Archives for September 2013

Beckett’s Story

Told by: Jami

Babies aren’t supposed to die.  We did everything “right”.

 

We met, fell in love, had a big beautiful wedding, lovely home, great jobs, bright future, the perfect environment to bring a baby into. We had everything…and then we found out in 9 months we were going to have you! Our lives were full of so many good things, our hearts were full of joy and anticipation.

My husband Nick and I had planned to start our family in the summer of 2011. We got pregnant right away and were ecstatic just as quickly. As soon as I looked down at the two bright pink lines on the pregnancy test staring up at me, my heart was instantly in love with this little growing person inside of me. My pregnancy was perfect, flawless. My doctor often mentioned that I was “boring” because everything was so great. I was careful to take excellent care of myself and my little growing peanut.

40 weeks passed in the blink of an eye and I was feeling great as my due date rolled around; Friday, April 20, 2012. During a casual lunch on Friday the 20th, one of my co-workers said she was certain I’d go into labor that night. “You don’t look right”, she stated nonchalantly. I brushed her off, not wanting to get my hopes up. That was the last night I went to sleep with our hearts beating together.

My contractions started sometime in the middle of the night. I was awoken with more intense contractions about 3:30 am. Unsure of what to do, I walked. I tried a bath, I watched TV, I listened to music. Mostly I was just trying to rein in my excitement. You were coming and I was so anxious to meet you! Around 5:30 am my water broke while I tossed and turned on the couch in attempt to find a comfortable position to lie in. My immediate thought was, “I need to take a shower and get some dry clothes on.”, nevermind calling the hospital or feeling hurried. I was strangely calm and composed. Upon getting dressed my husband stirred and asked what I was doing. “My water broke about an hour ago…”, I said calmly. In a surge of panic he jumped up and rushed to me. I convinced him that there wasn’t a necessity for rushing and that he could go back to sleep while I called the hospital. With shaky hands I dialed the birth center. As expected, the nurse on the other end of the line urged me to come into the hospital immediately. We packed up the car and made the agonizing eight minute drive to the hospital, beaming with the thought that we would never step foot in our home again as just a family of two.

I was admitted to the triage area for monitoring. Poked, prodded, strapped down, and questioned, I laid there with my eyes screwed tight in attempt to control the growing contractions. Two back to back, I was helpless feeling as if I wasn’t going to get a break until this was all over. My only solace laid in the rhythmic beating of your heart on the monitor. Nick and I had plans to push through this birth without any pain medication for as long as I could bear, and I was desperately clinging to that plan. I was finally transferred to my birthing room at 10:30 am. Upon checking me, my wonderful angel of a nurse, Amalia, beamed when she discovered I was fully dilated. We agreed that I would start spontaneous pushing. I pushed, and pushed, and pushed some more. Exhausted, I kept picturing what your face would look like, the color of your eyes, whether you were a boy or girl. You were my motivation and I pushed, pushed, heartbeat, heartbeat, push, push, push. “You’re crowning”, said Amalia, “I need to call the doctor”. Nick lit up as he looked down at our baby’s head making its way out.

The following moments were a blur. The doctor rushed in with a concerned look. Oxygen was placed on my face. Nurses rushed in, doctors, more nurses, more panicked faces.

The doctor said something but I could only hear white noise. With the help of forceps, my son was pulled from my body. No breath, no heartbeat. Silence.

I looked at Nick. “Everything will be fine”, I assured him. I knew it wasn’t. Sad faces falling quickly all around the room. “We need to name him”, Nick said calmly. “Beckett, he looks like Beckett.” I nodded silently. The pediatric doctor came to me and Nick. She stated that they had done all they could, they were going to stop trying to resuscitate him. Just like that? Stop? The numbness set in.

Babies aren’t supposed to die. We did everything “right”.

