It has been one heck of a week here at my house. Last weekend, we took Abby, my oldest to a museum with her friends to celebrate her 7th birthday. When we returned home the babysitter told us that our 12 month old, Caleb, had some explosive diapers while we were gone, and she had had to give him a full bath and change of clothes. Just what you want to hear before Christmas...
My husband and I were supposed to go to New York City with two of our best friends on Tuesday, to see the city and the fantastic Christmas show put on by the Brooklyn Tabernacle. It was a RARE kid free day we had planned, and the babysitter was lined up months ago.
On Sunday, Caleb began vomiting. On Monday, Josh, our four year old began vomiting.
Adios, New York City.
Though Josh recovered quickly, Caleb continued his random and frequent vomiting spells. Each day he seemed a little more tired and a little less himself. I took him in to the doctor twice, once with a diagnosis of an ear infection, and then two days later another doctor declared there was no ear infection and it was just a tummy bug. That doctor also declared that Caleb would stop vomiting after the visit and I need not worry.
Then he vomited the next day. And the next.
Each day that he wasn't better, my worry began to grow. I found myself googling everything from allergies to baby brain cancer symptoms. What started as a small seed of apprehension became a rather large knot in my stomach, which, by yesterday, had turned into overwhelming anxiety that something was very wrong. After seven days of my baby vomiting, I was scared.
I try hard not to be the crazy mother. The one who goes to Google for medical advice and immediately thinks the worst of the smallest illness. But I find with Caleb, I am always on edge and anxious. I think because he is the baby I had after loss, deep down I am always terrified that he will be taken away from me and my rainbow will be gone. I'm afraid I don't deserve him and that it's just a matter of time before the universe steals him away from me. I have learned that fear lends itself easily to irrationality.
With all of this stress, and worry, and constant vomit-cleaning I was on edge yesterday. While shopping at Giant, a man, who in retrospect I suppose was probably also having a bad day, was very rude to me, and instead of letting it go, I exchanged some heated words with him in the Christmas card aisle. I said things that should never have escaped my mouth. I went back to apologize to him for what I had said, and it only made him angrier, so I said some more unkind words in return. What a disaster. I might as well have been in middle school all over again.
I got into my car and cried my eyes out. Cried because I was worried about my baby. Cried because I had let my temper get the best of me. Cried because Christmas is stressful.
And as I sat there, feeling quite sorry for myself, and rather humiliated by my grocery store display, I was reminded of the words that God so lovingly spoke to me on the day of my miscarriage.
Emmanuel.
God is with us.
There are days, and weeks, and sometimes months that I can fool myself into thinking I've got it all together. That I am a pretty good person and decent Christian. And then there are days, like yesterday, where the mirror is put up to my face and I see that, despite having things together on the outside most of the time, there is still plenty of sin in me, and I need Christ now more than ever.
I came home and tearfully confessed the whole ordeal to my mother-in-law, who was staying with us. She reminded me that this is exactly why we celebrate Christmas. We celebrate that God, who loves us despite our worst failures and shortcomings, sent Himself in the form of a baby, to teach us how to relate to God and, eventually, to die in our place.
I had forgotten the truth of the Christmas season. I had taken my eyes off of the One that I should have been focused on all along.
After getting home from the grocery store, Ben and I attempted to go out to lunch with friends, leaving the kids home with his parents. We had driven less than a mile when we got the call that Caleb was throwing up again. After a call to the pediatrician we were sent to the ER.
The entire drive to the hospital I was wrestling with fear. You see, once you experience loss, you know that deep down the worst thing really can happen. No matter how many people tell you things will be okay, you know your child could have cancer, or your father does have incurable muscular dystrophy, or you can find out your baby has no heartbeat. There are no guarantees.
It's in moments like this that I come face to face with the fact that I have no control over life's circumstances. And that no matter how many good deeds I do, or nice thoughts I think, or religious practices I follow, I can't rack up enough "good karma" to prevent bad things from happening.
I have found in these circumstances that I have two choices: to turn my back on God, or to run closer to Him. Yesterday, as we drove to the hospital, my apprehension at an all time high, I found myself praying the most sincere prayer I have prayed in a long time.
God, I do not know what is wrong with my baby. I'm scared that he isn't going to get better, or is sicker than we know. I acted like an idiot today and don't deserve any answered prayers. Please just be with me and give me peace.
I felt him whisper back to me, Child, you are dearly loved, and I am Emmanuel yesterday, today, and tomorrow. You can trust Me.
And I can. I can trust in the One who never leaves me. Who always forgives me. Who offers a second chance. Who convicts me when I do the wrong thing and reminds me that apart from Him, the ugliness and fear in my heart will win.
We were at the hospital for a few hours, and doctors believe that Caleb just has an extra stubborn virus that is hanging on longer than usual. We were sent home with some anti-nausea medication, and he woke up today smiling for the first time in days. Hopefully we are over the worst and headed toward sunnier days.
Today, on this Christmas Eve, I awoke with a deeper sense of what today is truly about. Christmas Eve is the anticipation of the greatest gift that the world has ever received. A Savior, born as a baby in a lowly manger, who came to save us from the ugliness of sin and to comfort us as we walk through life's most difficult circumstances.
I need Christmas today more than ever.
For to us a child is born,
to us a son is given,
and the government will be on his shoulders.
And he will be called
Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.
Isaiah 9:6
Here is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance: Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners—of whom I am the worst. But for that very reason I was shown mercy so that in me, the worst of sinners, Christ Jesus might display his immense patience as an example for those who would believe in him and receive eternal life. Now to the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only God, be honor and glory for ever and ever. 1 Timothy 15:17
Sunday, December 24, 2017
Wednesday, June 14, 2017
Gratitude in the midst of chaos
Today was just one of those days. It was hot. Too hot. Something about the summer heat brings out the worst in my family. My six year old, Abby, and four year old, Josh, were at each other's throats all morning. Abby, upon waking up, looked at Josh "the wrong way" as they sat down to the breakfast table. So, naturally, in an act of swift justice Josh stole Abby's bagel and fed it to the dog. I came downstairs to find the two of them locked in some kind of wrestling death grip screaming into each other's faces. Sighing, I looked at the clock. 7:15am.
