Monday, May 28, 2018

Nobody Knows Where You Might End Up

I've watched Grey's Anatomy since it first started airing.  It is one of the few shows that I actually keep up with still.  A lot of the time it is overly dramatic and unrealistic, but there is research behind most of the medical sides of things and sometimes they do tackle big issues like racism, domestic violence, and mental illness.  And who doesn't like to escape from reality with a little over the top drama every once in a while? 

Never in a million years, did I think that random medical information I had learned by watching a TV drama would be meaningful in my real life.  But on July 19th, 2017 I stood in the techs' office of the women's imaging department of our local hospital and a doctor told me my child had an "abdominal wall defect" and I needed to see Maternal Fetal Medicine first thing in the morning.  The only reason most of those word really meant anything to me was because I had heard them on TV.  The doctor asked if I had heard of Maternal Fetal Medicine specialists before and my exact answer was, "Well, kind of, I mean I know what they do on Grey's Anatomy."  (I know really intelligent sounding answer).  The doctor actually responded, "You watch Grey's Anatomy?  Ok, good, yes, that is what they do," and he went on to explain exactly what they specialize in.  Of course he left out the part where the vast majority of the time the doctors on Grey's Anatomy pull off amazing fetal surgeries and never say, 'no it can't be done', though that is what I was destined to hear.

Tuesday, May 22, 2018

One Year Ago "In a Parallel Universe"


This past Friday, May 18th, marked 5 months since Miriam Jordan Ferrara was born and went to Heaven and exactly one year since I found out I was pregnant. The pain of missing Mira hurts deeply each day.  Between this anniversary and Mother’s Day, and very busy season at work, May has been rough so far. Since Friday I haven’t been able to stop thinking about May 18th, 2017 and the weeks following. 



I remember the events of the day very clearly.  I remember that when driving home from work, I was thinking about how I was a day late, and trying to not feel hopeful so I wouldn’t be disappointed.  When I got home I took one of the cheapy pregnancy tests I had bought inn bulk a few months ago because I was tired of spending money on tests each month when I wasn’t patient enough to wait and see if I got my period before taking one.  May was actually the month I had managed to wait the longest, to the END of the day.  When that test showed those two lines that I had never gotten to see before, I was thrilled, but cautious, sure it was too good to be true.  So I got out the fancy more accurate test I had been saving (really, saving a fancy stick to pee on, lets be honest), and that one was positive too.  Over the course of the next 8 hours, I took 2 more cheap test, just to be sure.  I was so worried it was too good to be true! 

Sunday, May 13, 2018

Hanging On When Your Heart Has Had Enough


Last Mother’s Day I was pregnant with Mira, she was smaller than I grain of salt and I didn’t know she was there yet, but she was.  Four days later, on May 18th, I would take a pregnancy test, and then three more just to be sure, and be filled with joy and bliss with no idea that exactly 7 months later I would be meeting her, and she would be welcomed to Heaven the same day.  On the only Mother’s Day that I was a mother to a living child, I had no idea.  The irony is not lost on me.  Joe did have a suspicion though, when on the way to church I told him his breath was too minty and it was making me nauseous.  I was convinced he had bought some horrible new toothpaste.  He didn’t say anything though, wanting to save me from disappointment if he was wrong.  He had seen my disappointment for too many months in a row at this point.