Archives for 2012

Breast Milk Keepsakes

At approximately 20 gestation weeks onward, a mother may produce breastmilk upon the birth of her baby.  Having options with our breastmilk is important.  HollyDay Designs  Breast Milk Keepsakes utilizes just one tablespoon of our breastmilk to turn it into a beautiful keepsake.  In approximately the first 3 days postpartum, breastmilk production is not based on demand – it is simply present after the birth of the baby and placenta.  Because of this, a stillbirthday mother may collect her breastmilk in these earlier days to use for one of these custom made keepsakes, without concern that it will produce more breastmilk.  Milk donation and expedited milk suppression are both options that our SBD doulas and our SBD lactation professionals can support.

Below is a keepsake that includes both breastmilk and a small lock of baby’s hair.

 

milkandhair

 

Bg&Co Birthing Gown

Bg&Co provides absolutely beautiful birthing gowns, which are especially valuable for stillbirthday families, as we try to capture our hello, family and friends gathering, and farewell, all in such a fleeting time.  These gowns are made of luxurious jersey and wrap easily all the way around the mother with a fully closed backing, letting her feel dignified in such an overwhelming time.

Earth Mama Angel Baby

Earth Mama Angel Baby has a very special wellness product line for stillbirthday  mothers, including:

  • No More Milk tea to help you dry your milk quickly.
  • Seeds of Hope to plant in your garden.
  • Scented candles, mists, and more.

 

BEBE

BEBE instructor Jill provides supplemental education regarding prenatal development for our graduated SBD doulas interested in deepening their training in this valuable area after they’ve graduated from our extensive program.

Casting Keepsakes

 

 

Casting Keepsakes provides casting supplies for blessingways and the welcoming of our babies born in any trimester.

 

 

 

 

Thanksgiving Dare

There’s lots of talk going around, wondering just what our new Grief Dare is going to be all about.

What is it going to require of me?  How personal is this going to get?

Relax.

This is going to be so much fun.  We’ve drawn from resources all over to compile these dares, including the Love Dare and Respect Dare books and other website owners, like Franchesca from Small Bird Studios.  While you’ll be challenged to look at your marriage, your faith (in whatever you place your hope), and other relationships, the only things you’ll be actually sharing back at the Grief Dare are updates, and your own responses to the activites.

A couple of these responses will include sharing a photo and a video, but we’ll give you tips on how to do that.

 

So, who’s up for a sample dare?

This week is Thanksgiving.

Maybe you’ve got plans to visit your family, or maybe there is a party at work, or maybe you’ll notice the extra people in the grocery stores this week, gathering and collecting the items they desire for their own family’s feast.

Everywhere you go, you may feel as if the crowd is looming in.  And, you might feel even more alone than ever.

If you are anticipating this festive season of celebration and thankfulness with even a tinge of dread, this dare is for you.

This week, pick one person.

Maybe it’s not the most difficult person –

maybe it’s not the family member who told you to “get over it”, or maybe it’s not your newborn niece.  That’s OK.

Just, pick someone, whom you know you will encounter, and whom you know may possibly be difficult to encounter, for whatever reason.

For these days leading up to your Thanksgiving, think on this person.

Pull out old family photo albums to see them as a kiddo, if you want, or maybe talk to other family members who really adore this person – maybe their parents.

Really, spend time thinking, about what it is this person likes.

What hobbies they have, what subjects interest them, what collections or possessions they treasure.

And,  mentally prepare for an encounter with this person.

Spend time meditating or praying for guidance, for wisdom, for peace, on this project and between you and this person.

If you can, get excited about the things you learn about this person’s joys.  Genuinely learn something new.

And then, make some time to connect with that person.

For example: Maybe it was your husband’s brother who said something during your initial loss, that still leaves you feeling sour toward him.  Nothing extremely mean, but, it just didn’t seem like he was very understanding.  Maybe he’s really into football, so you commit to learning a little about football, and you tell him that you want to understand the difference between the AFC and the NFC.  Just, something engaging.

If they aren’t in your family, consider communicating with that person through email, calling them, or meeting over lunch.

