter of seconds.  'At least' doesn't cut it.  'At least' can kiss my ass. 

So for the general public, the well meaning, if you ask how we are and we answer with less enthusiasm than you expected, please refrain from reasoning with us.  It doesn't work, it doesn't help, and it doesn't make a difference.  There is no reason that will make us accept the death of our daughter.  None.

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Today

Today someone asked me if I'd had my baby.  It was someone who might not have totally understood my full answer, so I didn't feel like it was worth elaborating on.

So I just said yes.

I had my baby. 

It's the first time I've said that without adding, "...but she died." 

It felt good.  It didn't stop the tears in the bathroom afterwards, and it didn't put a cork in the jealousy and anguish I feel daily, but it still felt good to only have to say 'yes.'

I had my baby.

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Team Ramona & Savannah

My best friend Jessica and I are blogging about our daughters and our experience through baby loss over at Team Ramona & Savannah .

There are so many amazing people writing about their children and loss that I wondered if what we have to say and share is even relevant,  but I've noticed the further out people are with their grief, the less they focus entirely on it like they did in the early days.  If we can reach a handful of people who are new to this crazy world of baby loss,  we're doing a good thing.  The best thing about blogs for me has been watching the progression of grief and life in general.  It's good to know that eventually the pain will lessen.  We won't ever forget,  but we won't always hurt so much.

We also want to help family and friends learn how to support these moms and dads in the best way possible.  We know firsthand people don't know what to say or how to react to the death of a baby.  Hopefully we can help break the silence and make this experience less painful for everyone.  First instinct for many people is to avoid the subject for fear of 'reminding' the grieved of their loss, but I can promise you, we are never not thinking of our babies. We want to share resources that help not only mom's and dads, but the people close to them.


Friday, March 14, 2014

Kindness of strangers

Yesterday I had an encounter with someone who didn't know what happened to Ramona.  I explained, the woman was sad and shocked, but for some reason it set me off.  I ended up at a Coney Island crying my eyes out.

She wasn't rude, but she didn't ask what her name was and I was left just kind of standing there while she talked nervously.  She tried her best, but it was so hard to stand there and make small talk. 

All I've been thinking lately is WHY?  Why my daughter, why me, why my husband, why our family?  While I was pregnant I knew eight other pregnant women.  Two of us have lost our children, one gave birth to a healthy baby boy, and the other six are waiting.  I know they must be scared by what happened to my child and my friend's child, but I also get a feeling there is an air of certainty around them.  That since this happened to me, to Jessica, to Ramona and Savannah, that they should be in the clear.  And I hate them for it. 

These women are friends, one a best friend, and right now in this moment I hate them with every ounce of my being.  I don't WANT them to go through what we're going through, but WHY?  They will most likely bring their children home.  Two of those children will be girls.  I don't know if I will ever be able to look at them without hating them.  In an irrational way, I blame them.  I blame them for taking the place of my Ramona.  I know it's crazy.  I don't care. 

I ended up at the Coney Island after the gym and all this came pouring out of me.  When the waitress came to take my order instead of telling her I wanted two eggs over medium I started crying and choked out, "I'm having a really bad day, I'm sorry."  This woman I've never met before in my life grabbed me and hugged me.  She didn't know what I was going through, but she hugged me and showed me a smiley face on her receipt pad.  "You keep thinking about this right here," she said.

I'm trying.  I'm trying to move forward, I'm trying to push through the anger and the hate.  I'm trying to be a good person, but it is damn hard.  It is damn hard to live without your child when so many others don't have to.

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Pre-

There's an unopened email in my inbox.  It's from my mother, sent Christmas Eve morning.  She didn't know we'd been in the hospital overnight.  I didn't have the heart to call her after we got the news.  I wanted our family to have one last night free of grief. 

I haven't had the guts to open or delete it.  Thanks to gmail I know what it says.  She just wanted to know if I was awake and to call her if I was.  As far as my mother knew we'd be over that afternoon, preparing our Christmas smorgasbord and celebrating together.  Or she'd be with me in the hospital, which is what we'd been expecting the night before.  Instead she would get a phone call that her first and only grandchild had died. 