Lord, help me.
Summer vacation is wonderful and horrible all at the same time. The freedom to stay in our pajamas as long as we want without the pressure to look presentable at the bus stop is liberating. The fluidity of our schedule: pool one day, play date the next, is a welcome change from the rigidity of the school year. And yet, the sudden lack of structure lends itself to boredom, and the intense "togetherness" has us all out of sorts as we adjust.
This summer is also much different than last because now we have a baby in the family. Caleb is almost 7 months old, and throws a delightful monkey wrench into the summer schedule. Last year, when Abby and Josh were ready to kill each other I just packed them up and headed off to the pool or Chick-Fil-A or anywhere except home. Now, we have nap times and diapers and breastfeeding and summer heat to worry about, and zipping off somewhere seems a lot more complicated than it did last year.
Adjusting to having a third child has been more challenging than I anticipated. Perhaps because I feel pressure to meet the needs of three tiny, screaming humans simultaneously on a daily basis. Perhaps because Abby and Josh are so much older than the baby and have an entirely different set of wants and needs. Perhaps because I'm still running on a deficit of sleep that no amount of coffee can offset. I would be lying if I didn't admit that it is a stressful season of life. I can often be found yelling, stomping my feet like a toddler, or locked in a bathroom for a few minutes of deep breathing.
And yet, in the midst of the chaos and my often less than stellar mom moments, there is an underlying gratitude that permeates throughout my life and gives this difficult season of life a particular sense of sweetness.
Not a day goes by that I don't remember how exceedingly blessed I am.
Chatting with a friend this week, she reminded me of what was happening in my life at this same time a year ago. I had just gotten my first trimester screening done. I was thirteen weeks pregnant and the doctors had found some abnormal fluid levels on our baby's neck and advised us to do further DNA testing. Today, right now, one year ago, I was in the middle of the worst, most stressful two week wait of my life. Having just been through the grief of a miscarriage, to hear that something might be wrong with our rainbow baby was a crushing weight. I cried every single day of those two weeks, afraid that we would hear the worst. I will never forget when the results came back and I finally heard the words, "everything looks good."
Can I just tell you how deeply thankful I am for my baby boy? Oh, the chaos adding another child to our family has brought. It has been such an adjustment. And yet, when I look at him, now even seven months later, I can't tell you how many times my eyes fill with tears at the utter gratitude I feel that I was entrusted with this little soul.
Tonight, I had the rare chance to put him to bed without anyone else at home. Ben had taken the older two to Abby's softball game. I took the opportunity to finally hang Caleb's newborn pictures up in his nursery. In the chaos of my daily life I have little opportunity, let alone two free hands to hang pictures on the wall.
I had chosen two of my favorite pictures for his nursery, and for the last seven months those two places have remained patiently blank on his walls, just waiting to make his room complete. So tonight we headed up to his room and I laid him down on his back to wiggle around while I hung the pictures. He promptly flipped over to his belly, and pushing up on his hands, proceeded to do some kind of caterpillar wriggle to grab a toy in front of him. Crawling is just around the corner.
As I looked at the pictures I couldn't help but feel a little sad that he is no longer so tiny, and that the last seven months have passed by so quickly. All those wishes made in the middle of the night for him to hurry up and grow are being granted. Can I take them back?
I stepped back after I hung the final picture, and looked around at his nursery, finally complete. Each picture, shelf, decoration chosen especially for him. And the gratitude washed over me. One year ago I feared the worst. Eighteen months ago I lost the baby before him. But tonight, I finished the nursery for my sweet, happy, perfectly healthy little boy.
Today was rough. Abby and Josh fought all. day. long. Caleb has some weird cradle cap thing going on and his head is itchy and he's really cranky and entirely opposed to napping. Sensing my weakness today, the dog decided to steal dirt out of my houseplants and trail it all over the floor in a muddy, half chewed mess. I burned most of dinner on the grill when something caught fire and flames shot up over my head. Not my best performance.
And yet, gratitude. It keeps everything in perspective. There's something about the milestones of loss and of close calls that reminds me to take a deep breath and practice gratitude. I thought back over all I've been through in the last eighteen months, and suddenly, the half burned dinner I was standing over paled in comparison.
If we let it, loss can make us better people. Not perfect, but better.
Loss. It's painful and awful and terrible, and yet, as I continue to heal and step forward out of the darkness of grief, I find that the world looks different than it used to. I'm more present, more reflective. Colors are brighter, emotions run deeper, and I hang onto the moments of joy with clenched fists, willing them to stay a little longer. I'm grateful for all of the messiness and chaos and laughter.
Gratitude. It changes everything.
Tonight, as I put Caleb to bed in his now finished nursery, I didn't rush to leave. I lingered over his crib, watching him sleep peacefully, his chest slowly rising and falling with every breath. And I marveled at what a miracle he is. He is the fulfillment of a promise of restoration that God made to me shortly after I lost my angel baby. Caleb brings a joy, and laughter, and sweetness to my life that I have never known in such intensity.
This season of mothering isn't easy, or simple, or perfect. But I couldn't be more thankful for every single second. And the gratitude makes days like these bearable, and even poignant, because I know they are fleeting. When we remember times of loss, of pain, and fear, and grief, we are more thankful for days when the worst that has happened are scorched dinners and cranky children.
Tomorrow is a new day, and I welcome it in all it's imperfection, and couldn't be more thankful for it.
Lord, help me.
Summer vacation is wonderful and horrible all at the same time. The freedom to stay in our pajamas as long as we want without the pressure to look presentable at the bus stop is liberating. The fluidity of our schedule: pool one day, play date the next, is a welcome change from the rigidity of the school year. And yet, the sudden lack of structure lends itself to boredom, and the intense "togetherness" has us all out of sorts as we adjust.
This summer is also much different than last because now we have a baby in the family. Caleb is almost 7 months old, and throws a delightful monkey wrench into the summer schedule. Last year, when Abby and Josh were ready to kill each other I just packed them up and headed off to the pool or Chick-Fil-A or anywhere except home. Now, we have nap times and diapers and breastfeeding and summer heat to worry about, and zipping off somewhere seems a lot more complicated than it did last year.
