Coretta Owen, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving central Connecticut

email: corettaowen.sbd@stillbirthday.info

Coretta Owen is a happily married wife and mother to an Angel son and two young girls.  Before she began officially working as a Doula Coretta worked in the Social Services field with at-risk youth and teens in the Foster Care system.   Coretta is a CAPPA trained Labor Doula and facilitates a support group for Moms in her community.

 

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Discover what the SBD credentialed doula has achieved.

Roe v. Grief

Bereavement faces many challenges.

The strikingly contradictory response to our bereavement from our loved ones who espouse strong religious, political or other personal beliefs can be quite jarring and indeed, even traumatizing.

Loved ones who espouse strong pro-life beliefs, specifically if they are someone who would be the quickest to say that elective abortion is the murder of a child, when they shun a mother who has experienced miscarriage or stillbirth be telling her, in word or action, to quickly “get over it”.

Loved ones who espouse strong pro-choice beliefs, specifically if they are someone who would be the quickest to proclaim freedom of a mother’s rights and choices, when they shun a mother who is experiencing bereavement and attempting to deny her the freedoms and the rights to explore and express her bereavement journey, these rights and freedoms they otherwise believe all mothers to have.

Dear loved ones, we need you to have an eye to your own hypocrisy, because it is wounding.  Whether you are pro-life or pro-choice, it isn’t actually Roe v. Grief, and we need you to become pro-healing.

 

Big Brother Bentley

Told by: Stephanie

My firstborn son, Bentley Charles, was born sleeping October 18, 2011 weighing 6lbs 19 inches. He was born perfect, just simply had the cord wrapped around his neck three times. “Stephanie, I am sorry…” were the worst words that I ever heard the afternoon before we delivered Bentley.

My world was flipped upside down.

My husband and I were completely at a loss to how something so wrong could be wrong beings that I was 38 weeks. It did not make sense. I could not fathom those words- “no heartbeat“. Who could?

One thing I clung to even in those initial hours of learning that Bentley had already passed was our faith.  I had no clue why this was happening, and I did not understand why Bentley was chosen, and I certainly did not know where I was going to go from there, but I knew in the midst of the chaos–God was standing still. He was going to carry us through.

And, he has continued to carry us. Two months after burying Bentley, his father and I learned we were expecting our first rainbow baby. The pregnancy was another typical pregnancy, and Chase was born screaming looking exactly like Bentley just 10 months later, on August 7, 2012.

Life has been a rollercoaster of grief since Bentley died. And, my life is nothing what I imagined, but I believe that Bentley’s life has such a purpose.

He is my son, and he is waiting for me at Heaven’s gates. And, one day because of the promise of hope we will be a family all together when the time comes. Until then, I will be missing him every day, and we will have our ups and downs, but we will always come out on top because of Bentley.

God has blessed us again, expecting in November. We are anticipating a little girl this time. We are naming her Briella Caroline. Caroline is the femine form of Charles which is in honor of Bentley. Bentley and Briella will have the same initials and in a sense the same middle name. I know that Bentley is watching over his little sister. The anxiety never leaves after a loss, but each day I find another meaning to Bentley’s life. You can visit my blog which shares our life in a bit more detail.

Rainbow Milk Teether/Necklace

 

If you have faced post-loss lactation and have shared that milk:

  • with a surviving multiple
  • with a surviving older sibling
  • with another baby, either through pumping or direct wetnursing

Or if you are a mother nursing your subsequent baby, and this has brought you into a new facet of your grief, as you mourn that nursing relationship not had with your beloved, deceased baby.

Related: Stillbirthday has support for the various decisions regarding lactation.

Or if you are a bereaved mother who has not experienced lactation at all, but who wants a beautiful keepsake that honors your very real motherhood and all that you are grieving.

the Rainbow Milk library of stories and photos is a place to share your experience.  We’d be honored for you to share your stories and photos of nursing your surviving baby(ies), subsequent baby(ies) or pumping your milk to share it.

Related: the Universal Breastfeeding Symbol to honor our experiences.

Heidi Faith and her daughter, Evelyn, are both rainbow babies.

 Stillbirthday has a gorgeous rainbow nursing/teething necklace!

The Rainbow Milk nursing/teething necklace is a natural and beautiful accessory that will match every outfit you wear, and will give your surviving or subsequent baby a perfectly fitting grip to hold as he or she snuggles in close with you.

You can get your rainbow teether/nursing necklace, plus engraving, for only $28!

