Archives for September 2012

Childhood Infertility

A recent news story of young Natalie, who had a germ cell tumor removed.  She is eight years old, battling ovarian cancer.

Just 20 years ago, treatment would have included the removal of both of her ovaries, resulting in infertility.  Today, however, removal of the one affected ovary and fallopian tube seems to be sufficient treatment.

You can read more of Natalie’s story on Yahoo, here.

 

Have you endured fertility challenges at an early age?  Consider sharing your story with us here at stillbirthday.

 

Back to Church Sunday

Today is National Back to Church Sunday.

Stillbirthday wants to know:

Has the death of your baby(ies) challenged your faith?

Have you felt distanced from God in your grief?

In anger, have you turned away from your church home, your religion or your faith?

In your darkest hour, have you found the light of hope and faith?

 

Has your spiritual life been impacted at all by your loss?

 

Where will you be on October 15?

October is National Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month, as proclaimed by Ronald Reagan in 1988.

October 15 is International Remembrance day.

What are your plans during this season of remembering?

What activities do you have planned?  Where will you be?

Let us know – we want to hear about it.

Do you want to consider your event a stillbirthday event?  Share our printable resources at your event, and take pictures!  We want to add your event to our first newsletter this November.

 

An invitation from Heidi Faith!

If you are in Kansas City, Heidi Faith is planning a glowing spiral balloon release.  It will require the help of 100 people.  That’s right, 100 people.  Since nearly 100 mothers give birth to a stillborn baby every day in the US alone (the number of babies born via miscarriage are even higher), this is an appropriate number.  The balloon release is with the help of Balloon Garden.

If you’ve ever experienced a miscarriage, stillbirth, have struggled with fertility, or have lost a child at any age, you are invited to release a balloon.  Perhaps you are a grandparent or an aunt to one of these children.  It is a time to demonstrate our parenthood, our love, for these children who are not physically present in our lives but who are present in our hearts.

Come on out to the Northland, on the early evening of Monday October 15 (about 6pm), and help release a purple, glowing balloon.  A pregnancy loss is still a birth, and is still a birthday.  Come, honor the special stillbirthdays in your own life, by helping Heidi release 100 balloons.

Purple has been chosen because many mothers are uncertain of the gender of their babies born via miscarriage.  Considering that pink represents the mother, blue represents the father, pink and blue together make purple.

Face painting and clowns for your surviving and subsequent children will help encourage them to see that they belong, that grief is safe, and that a pregnancy loss is felt by the whole family, including siblings.  Kevo the Klown and Dodger the Clown may both be there!

The event is free, with an optional love offering recieved.  I can’t do this without you, so please, just come.

 

Address:

Northland Cathedral (click for directions)

101 NW 99th Street

Kansas City, MO 64155

(When you turn into the driveway from N. Oak Trafficway, drive until you see the open lawn on the right side (east of the church).  You can park anywhere and that east lawn will be the launch site.)

Time:

approximately 6pm-6:30pm (launch time will be around 6:15)

 

 

 

 

Suicide

Today is National Suicide Prevention Day.  Did you know that persons considering suicide don’t just wait until today, though, before putting action to their thoughts?  In fact, suicide rates are highest in the Spring.

One half of all suicides occur from adult men.  In fact, the highest demographic of those who have committed suicide are elderly men.  Suicide is an act that often follows depression.  Grief and depression are not the same, but they do share some characteristics.

Where do men turn to for prevention and support?  How do they learn that they can grieve?  How do they learn how to grieve?  This is a difficult thing, as men so often minimize or silence their grief.  We have support here.

Grief, depression, suicide: these things impact all demographics, though, don’t they?

My childhood was spent in and out of foster care, institutions, and orphanages.  Just about every six months, I attended a new school, had a new group of bullies to torment me, a new family I tried to fit into.  Every Christmas was at a new place, as was every birthday.

When I was a little girl, I lived with my dad for a very short time.  He was abusive in every manner.  I remember him picking up my stepmother and throwing her out of a window.  He threatened me at gunpoint on more than one occasion.

