Monday, September 28, 2009

Josie, my first little girl...almost one year later...

I started writing in advance of Josie's birthday. Things were coming to me, bit by bit, in the last few weeks of "the first year." I'll write again, I'm sure, before the 10th.

You might think that in the run-up to the big day, as it were, I would feel overwhelmed by grief again, but this isn't the case for me. I know that for others, it has been, and completely, utterly and totally respect that. But for me, the word "grief" so profoundly expresses what I felt in the first few weeks after Josie died - the utter desolation - the never ending spiral of despair...that it feels somehow incorrect to use it now, when things have settled to a new normal, for which I am grateful.

Nevertheless, I have been flooded with emotion. I think about Josie every day - I can say that there hasn't been a single day I haven't thought about Josie at various times. She's with me all the time. Every second of the day - and this isn't just imagination: when a woman has a baby, she actually carries that child's DNA around in her own bloodstream for the rest of her life... It's palpable, I can tell you. It's like a permanently activated link to your child: except with a child that isn't there anymore, the link is to the beyond...to wherever our souls go after we die...so in some ways we're permanently a little adrift forever after...

I do feel sometimes like I'm floating above people around me, hooked to a big, green, hugely deep sea of life to which we all fall up into when we go... A big energy - enormous and beyond comprehension. In some ways, since October 10th 2008, I've been standing in the middle of a bridge between two worlds. It's not a bad place now - there are trees and flowers, and sunshine - but nobody else. It's peaceful.

Back when Josie first died, I was stripped naked and whipped to the bone, bloody and bruised and completely spent, almost dead: laying on this rock bridge above a river of lava. My hair curled and frazzled in the heat; my skin blistering and completely raw - totally done. It was the beginning of a new world - before new life appeared in the small puddles of water next to the river...before the beginning of a new consciousness. My humanity had been completely undone, like a corset, fallen away and sending guts spilling out helplessly into the outside world. One can fight with fingers to keep them in, but they keep coming out...

In so many ways, that was exactly what had happened, though. At the end of a beautiful, nine month relationship with my girl, things had gone horribly, inconceivably wrong and I'd found myself stripped, roughly examined and catheterized, stabbed with needles and then anesthetized. So horribly, one-hundred-percent different from what I'd been preparing for. You can't prepare for that in any birth class. No woman can prepare to be walking into the entrance to a hospital, blood running all over the place, knowing her baby no longer had a heartbeat but that until just minutes ago, she had been kicking - one last thump on the way to the ER. No person can "get ready" for the utter desolation one feels to wake up to be told the child one loves is dead, even though the hospital staff tried desperately to revive her for thirty minutes with heart massage...electricity...epinephrine... You can't "make the best of" a birth plan gone so horribly wrong that you can only spend just over a day with your baby before giving her to the funeral home.

You can't "not be too disappointed" with the extraction of a little being from your body, like an abscess, ripped out quite violently through a large incision, instead of being able to birth the little one quietly and lovingly. In terms of birth plans gone wrong, this one's a big one. In terms of family members trying to deal with everything: seeing their woman lying there on a bed and being told she might not survive is not something one has to face every day. In terms of recovery, not being able to stand at one's own daughter's funeral because of the eight inch band of internal and external bruising that turned black was not where I thought I'd be on the 13th of October, 2008.

I'd never, ever known such mental pain. Or such physical pain. My body just ached for my baby - I cried from my eyes and my breasts leaked as I wept: big fat tears for my little one. My body, like a tiny child, unable to understand what was going on but just yearning to feed the infant, wondering where she had gone... How do you explain to your own body that your daughter is no longer there?

In terms of communication, my body and mind were torn apart - uncooperative; going down separate roads. I looked in the mirror and cried, cried and cried because of the great big scar on my belly and the big black bruising, and the soft mama-tummy I'd been left with for my infant to lay on. I really hated myself for weeks. I just cried, feeling like an empty shell, pulling bits of myself to myself; walking about picking pieces of the old me off the carpet like slivers of meat. I knew I had to heal; took my vitamins to help myself; rubbed oil on my scar but then looked at myself in the mirror and felt like two different people: the one rubbing oil in, and the one having the oil rubbed into them - the one I just couldn't stand.

I do remember the very first time I broke down and felt bad for me, having flagellated myself for a long time: perhaps it was November? I had a shower and just held myself tightly and as usual, cried. But this time it was a cry of "come back to me, my body - come back to me, my mind - let's be friends again instead of hating one another..." instead of being lost.

