Sunday, December 1, 2013
Once a day...
Once a day the light hits this monitor just right and it lights up his handprints. I refuse to clean it. The pain of seeing his sweet little prints is unbearable but the thought of wiping them away is abhorrent. They are all I have left of him. The little prints here, the little prints on the back door, the little prints on the oven door, all left in stasis.
Yesterday the little rainbow concieded to be entertained by his daddy and I swept into the boy's bathroom on a mission. How do little boy's bathrooms get so completely and utterly disgusting? I started grabbing the hodgpodge of medicine and shampoo bottle scattered all over the counter and dumping them into the top drawer (because, yes, that is how I clean these days). I grabbed a bottle and stopped dead, my heart threatened to clench so hard in my chest it would just stop. They were his prescriptions, there was his name, one bottle, two bottles... what the hell? I haven't touched anything, nothing. All of his things have stayed exactly where they were. His medicine cabinet hasn't even been opened... and there they sat, staring at me, telling me what I'm starting to have to see. I can't run from this forever.
Will and I have discussed Damon's room, decided that it is time to make it rainbow baby's room, then done precisely nothing about it... over and over. I stopped going in there nearly a year ago. I just couldn't... I just couldn't. I refused to close the door. I was afraid I would close it and never open it again. I felt like closing it was somehow denying his existence, something I refuse to do. I love him. I miss him. He was here. He was REAL.
For a long time I would make sure when I left our bedroom I had absolutely everything I could possibly need so that I wouldn't have to pass that horrifyingly empty room again once I had managed to do it once. I spent months avoiding the hall. One trip out of our room in the morning, one in at night, minimize the number of times I'm stabbed through the gut. It's nuts, as if I wouldn't be stabbed a million times, a million other ways...
Every single time I pass his door I touch the doorframe. It's like my way of saying "This affects me. Every single time I pass your door. I notice. I see you standing in your crib excitedly pointing at your Zebra. I see you getting zipped into your footie pajamas by your daddy. I SEE you!!!!" And I do. I see him... always.
I carefully put all of those bottles back into his medicine cabinet. I may very well keep them until the day that I die. I may have a random computer monitor smeared with baby handprints perched somewhere in my living room for always.
He's gone... how the hell can this be real?
Until next time....
Friday, November 22, 2013
Sweet tea and Hard work
Most mornings
after I drop Isaiah off at school I swing by McDonalds and get a gigantic sweet
tea, because I’ve given up Dr. Pepper…again. Don’t smirk, it might stick this
time. Hush.
Anyway, four
or five days a week I see roughly the same people and by in large they are
exceedingly pleasant. I have so much respect for these incredibly hard working
individuals who manage to smile as they serve everyone else all day, every day.
I don’t think I would be quite so easy to get along with.
Am I the only
one who somehow got the impression at some point that these type of jobs were
somehow dishonorable, that the very people on whose shoulders our country is
built are somehow less? I’m not exactly sure when I realized that this was a
subconscious belief but when I did I was pretty disgusted with myself.
It seems like
there’s an attitude that anyone who isn’t wealthy, or god forbid, needs help is
somehow a drain on society. Well, we’ve needed help. We need help. Often it’s
really hard to admit. It’s hard to know that we can’t just make it work like
everyone else seems to be able to.
I’m frustrated
by this. I’m frustrated that it seems that worth in our culture is so centered
on money and the perception of perfection. We gasp in shock as life after life
crumbles to the ground after years of plastered smiles, perfect houses, and
perfectly styled name brand clothes. When are we going to get it? When am I going to get it?
I’d really
like it if we would all get real but in the mean time I’m just going to work on
me. I’m going to work on identifying my underlying beliefs, reinforcing the
ones that are beautiful, and rejecting the ones that are ugly.
People have
worth. The sweet lady who grinned like I had made her day when I complemented
her fuzzy hat as she handed me my change has worth, big time worth. So do I, so
do you, period.
Until next
time.