We spend the day following Beckett’s 1:41 pm birth with him. I look back at photos from that day and gaze into my empty eyes. We couldn’t stand to see our son’s body stiffen and change color over the following hours, so we said our final goodbyes just before midnight that evening. I remember being so concerned about leaving him alone in the hospital room as we left. I swaddled him tight and gave him a final kiss. A final kiss until I see him in Heaven someday.

Minutes, hours, days, weeks. They were all a blur. People, flowers, cards, calls. I could care less. Nick and I came home to a cold and empty house, still a family of two. I was broken.

Nick and I opted for having an autopsy done on Beckett following his death. Every single excruciating day of the six weeks we waited for the results was torture. Nothing. There was no reason for his death. The autopsy was ruled “inconclusive” and gave me no peace, no closure. I have forced myself to stop torturing my mind with the “whys” and the “what ifs”. I have resolved that I will never know…

I was 28 years old. I’d lost my baby, my first and only child.

Losing Beckett has changed me, tested me, shaped me, forced me to grow. My marriage has been tested and proved to be a rock in my life. Beckett’s life and death will not be in vain. I cling to the belief that everything happens for a reason and one day I will have the privilege of being used to help someone else grieving a loss.

My angel Beckett James has been looking over us ever since he left this Earth on Saturday, April 21, 2012. He sent us his baby sister only six weeks after his death. Just two and a half months into my grieving process I discovered rather unexpectedly that I was expecting again. I cried, I laughed, I panicked, I worried. My pregnancy was littered with an array of rollercoaster emotions. Finally, on February 25, 2013, Adelaide Grace was brought into this world after eighteen months of pregnancy. I held my breath until I heard her first cry. Tears flowed and flowed out of me and I grieved the loss of Beckett and the cries from him I was brutally deprived of.

In my naiveness, I thought having a new baby would take away the hole in my heart from losing Beckett. My heart has joy from the beautiful life Nick and I have, but a piece of my heart will always be with Beckett in Heaven.

Someday I will see you again, son. Someday I will kiss those chubby cheeks and smile when you call me “mommy”. Until then, I long desperately for those moments.

“Heaven blew every trumpet and played every horn

on the wonderful, marvelous night you were born.” –Nancy Tillman

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My Daughter was Ordained

Told by: Katie

This is my miscarriage story. When we found out I was carrying our third child after only one cycle of not preventing pregnancy, we were thrilled! My husband said it is pretty awesome, but also pretty ridiculous, how fast I can get pregnant (our second child was also conceived in our first cycle of trying.) After two boys with my red hair and fair skin, I was really hoping for a girl with my husband’s dark features. I didn’t start prenatal care right away since it was so early–I got my first faintly positive test at 10 days after ovulation–and I wasn’t sure if I would be able to afford a midwife this time around or go with the doctor I had seen before. I was 10 weeks, 5 days when I went to my first prenatal appointment. This being my third pregnancy, my bump was already starting to show, at least to me, and I brought my boys with me since I was pretty sure we would be able to hear the heartbeat at that point.

I love my doctor’s office…family practice, and very small. The one nurse had pulled my records earlier and looked over them so she was familiar with what we had and hadn’t wanted with my last pregnancy. My doctor came in and got more info from me, and did a pelvic exam. She told me my uterus was right on for the date of conception I had given her, and the mood was so joyful and excited! I was thrilled to be in that office again and couldn’t wait for my doctor to pull out her Doppler so we could take a listen to our sweet little one.

My 5-year-old asked “Where’s the cold jelly?” since I had told him about how the doctor would listen to the baby’s heartbeat. I am always just a little nervous when the doctor first puts the Doppler on my stomach, just for a few seconds until she finds the baby. This time, it was taking longer than usual (I don’t have a tilted uterus, and my babies have always been more than willing to be found), and she was having to press harder to check further and further toward my back. It was getting painful. My son asked when we would hear the baby’s heartbeat and I just had to ask him to be patient. Finally, the doctor pulled away and told me gently that she should be able to find a heartbeat at this stage in the pregnancy. She knows that we have declined ultrasounds in the past, and told me we didn’t have to do one, but that it would answer our questions.

