Tuesday, December 25, 2018

Birthdays and Holidays


For days now, I have felt like I have so much to say that I want to write something but taking the words from my mind and typing them out just seems impossible.  I should have a 1-year old daughter.  We had a beautiful party to celebrate her life that brought Joe and I some real pure joy.  We donated 81 books to CHOP in memory of Mira and felt so proud to have our girl’s legacy be honored. Joe and I just opened gifts we carefully selected for each other.  We loved our gifts and the love and thought behind them.  But, what we really wanted was to have a beautiful 1 year, 1 week old little girl to show how to open presents.  To watch her start to understand the magic of Christmas and giving.  We will read the Christmas story from Luke to Mira tonight as we light her candle, but I wish instead I had taken her to church on Sunday to hear the story, even though she would be too young to understand. 

Over the last year, I have tried to be honest about my journey with Mira and grieving her loss, but there is no real way to put words to the stabbing, drowning, pain of grieving your child.  Last Christmas, I was home from the hospital for 5 days and it was exactly one week out from Mira’s birth and death.  I barely remember it to be honest.  I remember sitting.  Sitting on the couch.  Sitting in the basement.  Sitting at the table.  All with a bear in my arms and a blank look on my face as I tried to keep up with what was happening around me.  I remember very little of that first month home.  I was a zombie, numb and in shock.  I remember talking to people who stopped by or family that stayed over or taking a shower or other daily activities, but not really being sure what I was doing or saying.  I remember clinging to the bear, desperate to survive, but not sure why I was bothering.

This Christmas looks more like, forced smiles and jokes.  Joe and I’s usual picking on each other and sarcasm, as we try to push through.  It looks like finding some true happiness in giving my husband a gift and getting something from him that shows how well he knows me.  It looks like trying not to cry when the gifts are done, because there should be so, so much more.  It looks like finding a way to smile and laugh so I can facetime my brother, but then falling into bed (with a bear again) and not finding the will to get up for quite some time.  Last Christmas was pain, but more so numbness and shock.  This Christmas is desperately trying to find some joy while feeling the pain of being a world away for the person I most want to share in the magic with. 

Sunday, December 9, 2018

Tell Him I Might Need A Hand


It has been almost a year since I gave birth to Mira and watched her take her last breath.  That does not feel like it is possible.  How could a whole year have passed since I last held my daughter?  Those of you reading this that have lost a child are familiar with this surreal feeling.  Those of you that last held or spoke to your child minutes, hours, or even days ago probably cannot even envision what it would be like to go a full year without them.  I hope you never fully understand this feeling.

This last year has been hell, to be quite honest.  Parts of it have been worse then others, and I’ve tried to talk about those parts as Joe and I have walked this journey.  These last few weeks have certainly been some of those “worse” parts.  I think most bereaved parents agree that the hardest times of the year are anniversary dates (birthday, date of death, etc.) and Christmas time.  I don’t know if it is better that I am hit with both at once (with Mira’s date of birth and death being exactly one week before Christmas) so I don’t have two overwhelming times of the year, or worse because Christmas is that much darker for me.  I can’t answer for sure, because I have not experienced it any other way, but I can say it certainly sucks. 

I have been thinking over the last day or two about some things I have learned along this grief journey that I want to write out. Some things I learned right away, but most took many, many months to learn.  Most I wish I never would have had to learn, some lessons I am grateful for though, despite the fact that I would trade all the lessons in the world to have my sweet girl back.



I have learned that joy and sorrow are not black and white.  They are not polar opposites that cannot exist together.  The joy of loving my daughter and the sorrow of missing her live side-by-side in my heart every day.

I have learned that letting go of pain does not meaning letting go of love.  When an entire relationship has been full of love and pain tangled together, it feels like if you let one go, you will lose the other.  Even if logically you know this idea is false, it is so hard to feel in your heart.  The pain may always be there, but as I slowly, slowly, let it shrink back, the love grows to take its place. 

Unfortunately, I have also learned that the pain will always be there. I may only be one year into the life of a loss mom, but I have the great fortune of being a part of a network of loss mothers who share their wisdom.  And I know the pain never fully ceases, but does become bearable as the years pass and as you commit to doing the work of grief.

And, yes, grief is work, I have learned.  Very hard work.  It is not sitting and waiting for time to pass and feel better.  It is actively working through the pain and finding the desire to heal when you just want to give up.  It is being honest when people hurt you and trying to teach them how to help the beavered.  It is giving up time and money to attend counseling and lay all the darkness out in the open and ask for help. 

I have learned that even after doing your best to tell people that you just don’t have it in you to be the one who reaches out while grieving, some people, actually most people, will still say, “call me and let me know if you need something.”  Or, “Tell me what you need.”  Or, “I’ll wait to hear from you.”  They say them because they are nice things to say and grief makes them uncomfortable.  I have learned who I can depend on to just tell, “things are bad and I need you” and they will be there.  I have learned to feel unending thankfulness towards them instead of guilt for needing them.

I have many more lessons to learn and I am sure I will have to learn some of these over and over again.  I miss Mira with every cell of my body.  The wondering about if, at one year old, she would be walking yet, wondering what her first word would be and when it would be, and wondering who she would be plague me daily.  Hearing updates about children near her age strangely fascinate me and feel like a knife in my heart at the same time.  I will keep pushing through this healing journey to honor my daughter, but I think the next few weeks will be survival mode.  And I have learned that survival mode is okay sometimes.

I'll see you on the other side
If I make it
And it might be a long hard ride
But I'm going to take it
Sometimes it seems that I don't have a prayer
Let the weather take me anywhere
But I know that I want to go
Where the streets are gold
'Cause you'll be there
So if you're up there watching me, would you talk to God and say,
Tell Him I might need a hand to see you both someday
(George Straight)