Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Silence Explained
Daniel and I have had a whirlwind of changes in the last six weeks or so... much of it has been exciting and miraculous, and some of it has been exceptionally hard. Currently, we're in one of those exceptionally hard patches.
We found out at the end of December that we were expecting a baby. That was very welcome news, but it has been a very bittersweet journey, both because the pregnancy itself was very hard on me physically, and because it has come to an end much sooner than we had hoped.
An ultrasound yesterday morning, at what would have been 8 weeks 6 days, confirmed that the baby had stopped developing at 7 weeks 4 days. It's rather hard to describe how painful it was to see the all-too silent and still ultrasound before walking through two long hallways of very pregnant women and their beautiful babies and then waiting in line, face red and puffy, to check out. I really don't begrudge them their happiness -- in fact, I need to know it doesn't always end like this -- I just wanted to disappear.
The process isn't over yet. We've chosen to let nature take its course and check back with the doctor next week, at which point we'll decide how to proceed if my body hasn't managed to complete the process naturally. I understand the science, I know the statistics. I'd hoped to be fortunate enough not to face this outcome, but now that it is here, I'm quite resigned to doing whatever needs to be done and moving on as best I know how.
People who know me well enough to have known about this sooner have called me or messaged me online, most of them asking how I am doing, and I think I can honestly say that while I am heartbroken, I actually feel a great deal of peace about the situation. It's still rather emotionally exhausting to talk about, so if I decline to take a call or delay answering an email, I hope you'll understand that it is not at all personal and that it doesn't mean I am cutting myself off from you or from others. I really only have so much desire to talk. I communicated with no fewer than 30 very kind and supportive people yesterday in various ways, including 2 priests and a couple of women who have been through similar circumstances, so I am genuinely not feeling isolated or unsupported.
About 2 weeks ago I posted a rather philosophical post on a pregnancy message board about my deep conviction that even painful things like miscarriages, as senseless and difficult as they must feel (no matter how easily and handily science dismisses them), happen in the greater context of God's perfect plans. Around that time my prayers changed, too... from pleading that God would work things out my way, to accepting that my way may not be His way and asking instead for grace to handle whatever He may have in store for us: difficult pregnancy, easy pregnancy, a healthy child, a child with special needs, a miscarriage or some other outcome I couldn't imagine. I still feel that way. We're all in His hands.
I lay in bed last night thinking about some of the other deep disappointments in my life: the long-term boyfriend who didn't want to marry me, the exciting move that didn't happen, the transfer to college that fizzled... each of them were devastating to me at the time. However, from this distance in time, I can see very clearly how each of them fit in the bigger picture, and, in every case, something wonderful was brought into my life later on. Dare I say something better? In many cases, that is absolutely true. I don't know why this baby wasn't meant to thrive. I'm not sure it matters to me, really. I'm content to know that this baby wasn't meant for a longer stay and that the choice was never mine to begin with.
I expect I'll have my moments as time goes on. I expect to grieve -- with all that that entails. But I also know that we'll be okay, and we'll open ourselves up to the possibility that next time may be different. Those of you present at our wedding probably recall the dozens (hundreds, perhaps) of reminders that children absolutely must, somehow, be a part of our marriage. We're confident that they will be...
Finally, I know this is one of those uncomfortable topics that prompts one to say, "I don't know what to say." Please... you don't need to feel that you need to say anything, or that you need to come up with the "right" reply. The "right" reply may simply be letting us know you are there and praying. That's comfort and support enough.
Saturday, January 26, 2008
Still here
Friday, January 11, 2008
Prayer for baby Justin
Justin, Born August 8, 2007, has a congenital heart condition. He was admitted to the hospital for what was to be a fairly routine (outpatient, essentially) procedure earlier this week. Since then, he has really struggled, and his heartbeat and breathing have stopped twice in the last few days that I know of, once for almost 30 seconds. He's being given a temporary pacemaker so that he can be transferred in preparation for a surgery on Monday. He's a beautiful little child and deeply loved, and I covet your prayers for his healing and recovery, and for the strength and wisdom of those caring for him at this critical time.
Read more about Justin here at his family's blog.
Thursday, January 10, 2008
Four Days in Bed
Beginning Sunday morning at 3 am, when I woke up feeling as though I had taken a nap in a radiator, I finally had my wish. I was so drained, feverish and otherwise unwell for 4 days that I wasn't able to get out of bed to do anything other than feed myself simple foods, use the restroom, and get myself from one reclining position to another elsewhere. My nose was so raw it bled profusely and repeatedly. I haven't been able to answer simple questions without irritation and frustration. I have had no voice... but that hardly mattered since I didn't want to talk to a soul. Trying to compose a sentence or an email was too much. I could read some, if I didn't mind going back to reread (several times), and I was occasionally up to some mindless chatter with a far-off friend online when I felt up to opening the laptop and stringing a few letters together in a sensical fashion.