Being strong is a "doing" word I think. It's also a total choice: it really is. Every day for a long time I made a choice: get up and carry on as best I could, or slip into a bog and drown. It is a choice anyone can make in a position like mine - you don't have to be "special" to make that decision each day. If you know at the beginning of the journey that you want to live, it's a simple as making the choice to carry on, every day - every day until you start standing up again. Don't let yourself go under: you're the one resource you have.

Regardless of that, now, I am further down the path and able to look back over my journey. I've got to say, it's been damn hard. No two ways about it. I love my daughters - both of them (not discounting A and D, who I love equally) - the one who died and the one living in my belly and it was always going to be hard. From the emotions at the beginning of the journey, to the life changes, to dealing with other's grief (which one can only really observe and try to help with, never control) and the outbursts that come with that whole deal...it's been very rough at times. But...

It's also been beautiful. After you get through the anger and the destructive emotions; the desolation and then the crazy feelings, you do - you really do - eventually come to a point of acceptance. For some this can take years. For a certain extent you can control when you come to this point, too: but beware of depression! Acceptance is so much more peaceful. The seas are calm. You're not drowning any more: you're just floating, waiting for something interesting to come along.

I have the Kate Bush song "And Dream of Sheep" on my playlist for this blog (in case of international people who can't access that content) and that song is the beginning of the "Ninth Wave" part of an album entitled "Hounds of Love." It's about a woman drowning in a big, dark ocean, and I always felt drawn to it after Josie died - and still do, now. Here are the lyrics:

Little light shining

Little light will guide them to me
My face is all lit up
My face is all lit up
If they find me racing white horses -
They'll not take me for a buoy.

Let me be weak, let me sleep And Dream Of Sheep.

Oh I'll wake up to any sound of engines
Every gull a seeking craft
I can't keep my eyes open -
Wish I had my radio

I`d tune into some friendly voices.
Talking 'bout stupid things
I can't be left to my imagination
Let me be weak, let me sleep And Dream Of Sheep -

Ooh, their breath is warm,
And they smell like sleep
And they say they take me home -
Like poppies, heavy with seed -
They take me deeper and deeper.

That was me, almost a year ago. Today, it's still me - but now, the scene depicted by the song is like a featherlight veil covering my body. You can see through it, and perhaps if you didn't know what had happened, you might not notice at all - just a thin, light covering of...something...

Like the ocean in this song, I am deeper than you might realize. There's more to me. The loss of Josie has dropped into the darkness of the inside of me and my heart pumps it around my body every day.

If you know pain too, then come and sit with me and be my friend. We don't have to feel it to know each other now - we just have to have been there. Then, we can go out into the leaves of fall and kick them around together - we can feel joy and pleasure and depth and sorrow and love and compassion and calm together, because we know - really know - what real pain feels like. We know how to be grateful beyond the spread of a bountiful harvest. If we want to, we can experience everything life has to offer and not be destroyed by it, and remain thankful...

Preganancy Dreams...after loss...

...seem to be even more horrific than one can think sometimes!

Yes, pregnancy dreams can be vivid at the best of times - but usually they're mild-vivid or pleasant-vivid, or odd-vivid. Occasionally you'll have a vivid night mare, wake up in the middle of the night and go "oh thank goodness!" and then go back to sleep. But this dream was awful.

I was perfectly happy at the beginning of the dream, living in some kind of outdoor encampment with a bunch of other people. The grass was green, and the whole encampment was surrounded by trees. All of a sudden, news started to spread about people being killed because of other people who disagreed with our way of living and our beliefs. It would seem that the people doing the killing were doing it in the same way as Hitler and other fascists justify killing: it needed to be done for the good of others. We were being killed for the good of the masses, because our ideas were so wrong.

First I saw one of these murderers walking about carrying the blond, curly head of my dead friend by the pigtails. The person didn't see me and I wondered if they had mistaken me for one of their own. Soon I saw more heads - sometimes two at a time, being carried by these murderous people. The murderous people appeared to be high, or in a trance - think of Carrie's mother in "Carrie" and you'll get the idea - and quite indifferent to everything else.

One of my friends gave me a four inch steel flip out pocket knife, which I put in my pocket to defend myself. I was walking up a big clear perspex tunnel (hamster style) when the murder people finally noticed me.

Of course, in this dream, I was pregnant as I am now and thought of protecting my unborn child. I couldn't believe these people would want to harm a baby, and when their intentions became clear, I started running, gripping my knife. There they were, behind me, blades drawn, wanting to stab me to death and cut my head off - more and more of them joining the chase every second. I came out of the tunnel, and they were almost upon me.

