Take Your Shoes Off

Welcome to stillbirthday.  Read below for our password, and for our copyright information.

Take Your Shoes Off

Stillbirthday is not just another website on the internet.

It is a place that holds life.  We at stillbirthday speak life.  We at stillbirthday honor life.  We at stillbirthday mourn life.

Parts of stillbirthday are password protected.  All of stillbirthday should be respected as if it were password protected.

Our stories are a first hand account of possibly our darkest of days, our most traumatic days, and we share our most intimate of thoughts and feelings as we reflect on the life, and death, of our children.

As you step into a story, it is like you are stepping into the room in which a mother first discovers her lifeless child.

Whatever her interpretation, whatever her beliefs, whatever her reaction, whatever her words,

you are walking on holy ground.

Take your shoes off.

Show respect.

Show reverence.

Show compassion.

Learning about the password is intented to slow you down.

It’s intended to get your spirit right.  Your mind right.  Get your soul right, before entering.

The Stillbirthday Password

The ONLY reason to see something contributed at stillbirthday is to be loved and to give love.  Anyone who uses any contributed materials or content published at stillbirthday, outside of these standards may be subject to its author/rightful owner pursuing legal action to the fullest extent of the law, including within the anti-circumvention law, misusing the electronic password barrier.  This might include republishing a story in part or in entirety with re-interpretation, republishing a photo that does not belong to you, publishing the password without this notice, or in any way using a bereaved authors own healing journey in a way intended to cause emotional harm to that author or any other bereaved person who potentially may interpret their own experiences in a similar way.  You can view our Sharing Rights and Responsibilities page for more information.

By entering in our password to access what a member of our stillbirthday family has contributed here, you are agreeing to these terms and agreeing to abide by these expectations.  It should be considered that by proceeding with using the password you are in agreement of the above.  Finally, the password is stillbirthday

 

Heidi Faith’s story

This place is where I come to mourn my fourth child, born via natural miscarriage on April 19, 2011.

I saw his lifeless body, bobbing on the ultrasound monitor.  I was terrified.  I searched, frantically.

I peered into the screen, praying, more deeply than I ever have in my life.

“Please God, speak life back into him.  Please, God.  I know You can do this…”

It was the most intense request, the biggest miracle, the deepest I have ever pressed into God.

When the ultrasound machine was shut off, and all I could see was blackness, I was encountering a spiritual experience that would change the course of the rest of my life.

Why wouldn’t God perform this miracle?

Why has my baby died?

I was having a holy encounter.  A supernatural experience.

I was deeply, profoundly vulnerable, as my entire being was overcome by the vastness and weight of what I was experiencing.

A doctor entered into the room, and attempted to break through this sacred space.

She tried to cut through with slicing words.

The very first thing I heard from another human being, in my most vulnerable, spiritual encounter, was

“Call it whatever you want: products of conception, the potential for life, but…” as she clasped her hands firmly on my trembling shoulders she continued, “we need to get that debris out of there.”

The Rights of the Bereaved

Every bereaved person has a right to an authentic mourning.

Every bereaved person has a right to interpret his or her experiences in his or her own way.

Every bereaved person has a right to their feelings shifting and their perception changing through the course of their healing journey.

Every bereaved person has a right to discover how to nurture and discipline their grief for their own greatest healing.

Every bereaved person has a right to bring a flicker of light, of hope, of healing, to another bereaved person as they may be in the darkest days of their life.

Every bereaved person even has a right to make mistakes, to stumble, to not have a smooth, linear grief, but to recognize their own accountability within their own experience with grace and the accountability of others within their own experience with mercy.

Every bereaved person has a right to explore healing options, resources and expressions, free from the condemnation of others.

I implore you, to read our stories, read our experiences, with an awe and an admiration for the courage, the raw heartbreak, the discoveries, the grief and the healing, these, our stillbirthday families, pilgrimage on and sojourn through.

I invite you, to consider sharing your story, your baby’s photo, and to participate in the many opportunities for journeying toward healing we have at stillbirthday.

Thank you, for visiting stillbirthday.  May you find a flicker of light if even in your darkest hour here.

Related: be a part of Debris Day!

All Our Kids

The Rainbow Within

Protected: Eight Beautiful Wings

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Protected: Gabriel Brings Comfort

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Protected: He is Strong and Enduring

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Bullying the Bereaved

As if grief isn’t hard enough, a great many bereaved mothers endure platitudes and comments from loved ones that are intended to bring love but instead bring compounded pain.

And, there are bereaved mothers who endure words, actions and behaviors that are not at all intended to bring love but are designed to inflict additional wounds and create even more pain.

There are, additionally, many many mothers who began as victims in their bereavement experience, and who then became perpetrators, bringing pain onto others in an effort to release their inner turmoil.

Consider these examples.  Have you ever:

  • heard about someone lying about their babyloss experience, and wondered why they’d do that?
  • heard of anyone telling a mother that her baby’s death was preventable?
  • heard of anyone telling a mother that she doesn’t deserve to find good or be good through her experience?
  • heard of anyone trying to censor photos of deceased babies?
  • heard of a mother feeling offended because of that censorship?
  • heard of someone lying about another bereaved mother?
  • seen any of these things take place in real life, or online?