I didn’t live with him long, but his power over me continued for many years after the police removed me from his home.  I hated how angry he was, and swore that I would never unleash that sort of anger on anyone, ever.

I tried to counter his dysfunction by always internalizing my anger.  I thought that I could quietly swallow my disappointment, my loneliness, my shame.  Eventually, I began imploding, unable to contain one more drop of negativity.  These feelings needed to get out of me, and so, determined to keep my promise not to take my anger out on anyone else, I became violent to myself.

I punched, pinched, burned, and cut myself, all in a desperate message:

please, someone, love me.

When I was thirteen, I was moved to a foster home that was simply lovely.  I felt safe.  Safe enough to want the family to adopt me.

Wanting to belong was a feeling I hadn’t previously allowed myself to have.  After all, I knew I’d be moved again.  Outside people could control an enormous amount of my life, but they couldn’t control how I felt.

At this foster home, I was too terrified of rejection to tell them that I wanted to be adopted, but the passion grew like a fire.

Each day, every interaction with my foster parents began to scream rejection.  It became apparent to me that they didn’t want to adopt me – didn’t they care about me? – how can I take my feelings back?

I imploded.

I am a suicide survivor.

Today, we are so caught up in social media, our statuses, and how many “likes” something we say receives.

That is not how I want stillbirthday to grow.

Yes, I want you to like stillbirthday, to share stillbirthday.  But not just because it’s one more place that offers pregnancy loss support.

Bereaved parents endure so much trial.  I consider it proof that our children matter, but that truth doesn’t always ease the pain.

We are constantly under attack, facing criticism for anything anybody can bring up against us.  Other members of stillbirthday – and plenty of other bereavement organizations – will all attest to this frustrating, hurtful fact.

At the risk of being judged, I come to you to let you know who I really am.

I want you not just to like stillbirthday, but to trust it.

When I experienced my pregnancy loss, it was the deepest hurt I had ever endured.  I was absolutely crushed to the very core.

But since my childhood, I came to know God.

I came to know that He is big enough for me to shake my fist at.

He is big enough for me to cry to.

I learned that Heaven is a lovely, magnificent place, because those who are there dwell with God.

And I learned that death is not the only way to be in this place.

I didn’t need suicide – and neither do you.

You can enter into a conversation with God, right where you are.

He’s big enough to meet your need, and to meet you right where you’re at.

You don’t have to hurt yourself to call Him.

All you have to do is speak.

Tell someone, if you are feeling depressed.

Tell someone, if you are contemplating hurting yourself.

Tell someone, if you feel unable to communicate with those around you.

Here are resources, including crisis hotlines, staffed by trained people ready to speak with you.

They want to speak with you.

We are not professionals here, but we do have mentors and we have a prayer team, all willing to come alongside you just to remind you that you are not alone.  Tell us, how we can pray for you.  We take the request very seriously, and we will pray for you.

 

I want you to come to stillbirthday because you trust this place.  Because you feel connected.  Because we have the resources you need.  Because you can trust that we too, have endured an awful lot, and because what we share with you works.

 

 

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Alive in Heaven

Sunday, September 23 is International Bereaved Fathers Day.

From now until September 15, you can download a free eBook version of Mark Canfora’s book:

Alive in Heaven:

A Child Died

A Father Cried

And God Answered

Just visit this link, and in the left sidebar you’ll see “Download eBook”.

Enter in your name, email, and this code:

markjr1985

This is a story of a boy, eighteen years old, who committed suicide.  It’s a story of a family, coming together to find their way, to find God’s way, in their healing.

Seeing his son in the morgue, the rope marks around his neck, brings back memories of the day Marky was born, with his umbilical cord wrapped around his neck. Looking back on that day, Mark remembers how fervently he prayed for his child’s survival.  This book brings you through the intimate, devastating experiences of a father begging for his son’s life to be preserved, to losing his son eighteen years later, and of that broken, devastated father turning to his own Father for answers, mentorship, guidance, restoration and hope.

September 15 is the anniversary of Marky’s arrival in Heaven.  Thank you Mark for this generous offer.  May bereaved fathers find comfort in your message, in the legacy of your son, and may you find comfort in these days ahead.