I agreed, got dressed, and the nurse moved me to the ultrasound room. The doctor came in, turned out the lights and turned on the monitor overhead so I could see what she was seeing. When she put the ultrasound wand to my stomach, and moved it back and forth a bit, I was confused to see…..nothing. I haven’t ever had an ultrasound, but I’ve seen enough pictures to know that there should be at least a little white blob inside the sac…my baby. But there was nothing.

She then told me that she was very sorry, it looked like I had experienced a blighted ovum…the baby stopped developing very early and now the sac was empty. My body still thought I was pregnant, but I would be having a miscarriage.

I felt pretty numb right then.

I didn’t immediately get upset because it just didn’t feel quite real yet. My son said he just wanted to know what was going on with the baby, but I just couldn’t tell him. I had blood drawn that afternoon, and a few days later, and at a followup appointment my doctor confirmed that my hCG levels were falling. She gave me the options for miscarrying, and I told her I wanted to let it happen naturally if at all possible. The next two weeks seemed to drag on. My belly was still growing, and getting harder to hide. Only a few people even knew I was pregnant, and I didn’t want anyone to notice me growing and ask questions.

I hated that I felt like I had to hide my belly…I have always loved being pregnant and growing with my baby. It was a very difficult time, feeling pregnant, looking pregnant, being “technically pregnant,” but knowing my baby was already gone. After spotting for about 5 days, at what would have been 12 weeks 6 days along, I started having stronger cramps, and heavy bleeding. I called my husband home from work, and that night I miscarried. I’m glad I allowed my body to do its own thing when it was ready, and that I was at home. It wasn’t nearly as horrible or painful as I was expecting. All in all I had about 5 hours of heavy bleeding and clots, and then it started to slow down.

My husband was with me the whole time, and our boys were in bed, so it was a peaceful, private experience that gave me the chance to say goodbye to my baby.

It was finally completely real….my little one was gone. I am still grieving….still missing my baby, but also hopeful for the future, and hoping that by sharing my story I can give comfort to someone else someday. Before I learned I was going to have a miscarriage, I had been having baby girl dreams, and feeling that this baby would be a girl. I named my baby Moriah Faith. Moriah means “ordained/considered by God” and I know my sweet little one was indeed considered by her creator from the moment she was conceived and through her brief, brief life.

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The Silent Birth of Samuel Anthony

Told by: Jessica

 

 


www.onetruemedia.com

 

 

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The Birth of My Son

Told by: Anonymous

A year and 3 months ago I had a beautiful little boy; he was born way too early because I had an incompitant cervix.

This means my cervix is weak and can’t hold baby so I have to get a stitch put in every time I get pregnant. I went into labor with him on mine and my husbands wedding night.  It was devastating.

I didn’t know what was happening until they told me I was in labor and I could possibly lose my baby.  All I could do was cry and sit there and hold my belly praying that him possibly dying would not be true, that maybe this was a bad dream. I was in the hospital for three days trying to keep myself from going into labor with him for the second time but nature decided other wise and I ended up having him on May 21,2012.

He was 20 weeks and 5 days, he weighed 12 oz. and was 14 inches long.

To anyone who is married and thinks they can’t get through this together it is possible.  My husband and I are still married and we now have a beautiful little girl who has a big brother looking after her.

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His Family of Strong Men

Told by: Stacey

I was thrilled to have made it past the 8 week mark where I had had my 3 miscarriages. Although the thrill and excitement was all too suddenly cut short. At 17 weeks 3 days I woke early in the morning and got out of bed and my waters had gone.  We went straight to the hospital where it was confirmed and I was put on antibiotics and sent home and told to go back if I developed any signs of infection or anything else.

Well I got home and went to bed, that evening I woke with a very high temperature so went back to the hospital and was put on IV antibiotics. That evening they couldn’t find our little angel’s heartbeat, this was confirmed the following morning on ultrasound.