A couple of things to keep in mind: As you anticipate and prepare for this dare, release any expectation you have of their response.  Do not go into this dare with the expectation that you will have a window to tell the person that they hurt you, or that it will dawn on them that they’ve hurt you.  It might not be the right time to talk about that at this point.  Allow yourself the peace, now, to know that.  If you don’t have that peace, pick a different person.   It is NOT acceptable for them to be intentionally cruel to you, and remember, it’s OK to pick someone who isn’t the most hurtful to you – maybe just someone who you’ve just had a disconnect with.  You can determine your own commitment, based on what you believe you are capable of challenging yourself to emotionally.

After you’ve completed this example dare, this Thanksgiving dare, you can leave a comment below, just sharing what the experience was like.  Did it take great mental preparation?  Did you learn something new about their interest?  Did you learn something new about the person?  Was it fun to learn a little about their interest?  Was it scary to make a point to talk to them?  Were you able to release expectation, if only for one encounter?  In the end, was this challenge helpful to you or to the person in any way?

Don’t tell us who the person is, just what you learned and experienced through this intentional time of learning about and interacting with them.

As an incentive to challenge you to this dare, Tiffanie from Miscarriage Blankets will provide one participant here with a beautiful keepsake like this darling little baby in the photo.  You will be able to customize yours, with skin tone color, and pink or blue details.  The winner will be chosen on Monday, November 26.  Even if you don’t have Thanksgiving plans this week, you can commit to this dare.

In thankfulness of your baby, can you find strength to see joy in places (and people) unexpected?

 

Tiffanie’s even going to serve on the judge’s panel throughout the Grief Dare, along with Christy from H.A.I.L. helping determine the grand prize winner at the end!

While this example dare is open to any participants, please be sure to officially register to be a part of the upcoming Grief Dare, so you’ll be entered for a chance to win some incredible prizes!

You can use this yellow button for a special discount on your registration, through this Thanksgiving weekend ONLY!



The winner for the Thanksgiving Dare is Anna!

Teeny Tears

Giveaway!

November is National Prematurity Awareness month, and just like families who endure loss and who find significance in October, this month is a tender time for families who’ve experienced the need to utilize the NICU.

November 17 is also World Prematurity Day.

This is a very special giveaway, one that is going to work a little differently than most.

In this giveaway, you will choose a hospital to have beautiful, darling, teeny diapers donated to.

Megan, the founder of Teeny Tears, shares her experience both with needing the care of the NICU, and of loss, here:

As we came closer and closer to Dex and Crew’s third birthday, I began searching for a project that would honor Dex’s memory and give purpose to my grief. I was looking for something economical, meaningful, and within my limited sewing abilities.
When my sister showed me what her friend Arah had started making for the local hospitals in Spokane, I knew immediately that I had found my answer. My heart told me that there was no turning back. I would make tiny little diapers for stillborn micropreemie infants and those that pass away in the NICU. With full support from Arah, we launched Teeny Tears last November…

please click here to read her whole story

All you have to do to enter this giveaway, is comment below, telling us:

What surprise or unexpected support did you receive during your pregnancy loss or NICU experience?

Please be sure to include in your comment, the name and city of the hospital you want the diapers donated to, and who your entry is in honor of – your own baby(ies) and/or others.  A tip: if it is a labor and delivery hospital, it will be more likely to receive the diapers than say, a children’s hospital.  If for any reason your chosen hospital can’t accept the diapers, a hospital within that community may be selected.

Two random names will also be drawn to receive one teeny diaper sent to you.

Winners (all three) will be selected on Monday, December 24 – Christmas Eve.

 

Each family receives two teeny diapers – one to keep as a momento, and one for the baby to wear.  Click the photo to watch Megan’s story.

More Ways to Get Involved

If making tiny diapers for precious babies is something you want to learn more about, please visit the Teeny Tears “How you can help” tab.

You can get involved by sewing, or by donating to Teeny Tears to help support families.

You can even start your own Stillbirthday Love Cupboard, get a group together, and make Teeny Tears diapers!  Your own Love Cupboard could be featured on the Teeny Tears list!  What a fantastic way to approach the holidays and the New Year, by making a commitment to get involved and joining in this way to help other families.