It's my last, small connection to my old life.  I remember about a week earlier thinking how happy and lucky I was.  Pre-emptiness, pre-sorrow.  My life before feels like fiction, like a sitcom that occasionally touches on a serious subject in a humorous light.  I look at pictures of myself from when I was pregnant and I try conjure those feelings of joy and anticipation, because I know I'll never have them again.  That part of my life is over.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Baby Bee

I wasn't surprised at all to see this post recently.  The universe sends crazy things your way at crazy times.

My mom gave me the Betsy-Tacy books for Christmas one year, probably when I was seven or eight.  She loved those books and when she found the newer editions back in the eighties, she knew she had to give them to me.  I loved those books, too.  I still do.  I have all my original books, plus the new editions from a few years ago.  I identified as a Betsy, so did my mom, and the minute I found out I was having a little girl I knew she would be a Betsy.  She would have been a Betsy, but she turned out to be a Bee.  

As soon as I got up the courage I went into Ramona's room to get my copy of The Betsy-Tacy Treasury.  I had put it on her bookshelf along with her books, toys, piggy banks, and other carefully chosen gifts from family and friends.  It was my contribution, my gift to her, a hopeful love of reading.  I read her the first book while she was still alive, safe inside me.  I skipped the Bee part, though.  I read it to myself and I thought, what a terrible thing it must be to lose a child so small and young.  To lose all that potential.  How do live the rest of your life without that child?  Reading that part as a little girl wasn't nearly as shocking to me as it is to adults reading it for the first time.  I've read so many reviews of Betsy-Tacy that warn readers of the death of a baby.  I wasn't traumatized by that passage.  I just always felt sad for Tacy because her baby sister died.  I read that passage again days after Ramona's birth and instead of feeling sad for Tacy, I grieved for Mrs. Kelly.  I'd never given her feelings much thought before.  The story is told from a child's point of view, the one line you get about Mrs. Kelly is something along the lines of "Mama feels awful bad."    

Now I have my Bee.  And I feel awful bad.  Now I'm beginning to learn how to live without her.  The 'new normal,' baby loss mom's call it.  I don't like to look back, to think about what ifs, but I do my fair share of magical thinking. I imagine my life with her to the point where it almost feels real, like an alternate universe where she lived and she's two months old now.  I dress her in tiny clothes and marvel over her perfect lips that are an exact copy of Kyle's.  I smooth down her wavy brown hair and slide on the hairbows I made for her.  I finish knitting the blanket that I thought I had all the time in the world to complete after she was born.  My mother and I take her on a trip to Mankato, the real Deep Valley, to show her all the wonderful places from the books we've read together.

That isn't real, though.  The reality is empty arms, sleepless nights, and a room full of brightly colored dresses, toys, and blankets, hoping the birds will bring my baby girl a message:  I love you, I love you, I love you.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Our old life

I'm a reader, so when we got home from the hospital the first thing I needed to do was read about other people's experience with stillbirths.  I found message boards, blogs, books.  I read and read and read, but no matter what I still feel so alone sometimes.  The crazy thing is my best friend lost her newborn daughter on the same day.

Yes, my best friend's daughter died.  The same day.  On Christmas Eve.

Two completely different circumstances, but we both experienced the worst day of our lives on the same day.  And we both feel very alone.

The thing is I know the stats.  I look them up every day.  I know that about 30,000 babies are stillborn every year in the United States.  Stillbirths occurs ten times more than SIDS.  I know there are more of me out there.  I read the stories.  I still feel alone.

I read An Exact Replica of a Figment of my Imagination by Elizabeth McCracken.  My experience is almost identical to hers.  When she first found out what had happened, she had the feeling that everyone would be mad at her.  I lay in bed that night in the hospital, doped up on my first of many doses of xanax thinking, "Everyone is going to blame me for this.  Everyone is going to think this is my fault."  Obviously no one (that I know of) blamed me or thought that I did something wrong, but I had myself convinced that I must have done something.  I'd never heard of this happening outside of stories about my grandmother's stillborn babies in the thirties and forties and the old-fashioned books I'd read as a girl.  This did not happen in 2013.