At that point, some conscious part of me said "you know this is a dream, but you need to wake up now, because you don't even want to dream this," so there I was, bodily shaking myself from side to side to try to wake myself up. After what seemed like an age, I finally came out of the dream for long enough to realize I was in bed, but not long enough to lose the sight of the knife-wielding crazy people bearing down upon me with an arsenal of knives and other weapons... The freakiest thing was the look in their eyes that said "this is a sad thing, but you must be killed to protect other people..." Sympathy for me in my situation, but simultaneously the absolute intent to get the job done. Must be the same thing when you kill an animal for food, I suppose, whether you're a lion or a human.

In the end I had to fight the dream for several minutes, really waking myself up and having a drink of water to prevent slipping back down into the same situation.

What helped actually, were the positive pregnancy affirmations from my Hypnobabies course, which I started reciting to myself in my head "pregnancy is normal, natural, healthy and safe...for me and my baby..." and "this is a different pregnancy..." and so forth. I thankfully didn't slip back into that nightmare, but the experience was enough to leave me very tired this morning.

I think this dream must have been directly related to being pregnant after losing a child. Being out of control against huge forces threatening to overwhelm; being at the mercy of other people; not really knowing fully if you're going to be holding a living baby (because after a loss, you really don't ever feel completely sure about that whole deal). Also, that whole deal coupled with the basic instinct to protect your child at all costs really can mess up the head a bit!

One interesting thing though - this dream did bring up a good point: no matter how self-sacrificial we are, we have to admit, especially in pregnancy, that our children are completely lost without us. For me here, it was the physical body: I couldn't say "kill me and spare the child" because the child depends on me for life.

In the end, the one abiding thing the dream has left me today is tired. It is cold in the house today: the beginning of fall is upon us, and I even thought about breaking out the winter duvet this morning. It's really frigid and between that fact and the disturbed night, I'm a little drained. This too, shall pass. Isobella is tired as well, very likely because of the stress hormones and extra activity inflicted on her in the night... Poor girl!

I will post a proper 25 week update and belly picture this evening!

Saturday, September 19, 2009

24 Weeks...the start of "Viability"...

Yes...here we are! We made it to the whole "viable" bit! I know, yes, of course, that doesn't necessarily mean a darn thing but heck - it's a milestone and so, let's celebrate it! Technically it's tomorrow, but since Bella is measuring ahead by about a week, I think we're safe to celebrate it today.

We're celebrating by making Cornish Pasties for the very first time and so far, the mixture is smelling a lot like....Cornish Pasties! Now if I don't go and burn them up in the oven, I will post pictures of the resulting edible later on...

But for now, here I am at 24 weeks with my belly covered...



And here I am at 24 weeks with my belly uncovered...



I love you, my little baby girl!

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

The tragedy of a sweet friend...

I wanted to put this on here quickly, because it's just been found out.

A very lovely, very sweet friend of mine today found out at her very last prenatal appointment that there was no longer a heartbeat inside her son. I am just crumpled for her: totally heartbroken. She is only twenty years old and such a precious young lady: I'm so utterly fond of her - she was very sweet and gentle after Josie died and this is another example of how much unexpected randomness life can throw at you.

I'm never one to say "life sucks" because it doesn't: but sometimes, the events in life can be very hard; there are deep, dark holes that we all fall in. I just of course, wish it hadn't happened to her - I wish it didn't have to happen, but it does happen and it will continue to happen to a proportion of us.

She has been sent home for the night and will be induced in the morning. I am going to see her and her little boy, I hope, as soon as I can.

Please, anyone who reads this, send their most loving thoughts and their most healing vibes to southern Minnesota this evening, because when Josie died, I could feel the various prayers and thoughts coming from people every day like a warm blanket over both H and myself as we lay in bed. She will need this from as many people as possible tonight and for many nights to come...

Much love to you all...

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Updated Pictures...

Here I am at 21 weeks, 3 days - so two days ago. I got H to take these, and he did a good job! The last time, he cut half of my head off, and then I said "hey, you cut the top of my head off (!)" and he replied "yes, but you said I should take a belly pic and I got your whole belly in there!"

Ever the literal one!

So anyhow, here I am, looking bigger! Isobella is a little mover and shaker in there - really clanging about; has her rhythms: quietly active in the mornings, raising the roof from about 7-10 and if I wake up at 3 or 4 am, I get a fifteen minute ruckus from her then as well. Of course, we get bumps and kicks throughout the afternoon as well, but the above seem to be her most predictable active times.

Lots of love to you all...

Thursday, September 3, 2009

I completed the rest...

Yes, it's been weighing on my mind for months to do this: unfinished business is never a good thing, and this was definitely unfinished business. Now it's done though, and I am pleased with what we have here...color photographs of our beautiful baby. Eleven more of them.

I would like to share her with you now. Here she is...












The more I look, the more I realize it wasn't all my imagination: she really was an undeniably beautiful little girl...