Just Give Me a Minute

Have you ever said that?

“Just give me a minute!”

Stillbirthday is calling you, inviting you, beckoning you, to just give us a minute.

We have helped over 285,000 families since August 2011 – but that’s not good enough.

Not one family should endure pregnancy loss without the support they need, when they need it.

Stillbirthday is unique in that we offer support:

  • prior to pregnancy loss (see our Before Birth tab for birth plans, explanations, photos and more)
  • during pregnancy loss/birth in any trimester (see our During Birth tab for our global network of trained SBD doulas, as well as volunteers, photographers, doulas, chaplains, and more)
  • immediately after pregnancy loss (see our After Birth tab for SBD lactation professionals, Love Cupboards and more)
  • as well as ongoing support for survival after loss (see our After Birth tab for local, national and international listings of phone numbers, websites, books, crisis lines, groups, pregnancy loss specific devotionals, mentoring, and more)

Stillbirthday is the most comprehensive support resource for pregnancy and infant loss.

Please, just give us a minute.

285,000 families isn’t enough.  We need to help more.

Give us one minute, just one minute, and contact your local news station, your local newspaper, your local radio station.

Tell them that October is National Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month, as proclaimed by Ronald Reagan in 1988.

Tell them that a family endures a stillbirth every 20 minutes in the US alone.

In fact, become a local SBD Representative and spread the word even further!

Here are some places to share about October and about stillbirthday:

Spread the word about stillbirthday.  It will only take a minute.

 

 

 

Grandparents Day

Sunday, September 9 is National Grandparents Day.

I became interested in doula work in my first pregnancy.  I learned how magnificent the process of gestation is and marvelled at God’s intimate design.  I became trained through Cascade Christian Childbirth Association, an organization seated in God’s design of pregnancy.  My second birth was the first time I felt the blessing of being supported, of seeing how neat it was to advocate for myself and to see others truly participate and enjoy the journey with me.  My third baby’s birth was hysterical – I practically laughed him out.  Each of my children have blessed me with wisdom and valuable truths about pregnancy, gestation, birth and early parenting.

As everyone knows, it was my fourth child who inspired my husband and I to create stillbirthday.

But this story is in many ways about our fifth child.

I don’t know if it’s because she is my first subsequent child, or if it’s because she is a girl.  Probably, it is both.

Grandparents Day always reminds me to be thankful for the people who came before me, to marvel at how my parents could have made such poor choices, how I was rescued from so much, but how ultimately, we are in fact still connected.  It reminds me to spend time in thanksgiving over my husband’s grandparents, over how easily they accepted me as a part of their family.  It reminds me to recognize the joy his parents have at being grandparents, that they adore these children the Lord has knit in my womb.  It reminds me that the Lord has sewn my children into a stable, strong, loving family that will help sustain them as they learn how insecure and unstable my parents’ lifestyle is.

But, this is the first Grandparents Day that I have thought about myself as a grandparent.

I have five children – one of whom resides in Heaven.  Of the four children in our home, someday, the Lord may bless one of them with a spouse, someone to join in their life and witness their struggles, and embrace and nurture their hopes and dreams.  Someone, who may join them in parenthood.

This Grandparents Day, I look at my daughter, my sweet, tiny little girl, as she nuzzles up to my breast for a comforting meal.  As she gulps, I touch her tiny, perfect toes.  I stroke her short, strawberry hair.  And I pray for her.  I pray for her future spouse, wherever he may be.  I pray over their future plans of conception and parenthood, and I pray – oh, how I pray – that she will never, ever, ever endure a pregnancy loss.

Blessing God’s Way is an organization that supports stillbirthday through their pregnancy loss specific Celebrating Pregnancy Blessingway, a time of honoring the baby-in-utero as the very real baby he or she is, regardless of his duration of life outside of the womb.

Besides their loving care of pregnancy, they also provide tools to teach our little girls about puberty – about the season of their life that may or may not lead to their season of motherhood.