Of course I know better now.  The pathology reports came back with nothing.  My whole pregnancy was uneventful.  I was completely prepared to bring Ramona home, but instead her carseat is hidden away at the in-laws and her nursery door is shut and I'm back at work early because I have no baby to take care of.  I have a baby I think about every minute of the day and a baby I cry over daily, but I don't have a baby in my arms. 

“For us what was killing was how nothing had changed. We'd been waiting to be transformed, and now here we were, back in our old life.”
― Elizabeth McCracken, An Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination

 We've been to a support group, I know the stats, my best friend is walking this road with me, but I everywhere I go I see women with children and all I can think about is how their child didn't die.  That no matter how many people I meet and know, I still feel like a pariah, a freak, the woman no one wants near them while they're pregnant.  Even in this space I feel isolated and strange, my words going out digitally into the void.

Everything and nothing changed, everything and nothing is the same. 

Sunday, February 16, 2014

Sunday

If I facebooked and instagrammed my life right now it would be the saddest display of social media of all times.

New necklaces!  With my dead daughter's name and initials on them.

What I'm reading... An Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination.

Feeling: fucking miserable. Grief stricken.  Are there fucking emojis for that?

Valentine's day! I don't even remember, I was just thankful Kyle and I have been able to make it through the past two months and become closer than ever. I love him so much.

I want the hopeless days to even out with the hopeful days. Right now our life is leaning heavier on the hopeless, but we do have hope.  We're scared and sad and the waves of grief knock us over hard some days, but we have hope.

Monday, February 3, 2014

Yesterday

Yesterday was a hard day.  I almost typed 'bad' day, but I don't want to refer to days where my grief for our daughter overwhelming as 'bad.'  Hard, yes, but grief is not bad.  It's hard, but it's not bad.

Last year we also lost our beautiful cat Precious.  She was amazing and we had looked forward to Precious and Ramona becoming friends but Precious was a senior cat and we had to make the hard decision in September to say good-bye.  We planned on adopting another cat when Ramona turned about 6 months old.  I wanted her to grow up with an animal companion and I believe pets teach compassion.  None of that was meant to be, so Friday we visited the local animal shelter and adopted a one year old cat we named Chet Lemon.

Chet is wonderful.  He is just what we need to help heal, he is affectionate and smart and it's wonderful having more life in our home.  The only problem is I looked at him yesterday and felt such extreme anguish because he should not be here.

I should be cuddling on the couch with Ramona, not Chet.  I should be feeding Ramona, not Chet.  I should be playing with Ramona, not Chet.  I should be waking in the middle of the night checking on Ramona, not Chet.  I love him already, but yesterday all my shock and grief and pain collided and I lost it.

I played some sad bastard music and cried and screamed.  Chet just watched and when I was done he jumped back on the couch with me.  He sat in the bathroom with me while I showered.  He laid on the bed while I got dressed.  This cat we'd only known for two days comforted me and watched over me.

I don't really believe things happen for a reason.  I don't believe our daughter died so we could make room for a cat who needed a home, but after I released that pain I felt grateful for Chet and happy we made room for him in our home and hearts.  Some days I imagine Ramona and Precious somewhere together, playing and cuddling, two destined friends.  I'm slowly starting to imagine Chet and another child, a similar scene but different players.  It gives me hope.

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

It's not personal

We live a digital life.  It's hard to believe a month ago I actually thought people cared what I was doing at 4pm on a Wednesday or how my work day was or what I ate for dinner.

I was one of those women who posted bump pics on Instagram.  I wasn't entirely in your face about my pregnancy anywhere else, but I posted about it occasionally on facebook and twitter.  I announced it at 15 weeks and used hashtags.  I started a baby board on pinterest.  It never occured to me that pregnancy is not a promise.  I read that somewhere on the web while searching for baby loss websites.  Pregnancy is not a promise.  I had a normal, healthy pregnancy with an active baby but I went home with empty arms.