I went into labour naturally and delivered our perfect sweet little angel Ayrton Michael. We spent several hours with him cuddling him, talking to him and taking photos.

The following morning we saw him for the final time before he was taken down to the mortuary to await collection to take to the funeral directors. My dad was one of my heroes through all this, he came down the day after I gave birth and stayed with me and my fiancé in the hospital over night then the following morning he drove the 150 miles back home with Ayrton in the back of the car.

My dad helped us arrange the funeral and everything, I couldn’t think straight to do simple tasks never mind arrange my baby’s funeral. We had a beautiful service at the graveside for Ayrton and he was buried in the same cemetery as some of our family members are.

My fiancé was my rock through all of this and still continues to be, even 16 months after we lost our precious angel I still have bad days.

But now we have our rainbow, my little miracle to keep us going and thinking positive. The pregnancy with Isaac wasn’t easy I was terrified and involved many scared trips to the hospital which all thankfully were false alarms but finally he arrived safely 2 weeks early. I love you so much Ayrton and we’ll never forget you. In loving memory of our precious boy Ayrton Michael born sleeping 12/04/12.

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Calla’s Story

Told by: Julianne

I had known I wanted to have three children for a long time. After the birth of my second child, I quickly started feeling the desire to start working on a third. My husband, Titus, wasn’t quite ready, so we waited for (what felt like an eternity to me) three years before we started trying. It took us about eight months to conceive. When I finally did, we were elated. My pregnancy was very much like my other two. I experienced extreme morning sickness to the point where I could hardly eat. I lost 12 pounds in the first trimester. Some nights, I had to carry around a spit cloth because I would salivate so much (the sensation you get right before you throw up). The second trimester, the circulation in my right leg went haywire and I developed awful, painful varicose veins all up and down my leg. Calla started kicking at about 16 weeks, and she didn’t stop. I felt her all the time. By about 20 weeks, I started having Braxton-Hicks contractions with her movements. This happened with both my other pregnancies, so I wasn’t worried about it. All my checkups were normal, my ultrasounds looked great, my risk numbers were fine- we weren’t worried about anything. When we found out we were having a girl, I cried. I had always wanted a girl, and this felt perfect.

We chose the name “Calla” because of the significance of that flower to our relationship (both Titus and I love calla lilies) and “Pearl” for Titus’s paternal grandmother.

I can’t remember the specifics of what happened the week before the birth. I’ve racked my brain to try to pinpoint the day and time that something went wrong, but there are just no specifics. I remember the Friday a week before, I had gone in for a checkup, and everything was fine. I heard her strong heartbeat along with mine- all was well. After that, it’s all fuzzy. The Thursday (three days) before, I had gone out with some friends from a book club. The book we read, ironically, was about a girl whose friend delivers a stillborn baby. I remember enjoying our conversation, eating way too much, and having a stomachache as a result. Nothing out of the ordinary, though.

The next day, our family joined another family for a short trip to a cabin on a lake in the Adirondacks. We swam and lazed around for most of the day, and at one point, we went out on a motorboat. That was the first mental note I made that Calla wasn’t moving. “The water is soothing to her,” I thought. Later that night, we barbequed, and I ate way too much food, which triggered lots of BH contractions. Since for so long, I had been associating the BHs with her movements, I didn’t consciously realize anything was wrong. We left early the next morning. After we had been driving for a few minutes, it hit me- I hadn’t felt her move that whole trip. In fact, I couldn’t remember the last time I felt her move. I thought that it was probably because we had been moving rhythmically so much- the long car drive there and back, the long boat ride- maybe she was just sleepy. I spent much of the car ride trying to “wake her up” by poking and moving my belly around, but nothing. We stopped for lunch in Litchfield (a place I can’t bring myself to go to anymore). I thought that since we weren’t driving anymore, surely she’d wake up and start kicking, so I parked myself at a restaurant, and while Titus took the kids to play at a field, I worked hard at it, poking, slapping, hitting my belly. I must have looked like a fool, but I was beginning to feel desperate.

