Monday, 15 April 2013

Remembered Always

April 15th, 2012

The week of busy, of rushing, of go-go-go, is finally coming to an end. I think we just planned an entire wedding in the span of one week. My future sister-in-law has bought a dress and shoes and all of the sparkly wedding bits that will decorate her on the day she marries my brother. We've made guest lists and to-do lists and to-buy lists. I've made a master list of the lists. It's over and I finally have Mac all to myself again. In this week of wedding planning extravaganza my major contribution to the upbringing of my son has been to pull my boob from my shirt when needed. Instead of spending his days in my arms, as he usually does, he has been passed from grandmother, to aunt, to friend, to random sales lady, and back again. And when I finally get a moment to myself to wind down I realize that my arms have ached for him. So I pull his warm little body next to mine and curl myself around him as I try to quiet my mind in preparation for sleep. But for some reason I can't turn my thoughts off. I think of all the parents who have lost their children and I wonder if they feel an ache in their arms.  At first I try to chase those thoughts away. But then I force myself to give them my full attention. I can't complain about imagining that loss. So many parents are living it.


April 16th 2012 - 7:00 AM

It's Monday which means blog time. I'm exhausted from the week of wedding planning and all I really want to do is hold my baby. But that's why I called this blog Mondays with Mac. I knew that by giving myself a hard deadline each week I'd be forced not to let procrastination, that old temptress, take over. So with the baby happily tucked into the carrier against my chest I sit down at the computer to write. I'm still thinking about the strange ache I felt in my arms last week. "Mama arms"- I coin the term and realize that I have a topic for my blog. I write about the busy week and how I missed my baby. And then I write about all of the parents who have lost their children. I write about my wife's friend who lost twin sons, and my grandmother who lost two adult children, and the bloggers I follow who write about the loss of their children, and my heart breaks for them. I sit at my computer and I cry. I ache for all of the parents with aching Mama (and Papa) arms. And I finish the post by writing "You are in my thoughts today."


April 16th 2012 - 12:00 PM 

The green light flashes on my phone and I turn it on to read the single worst text I have ever received. My friend, who has just amazingly grown two perfect babies in her womb for the last eight months, has lost one of her children. Her pregnancy has been pretty normal, in the world of twin pregnancies at least, and this is a devastating shock. No heartbeat. No signs of life. Alive two days ago. Gone today. My heart drops into my stomach and then leaves me entirely. It is flying across the country, landing in a hospital room in Nova Scotia, sitting next to Katie's bed.

I sob. Hard ugly cries. Her words make her seem brave and strong. She's in shock most likely. And since her son is still living in her womb I imagine that her body is not yet letting her feel the full impact of the trauma.

Never one to be short on words I struggle to find the right ones. I'm sorry seems too miniscule. I'm sorry my grocery cart bumped into yours, I'm sorry I forgot your birthday, I'm sorry I'm late for our appointment... but I'm sorry your child has died? No that doesn't sound right. But there really aren't any words that matter. I know she doesn't give fuck about my words right now. And I can swear because I know she would. She's probably so fucking sick of hearing I'm sorry. There are no words that will help. No words that will comfort. So I write some anyway, knowing they are useless, but necessary nonetheless.


April 10th, 2013

It's a cold spring. I don't know if the groundhog saw his shadow or not. I don't much care. But I'm cold.  Which allows me to believe that it's still winter and not yet spring. Can it really be April already? Has it really been a year since Caroline died? It seems impossible. And yet I look at the photos of her brother and there he is - happy smiles and big toddler teeth. Somehow a year has indeed passed.

She doesn't feel strong, my friend, I know this much. And she's sick of people telling her that she is. It's not strength that keeps her going. She's angry and sad and a million other emotions I can't comprehend. But she's still breathing and there's strength in that. She's made it through the first year of parenthood and the smiles on her son's face are proof of how much she has rocked it. She's also muddled through the no man's land of bereaved parent and new mom. It's hard to find a place to be between the grieving parents envious of her healthy son and the rest of the new moms who exchange birth stories like baseball cards.  

As the date approaches we talk a lot about Caroline. Even though I know it's the wrong thing to do I'm always cautious to mention her name. What if in that one single moment she wasn't thinking about her terrible loss and I just reminded her? I tell her about the blog I posted last year just hours before hearing of Caroline's death. And then I backtrack. I tell her not to read it because it will just make her feel worse. And then she tells me what I already knew but somehow couldn't really accept. "It doesn't make me feel worse," she says. "There's no such thing. People always worry about reminding me, or opening up wounds. Please don't ever worry about that. My wounds are always open, not a second goes by that I don't think about her."