Did you know?  Preemie awareness is a pink and blue ribbon, just like the pregnancy and infant loss ribbon.

This giveaway is now closed.  There were a couple of hospitals nominated that Teeny Tears are already in the process of supporting, and a couple of duplicate comments, so those were taken out for a fair drawing.  The location selected is Akron General Medical Center in Akron, Ohio.

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Infant Shrouds

 

 

 

Kinkara creates custom infant burial shrouds exclusively for our SBD Chaplains to purchase.

 

Bereaved Veteran

My dad served in Vietnam.

Horror stories of this misunderstood war, and of my misunderstood father, are all I have.

My memories of him include violence.

Fear.

Pain.

I was raised in foster care because of the damage he and other members of my family inflicted on me.

Today, he is dead.

Today, I am a woman.  A wife.  A mother.

But when I think of him, I still feel like a little girl,

a little girl who longs for her daddy’s attention, and affection.

As I draw on the few memories I have of him, I wonder if he loved me.

I imagine,

what it must have been like.

To enter a war, so poorly trained as those young men – boys – were.

To enter a war, so poorly prepared

To see devastation, to feel devastation, to see death.

Then, to come home to America, and have such an insensitive homecoming.

To be disregarded, disrespected, discarded, by the very nation, even by the very family, he represented and defended.

I imagine his unsupported overwhelm, his hurt, his rejection, turning to anger and resentment.

His inability to recieve the validation, compassion and respect he deserved and needed, turning, festering, into rage of the deepest scale.

I remember being his little girl, in a small, suffocating world of lonliness and pain.

I remember wishing I could have a daughter someday, to show them – show my family, show my dad – how to do it right.

Show them how to love, how to be a good parent.

Today, as a woman, as a wife, as a mother,

I remember that my parents had three boys, then a stillbirth, then me.

And so here I sit, as a woman, a wife, and as a mother, with the same feelings my dad faced.

Stillbirthday is a headstone.  A place where I can come to remember my child, who died.

But this very thing I have crafted out of my own broken heart, in defense of all broken hearted families, has been attacked, lied about, stolen, and ignored.

My homecoming here is not always a welcoming one.

Misinformation and silence is thrust at grieving mothers and fathers instead of the reality that all mothers deserve respect and validation.

Parents find this place long after the most precious mements they had are already gone.

My own grief experience has been gauged against my involvement with stillbirthday, the memorial I have erected for my child and for all children gone too soon.

I have been left feeling defeated  and abandoned.

And now I have an idea of what my dad was left with.

He saw devastation.  Felt devastation.  Saw death.

Then had three boys, one stillbirth, and then a little girl.

And, so did I.

Now, humbly, mercifully, and heartbreakingly, I cry.  I beg for release from this overwhelming burden of rejection, isolation, and loneliness.

I taste the temptation to retaliate.  To close up.  To hate.

Unlike my dad, I resist.

I know what it’s like, to wonder if he ever loved me.  To have memories of him saturated in fear and confusion instead of forgiveness and endurance.

My miscarried baby would by one, this week.  One year old.

My grief is changing, but it’s not over.  As I feel the pressure mount to move on, in a moment of vulnerability I seek to be transparent as I tell you, I am a bereaved mother.

I am a little girl, without a daddy.  In his stead are haunting memories and a lifetime of yearning.

I am a mother, without one of my children.  In his stead are fleeting memories and, a lifetime of yearning.

I yearn for validation, for love, for peace.

For mothers and fathers all over the world to receive the support they deserve and need, when they deserve and need it, through stillbirthday.

For mothers and fathers who’ve seen devastation, felt devastation, seen death, to have this safe place to come home to.

For the war against healing to be over.

Please, tell people about stillbirthday.  They need resources and knowledge prior to the death and birth of their child, the deepest love and dignifying care during the darkest days of their entire lives, and  a proper, respectful, supporting and validating homecoming as they emerge, somehow, afterward.

You have no idea the impact that can have on their life – and others.

 

 

 

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.