Finally, Titus came back with the kids, our food came, and we ate. I was inwardly panicking. I had my oldest son talk to her through my belly as I poked. Suddenly, there was a kick. Just one, but it was some kind of sharp movement. I felt a huge sense of relief. She just wanted to hear her brother! Little did I know that that was the last time I would feel her. I’ve often wondered if that was her last call for help, trying to get my attention. Or was it just a muscle spasm that tricked me into feeling better? We finished up there, went to ice cream, shopped at some antique stores, and just enjoyed the time with our kids. On the last stretch of the drive, I kept expecting her to move more, but there was nothing. Sleeping again?

We got home and went through the usual busyness of unpacking the car, starting the laundry, cooking dinner, taking the dog for a walk, getting the kids in bed, etc. Titus went out to get some work done in the studio, but I know he was feeling nervous too. I was alone finally, and I dedicated the evening to waking Calla up.

I lay down on the sofa, which was where I always would feel her, and I waited. I watched a movie. Nothing. Finally, I called the midwife. It was a Sunday night, and I hated to disturb her. I’m the type of person who will NEVER call my doctor after hours. I felt terribly guilty, but I was beginning to realize that something was really, genuinely wrong. My midwife, Elise, told me to drink something super sweet and sugary quickly, and then to lie down on my left side for 20 minutes and count kicks. The sugar rush was supposed to wake up the baby. I did what she told me to… three times. Nothing.

I can’t begin to describe the feelings of denial that happened at this point. It is really remarkable how the brain works around reality. In hindsight, I should have rushed to the hospital when we were in the Adirondacks and I had the first inclination that something was wrong. But I couldn’t begin to accept and act on a reality that I didn’t choose or want. So I kept making up reasons for why it was happening. After the third time of drinking chocolate milk and lying down for 20 minutes, I called my husband. He came home. I called Elise back and told her that nothing had happened. She told me that I should go to the hospital to get checked out, just in case. She said that it was really normal to experience something like this, and that for my peace of mind, I should go. I flipped out. Not because of fear, but because it was almost midnight, and that would mean inconveniencing more people. I was tired, and I wanted to sleep. I would have to go to the hospital and wait there forever, only to have someone smile at me patronizingly and tell me everything was fine. Couldn’t it wait until morning, I asked her? But no, she wanted me to go right then, for my peace of mind. Then she asked me who would take the kids. I told her that Titus would stay home with them, but she insisted that he go with me. So, I grudgingly called my friend Asha, who was to be my doula during the birth. Thankfully, she was awake, and she came over and hung out on my couch. We left for the hospital.

Arriving at the hospital, (and still in complete denial,) I remember noticing how empty it was. I need to make sure I go into labor at night, I told Titus, remembering how chaotic it was to get valet parking and get set up the last time I went into labor. I chit-chatted with the friendly woman who checked me in and wheeled me to the exam room. It seemed so empty, and I was sure that whoever would do my exam would be upset that I woke her up from sleeping in some on-call room. She was really friendly, though, and as I profusely apologized to her for my presence, she reassured me that she did several of these a day and that there was nothing wrong with just checking to make sure things were ok. I lay down on the bed, and she put the stethoscope on my belly. The second she did, I knew. Only one heartbeat. My heartbeat. She moved it to another spot, and another. She asked for my finger to check my pulse, to see if she was hearing my heartbeat or the baby’s.

I already knew what was unfolding.

But she wasn’t sure- at one point she told me that it was the baby’s heartbeat, but that it was really slow. I knew that it was just my own heartbeat, beating faster than it probably had ever beat. She called for the on-call OB, and within seconds, the tiny exam room I was in was full of doctors and nurses, all silent. The OB hooked up the sonogram and quickly put it up to my belly. The picture came up, and confirmed the worst.