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Pain, Isolation, and Adoption
I’ve been in an
exceedingly bad place lately. Honestly, it’s not really fair to say I “have
been” because quite frankly I’m still so there. I’m hurting and angry and
confused and I suppose that is nothing new which makes it that much more
exhausting.
I’m lonely and I
have to acknowledge that at least part of my isolation is my own doing. I had
my first panic attack in months a few weeks ago because I made the mistake of
acting like I’m not thoroughly broken. I participated in an activity that any
mentally healthy person would think nothing of and it just overwhelmed me. I
was stuck in public, going dark, and feeling terrified. I was horrible. It was
frustrating. I’m so sick of being shattered. The truth of the matter is that,
at least to some extent, I isolate myself. I do this partially out of fear,
fear of the panic attacks, fear of having to have that conversation
one-more-time, fear of the awkward silences when I just don’t do the
let’s-talk-about-nothing portion of the conversation. I also do it to avoid the
pain. The pain of never ever fitting. The pain of hearing one more freaking
“God is so good!” when the eleventy bagillionth person has their life fit
nicely into the American middle class ideal. I think “so what is the reverse?
If God is so good when he heals your
child, gives you your dreams,
protects your husband on his trip to
XYZ then what is he to me?” Not good.
I’m lonely and I
don’t fit. No one knows how to deal with my reality so they just don’t.
I’ve been in a bad
place with everything. I’ve been incredibly overwhelmed and wondering if we
should continue Damon’s Dance. The fundraising, the application review, the
interviews, the requests for check dispersal… it’s a lot and this year I barely
managed. I’ve wondered if we are even helping. I’ve wondered if we are doing
any good at all. Quite frankly, I’ve just wanted to quit.
Yesterday I got an
email from one of our families with new pictures of their son, awaiting them in
Korea. The mom had great news about a fundraiser they just had and the pictures
were beautiful. Then, we interviewed a new family. I wanted to just sit and
listen to their story. They had that intangible something. They talked a lot
about their son’s birth mom. They talked about her with such love, gratitude,
and adoration. This perspective is certainly not new to me. Two of my favorite
parents in the world honor their son’s birth mom similarly but I don’t think I
had really stopped to consider the difficulty of this choice and I was deeply
moved to hear this couple speak about this person they now consider a part of
their family.
Then today I
watched a show that was supposed to be about a weight loss journey. It turned
out to be a lot more. The young woman who was the subject was adopted at age
two. Her birth mother chose adoption for her because she was homeless and made
the agonizing decision that the best choice for this child she loved was to be
with someone else.
… can you imagine?
At one point in the
show the young woman got to travel to meet her birth mother. She approached her
with such love and gratitude. They walked the streets of her birth country and
the woman’s birth mother showed her the shack where they use to live. I was so
incredibly humbled. I was deeply deeply moved. I was reminded that this is
quite simply not about me. Not at all. Not even kind of. This is about them.
This is about the babies, the kids, the moms, the dads, the brothers, the
sisters. It’s about them.
Life is so hard.
Every day is full of pain. I think the only way I’m going to survive is to find
a way to focus out. To poor everything out. To give because I want to.
How ironic.
Until next time
with pain and love…
Tuesday, October 8, 2013
Nasty nasty ugliness
I’m so
angry and so so so confused.
I
completely stopped reading the bible several months ago. I was so sickened by
the suffering and horrors of the Hebrew Bible and my complete inability to
reconcile the truth of what is plainly written with what I had been taught to
believe that I just stopped.
Every
time I happen across a sermon on the radio or read an “inspiring uplifting”
devotional my stomach turns. It infuriates me. I’m disgusted. Isaiah comes home
with stories of the “heroes” of the bible. Sampson for example. Sampson who was
a murderous, disrespectful, vile, lying, selfish man who squandered an enormous
gift, whose only semi-redeeming act was murder-suicide. Seriously?
How is
it that we just conveniently ignore the hundreds of thousands of deaths
perpetrated directly by the God of the Hebrew Bible. I was in a class that
touched on this subject much to the extreme discomfort of the room full of
ministers. One of them said “Well, they must have deserved it.” I’m so flushed
with rage just at the memory I can barely type. Seriously?
