Archives for March 2015

Linnea Mugford, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Bloomington, Indiana

email: LinneaMugford.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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Dettranay Martin, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Riverside & Inland Empire, California

email: DettranayMartin.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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Jessica Nash, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Mid North Coast, NSW, Australia

email: JessicaNash.SBD@stillbirthday.info

Certified in Psychological First Aid

 

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Casey Melancon, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Granbury Hood, Texas

email: CaseyMelancon.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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Caleb Adventure

Told by: Taylor

My husband, Jack, was traveling on business the day my dear sister-in-law, Semmelle, and I excitedly walked into my OB’s office for my 36 week appointment. She had never been to an ultra sound before, and I was so excited to show her a sneak peak of her new nephew. I met her at my mother’s that afternoon, where relatives were still visiting after throwing me a beautiful baby shower that weekend before. My cousins and I had stayed up until late the night of the shower unpacking gifts, laundering tiny clothes, and decorating the nursery while we ate chocolate cake, giggling like little girls.

Caleb was the first grandchild in both Jack’s and my side. After years of my fighting an extreme case of bipolar disorder and wondering if I would ever be well enough to bear my own children, we felt the world was celebrating with us as we prepared to welcome our victory child.

At first, they couldn’t find the heartbeat in the exam room. I became furious with the nurse, assuming she was inept. They brought in another nurse, and she, too, could not find the heartbeat. My OBGYN was called in. We were rushed to the ultrasound room as my OBGYN shouted orders to her receptionist to call her nanny and tell her she’d be late. I didn’t realize that anything could be that wrong until I heard the ultrasound tech gasp.

“What?!” I screamed. “THERE’S NO HEARTBEAT.” As I write this today—years later—I still cry.

I remember begging them to do an emergency c-section, kicking and screaming like a three year old, my sister’s face covered in agony. I remember leaving, with my dead baby still inside me, Semmelle driving me back to my parents’. I remember calling my husband’s family, knowing that Jack was somewhere in an airplane still believing that our baby would be born and live, knowing that I would have to be the one to tell him we were living a horror I had never even thought to imagine.

Shock makes some people crazy. Shock makes me sane, and I am able to see what is necessary and what is not. I am able to function and choose. I am able to get on the phone with my husband, while he is sitting on the airplane, and tell him his first son will be born dead. I am able to do that because he needs to stay on that plane and come home to me. I laid in my parents’ bed and waited, as well meaning, shocked relatives came in one at a time to tell me they loved me and rub my belly as they had done so many times throughout my pregnancy.

I laid in bed and prayed the Our Father and the Hail Mary over and over, because they were the only prayers that I could muster. I asked my mother if she thought I was unlucky. If I was cursed? I prayed Jack home to me, praying that he, too, would not be taken from me. Jack’s father greeted him at the airport and drove him to my parents’ home. He burst up the stairs to hold me in his arms, and we didn’t care who watched. We wretched. We held each other all night, knowing this will be the last night we would spend alone with Caleb.

We took a shower the next morning with my big pregnant belly and wept for the child we already loved so much. We gathered up every ounce of courage we had, and we made our way to the hospital. We had just toured the birthing center in our Labor and delivery class, so we knew right where to go. Our bag had already been packed, just in case Caleb had decided to come early. For me, before having children, labor and delivery seemed like a black hole that I would enter, having no idea how I would make my way out the other side. I was afraid of the pain, afraid of the risks involved, afraid that I might die. I had never considered that my child who had been checked and rechecked thoroughly throughout my pregnancy–and was certified healthy–could die. And I never dreamed what it could be like to face all of the fears of my first childbirth knowing that I would have to endure it all and leave the hospital without my child.

It was a day. An entire, 24-hour day. I was heavily drugged, as I had requested, with an epidural that left me entirely numb and very groggy. I spent the day with loved ones hovering over me when I opened my eyes, and kneeling next to Mary at the foot of Jesus’ cross every time I closed my eyes.