The strangest thing about coming home from the hospital after delivering your baby, but without your baby, is learning to live your life the exact same way you were living it all over again.  I had no baby.  I had a daughter, but I had no baby and now I had all the time in the world to look at facebook and pinterest and instagram.  This is what you find on facebook, pinterest, and instagram after baby loss:  pregnancy posts, complaining parents, cute baby photos, and adorable baby clothes.

It's hard not to feel assaulted, to feel hurt by all these happy people and their hopefulness and joy.  On the other hand, it's even harder to not want to punch the people who take if for granted and complain about late night feedings and tantrums.  I know better than to take any of these posts or photos personally, but grief makes that difficult.  Grief can make it impossible if it catches you on a bad day.

Trying to figure out how to navigate a digital life while experiencing intense grief involves a lot of odd effort.  I spent almost an entire year being pregnant and my internet habits reflected that.  This first month I've spent my time unfollowing all pregnant women, new mothers, baby boards, blogs, anything that triggered me.  I unsubscribed from all the stupid weekly pregnancy update emails.  I googled baby loss and found bloggers who'd gone through the same thing as me, replacing all the women who were happily home with their babies.  I read support boards, I couldn't get enough of other mother's stories.  I learned the term 'rainbow baby' and spent hours finding stories of 'take home babies' after full term losses.

I've realized that as much as I love living in a digital age, I don't want to be as wrapped up in it as before.  Every time I see someone's healthy living baby, I think about every time I posted a bump pic and wonder who I hurt with my happiness.  It's not that I don't want people to be happy, but now I question the importance and kindness of sharing these things.  It's no revelation that social media is for navel-gazing, but in the wake of our loss we've really come to appreciate living an analog life.  I don't want to share the minutiae of my life anymore and I don't want other people to feel the way I feel at this point in my life.  I would like to think that if she had come home with us, I would be focusing on our joy and not what pictures to post to facebook and instagram or status updates about how tired I am.  The sad thing is I probably wouldn't have changed much.

The sad thing is grief tends to teach us more than joy.

Our daughter taught us pure love.  Our families have been brought together to create one family and they have each been here for us every step of the way.  These are the people I want to spend my time on, not an old co-worker I haven't seen in person in three years.

We hope to give Ramona a brother or sister one day, but if and when we do he or she will be our private joy.  The people in our lives who want to share in our joy will have to do so face to face, not through a computer screen.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

The Grief Shelf

This morning when K left for work I left too.  I've been trying to get out more and get used to the millions of babies that seem to be everywhere now.  I went to Target and saw a mother with an infant.  I cried and I didn't care.  I feel better letting it out than trying to go about my day like it didn't happen.  Like I shouldn't be doing the same thing, like I shouldn't be carrying my daughter in a wrap and feeding her and kissing her.  I just looked away and cried.

Afterwards I headed to Barnes and Noble.  I don't buy books anymore since I'm a librarian and have access to free books, but obviously I don't want to be at work right now.  I wandered around and looked for books about baby loss and grief and I found one shelf.  One damn shelf.  It was the bottom shelf at that.

I guess the book business doesn't want to burden shoppers with us sad bastards and our grief.

I bought one of those books.  Healing After Loss:  Daily Mediations for Working Through Grief.  I opened to today's date and found this quote by Elie Wiesel:

Whoever survives a test, whatever it may be, must tell the story. That is his duty. 

So here is my story today.  I am sad, I am angry, I want my daughter.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Ramona Alice

Our whole world has changed since I wrote that first foolish post.  Our beautiful daughter Ramona Alice was born sleeping on December 24, 2013.  It's been three weeks and we still can't believe this happened to our sweet, sweet little girl.  She was the most perfect baby girl I've ever seen.

I don't know how much I'll share here or how often, but I've been journaling again almost every day and it helps.  If writing here helps, I'll keep it up. If it doesn't, I'll drop it.

I can't believe this is our life now.