Adjusting to having a third child has been more challenging than I anticipated. Perhaps because I feel pressure to meet the needs of three tiny, screaming humans simultaneously on a daily basis. Perhaps because Abby and Josh are so much older than the baby and have an entirely different set of wants and needs. Perhaps because I'm still running on a deficit of sleep that no amount of coffee can offset. I would be lying if I didn't admit that it is a stressful season of life. I can often be found yelling, stomping my feet like a toddler, or locked in a bathroom for a few minutes of deep breathing.
And yet, in the midst of the chaos and my often less than stellar mom moments, there is an underlying gratitude that permeates throughout my life and gives this difficult season of life a particular sense of sweetness.
Not a day goes by that I don't remember how exceedingly blessed I am.
Chatting with a friend this week, she reminded me of what was happening in my life at this same time a year ago. I had just gotten my first trimester screening done. I was thirteen weeks pregnant and the doctors had found some abnormal fluid levels on our baby's neck and advised us to do further DNA testing. Today, right now, one year ago, I was in the middle of the worst, most stressful two week wait of my life. Having just been through the grief of a miscarriage, to hear that something might be wrong with our rainbow baby was a crushing weight. I cried every single day of those two weeks, afraid that we would hear the worst. I will never forget when the results came back and I finally heard the words, "everything looks good."
Can I just tell you how deeply thankful I am for my baby boy? Oh, the chaos adding another child to our family has brought. It has been such an adjustment. And yet, when I look at him, now even seven months later, I can't tell you how many times my eyes fill with tears at the utter gratitude I feel that I was entrusted with this little soul.
Tonight, I had the rare chance to put him to bed without anyone else at home. Ben had taken the older two to Abby's softball game. I took the opportunity to finally hang Caleb's newborn pictures up in his nursery. In the chaos of my daily life I have little opportunity, let alone two free hands to hang pictures on the wall.
I had chosen two of my favorite pictures for his nursery, and for the last seven months those two places have remained patiently blank on his walls, just waiting to make his room complete. So tonight we headed up to his room and I laid him down on his back to wiggle around while I hung the pictures. He promptly flipped over to his belly, and pushing up on his hands, proceeded to do some kind of caterpillar wriggle to grab a toy in front of him. Crawling is just around the corner.
As I looked at the pictures I couldn't help but feel a little sad that he is no longer so tiny, and that the last seven months have passed by so quickly. All those wishes made in the middle of the night for him to hurry up and grow are being granted. Can I take them back?
I stepped back after I hung the final picture, and looked around at his nursery, finally complete. Each picture, shelf, decoration chosen especially for him. And the gratitude washed over me. One year ago I feared the worst. Eighteen months ago I lost the baby before him. But tonight, I finished the nursery for my sweet, happy, perfectly healthy little boy.
Today was rough. Abby and Josh fought all. day. long. Caleb has some weird cradle cap thing going on and his head is itchy and he's really cranky and entirely opposed to napping. Sensing my weakness today, the dog decided to steal dirt out of my houseplants and trail it all over the floor in a muddy, half chewed mess. I burned most of dinner on the grill when something caught fire and flames shot up over my head. Not my best performance.
And yet, gratitude. It keeps everything in perspective. There's something about the milestones of loss and of close calls that reminds me to take a deep breath and practice gratitude. I thought back over all I've been through in the last eighteen months, and suddenly, the half burned dinner I was standing over paled in comparison.
If we let it, loss can make us better people. Not perfect, but better.
Loss. It's painful and awful and terrible, and yet, as I continue to heal and step forward out of the darkness of grief, I find that the world looks different than it used to. I'm more present, more reflective. Colors are brighter, emotions run deeper, and I hang onto the moments of joy with clenched fists, willing them to stay a little longer. I'm grateful for all of the messiness and chaos and laughter.
Gratitude. It changes everything.
Tonight, as I put Caleb to bed in his now finished nursery, I didn't rush to leave. I lingered over his crib, watching him sleep peacefully, his chest slowly rising and falling with every breath. And I marveled at what a miracle he is. He is the fulfillment of a promise of restoration that God made to me shortly after I lost my angel baby. Caleb brings a joy, and laughter, and sweetness to my life that I have never known in such intensity.
This season of mothering isn't easy, or simple, or perfect. But I couldn't be more thankful for every single second. And the gratitude makes days like these bearable, and even poignant, because I know they are fleeting. When we remember times of loss, of pain, and fear, and grief, we are more thankful for days when the worst that has happened are scorched dinners and cranky children.
Tomorrow is a new day, and I welcome it in all it's imperfection, and couldn't be more thankful for it.
Tuesday, February 28, 2017
Baby After Miscarriage
It's the last day of February. The sun is shining into the window of my office. My three year old is contentedly watching Nature Cat on tv. Baby boy is sitting in his car seat on the dining room table snoozing in the sunshine. Big sister is off at kindergarten and the dog is asleep at my feet. I'm experiencing a rare moment of quiet.
These moments of alone are hard to come by these days. It seems every time I turn around there is someone who needs to be fed, or held, or washed. Baby boy is not a great sleeper, so I find I'm going through the motions of my day with eyes half closed, existing in a sleepless fog. When I can catch a fleeting moment of alone-ness, I close my eyes and try to sleep before anyone notices and decides they need me again.
It's a hard season. A season where I feel like I am tending to everyone else's needs and rarely my own. Most nights I brush my teeth to the soundtrack of a wailing baby, or shower while little hands bang on the door demanding that I get out, or eat my kids' half eaten bagels for breakfast because the baby is screaming and I have to get my daughter to the bus stop in the next three minutes. There are days I reach the end of my rope and close the bathroom door, and turn on the fan, so that I can cry without anyone hearing me.
And yet, underneath all the stress, and all the growing pains of adding another child to our family, there is joy and indescribable gratitude. Gratitude for the miracle of three precious children who call me "mama."
And I've noticed that along with that joy there is also still a feeling that someone is missing and the truth that even with the birth of our little boy, I still have a child in Heaven that I long for. The pain of last year has softened, but has not disappeared.