In both realities, I was in extreme pain, but with my eyes closed I was in the company of Jesus’ Mother. As He suffered, She suffered, and they both held me in my suffering. That day, as I lay in that hospital bed, I felt the most intense love being poured out upon me, into me by pure Mother love. In Her suffering, she begat love for Me, born of physical and spiritual travail. It entered my laboring heart and flooded my chest cavity. This love rested upon me for weeks, as I bore the physical pains of just giving birth without the joy of my baby to help me forget them.

Caleb Joshua was born at 6:27 pm on Wednesday, March 19th, 2008, in the middle of Holy Week. Time stretched before me like never before. There would be too many tomorrows without him in which I would be forced to dwell. Now was the only time to not fall asleep with exhaustion or miss one small dimple. Now was the time to make up for a lifetime of loves and hugs, kisses, baths, and songs. Those few hours would be the only ones I would ever spend with my son’s physical form, and I knew that it would most likely be a very long time until we would again be face to face. He was baptized by our beloved Father Ed and Deacon Bill. I bathed him, undaunted by his already decomposing form, and dressed him in his going home outfit. We took many pictures, but not enough. Our parents held him, and we held him and held him.

Time stood for me. And then, I looked at Caleb’s eyes and they were crying blood. We knew it was time. I gave the nurse my baby, and she brought me back the outfit I had him dressed in. They wheeled me out that night on because I refused to stay the night in a hospital without my baby. I howled crying from my room to the car, where Jack laid in the back seat next to me until I passed out from exhaustion. I woke up the next morning early in the guest bedroom at my parents’ house. I woke up without Caleb and started to wretch again. My sobs woke Jack up, and the two of us laid in bed and cried ourselves back to sleep . . .

We did everything we could for our son in the days following his silent birth. I went to the funeral home and picked out his casket, his burial plot. I went to the children’s boutique and bought him his final “going home” outfit. When the sales lady asked if it was a going home outfit, I doubled over in sobs. My mother then went ahead of me into every store we entered and told them what was going on and to please leave me alone.

I bought myself a hot pink dress to wear to his funeral, and his father a bright orange tie. It was Easter week; we refused to wear black.

We laid Caleb to rest the Tuesday after Easter, surrounded by loved ones all dressed in their best Easter clothes. Our siblings–his aunts and uncles–carried his casket down the middle aisle of our church while Jack and I walked hand in hand behind them. We celebrated his life, as well as the unending life he was already living in heaven. We have spent the time since Caleb’s death trying to move on. We have had two more beautiful sons and live as joyfully as we are able.

But the love for our first born son never fades, and my yearning for him has created a deep hole in my heart that is only satiated by my relationship with Jesus. Certainly, the shock and the intense pain has subsided. What is left is an ache–deep and unyielding–gnawing in the back ground of a beautiful life.

I still hang his stocking at Christmas, and his birth certificate will forever be displayed in our hallway upstairs with the tiny prints of his perfect feet. We celebrate his birthday every year by going on a “Caleb adventure,” with his brothers. We look forward to heaven more than ever before, but know our little Lebanite Warrior is in Good Hands, exploring the Promised Land, until we meet again. AMDG

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Eighteen

Told by: Dawn

On March 7 it will be 18 years that I lost my stillborn son, Patrick Nicholas. Not a day goes by that I don’t think about him or how he would be today. I have four children and one beloved angel in heaven, and he is loved just as much as his siblings and although he never got to breath even a breathe of life, he did not die in vain.

His short life will always be remembered and his legacy will always follow.

God Bless my little boy!!!!

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To the Visionaries

To the visionaries, the hopefuls, the longing-to-doers.

I’m not going to tell you about the issues – the many issues – of recreated wheels.

Of doing what someone is already doing and calling it being inspired.

Of the confusion and division this causes.

The distraction from the real work.