I called a nurse twice and eventually went to a medical office to get checked out. The practitioner greeted me with the words, "Oh, you are miserable, I can see that all over your face," when she walked in to listen to my lungs and poke around in my ears. Oh, but I was! Thankfully, I didn't need to explain, much. I felt utterly helpless and was starting to taste a hint hopelessness. This after 4 days of illness that was sure to be passing.
It all came to a head last night when I decided I would get up and do some laundry. The house is a mess and we have house guests coming for the weekend. I normally love company. This time all I could think was something like "mess. tired. company. mess. tired. mess. tired. mess." There were one too many messes in that chain of thought. I started to grab clothes from the hallway floor where they get sorted before a good washing, and I dumped them into the washer. Even that simple act took herculean effort. Mid-load I just began to cry. Water streamed into the machine and a lesser quantity out of my eyes. It was a hoarse, pathetic cry that sent Daniel flying to my side with a hug. He petted my head and asked what was wrong. What was wrong? I was just soooo tired of being so tired. So tired of feeling so useless. I wanted to be up and out and able to do basic little things around my house. I wanted to be reasonable and cheerful and personable... but all of those things felt far out of my reach.
Mercifully, I didn't have too long to wait. I woke up this morning feeling human again. I'm still sick. I am still tired. But I am also capable of completing a sentence, sitting in front of a computer, cooking food that requires multiple preparation steps, fetching the mail from the street-side mailbox and breathing without aid of medicine. At this rate, I may be able to answer a phone tomorrow without sounding like death warmed over.
It's so easy to want to check out of responsibility and into bed when life is going as it normally does and I feel put upon by responsibilities. Having been to bed recently out of necessity, I can't say I recommend it... or do I?
My four days in bed drove some uncomfortable truths home. I, it would seem, can't stand being reminded that sometimes I have to rely on other people. Sometimes I can't do for myself. Sometimes I need to just trust. Sometimes I need to just sleep. Sometimes I need to just be. Sometimes I'm not in control. Sometimes... it's okay to be weak and tired and broken.
We begin life in desperate need of help. Many of us will end it the same way. When we're given a chance to visit that place of vulnerability for a day or two during the stronger years when the beginning and end seem impossibly far off, perhaps it is a gift--a reminder that some things are always true, no matter what we feel. We need. No matter how strong or affluent or healthy or independent or proud or intelligent or capable we are. We all need.
Wednesday, January 2, 2008
The a Tale of Two Krigsbarns
Neighbors whisper that he is rather strange. He is, they wager, an alcoholic. In any event, he’s a throwback to an earlier age in more ways than one. Shunning indoor plumbing (because of cost or custom, nobody knows), he runs to his outhouse come sun or snow, and his life is, by all accounts, simple and quiet, even if he has neither assimilated to the old Scanian culture or the new Swedish aesthetic.
There, in a land that still clings to its own identity as, at its roots, neither Danish nor Swedish, there is a man without roots, save those that dig into the frozen earth from the scant plum, cherry, pear and apple trees that fill his rotting mouth with their abundance when summer thaws the northern climes, and those that run deep, yet withered, to his Finnish birthplace.
Magnus is not much for words, but the words he shares on the rare occasion that a neighbor finds him out of doors and feeling sociable are un-Swedishly raw. He remembers war-torn
Neighbors think he must have stayed in Skåne rather than return to his native land when the war was over. Perhaps he had no family to return to, no home. Instead, he took up his dwelling there, in the quiet lake-land. He lives peacefully, alone, trying to forget the bitter fruit life fed him by cultivating fruit of a sweeter, life-sustaining sort and drinking the fermented spoils of the fruit of vine and field.
How did I learn of this now-grown Finnish krigsbarn? I watched a gem of a Finnish film “Äideistä parhain” or “Mother of Mine” and then I spoke of it to a Swedish friend, who just happens to be one of this man’s neighbors. This strange old Finn is one of the 70,000 very real Finnish children who found themselves transported to neutral
“Mother of Mine” is visually stunning, and rich color and passionate music paint an emotional picture that is at once achingly simple and richly complex. Eero’s story, though steeped in time and place, speaks of the universal themes of life -- love, regret, sorrow, loneliness, despair, joy, hope, redemption, forgiveness -- that resonate here and now. The story of his two mothers -- one of the flesh, one born of war -- is a story of lives intertwining and permanently changing in ways that none of them could have predicted.
Certainly, life changed for Magnus, fresh from the horrors of Russian-invaded
Images are from http://terve.rossi.se/