I think deep down, I expected that with the birth of our rainbow baby, I would no longer feel the sense of loss that I carried last year. I remember a conversation with a close friend before getting pregnant with Caleb where I confided to her that I felt like if I could just get pregnant again, maybe it would be like the baby I lost was coming back to me. Although I knew rationally this was impossible, I think I just desperately wanted to undo the loss that had been done. I wanted to make right what had gone wrong. But, as my friend gently reminded me, we know this is not how God works. Each child He creates is unique and my baby at 11 weeks is now in the arms of the Father. And now we have Caleb, who is meant just for us at this exact time.
I find that my mind often wanders to the baby that we lost. I'll be cuddling Caleb, or watching Josh and Abby play and I'll wonder, how old would he or she be right now? What is he or she doing in Heaven? Some days, like today, I have moments when I still cry thinking about it. Those are the moments I walk over to Caleb, pick him up, and bury my face into the rolls of his little baby neck and breathe deeply, and thank God for the miracle of my Rainbow.
Having a baby after miscarriage is wonderful, and hard. Wonderful because I rejoice over this new life, and hard because sometimes it feels like people expect my new baby to erase the grief I carried before he was born. And I'm sure some people do expect that of me, but if I'm really honest, I think maybe it's what I expected most of myself. And that expectation often leaves me feeling guilty for the moments that I hold my little boy while still thinking of my baby in Heaven. Or guilty when I complain about the sleepless nights spent nursing a fussy baby, because they are what I prayed for most after my loss.
But I'm finding that having my Rainbow baby is simply another step towards healing, not the healing itself. I'm reconciling the fact that I can be joyful in this season and yet still experience moments of grief.
I often come face to face with this truth when I'm asked the Question. I've been getting it a lot since having Caleb. It seems to be the question I am asked the most, especially when I don't have the other two kids with me. It comes in a few forms. People take one look at my chubby little boy and ask, "What number baby is this?" or "How many do you have?" On the outside, it seems like a simple enough question. But for a mom who has lost a child, the answer feels complicated. My answer often varies. I often just call him my third, for simplicity's sake. But I never feel quite right when I say it, because I know he is really my fourth, and somehow I feel like I'm forgetting my third baby by saying so. But to launch into how I lost a baby, which makes him my fourth, but also my third, leads to an awkward moment that I don't really want to navigate either.
I was at a mom's group the other day, and a mom innocently asked, "So, is this your third baby?"And I remember feeling the familiar twinge in my stomach as I debated how to answer. In a rare moment of courage I answered, "No, he is my fourth baby, but third in our family since I lost one to miscarriage." I braced myself for the awkward moment that often follows.
"Oh, I understand. I lost one too," she answered, "and sometimes it's hard for me to answer that question." And I looked into her eyes, and could tell that she really did understand, and it made all the difference. She remembered her baby, just like I remember mine. And suddenly I felt less alone in navigating this new season.
Having a baby after miscarriage has changed the way I experience the newborn period in so many wonderful ways too. It makes the sweet moments sweeter, and the difficult moments easier. When it's 3am and Caleb doesn't want to go back to sleep and decides he wants to stay awake and coo at me, I take advantage of the moment to tickle him and listen to his silly laugh. When he is screaming in the evening before bed, inconsolable, and my husband hands him to me to nurse him for what feels like the millionth time, I tell myself what a privilege it is to have a healthy baby and to be the one person in the world who can calm him down. The day when he first returned my smile with a big, toothless grin, I felt my legs turn to jello and my heart melted right out of my body. I make sure every single day to look deeply into his baby blue eyes, and remind myself how lucky I am to be his mama.
Just now, as I finish writing, I hear my little one waking up from his nap in the sunshine. It's time to feed him, and hold him, and turn on the music and dance together. And I know one day I will dance with a very special baby in Heaven too. And today I thank God for all four of my most precious blessings who call me mama.
These moments of alone are hard to come by these days. It seems every time I turn around there is someone who needs to be fed, or held, or washed. Baby boy is not a great sleeper, so I find I'm going through the motions of my day with eyes half closed, existing in a sleepless fog. When I can catch a fleeting moment of alone-ness, I close my eyes and try to sleep before anyone notices and decides they need me again.
It's a hard season. A season where I feel like I am tending to everyone else's needs and rarely my own. Most nights I brush my teeth to the soundtrack of a wailing baby, or shower while little hands bang on the door demanding that I get out, or eat my kids' half eaten bagels for breakfast because the baby is screaming and I have to get my daughter to the bus stop in the next three minutes. There are days I reach the end of my rope and close the bathroom door, and turn on the fan, so that I can cry without anyone hearing me.
And yet, underneath all the stress, and all the growing pains of adding another child to our family, there is joy and indescribable gratitude. Gratitude for the miracle of three precious children who call me "mama."
And I've noticed that along with that joy there is also still a feeling that someone is missing and the truth that even with the birth of our little boy, I still have a child in Heaven that I long for. The pain of last year has softened, but has not disappeared.
I think deep down, I expected that with the birth of our rainbow baby, I would no longer feel the sense of loss that I carried last year. I remember a conversation with a close friend before getting pregnant with Caleb where I confided to her that I felt like if I could just get pregnant again, maybe it would be like the baby I lost was coming back to me. Although I knew rationally this was impossible, I think I just desperately wanted to undo the loss that had been done. I wanted to make right what had gone wrong. But, as my friend gently reminded me, we know this is not how God works. Each child He creates is unique and my baby at 11 weeks is now in the arms of the Father. And now we have Caleb, who is meant just for us at this exact time.
I find that my mind often wanders to the baby that we lost. I'll be cuddling Caleb, or watching Josh and Abby play and I'll wonder, how old would he or she be right now? What is he or she doing in Heaven? Some days, like today, I have moments when I still cry thinking about it. Those are the moments I walk over to Caleb, pick him up, and bury my face into the rolls of his little baby neck and breathe deeply, and thank God for the miracle of my Rainbow.
Having a baby after miscarriage is wonderful, and hard. Wonderful because I rejoice over this new life, and hard because sometimes it feels like people expect my new baby to erase the grief I carried before he was born. And I'm sure some people do expect that of me, but if I'm really honest, I think maybe it's what I expected most of myself. And that expectation often leaves me feeling guilty for the moments that I hold my little boy while still thinking of my baby in Heaven. Or guilty when I complain about the sleepless nights spent nursing a fussy baby, because they are what I prayed for most after my loss.