Already, with this still nursling little girl, I have eager and excited plans to be the one to teach her about this marvelous journey – to walk alongside her as she explores this beautiful, joyful, and potentially heartbreaking season.  As I see her toothless little grin, I can think of no one better qualified to teach her, and no other way better cabable of teaching her, than through the lens of God’s awesome, mysterious design.

All of this also has stirred a change in my husband, as he prepares to teach our oldest child, a strapping young man, about the season in store for him.

Together, we are prayerfully and joyously looking at this Grandparents Day as the future grandparents we may be, praying for our children and their future spouses, whoever and wherever they may be, who may join into our family someday through marriage and parenthood.

 

As bereaved parents, have you thought about yourself as a grandparent?  Is that an area of grief, an area that needs healing?  Is it an area of fear or anxiety?  Is it an area you haven’t yet considered?

Will you focus on your future grandchildren on this Grandparents Day, and be in prayer over your children’s future fertility, and over your grandchildren as well?

If you are a grandparent who has experienced a pregnancy or infant loss of your grandchild, how do you celebrate Grandparents Day?

 

Nine Eleven

An Empowered Miscarriage

This is National Empowered Birth Week.  Particularly today, on Labor Day (get it?  labor day?), birth professionals are focusing on medical interventions in childbirth.

Medical interventions in childbirth can save lives.  They can save the mother, they can save the child, they can save both.

But, sometimes, medical interventions are used, only because doulas are not used.  Only because that intervention may be the go-to for the doctor.  Only because it may seem easier for the nurse to suggest an intervention than to explain (at length) what other, non-medical options the mother may have.  Only because the mother wasn’t exposed to learning these options prior to birth.  Only because the mother never knew the extent of her responsibility, or her privilege, to participate in her labor – because nobody ever told her.

Today, as you drive past your local hospital, you may see people standing, maybe wearing blue (or the logo below), wanting to show that an empowered birth is a birth in which a mother knows all of her options – including having a doula – and including having the privilege to participate in her labor.

Having a professional doula involved in your birth choices or during your birth helps facilitate dialogue with medical providers, helps to discern what medical options are recommended for life saving care and which are suggested simply as the regular go-to of the provider.

Having a professional doula also helps to prepare you for those medical interventions that indeed are necessary, by providing comfort as you experience any of their side effects: chills, nausea, immobility.  By coming alongside you to remind you that these strange sensations are normal parts of your unique labor, they speak comfort and validation to the mother: you are safe – you are not alone.

The hospital that my local birth professionals are standing by today, sparking the curiosity of passersby, provoking the general public to understand the value of doulas and paving the way to equipping more mothers to embrace the privilege to participate in their labors…

…is the same hospital that told me that my miscarried baby was “debris”.  The same place where I was told to “expect a period”.  Where I was told not to worry about it, because I “probably already flushed ‘it'”.

An empowered miscarriage – an empowered birth of my miscarried baby – an empowered birth of my first trimester baby – I was not welcomed to have.  I was not invited to have.  I was not expected to have.

I gave birth to my miscarried baby at home.  An “unassisted birth,” there were no medical attendants present.  This is not the best or safest birth method for every mother experiencing a miscarriage, and I certainly do not convey the message that this is the only way to give birth to a miscarried baby.

Even the most highly medicalized birth of a baby – in any trimester – is still birth, and there is still room to speak love, assurance, and respect to that mother, letting her know that she is safe, that she is not alone.

I could have needed more medical intervention.  I understood entirely that a D&C might have been needed, and my desire was very much to know how to turn a “remove dead tissue procedure” into “the medically assisted birth of my beloved, miscarried baby.”

This is what our doulas (and our printable birth plans) are all about – providing support to families experiencing birth in any trimester.  If you give birth to a miscarried, stillborn, or subsequent baby, doulas from every US state and all over the world are ready to provide support to you.

What’s more, we also provide a training.  Are you interested in learning how to come alongside mothers giving birth in any trimester?  Consider taking our SBD doula training.

Stillbirthday – a place to equip you and support you in having an empowered miscarriage.  An empowered birth – in any trimester.

 

 

The SBD® Doula provides support to families experiencing birth in any trimester and in any outcome.

Here at stillbirthday.info, you can learn about the SBD® Doula.