Her words hit me over the head like a hammer and I feel bad for all of the times I didn't say her name. All of the times that I saw a butterfly, thought of Caroline, and didn't tell her. This time I heard her. Really heard her.


April 15th, 2013

It has been one year since Caroline died. One year without her precious soul on this earth. And today I will say her name on repeat. I will tell Mac about her. I will say a prayer for her. I will say a prayer for her parents and her brother. I will morn her. I will love her.  And I will remember her. Always.









Comments (12)

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I was standing at a gas pump when I got the text. I will never ever ever forget that moment.

Thinking of our dear friend today, and everyday.
that was a beautiful post.
It never gets easier' we were pregnant with triplets (2 identical and one on his own) we lost our twins at 8 months and delivered Finn at 42 weeks! We don't know why or how but we know that when the time comes we will tell Finn that his siblings knew they weren't strong enough and gave up to let him live! We will tell him they loved him so much that they gave their lives for him and we won't ever forget them' his first birthday was hard because we should have been celebrating 3 but we look at our glorious little dude and say a silent prayer to our angels and we never forget! It's not easy but she will get through it!
Beautiful, I was reading this on the bus and had tears pouring down my face...as usual you know how to put into words how I feel ♥
I am also thinking of her today and everyday!
What a tragedy.
This was beautiful. I think of Caroline often, and every moment today. Your posts always put into words what I am feeling. Thank you
This was beautiful. I think of Caroline often, and every moment today. Your posts always put into words what I am feeling. Thank you
Beautiful post!
This was a beautiful post. Having gone through early losses, I can only imagine what it would be like to create dreams for a baby who never gets a chance to live them. It's got to be the most terrible thing in life. You are a wonderful friend for doing what you thought was best, listening to your friend and changing your ways. Many would just give up. Sending up prayers for all of you.
Kristin, my aunt and uncle lost their only two children (and my only 2 cousins) at age 16 (that was Melanie...her LAST chemotherapy treatment for Hodgkin's Disease sent her into toxic shock and sepsis and she died 2 days later) and age 21 (that was Dustin...he had a congenital heart condition that nobody knew about and had a massive heart attack while visiting my grandpa one fall afternoon). How on earth aunt and uncle managed to go on after that, I will never understand, but they have. My aunt has said the exact word your friend Katie said...not to be afraid to say their names, not to be afraid to talk about them...she doesn't want anyone to ever forget them or their beautiful, short lives. So I have made it my mission to be sure my children all three know everything I can remember about Dust and Mel (as we called them) and I've made sure THEY know to not be afraid to ask my aunt and uncle to tell them about their children when we visit. It's so hard to know what to do when someone loses a child. I can't imagine the pain either. I'm glad you will never be afraid to talk about Caroline again. xoxoxo
I am a 47, well almost 48, year old wife and mother. I have been married to my wonderful husband for 27 years and we have been together for 28 years. We have 4 amazing sons that range in ages between 30 to 6. We love being parents and had we been able to afford it, we would have had more. But that's not my point; my point is that we lost 4 babies. My journey with grief has been many things, but the thing that I most want people to remember and to learn is that you can't possibly make a mother's loss worse. She WANTS and NEEDS for you to remember her child and to honor her child. We long to hear our child's name and we yearn to tell their story. It is part of helping us accept what has happened and helps us to move on when we are ready. The other most important thing to remember if you want to help the parents of a lost baby or child is to help us find a way to memorialize our child or children. Give the mother a gift certificate so she can pick out a memorial piece of jewelry so she can keep her child's memory close to her Don't buy the item yourself, ask the mother first. Some moms prefer a necklace, some prefer a bracelet, and other prefer something they can put in their home. I built a pandora bracelet that is my memorial item for my 4 pregnancy losses. When my father died, I added a tear drop shaped drop to an existing necklace that is his birthstone. There are a LOT of options out there and what works for one mom may not work for another. And the MOST important thing to remember is NEVER, EVER tell a parent who has lost a child that it's time for her to put it behind her and move one. Why? Because we never put it behind us or forget it. We simply find a way to go on with the pain that remains. The raw wound eventually forms a scar, but that wound is never like it was before. The wound will never go away, but it does become less painful and you will find a way to live your life with the pain. The best advice I was ever given was to find a way to honor our babies. I have done that by reaching out and helping other moms who have lost a baby and used my experiences to educate family members about how they can help a mom (and dad) who have lost a precious child.

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