She was completely still, no movement. No heartbeat. Gone.

Everyone left the room, and we were alone. I was bombarded with emotions. Crazy grief, denial, not even beginning to understand what lay ahead. Fear, confusion, devastation, terror. My baby is dead? I felt all of those at once. And then I realized that Titus was experiencing it too, and I felt like I needed to protect him. “We’re going to be ok, we’re going to be ok,” I told him, not knowing how NOT okay we would be for a very long time.

Maybe that was my way of dealing with that moment- to look into the distant future, as a way to calm myself in the midst of the storm that was already occurring. Then we were just silent. Elise came in next. She just held me for a long time. It then dawned on me that Calla would have to come out. She would have to be born. She talked to me about what would happen next, and we made some decisions about how the birth would happen.

I would be induced, starting immediately after the blood tests and the amnio, with a tablet on my cervix every 4 hours until labor occurred. She prepared me for what some of the things I might feel would be, physically and emotionally. She talked to me about what the body would be like at this stage in pregnancy. And, she just sat with me and cried. After that, we were moved to the delivery room. First they did an amnio, then they took a ton of blood from me to begin testing to find out what went wrong. Finally, they started the induction, and then we were alone to wait. We tried to sleep that first night, but we couldn’t stop crying. At some point, my angel nurse, Brenda, came in (one of many). She just hugged us, talked to us, and cared for us like a mother. She had all the right things to say. There are just certain people who come through your life for an instant, and they are exactly who you need to be with at that exact moment.

Brenda’s compassion and love carried us from that time between the amio and the birth. During that waiting time, it’s fuzzy. I don’t remember many specifics- just that a few important people were there. Asha, my friend and doula, and Michelle, another dear friend, came and sat with me for hours while I was in labor. And amazingly, while there were so many tears, there was also some laughter. And there was just regular girlfriend bonding. Somehow, that was exactly what I needed- to have some levity in the midst of that horrible day.

Labor was slow. I had decided with Elise that I would use any method of painkiller (drugs, epidural, etc) to not feel physical pain with this birth. As soon as I started feeling some progression of contractions, I asked for a painkiller. It made me loopy, sleepy, and nauseated, but at least the pain was better. While talking with my friends that day, I remember suddenly in the middle of the conversation grabbing the barf bucket and dry heaving, then being fine. It provided some comic relief. I got a new nurse that night- Rachel. Amazingly, she was friends with about half the people I know (including Asha and Michelle) but I had never met her. Having a nurse that knew people close to me and could personally connect with me was another incredible experience for me. It made me feel like I was being divinely cared for.

That night, nothing had progressed. I had received my 5th tablet on my cervix. After 24 hours without any real rest, I knew I needed to try to sleep. I dozed fitfully for awhile, but then I woke up somewhere in the middle of the night to the sound of the woman in the next room to me. She was moaning in the pain of labor, and shortly after I heard the cry of a living baby. A few hours later, I woke up suddenly- something was happening. I got up to use the bathroom, and it was evident that labor was starting. I woke Titus up, and he got Asha and Elise. We called for the anesthesiologist. Elise checked me, and I was dilated to 6. The contractions were moving quickly and strongly. The anesthesiologist showed up and gave me the epidural. After he left, Elise left too, telling Asha to get her if I started feeling the need to push.

Within 10 minutes (and before the epidural kicked in), I was ready to push. Elise came back and confirmed that it was time. I pushed only for a few minutes, and then she was there. Elise put her in my arms immediately. I felt the pain of childbirth completely- it wasn’t until after she was born that my legs went numb from the epidural. But I was so glad that I felt her- she deserved to be felt, and I would feel that pain over again in a heartbeat to feel her again.

Little Calla Pearl was so beautiful. She had these amazing, full, red lips. She just looked like a tiny baby who would cry any second, or open her eyes and move around. Though I knew she was dead, I felt enormously protective of her little body- she needed to be dressed and wrapped in a blanket.