How did
I make it through the vast majority of my life as a Christian without ever
having the courage to confront the black and white truth of the horror of the Old
Testament? Because I just didn’t want to. Because it didn’t jive with my
health, wealth, and prosperity gospel.
How is
it that we scream about homosexuality but have no problem with divorce? How is
it that we are so willing to judge the teenage mother but justify our enormous houses
and piles of stuff while people starve to
death? I’m just plain pissed.
I’m
disgusted with myself and I’m so confused about what is true. I don’t know what
I believe anymore. I just don’t.
I know
that I’m disgusted with the prosperous west. I’m disgusted that I never
realized how much North American Christianity completely fails until I was one
of the disenfranchised. Until it was my life that was devastated, destroyed,
broken. Until I stopped fitting.
So
much of what people spout simply isn’t
biblical. That I know for sure. Most Christians know more about celebrities
or sports than they do about the bible. How dare we? How dare we claim to have
the answer, sit on our high horse when we don’t even know what damn color the
horse is? Seriously?
But
that which is biblical often is far from pretty. It can’t be packaged and put
on a wall hanging or a shirt. A while back I heard “Life is complicated, God is
not.” On a local Christian radio station. I choked on my Dr. Pepper. Is your
life really that easy? Have you really confronted that much of the history of
your religion that you think your God is simple?!
Seriously!?
Have I
mentioned that I’m pissed? Cuz I’m pissed. And I just don’t fit. I wish I could
go back. I wish I could go back to when I believed life was shiny and happy and
good, when I believed I was the apple of this God’s eye, when I believed He was
good or gave a crap about me but I can’t. There is nowhere to go but forward.
Forward through all of the questions. The anger. The doubt. The nasty nasty
ugliness.
I don’t
fit in your world anymore…
Until
next time…
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
The Stroller
Ugggghhhhhh!!!
This
sucks! This hurts! I miss him so much…
Today
I decided Raz and I were going out. I’m restless and stir crazy and quite
frankly running hard from a wave of grief and is washing at my heels. The crash
is coming and I’m so tired of missing, hurting, raging being ruled by agony. I’m
running, just like I always run, because I just don’t know how to stand still
and be taken by this kind of pain. I just don’t know how.
I’ve
been staring at Damon’s things for nearly a year and a half. I didn’t want to
use any of them for Raz. Because it
hurts. Because they’re Damon’s. Because… hell I don’t know. I just don’t.
But we
just don’t live in that word. We can’t afford to buy a new carseat, a new
stroller, a new high chair. Raz has been in Damon’s car seat since he came home
from the NICU. I made my peace with that. It wasn’t that hard. Damon hadn’t
ridden in that seat in over a year. But today I screwed up my courage and
grabbed the stroller. It was filthy. A year and a half of life piled on top. I
went after it with my Lysol wipes, determined to hold back the Tsunami of pain
welling in my chest. I found myself apologizing over and over. “I’m sorry baby.
I’m so sorry.”
Then
the gut punch.
I
opened the stroller and there in the basket were his diapers. His diapers from
our last nearly daily trip to the park to play. Him with his banana in hand and
his big brother trotting along beside as I pushed. We were happy. God we were
happy.
The
river of tears broke through. It felt like something someone would think was
poetic as they dripped on the stroller while I cleaned. It wasn’t poetic. It
was hell. Just another day in the hell of being the mother of a dead child.
God
this hurts…
Thursday, September 19, 2013
Mommy meltdown
I’m
tired y’all.
My man
has been back at work for just over a month. I’m so fortunate to be married to
an academic. He gets most, if not all of the summer off. So, for those first
crazy months trying to adjust to being home from the NICU, adjusting to Raz’s
heart monitor, and re-learning how to parent a baby my partner was home.
Well,
spoiled I am no more. The hubby commutes to teach at a college a little over an
hour away. There’s only so much support a man can give over text message. Sympathetic
frowny faces, suggestions, and reminders of where I put my blasted keys are
about it. This momma is on her own and I’m tired.