But I'm finding that having my Rainbow baby is simply another step towards healing, not the healing itself. I'm reconciling the fact that I can be joyful in this season and yet still experience moments of grief.
I often come face to face with this truth when I'm asked the Question. I've been getting it a lot since having Caleb. It seems to be the question I am asked the most, especially when I don't have the other two kids with me. It comes in a few forms. People take one look at my chubby little boy and ask, "What number baby is this?" or "How many do you have?" On the outside, it seems like a simple enough question. But for a mom who has lost a child, the answer feels complicated. My answer often varies. I often just call him my third, for simplicity's sake. But I never feel quite right when I say it, because I know he is really my fourth, and somehow I feel like I'm forgetting my third baby by saying so. But to launch into how I lost a baby, which makes him my fourth, but also my third, leads to an awkward moment that I don't really want to navigate either.
I was at a mom's group the other day, and a mom innocently asked, "So, is this your third baby?"And I remember feeling the familiar twinge in my stomach as I debated how to answer. In a rare moment of courage I answered, "No, he is my fourth baby, but third in our family since I lost one to miscarriage." I braced myself for the awkward moment that often follows.
"Oh, I understand. I lost one too," she answered, "and sometimes it's hard for me to answer that question." And I looked into her eyes, and could tell that she really did understand, and it made all the difference. She remembered her baby, just like I remember mine. And suddenly I felt less alone in navigating this new season.
Having a baby after miscarriage has changed the way I experience the newborn period in so many wonderful ways too. It makes the sweet moments sweeter, and the difficult moments easier. When it's 3am and Caleb doesn't want to go back to sleep and decides he wants to stay awake and coo at me, I take advantage of the moment to tickle him and listen to his silly laugh. When he is screaming in the evening before bed, inconsolable, and my husband hands him to me to nurse him for what feels like the millionth time, I tell myself what a privilege it is to have a healthy baby and to be the one person in the world who can calm him down. The day when he first returned my smile with a big, toothless grin, I felt my legs turn to jello and my heart melted right out of my body. I make sure every single day to look deeply into his baby blue eyes, and remind myself how lucky I am to be his mama.
Just now, as I finish writing, I hear my little one waking up from his nap in the sunshine. It's time to feed him, and hold him, and turn on the music and dance together. And I know one day I will dance with a very special baby in Heaven too. And today I thank God for all four of my most precious blessings who call me mama.
Thursday, January 26, 2017
The Arrival of our little Rainbow: Caleb's Birth Story
I can't believe it has been almost five months since I last blogged. So much has happened in the last five months that it's hard to even know where to begin. It's unusual for me to take such a long break, when as a writer, words flow through my veins, and at every important and poignant moment I find myself involuntarily writing the story in my head, rolling words and phrases over and over, itching for the moment when I can put them down on paper.
But these last few months have been filled with so much emotion that I think I've just been intensely focused on the living of those moments, rather than the writing of them. In the last five months my oldest started kindergarten, I passed the one year anniversary of my miscarriage, survived a difficult pregnancy, and lastly, welcomed our son, Caleb, into our lives.
There are so many topics I want to write about. What is it like to have a baby after miscarriage? What's it like going from two to three children? What's it like knowing that you've given birth to your very last baby ever? I find myself with little time to write these days, so I want to start with the story that is dearest to my heart. Caleb's birth story.
A birth story. It's something we moms swap over coffee, at playdates, even sometimes in the grocery store. It's something that connects women to one another, no matter how different our politics, religion, or lifestyles might be. It's a sacred moment, welcoming a new human into this world. And there is magic in the sacred, capable of knitting us all closely together in this incredible experience of birthing new life. And for each child we birth there is a story as unique as the little human that came forth from us. Just as no two children are alike, neither are two stories of their arrival into this world. My sweet Caleb's birth was full of it's own surprises.
Caleb was born at 2:19pm on Wednesday, November 23rd, 2016. It was the day before Thanksgiving. I had to check his announcement just now for what time he was born because, well, he's the third child. I also have yet to write anything in his baby book. Again... third child. But that's another blog for another day.
Caleb's birth story really starts on Sunday, November 20th, a few days before his birth. On Saturday I'd been experiencing some unusual swelling in my legs, and I woke up that Sunday morning feeling a little "off." I had experienced preeclampsia with both Abby and Josh, so I knew that it was possible the swelling was an early symptom of impending preeclampsia. But when I checked my blood pressure that morning, it was still considered in the safe zone. So we got ready and went to church as usual.
I went into church that day, shook hands, greeted the other parishoners. Then worship began, and the lights dimmed as our voices sang in unified praise. And suddenly, as I sang, I heard a Voice speaking to me. If you remember my miscarriage story, as I was driving to the doctor the day of my ultrasound I heard this same voice. It was the Holy Spirit, reassuring me that no matter what, He was with me. I would find out later that my baby's heartbeat had stopped at 11 weeks.
But this time, the words were different. This time He said, "You will meet your son this week."
You will meet your son this week. I looked up at Ben. Had he heard the voice too? No. He kept singing like nothing had happened. But I had to sit down. Could it be true? Did God really just speak to me? Would this be the week I would finally be restored after my loss just one year ago? I didn't tell anyone at the time what had happened. Even though I believed it to be true, part of me is always nervous to share that I have heard God speak to me.
Later that afternoon Ben and I worked to prepare freezer meals in anticipation of our baby's birth. I was adamant that we finish it that afternoon. I didn't tell Ben at the time, but I knew our baby was coming soon and we weren't going to have another chance to get these meals done. My legs were continuing to swell, and I began experiencing migraine symptoms. I went upstairs and took my blood pressure. It was up to 150/100. I told Ben and he urged me to call the doctor.
When I listed my symptoms, the doctor told me to come in immediately. I kissed my kids goodbye, and put my hospital bag in the car just in case. I was admitted into triage, and it didn't take long for the tests to come back and show that I was indeed experiencing the beginning of preeclampsia.