We’re calling this the Rainbow Milk necklace – as your subsequent/rainbow baby holds to the necklace, they can hold to their sibling’s name as well.

Sarah-Anne’s mama was pregnant with triplets and lost all 3 babies. All girls, they collectively refer to them as ‘Hope’. This photo was taken by SBD doula student Canary Lane Photography during Sarah-Anne’s first birthday party; it was rainbow-themed.

After you receive your necklace, have a photo taken of you wearing it while nursing or holding your subsequent/rainbow baby or surviving multiple, and send your photo to Heidi.faith@stillbirthday.info with “Rainbow Milk” as the subject line.  We’d love to see it!

View more items from the stillbirthday shop!

Price includes shipping within the U.S.   There is no tracking for international shipping to keep cost down.  If you can, ship to a US location who can then ship to you if your address is outside of the US.  Simply fill out the form and then use the yellow payment button. Maximum character count is 25.

 

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Please visit our additional post-loss lactation resources.

MamAmour birthing & breastfeeding dolls have created a special stillbirthday triad – a breastfeeding mother and baby (she’s wearing her Rainbow Milk necklace!), but also a smaller baby.  This baby who is specially made to be a little different represents so many of our journeys.  A baby born via miscarriage.  An “invisible” sibling.  However this triad may speak to your experience, MamAmour has this special set for you; just ask them for the stillbirthday set.

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Celebrating the Small Things

This is about womanly issues.

My youngest child, most likely my last child, is weaning.

And it’s left me feeling limp, small, and awkward.

I’ve recently begun to sort through my old clothes – my “pre-pregnancy” clothes.

Clothes I wore before I was pregnant with my child, before I knew my child, who was born in the first trimester.

Before I was pregnant with his younger sister, before I knew his younger sister, before I nursed his younger sister.

And as I find myself crying into old clothes that smell like my musty basement,

as I try on old clothes that somehow feel too young for the ways I’ve matured,

I feel limp, I feel small, I feel awkward.

My youngest child is growing to not be a baby anymore, and as I ache for the baby before her, this transition is a strange one.

I love pregnancy, and I love breastfeeding.  I love feeling so round and maternal and so close to God and so near the life purposes of my children and so a part of a beautiful lineage of mothers of antiquity.

I pull out from an old, lumpy black sack, a faded yellow tank top with thin spaghetti straps, and I pull it over my old-but-new-again, small, strapless bra.

The Love of my life, he gives me a wink, tells me I look cute and fresh.  I smile, and he embraces me.

He knows.  And he loves me through my journey.

I will hold onto his words as I nurture these feelings.  I will treasure from my most fertile season, the biggest memories, both wonderful and striking, I’ve gathered in my entire life.  I will hold onto hope that the season is changing into something that will be beautiful in a new way.  I will cling to these things, as I sort through these clothes.

I will learn to celebrate the small things – even when I am the one feeling small.

 

See also: The Minus Size Mother

This photo is by Angelica Garcia and resonates with me precisely.

It Still Takes a Village

For more support as a Loved One, please visit our Friends and Family section.

Protected: Learning to Celebrate

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When Faith Hurts

An open letter to those who have hurt me through their faith.

And an open letter to those whom I have hurt through mine.

 

When you can dare to muster up some hope in a bleak place, you are courageous.

When you can dare to scrounge up morsels of reasons to continue to hope when logic flat tells you there aren’t any reasons, when you are willing to flail in crud to extend to your very last reach for these reasons, arching for these colorful, illusive thin strings dangling just beyond your grasp, when you can believe enough in the clasp of the thread that you clamor for it, yet unattained –

this is faith.

 

I know what it’s like to be scrambling for my own life, and to hear the morsels of hope that others thought would be helpful.  Hurtful, is what it was.

Like on a Saturday night, my father snorting cocaine with his friends and then forgetting who his daughter was.

Like the next morning, when my father still groggy from the night’s events, is reciting the Apostles’ Creed at Catholic mass in his voice that, to the frail girl in the crumpled dress, held the power of life, and death.

 

Like when I was introduced to Unitarian Universalism by foster parents whom I adored greatly.  Given the sense of unity, the message of the chalice, the feeling that all we had to do was hope and that hope itself would simply sustain.

Like when my darling foster mother became pregnant, and in hindsight to wonder how long she might have even longed to conceive and to reflect on what I know now of the deep maternal feelings that can burst in pregnancy.  Nevertheless, like when I felt that now that there was a new baby, their real child, that I was in the way.   Not included, in heart.