First, she was weighed on the scale and measured. Then, we put her in a dress and wrapped her in the hospital blanket. After that, we just held her, talked to her, and cried over her the rest of the night. In the morning, I knew I had to start facing the world. I had asked for no visitors beside Asha and Michelle, but it was time to see people. I wanted Calla’s presence to be affirmed by as many people who were close to us as possible.

First, Titus called my parents to come and to bring the boys. This was the hardest part for me- facing my parents, knowing that they were so devastated by this loss and so worried about me. They came and held Calla for awhile in private- I couldn’t bear to be around. My mom had knitted a blanket for her, which we wrapped her in. (We sleep with that blanket every night now.) Then, we had to tell the boys what had happened. That their baby sister, who they were so excited to welcome into the world, had died. We were shocked by their level of understanding and grief. They were 3 and 5 at the time, and the depth of their grief matched ours. We let each of them hold Calla.

This was their first experience with death. We felt that it was important that they could see their sister to give them as concrete an experience as possible. I treasured those few moments when we were all together in the room- the first and last time. After they left, some more friends came. They held Calla, rocked her, and talked to her as well. Each person who held my baby holds a special place in my heart. They are the people who witnessed her being, came alongside me, and embraced the unspeakable. They cried over her, and they comforted me in their doing so. They are also the people who supported me throughout the long days, weeks and months that followed. I can’t imagine how alone I would have felt without them. Around noon, I was moved to a new room, up in the cancer ward away from all the new babies and postpartum moms. We chose to bring Calla with us- we wanted to spend as much time with her as we could before they took her away. I remember I was so physically exhausted (going on day 3 with hardly any sleep and having given birth) that I couldn’t even focus on what people were saying- I just fell asleep when doctors were trying to talk to me. So I finally was alone and slept with my baby next to me.

Once, a food service worker came into my room to bring me a meal, and she saw Calla next to me in the blanket. She looked so confused, and said, “is that a baby?” and I answered that it was. She said, “oh, how cute!” and walked away.

I remember sleeping, and I remember visitors. At one point, there were about 5 friends in the room with me, and a friend who is a surgeon at the hospital came in. She cracked some crass joke that had me laughing so hard, I cried. I was so thankful for that joke. I had the opportunity to share genuine laughter with my baby. Thank you, Tamara. By the time evening came, I knew it was getting close to the time to say goodbye to Calla. Her little body wasn’t strong enough to be held much longer. Titus had spent several hours with the boys, and was supposed to head back to the hospital once a sitter came. I called him to speed the process. He finally came back, and we spent another hour or so with her, holding her and crying over her. And then came the agonizing moment when we handed her over to the nurse. We said goodbye to our precious baby, and then collapsed in grief on the bed. I spent two more nights in that room. I could have gone home, but I didn’t feel like I could face the real world yet.

I knew that life was going on without me, and that I would have to go back to all the things that needed to get done, and yet I felt so unable to step out of that room. I lay in bed, cried a ton, watched the panoramic sunsets over the city from my 14th floor window, and tried to find a place of safety and peace there. Elise came several times, and just sat with me and talked with me for long periods of time. She was so amazing- she had arranged to be with me through the whole labor and birth process, and then she just kept coming back to check in on me. She is one of the superheroes of my story. I had asked my mom to get me a tight sports bra to help with compression for when my milk came in. After I had been wearing it for a few hours, I suddenly realized that I didn’t want to stop my milk from coming in.

I had read in a book about these women who had donated their breastmilk to a baby whose mother had died in childbirth. I knew breastmilk donation was something that happened, but I had absolutely no idea how it worked. So, I called Elise to help me find out what to do. She contacted the lactation consultant, who found a milk bank near Boston. I learned that you can donate your breastmilk to prematurely born babies, whose digestive tracts cannot handle formula. I learned that doing so saves babies’ lives, and that there is a constant shortage of breastmilk. Since nursing was easy with my first two babies and I was a pro at pumping, I knew that this was going to be the redemption for my story. I would donate Calla’s milk to help save some other babies’ lives.