In case you are not familiar with preeclampsia, it a pregnancy complication characterized by high blood pressure and signs of damage to another organ system, often the kidneys. It is a serious medical condition, that if left untreated, can cause seizures, organ damage, and possible death. The only "cure" for preeclampsia is to deliver the baby.
The doctor said, "Looks like you are going to meet your son this week."
On Sunday, I was 36 weeks and 4 days. The doctors really prefer not to deliver until 37 weeks. This is because at 36 weeks the baby is still considered premature. The lungs may not be fully developed, the suckling reflex is weaker, and in general baby is not usually ready to come out. Even just waiting three more days would give Caleb the extra time he needed to be ready to enter the world.
The doctor gave me the choice to deliver on Wednesday, before Thanksgiving, or Friday, the day after Thanksgiving. I knew from my previous pregnancies that my condition has the tendency to deteriorate rapidly, and that by waiting until Friday it was likely I would be very sick by then. Forget the turkey and the stuffing; I told the doctor that I wanted to deliver on Wednesday.
I was also given a choice to attempt an induction or to have a repeat cesarean. My preference the entire pregnancy was to attempt a VBAC. I was a great candidate, having only delivered via c-section with Josh because of breech presentation. However, at 37 weeks my body was not even close to ready to deliver. The doctor told me I had about a 50% chance of a successful induction and that it could be a multi-day process. Though they were willing to try it, I made the decision to have the repeat c-section.
After being observed for a few hours, the doctor let me go home with strict instructions to rest as much as possible until Wednesday.
Wednesday morning came and I was nervous, excited, and emotional. It's very difficult to describe the anxiety and fear that pregnancy after loss brings. Every doctor appointment, every odd twinge, every time the baby moved less than usual I found myself steeled for the worst. To have finally arrived at the day of his birth brought overwhelming relief and joy, even mixed with the nerves before surgery. I had Ben take one last "bump" picture, kissed Abby and Josh goodbye, thanked my mom for coming to stay, and we were out the door.
We were admitted to the hospital at 11am with surgery scheduled for 1:00pm. The nurses started my IV, and then we waited, and waited, and waited for all my bloodwork to come back from the lab, which is required before surgery begins. I was nervous, knowing that I was about to have major abdominal surgery, but having been through a c-section before, I knew what to expect.
Finally, just before 2:00 I was taken back into the operating room. Ben was asked to stay outside the room until I received my spinal anesthesia. At this point, I was laughing and joking with the doctors, feeling calm because I had done all this before. I bent over my belly as the doctor placed the needle in my back, jumping from the electric shock of the medicine going in. They slowly laid me back on the table, put an oxygen mask over my face, and brought Ben in to sit next to my head.
With Josh's birth, I remember my legs going numb almost immediately after the spinal was given. But as I lay there on the table this time, I could very clearly feel my legs. I waited, hoping that it was just a fluke and that the medicine was taking longer than usual. The doctors began to prep for surgery, getting out the various instruments they would be using. And then, all of the sudden, I felt a very sharp prick on my stomach. Then more sharp pricks. The doctor nonchalantly asked, "How are you doing Jenny?"
And I said, "Well, I can feel you poking me."
Silence. The doctor paused. Pauses are never reassuring in a medical setting.
Then she asked hesitantly, "What does the poke feel like?"
"Like you are poking me with a scalpel."
"Do you feel it up here?"
"Yes."
"Do you feel it down here?"
"Yes."
"Even here?"
"..... yes."
The surgeon exchanged a glance with the anesthesiologist, who was positioned on the other side of my head, away from Ben. There was an entire conversation in that glance, and I knew it wasn't good news.
They said, "Let's just give it a few minutes and see if it starts to numb."
So we waited, and they checked me again. I could still feel it, but it was no longer sharp, and felt more like a pencil eraser poking me rather than the pencil tip.
Encouraged, the doctors said, "We are going to begin, but you let us know if anything is painful."
And so they began the surgery.
And I was not numb. It felt like a sharp knife sliced across my belly and cut me wide open. And I yelled out in pain.
After that, all I remember is the anesthesiologist telling me, "I'm so sorry; we have to put you under."
They clamped a mask on my face and told me to breathe in. Then someone told Ben he would have to leave the room, as it is against hospital policy to have a support person present when general anesthesia is used.
I struggled against them, whipping my face back and forth to avoid the mask, saying over and over, "No. Please. I don't want to miss it. I don't want to miss the birth of my baby." Tears began to flow and I heaved with sobs. In those split seconds I knew I was about to miss one of the most special and important moments of my life.
The anesthesiologist said one more time, "I am so sorry."
And then everything went black.
And here's the part of the story where my son was born. When he took his first breath. And they announced he was a boy. And they weighed him and measured him and took him to a special room where Ben took his very first pictures.
And I can't tell you any of that part of the story because I missed it. I missed the birth of my very last baby.
I awoke from the surgery sometime later, in a recovery room, and immediately began to weep. Even in my disorientation I knew what I had missed. They brought Ben to me after I was awake enough to respond to questions. I was in intense pain, as the spinal hadn't worked to block any pain after surgery, and the doctors and nurses were working quickly to try and get my pain under control. In my groggy state Ben showed me pictures of my baby boy on our camera, but it was hard for me to be happy, realizing the first time I saw my son was on a camera instead of in person.
After a while, I have no idea how long, as time in a recovery room is muddled and confused, they brought me my son. They wheeled him in, unwrapped him, and placed him on my chest, skin to skin. This time I began to weep for a very different reason.
He was here. My rainbow baby. Born exactly five months to the day that I was due with the baby I lost. Born just 10 days shy of the one year anniversary of my loss. The one thing I had prayed consistently for during my pregnancy was that my son would be born before that anniversary, so that on that very hard day I would have a baby to hold in my arms.
And he here was. Caleb Landis Cowan. All 6 pounds 4 ounces of him. We named him Caleb because there is a story in the Bible, where two brave men are sent out with a group to survey the land that God had promised to the Israelite. Everyone in the group is terrified by what they see, and are afraid to go in and conquer the land except for these two men, who know that the Lord is the one who will fight for them. Those two men were Joshua and Caleb. Three and a half years ago, when we welcomed our son Joshua, Ben and I talked about how we would love to have another son one day and name him Caleb, so that our two boys could go out together and conquer the world. We chose Landis for his middle name because my dad's middle name is Landis, and so is my brother's. It was also my grandfather's first name. So it was very special to me to honor my family with that name.