 

Like when I believed him when he said he loved me.   I believed in vain that I could yet reach for hope to work things out.  And like when I fled into a battered women’s shelter for my life – and my child’s.

 

Legalistically and hypocritically performing ritual.

Offering unity that in the end feels conditional and therefore, divisive.

Telling lies.

 

This is what my first experiences with hope and faith have been.

And the two were so contorted, so jumbled up, I couldn’t tell one from the other.

 

My first pregnancy, I learned I was pregnant in a Planned Parenthood.  I walked into the clinic a messed up girl not sure where the next months would even bring me, but believing that if I could just conjure up some wishful thinking, I’d be alright.

I was so entirely detached of hope that I couldn’t even remember how to imagine it.

And I was told that I was pregnant.

And I walked out of that clinic totally transformed.

 

Hope, found me.

And even deeper still, I encountered faith.

Faith is holding your little one in your arms, in the back seat of a police car, getting dropped off at a battered women’s shelter.

 

But as my own faith grew, starting from those morsels of reasons, I didn’t know how to articulate it.  All I knew, was that I didn’t want to lose it.

And so I lurched myself at it, stomped all over it, rolled around in it, and thrust it onto everyone I knew.

I was, in hindsight, obnoxiously flinging my faith at people – because I was scared of losing it.

 

And then, my baby died.

And the morsels dried.

Hardened.

I couldn’t choke them down anymore.

 

The platitudes, the morsels, they were then, thrust into my face by people who I felt should have known better.

“God needed an angel.”

“Trust God’s plan is a perfect one.”

 

I detested these things.  I spat them out.

 

I was baffled, that my relationship with God was the only conversation of interest.  Why do you feel so in need of defending a great big God, when rather, here, right in front of you, is a broken woman?

 

So when someone learns that I am Christian, the guard can go up.  The assumptions.

The memories – of their own pain.

Because, so often – too often – faith hurts.

 

But the truth is, these behaviors of others, their thrusting, their platitudes, did push me away from them, from the people who I thought could carry some of the pain with me.  And these platitudes very really could have turned me from God.

But I decided that a faulty representative of God doesn’t necessarily mean a faulty God.

So, I decided to learn Him.

 

And the legacy of my child whom I held in my arms in a battered women’s shelter has taught me about God’s power.  I did make a mistake in believing a man’s lie.  I can blame it on my childhood and on my mixed up life, but the core truth is, I was willing to believe in a flighty and a faulty hope.  My child was a gift, and whatever I would do with that, it would not change that I could see that nobody in their right mind would trust me with a baby in my condition, unless they knew something about me that I didn’t.

And so the legacy of my child whom I held in my hands in the first trimester has taught me about God’s love.  Life at that time appeared to be perfect.  I was married, I was a legalistic Christian.  I was in the early journey of quivering.  In hindsight, what it means to present your womb as an offering to the Lord means – it means much more than I knew it did, and I suspect, much more than what many conservative Christian mothers think it means.

And then, life was destroyed.  At least, life as I saw it.

I know that when I speak of my childhood, people who haven’t endured what I have often respond with a sense of sorrow for what was destroyed and what was taken from me.  But I confess to you, that as a child, the sense of lostness was literally lost to me.  I lived in an orphanage with a roommate who had been left in the trash as a baby.  With another whose mother was high on crack and placed her in a scalding bath so that her chocolate black legs are forever marked with the most beautiful and tragic patterns of folds and ripples of alternating shades of brown and pink.

Being aware that I wasn’t normal was my normal.

I can chalk up my childhood to God carrying me, and it sounds like a powerful enough story.  In some ways, I know that it is.  I’ve shared  pieces of my childhood in churches and I’ve seen the response.

But I didn’t encounter God during any of that.  In hindsight, there was no mutual agreement and no conversation about it, God just flat chose to look upon me and keep me alive during times I shouldn’t have been.

 

And so, it was in Planned Parenthood, when I saw that it was He who had carried me.

A hope was planted, and enough endurance came with it to grow into a faith.

There were no, by the way, picketers offering to adopt my baby or give me shelter.  It was just me and God.  And, ironically, my choice.

 

 

But 10 years later, God gave me a child in a situation in which I didn’t fear for my life.

And I saw this baby, lifeless, on the ultrasound monitor.

And as surely as I knew he wasn’t alive, I was sure God would breathe life, speak life back into my baby.