The work of bringing love.

 

Because with all issues considered, we still are all in this together, and truly, having options really is a very good thing.

So while you may be inspired by what one organization is already doing, and you’d like to duplicate it or glean from it – the many issues aside for a moment – there can be good to it.

But I offer you today, a word of encouragement.

 

If your ideas are not founded – founded – founded – in goodness, but if in the founding, there can be deceitfulness found, ill-intentions, selfishness – it will perpetuate the already very prevalent challenges in the work of bringing love.

The issues derived from a founding of works, items or services without a base of integrity mark an already war torn community of bereaved individuals, festers the already vulnerable wounds of division, of a belief in shame, and it parasitically consumes the energy and the hope that individuals have in themselves and in each other.

 

We are all touched by this.

 

If you are considering founding a work, an item or a service with an underlying premise of providing love, you will either be the one tempted to found without integrity, or my thoughtful friend, you will become subject to this issue, cast upon you by others.

You will be targeted.  Bullied.  Harassed.  Lied about.

You, and your works.

 

And it will have not a thing to do with your works.  Or you.
But, dear friend, if you are feeling a call to create something to bring love, it may be that you have yourself been wounded.

And as you read published works that depict you as every hurtful thing under the sun, words and names that touch you in intimate spaces that the accuser could not possibly know not of,  as if hate has been magnetized to your most vulnerable places, you will crumble.

You will fall.

You will weep.  You will wail.  You will be weak.  You will be broken.

And, in those most vulnerable spaces, you will see all of the things that you are guilty of, the sins that you have committed, the ways that you define yourself as bad, and in your most private space, you will believe that you are weak.  You will believe that you are broken.  You will believe that you are the monster that others have crafted you to be.

How can you possibly bring love to others, when you are even conveyed as so horrendous?  If someone could conjure up such articulately precise details of your ugliness, surely it must be true?  Believable, at least?

 

Oh, my warrior friend.  Before you enter the space I have been brought to and which I will be brought to again, hear me.

 

Listen.

Listen.

Listen to the message cast against you.  Listen to the accusation.  Listen to the person.

 

If you are called to be a love bringer, then you will need to bring love.

It’s that devastatingly impossible, and yet it’s just that simple.

 

Underneath the accusations, underneath the finely manicured words of hate, underneath the pretenses and the malice, there is a heart, that you have the privilege of speaking love to.  Not because you were inspired, not because enough time has passed from your last pain and so you’ve acquired a certain amount of words or phrases or things to say.  But literally from that broken place, from that crumbling, from that chasm, you have an opportunity that you might not be given at any other time.  The opportunity to hear.

 

Don’t miss it.  Don’t miss it.  Don’t miss it.

 

The accusations, the slander, the shaming, the projection of guilt, all of these are distractions.  Distractions from the work of bringing love.

 

And if in time your organization becomes a popular name in any context, know that the name itself becomes a target.  It becomes a hot button word.

It becomes a coat tail.

 

And the slander, the gossip, the hate thrust upon my coat tail has eaten into my heart.  Some days, I slip into the chasm because of the weight of what’s on my coat tail and I believe the lies.  I believe I am deserving of shame, of accusations, of falsehoods, of hate.  I believe I am deserving of hate.

And how can I ever be a love bringer, if I am deserving of hate?

 

You can try to shake it off, friend.

You can try to pick apart, to pull apart, to work with manicured precision to remove each weight of hate.

 

Or, you can simply stand.  If you don’t know how to walk forward with the weight eating at your heart, simply stand.

You will learn to walk again.

And every time you do, you will teach others that they don’t need to eat at hearts in order to stretch their own legs.

And you will bring love.

 

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Heather Schad, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving the Baltimore/DC area

email: HeatherSchad.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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Amie Salter, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Los Angeles California

email: AmieSalter.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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Kylie Saari, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving south central Minnesota

email: KylieSaari.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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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.