The moment they placed my baby boy on my chest, all of my pain melted away. Though I'm sure it had something to do with the fantastic pain medication they were pumping into my IV, it was also because the joy that I felt in that moment, meeting my son, snuggling him close to me, was more powerful than any pain I was feeling.
It took me several weeks to be able to talk about his birth without a deep sense of guilt and regret. What if I had opted for the induction instead? What if I had picked Friday instead of Wednesday? Would things have been different? Even though I know it was out of my control, it was really difficult to miss such an important moment.
But in the time since he has been born, the overwhelming joy that I have experienced far outweighs the sadness of the one moment I missed. People will often say, "As long as my baby is healthy I am happy." I can honestly say that now, two months later, I am so thankful for my healthy, happy, precious son, no matter what I may have missed on that day. In the two months he has been home, I am the one received his first smile, his first coo, and even now I sit with him snuggled warmly in his favorite place, on my chest, wrapped tightly in his Moby wrap, sleeping peacefully.
Welcoming a rainbow baby is an emotional moment. There is joy mixed with grief, and hope mixed with pain. But at the end of it all, I am so very, very thankful for the four children that God has given me the privilege of carrying and birthing. Welcome to our family Caleb, we are so in love with you and so blessed to call you our son.
But these last few months have been filled with so much emotion that I think I've just been intensely focused on the living of those moments, rather than the writing of them. In the last five months my oldest started kindergarten, I passed the one year anniversary of my miscarriage, survived a difficult pregnancy, and lastly, welcomed our son, Caleb, into our lives.
There are so many topics I want to write about. What is it like to have a baby after miscarriage? What's it like going from two to three children? What's it like knowing that you've given birth to your very last baby ever? I find myself with little time to write these days, so I want to start with the story that is dearest to my heart. Caleb's birth story.
A birth story. It's something we moms swap over coffee, at playdates, even sometimes in the grocery store. It's something that connects women to one another, no matter how different our politics, religion, or lifestyles might be. It's a sacred moment, welcoming a new human into this world. And there is magic in the sacred, capable of knitting us all closely together in this incredible experience of birthing new life. And for each child we birth there is a story as unique as the little human that came forth from us. Just as no two children are alike, neither are two stories of their arrival into this world. My sweet Caleb's birth was full of it's own surprises.
Caleb was born at 2:19pm on Wednesday, November 23rd, 2016. It was the day before Thanksgiving. I had to check his announcement just now for what time he was born because, well, he's the third child. I also have yet to write anything in his baby book. Again... third child. But that's another blog for another day.
Caleb's birth story really starts on Sunday, November 20th, a few days before his birth. On Saturday I'd been experiencing some unusual swelling in my legs, and I woke up that Sunday morning feeling a little "off." I had experienced preeclampsia with both Abby and Josh, so I knew that it was possible the swelling was an early symptom of impending preeclampsia. But when I checked my blood pressure that morning, it was still considered in the safe zone. So we got ready and went to church as usual.
I went into church that day, shook hands, greeted the other parishoners. Then worship began, and the lights dimmed as our voices sang in unified praise. And suddenly, as I sang, I heard a Voice speaking to me. If you remember my miscarriage story, as I was driving to the doctor the day of my ultrasound I heard this same voice. It was the Holy Spirit, reassuring me that no matter what, He was with me. I would find out later that my baby's heartbeat had stopped at 11 weeks.
But this time, the words were different. This time He said, "You will meet your son this week."
You will meet your son this week. I looked up at Ben. Had he heard the voice too? No. He kept singing like nothing had happened. But I had to sit down. Could it be true? Did God really just speak to me? Would this be the week I would finally be restored after my loss just one year ago? I didn't tell anyone at the time what had happened. Even though I believed it to be true, part of me is always nervous to share that I have heard God speak to me.
Later that afternoon Ben and I worked to prepare freezer meals in anticipation of our baby's birth. I was adamant that we finish it that afternoon. I didn't tell Ben at the time, but I knew our baby was coming soon and we weren't going to have another chance to get these meals done. My legs were continuing to swell, and I began experiencing migraine symptoms. I went upstairs and took my blood pressure. It was up to 150/100. I told Ben and he urged me to call the doctor.
When I listed my symptoms, the doctor told me to come in immediately. I kissed my kids goodbye, and put my hospital bag in the car just in case. I was admitted into triage, and it didn't take long for the tests to come back and show that I was indeed experiencing the beginning of preeclampsia.
In case you are not familiar with preeclampsia, it a pregnancy complication characterized by high blood pressure and signs of damage to another organ system, often the kidneys. It is a serious medical condition, that if left untreated, can cause seizures, organ damage, and possible death. The only "cure" for preeclampsia is to deliver the baby.
The doctor said, "Looks like you are going to meet your son this week."
On Sunday, I was 36 weeks and 4 days. The doctors really prefer not to deliver until 37 weeks. This is because at 36 weeks the baby is still considered premature. The lungs may not be fully developed, the suckling reflex is weaker, and in general baby is not usually ready to come out. Even just waiting three more days would give Caleb the extra time he needed to be ready to enter the world.
The doctor gave me the choice to deliver on Wednesday, before Thanksgiving, or Friday, the day after Thanksgiving. I knew from my previous pregnancies that my condition has the tendency to deteriorate rapidly, and that by waiting until Friday it was likely I would be very sick by then. Forget the turkey and the stuffing; I told the doctor that I wanted to deliver on Wednesday.
I was also given a choice to attempt an induction or to have a repeat cesarean. My preference the entire pregnancy was to attempt a VBAC. I was a great candidate, having only delivered via c-section with Josh because of breech presentation. However, at 37 weeks my body was not even close to ready to deliver. The doctor told me I had about a 50% chance of a successful induction and that it could be a multi-day process. Though they were willing to try it, I made the decision to have the repeat c-section.
After being observed for a few hours, the doctor let me go home with strict instructions to rest as much as possible until Wednesday.