And then darkness fell.  He didn’t.

 

It didn’t make any sense.

Nothing I knew about God fit into this.

This wasn’t supposed to be part of the story.

How do I carry this story?  This brokenness?  This lostness?  How do I carry what has happened?

 

The legacy of this child is that I have had to face my responsibility to learn this God I have smeared into other people’s faces.

Like searching for a spiritual autopsy, I scoured my Bible, jotted scribbles into my journal and splashed tears upon ink, and have heaved, heaved, heaved my crumpled spirit forward.

 

Moms, you might know what I’m talking about.

The chasm.

Trudging through, disconnected from loved ones, church, self identity.

Feeling so entirely vulnerable, broken open, raw, brand new, fragile and weak.

And in the darkness, in the mist, I found a finely thin thread of color.

Of light.

Of hope.

 

The walk through the valley of the shadow of death has transformed me.

My made up mind in Planned Parenthood very really threatened my physical life, but led me to obedience in ways that very literally probably saved my life.

My broken heart in the OB office 10 years later, led me to a whole new level of living.

 

Now, when I talk about my faith, I know that others have hurt me with theirs.  And I know I have hurt others with mine.

But my reason isn’t to trick you into signing up for a mailing list that you’d rather toss in the trash.  It’s not trickery.  It’s not legalism.  It’s not lies.

 

I share just how arduous my faith journey has been, specifically because, whatever faith journey you are on, of any spiritual or emotional context, you just might have to get messy with it.  The faith you thought would be there might not be there every day.  You might question if you ever had a faith.  You might question if you ever should.

If you’re enduring a crisis of faith, or if you feel angry or abandoned in your faith, I want to encourage you, truly whatever your faith is – this is not denominationally or doctrinally motivated –  to sit with it.  To go slow.  Open up your space and heart and soul to the possibility that what feels like an endless valley of darkness just might have a thread of hope in it.  And in time, a new kind of faith can grow, with much more clarity and depth and splendor than you ever imagined.

It’s happened with mine – it’s happened to me.

It is the hardest, clumsiest, messiest, ugliest, loneliest, most painful journey ever.

The death of my child is flat the most difficult thing I have ever had to endure in all my life.  And in case you didn’t know before now that I’ve been through some things, you now know that I’ve been through some things.

But I would not undo his existence just to undo my pain.

And the legacy he leaves behind is that a hope has been planted, a faith has grown, and a love has bloomed, wildly.

I can’t explain it, and I don’t always get it right.  And I know that for some, it takes a whole lot of courage to hear that I am Christian, because it causes you to face pain.  For those hurts, for those times when people have defended God instead of defending you, for those times when people you trusted, loved, depended on, when they poorly represented what faith should look like, when faith has hurt, I am so sorry.  I am so sorry.

When you can dare to muster up some hope in a bleak place, you are courageous.

Wherever your hope is, and whatever nurtures it into a faith, and wherever that faith grows and wherever your journey leads you, remember, you are worthy of hope.  Worthy of love.

 

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Beloved Gisella from an Imperfect Me

Told by: Irene

I experienced a stillbirth in August 2006. Her name was Gisella Marie. When this happened to me, I really found out first-hand how messed up my body is/was. I feel comfortable and safe enough to relate this occurrence now, since I have survived these years to date.

Rainbow Milk Teethers

Our Rainbow Milk Teethers are here!

If you have experienced pregnancy and infant loss, and are pregnant or nursing your “rainbow/subsequent” baby, this necklace is for you.

This nursing/teething necklace is a natural and beautiful accessory that will match every outfit you wear, and will give your new baby a perfectly fitting grip to hold as he or she snuggles in close with you.

You can get your rainbow teether/nursing necklace, plus engraving, for only $28!

We’re calling this the Rainbow Milk necklace – as your subsequent/rainbow baby holds to the necklace, they can hold to their sibling’s name as well.

After you receive your necklace, have a photo taken of you wearing it while nursing or holding your subsequent/rainbow baby, and send your photo to Heidi.faith@stillbirthday.info with “Rainbow Milk” as the subject line.  From the first 10 photos, those mothers will be entered into a drawing for a giveaway of our Be You Tiful tee!

View more items from the stillbirthday shop!

Price includes shipping within the U.S.   Maximum character count is 25.  After you complete the form, please use the yellow button below to complete your purchase (to ship outside the US, simply fill out the form and I’ll send you an invoice that includes shipping.)

 

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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.