I did finally leave the hospital, and it was hard. And so was every other little thing that I had to do after that. I found solace in donating my milk- it provided some connection to Calla for me. But most everything else sucked. I tried really hard to put on a normal face and go about daily life. But I felt like I was living life just barely above the surface of water, and that any little second I could go under and be down there for a long time. The autopsy results didn’t come back until November. They were inconclusive, meaning that there was nothing they found that could have caused her death.

I’m a different person now. Maybe not for the better. I’m still in the grieving process, and I have really bad days. When I’m down, I’m really down. I obsess over things like food and chemicals that never bothered me before. But what I can say is that in Calla’s birth, I experienced a depth of emotion that changed me. I experienced the care and compassion of strangers and dear friends in a way that I am so grateful for, and that is an example for me to follow. I don’t want to go back to being the person I was before, because I feel things more deeply now, and I am connected to a whole new world of people through this event who have made my life more meaningful. And, I am so much closer to my husband and children because of this. I’m putting this story out there in the world because it helps me. I think about my baby every minute of every waking hour- she is ingrained in all of my thoughts.

Everyone handles grief differently- Titus has a much harder time talking about her. But for me, she is ever-present, and to NOT talk about her is worse. I want to affirm her existence on earth, her existence as my daughter. I want people to know about her. We continue to hold out hope for another baby in our family. But whether or not that happens, Calla will always be cherished as our daughter, as a sister, as granddaughter. We miss her so much.

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Born into the Arms of His Daddy

Told by: Deborah
I am now ready to share my Alfie’s story.

It all started on Tuesday, October 18. It was my 3 week of maternity leave and I was just about getting used to it, but this day I had to rest a lot. I had this constant aching back pain but I thought nothing of it. I was 35 weeks pregnant I was supposed to feel uncomfortable (wasn’t I?). Later that night I knew I was in labour but I didn’t want to go to hospital too early so I had a long warm bath (like they tell you to) and counted the time between the contractions but with him doing somersaults in there it was getting quite difficult.

Around 2am (19/10/11), I went to hospital where we were left in a room for what seemed like hours before I was led to another room where they got me settled on the bed and tried to hook me up to monitors to check on little Alfie. It was only at this point I started to worry, as she couldn’t find his heartbeat (Matthew says he looked at her face and she knew… and at that point, deep down, so did he). She scurried off to find another piece of equipment but still had no joy so she called for the doctor who did an ultrasound. He then confirmed that Alfie had indeed died inside me. In that single moment, all our hopes and dreams were gone. Our whole world had come crashing down around us and there was nothing we could do about it.

I was sick constantly for a good hour after this news, but then I was offered morphine to help me deal with the labour pains (which as I remember made me itch so bad, I asked for a wire brush). I remember the pains like it was yesterday but somehow it didn’t matter. I was more concerned with meeting my Alfie face to face, I had gone from uncontrollable wrenching to feeling very relaxed and serene. I was pressing the button for morphine more and more when Matthew went to make the phone calls (about 5/6 am). He returned about 20 minutes later still sobbing with the heartache of it all and I was angry at myself for being so calm, I was in a daze. About 6.30am, my mum and dad arrived with tearstained cheeks, my dad who rarely shows emotion had the look of a broken man. He looked so old (he’s only 49) and he hugged me the tightest he ever has, like he was afraid of losing me too. Matthew’s mum and dad appeared too. His dad looked so frail and broken too. In the pictures we have, he looked as though he were about to pass out.

Just a few short hours after this, at 9.21am, Alfie James Jackson was born silently into this world into the arms of his doting devastated daddy. I was so high from the morphine, I don’t actually remember the next hour or so. I was drifting in and out of consciousness for a while but I had lots of pictures of the time my memory forgets which helps to fill in the blanks.

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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.