Wednesday morning came and I was nervous, excited, and emotional. It's very difficult to describe the anxiety and fear that pregnancy after loss brings. Every doctor appointment, every odd twinge, every time the baby moved less than usual I found myself steeled for the worst. To have finally arrived at the day of his birth brought overwhelming relief and joy, even mixed with the nerves before surgery. I had Ben take one last "bump" picture, kissed Abby and Josh goodbye, thanked my mom for coming to stay, and we were out the door.
We were admitted to the hospital at 11am with surgery scheduled for 1:00pm. The nurses started my IV, and then we waited, and waited, and waited for all my bloodwork to come back from the lab, which is required before surgery begins. I was nervous, knowing that I was about to have major abdominal surgery, but having been through a c-section before, I knew what to expect.
Finally, just before 2:00 I was taken back into the operating room. Ben was asked to stay outside the room until I received my spinal anesthesia. At this point, I was laughing and joking with the doctors, feeling calm because I had done all this before. I bent over my belly as the doctor placed the needle in my back, jumping from the electric shock of the medicine going in. They slowly laid me back on the table, put an oxygen mask over my face, and brought Ben in to sit next to my head.
With Josh's birth, I remember my legs going numb almost immediately after the spinal was given. But as I lay there on the table this time, I could very clearly feel my legs. I waited, hoping that it was just a fluke and that the medicine was taking longer than usual. The doctors began to prep for surgery, getting out the various instruments they would be using. And then, all of the sudden, I felt a very sharp prick on my stomach. Then more sharp pricks. The doctor nonchalantly asked, "How are you doing Jenny?"
And I said, "Well, I can feel you poking me."
Silence. The doctor paused. Pauses are never reassuring in a medical setting.
Then she asked hesitantly, "What does the poke feel like?"
"Like you are poking me with a scalpel."
"Do you feel it up here?"
"Yes."
"Do you feel it down here?"
"Yes."
"Even here?"
"..... yes."
The surgeon exchanged a glance with the anesthesiologist, who was positioned on the other side of my head, away from Ben. There was an entire conversation in that glance, and I knew it wasn't good news.
They said, "Let's just give it a few minutes and see if it starts to numb."
So we waited, and they checked me again. I could still feel it, but it was no longer sharp, and felt more like a pencil eraser poking me rather than the pencil tip.
Encouraged, the doctors said, "We are going to begin, but you let us know if anything is painful."
And so they began the surgery.
And I was not numb. It felt like a sharp knife sliced across my belly and cut me wide open. And I yelled out in pain.
After that, all I remember is the anesthesiologist telling me, "I'm so sorry; we have to put you under."
They clamped a mask on my face and told me to breathe in. Then someone told Ben he would have to leave the room, as it is against hospital policy to have a support person present when general anesthesia is used.
I struggled against them, whipping my face back and forth to avoid the mask, saying over and over, "No. Please. I don't want to miss it. I don't want to miss the birth of my baby." Tears began to flow and I heaved with sobs. In those split seconds I knew I was about to miss one of the most special and important moments of my life.
The anesthesiologist said one more time, "I am so sorry."
And then everything went black.
And here's the part of the story where my son was born. When he took his first breath. And they announced he was a boy. And they weighed him and measured him and took him to a special room where Ben took his very first pictures.
And I can't tell you any of that part of the story because I missed it. I missed the birth of my very last baby.
I awoke from the surgery sometime later, in a recovery room, and immediately began to weep. Even in my disorientation I knew what I had missed. They brought Ben to me after I was awake enough to respond to questions. I was in intense pain, as the spinal hadn't worked to block any pain after surgery, and the doctors and nurses were working quickly to try and get my pain under control. In my groggy state Ben showed me pictures of my baby boy on our camera, but it was hard for me to be happy, realizing the first time I saw my son was on a camera instead of in person.
After a while, I have no idea how long, as time in a recovery room is muddled and confused, they brought me my son. They wheeled him in, unwrapped him, and placed him on my chest, skin to skin. This time I began to weep for a very different reason.
He was here. My rainbow baby. Born exactly five months to the day that I was due with the baby I lost. Born just 10 days shy of the one year anniversary of my loss. The one thing I had prayed consistently for during my pregnancy was that my son would be born before that anniversary, so that on that very hard day I would have a baby to hold in my arms.
And he here was. Caleb Landis Cowan. All 6 pounds 4 ounces of him. We named him Caleb because there is a story in the Bible, where two brave men are sent out with a group to survey the land that God had promised to the Israelite. Everyone in the group is terrified by what they see, and are afraid to go in and conquer the land except for these two men, who know that the Lord is the one who will fight for them. Those two men were Joshua and Caleb. Three and a half years ago, when we welcomed our son Joshua, Ben and I talked about how we would love to have another son one day and name him Caleb, so that our two boys could go out together and conquer the world. We chose Landis for his middle name because my dad's middle name is Landis, and so is my brother's. It was also my grandfather's first name. So it was very special to me to honor my family with that name.
The moment they placed my baby boy on my chest, all of my pain melted away. Though I'm sure it had something to do with the fantastic pain medication they were pumping into my IV, it was also because the joy that I felt in that moment, meeting my son, snuggling him close to me, was more powerful than any pain I was feeling.
It took me several weeks to be able to talk about his birth without a deep sense of guilt and regret. What if I had opted for the induction instead? What if I had picked Friday instead of Wednesday? Would things have been different? Even though I know it was out of my control, it was really difficult to miss such an important moment.
But in the time since he has been born, the overwhelming joy that I have experienced far outweighs the sadness of the one moment I missed. People will often say, "As long as my baby is healthy I am happy." I can honestly say that now, two months later, I am so thankful for my healthy, happy, precious son, no matter what I may have missed on that day. In the two months he has been home, I am the one received his first smile, his first coo, and even now I sit with him snuggled warmly in his favorite place, on my chest, wrapped tightly in his Moby wrap, sleeping peacefully.
Welcoming a rainbow baby is an emotional moment. There is joy mixed with grief, and hope mixed with pain. But at the end of it all, I am so very, very thankful for the four children that God has given me the privilege of carrying and birthing. Welcome to our family Caleb, we are so in love with you and so blessed to call you our son.
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