I was
absolutely determined to breast feed Raz. I didn’t breast feed Damon. This is
one of my biggest regrets and biggest sources of guilt. My son died of an
infection. I didn’t provide him with my immunity. It’s my fault. You can point
out the obvious. Thousands of children grow to be completely healthy on
formula. Mine didn’t. This is the first time I’ve ever “said” that out loud.
But my
rainbow baby had his own agenda. When he was born six weeks premature and
unable to oxygenate his blood he was far too weak to breastfeed. So, I started
pumping. It sucked (no pun intended). He received my milk through a feeding
tube, what little I was able to produce. Once he was able to eat I tried to
breast feed then pumped at every feeding. He refused to breastfeed but I kept
trying. The nurses kept telling me that once we got home and I could rest I
would produce more milk. I was dubious. I was barely keeping up with him and he
wasn’t eating much.
Lo and
behold we came home and my production dramatically improved, thus began my love
hate relationship with my pump.
For
those few glorious months while the hubs was home it wasn’t so bad (except for
the actual pumping part). I could hand my little one off to his daddy and go
pump. It wasn’t fun but it worked and I was successfully providing my child
with the immunity I had failed to give Damon.
As you
can probably imagine once we finally got to hold Raz we weren’t so interested
in putting him down, like ever. Therefore our little rainbow learned to sleep
in our arms, pretty much exclusively. Fast forward to now with a mommy still
trying to provide breast milk and a baby who refuses to be put down. There’s
lots of crying in my world.
Add a
very bright, very inquisitive, very busy seven year old with a life of his own
and you have the perfect storm of mommy melt down.
I’ve
said it before but I need to hear it again so here goes.
Losing
Damon does make me more aware of what really matters. There is so much that
just isn’t important and there are a precious few things that so very very are.
My kids, my husband, my family top the list. BUT this doesn’t mean I’m some
sort of Zen momma. This doesn’t mean that I don’t want to go hide in my room so
I can go five minutes without someone needing something from me. It doesn’t
mean parenting ceases to be SO FREAKING HARD.
I just
needed the reminder. I’m gonna go cry now.
Until
next time.
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Consumed
I
spent a long time not crying, barely feeling, just moving. Then I cried. I
cried and cried and cried. I’ve been leaking for days now. Leaking and raging.
Raging and biting and snarling at everything in biting range.
Last night
as another volley of poisonous thoughts rammed through my consciousness I
realized something. I’m angry. I’m burning alive with it.
I’m
resentful angry. I’m jealous angry. I’m pour pitiful me angry. I’m sick with
anger.
And I have
every right to be.
I have
every right to be angry. If any time in my life I have ever had the right to be
angry it is now. Life sucks. It’s not fair. I’m so tired of watching everyone
else raise their children, celebrate birthdays, smile, and have entire days, or
hell weeks, untouched by sorrow.
I’m
tired of being one huge walking bruise. I’m tired of being hurt so easily. I’m
tired of aching to be included then running scared from people. I’m angry and
even scarier, I’m bitter.
I’m
bitter.
Ugh…
which means I have another blasted choice to make. I have every right to be
angry. I want to rage and mope and scream and cuss. But I don’t want to be
consumed. I want to heal. I want to find a balance. I want to reclaim beauty and
peace and life. I don’t get to have both. F-word.
I’m
not saying anger isn’t ok, or natural, or even healthy. It is. I’m saying this particular
all consuming, this is who I am anger has to be rejected or it will become my
god. Quite frankly I don’t know if I can do it.
I have
every right to be angry. That I know. What I don’t know is if I have a right to
be anything else. Do I have the right to be happy? Am I even capable of such a
thing? If I turn from the burning anger am I somehow saying this is ok? Am I
saying my child being ripped from me is ok with me if I smile or learn to
celebrate life again?
It’s
easy for someone who’s never done it to say no. It feels like a betrayal.
People would say things like “What would Damon want?” You have no idea what
Damon would want. Damon wanted to be held and eat popcorn and poop in the
bathtub. This isn’t on him. This is on me.
Yet another
realization with an unanswered question.
And the pain never ends…
Until
next time.
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