Stillbirthday holds a strict policy on sharing.  When you share here, you are allowed the freedom to express your beliefs and your own interpretation of the events that you experienced.  I moderate all comments and only approve those that validate you and have the potential for healing.

What happens, though, when someone shares their experience on facebook?  When someone uses a blog to make up lies about a bereaved mother?  When someone solicits the stories or photos from bereaved mothers and who does so recklessly, disrespectfully or with alterior motives?

What happens when a bereaved mother is left frantically trying to protect what little she can of her deceased child, to give her child’s legacy the honor and integrity it deserves?

What happens when someone tells her that her experience is worthless, that she deserves her grief, that her child deserved to die, that she does not deserve to make any good come from her experience?

As if bereavement isn’t hard enough, many mothers are faced with these challenges.

If you are a mother facing any of these things, I am so deeply sorry.  I can’t take these hurts away, and I can’t stop people from bullying, and stillbirthday can’t even help them change if they don’t want to.  I know it hurts.  I know it hurts deeply.  I too have been bullied in my bereavement, and the feeling is…..it’s devastating.

If you have bullied the bereaved, you can stop.  You can change.  You don’t have to be bound by that.  You can break free.  I have seen it happen.

If you have ever been bullied, you can find the validation in knowing you aren’t alone.

Whether you have ever been the bully, or the bullied, you can find healing.

An Invitation to Change

If you’d like to share your experience with being bullied, you can send your story to stillbirthday.  I incorporate many aspects of proper bereavement care into my workshops, particularly the community workshops, which help local communities have a better understanding on how to support bereaved mothers and families.  This includes expert understanding on the psychology of bullying, and your story could help to shed more light on how communities can rally to support their newest bereaved families.

All identifying information in stories are altered to uphold confidentiality, as is our policy to protect bereaved mothers here at stillbirthday.

Please email at iamloved@stillbirthday.info

You aren’t alone, and you can find healing.

When you use the email, you will receive an automated email reply with potentially helpful resources.  Just as in any other way you share your experiences with stillbirthday, your message is sent privately, directly and confidentially to the site creator.  This opportunity does not provide any legal counsel but is merely a way to break the silence of these issues so that more mothers can be properly supported and so that more communities can know of the issues surrounding bullying the bereaved.

I will nurture you instead

A part of our Love Letters to My Body collection, held within our Mothering the Mourning section.

Written by: Heather

Dear Heather-Body,

I know we’ve been through some tough times, you and I. No one can prepare you for how hard the process of growing older can be, both your side – the physical- and my side – the mental and emotional. I am so sorry that through all the natural hardship of aging, environmental toxins, and outside psycho-somatic stressors that I also added to your burden by not treating you right. I have consumed alcohol, caffeine, and tons of red meat, stayed up all night, partied, smoked cigarettes, starved you, squeezed you into uncomfortable clothes and shoes…I have even stared at the sun. I have had a concussion, broken bones, and sprained ligaments. I have not taken my vitamins. I have hated you. Through all this, you have supported us. You have protested times of high stress by creating a blood clot, among other things, just to try and tell me how hard this is for you. But, you haven’t given up yet. You rose to the challenge and gave my pregnancy with my daughter at 38 years old. You amazed everyone, including me, with your ability to accommodate what was anticipated to be a nine or more pound baby. You rose to the challenge and labored and delivered that child into the world despite her cord having brought about her death. You kept up your end of the bargain and made milk for her. You gave me aching arms, soft breasts, hips, thighs, and belly as a testament to her. And I hated you for that. I felt guilty. I hatefully resented you because of the reminder, but you were trying to tell me: I am doing this for us – not just us two inside and outside, but three of us including her. She is now a part of you, and you were of her. Her sustenance is in those curves, her cells are in your brain, the muscles and skin of your core bear her mark. Body, we will never forget, you and I. You will carry that memory of her in you forever, and that is a reason for love not hate. I didn’t realize that at the time, but now I appreciate all for which you stood strong. I love you for that. I am PROUD of you for that. I’m taking it easier on you now, as I’m taking it easier on me. I am patient with you, as I am patient with me. I still have a mother’s heart with no baby to nurture, so I am going to nurture you instead. I will honor our process and the time it takes. You will heal and so will I. The world is an unkind and hurtful place, so I will be kind to us. This is our one time together, our one shot. Let’s make the most of it. I love you, always.

Angel Heartbeat Bear Giveaway

This giveaway is now closed.

If you are following us on Facebook, you’ll know that we’re offering a giveaway!  Our objective with having a Facebook page is to lead families directly here, to stillbirthday, not the other way around, but if you’re already on Facebook, I invite you to find the stillbirthday page.  By the way, stillbirthday is also on Twitter.

While we provide support during the actual, physical birth of babies born in any trimester, and we provide support at any time afterward, including bereavement support, it is also important to provide trusted information regarding prevention of infant loss, and we work to lead you to the resources that provide the most trustworthy information regarding prevention, while also having the sensitivity to honor the feelings of blame and guilt that families who’ve already endured loss may feel as they learn about prevention information.

One such organization is Cora’s Story, who shares information regarding congenital heart defects and prevention, including pulse oximetry testing for newborns, after the first 24 hours after birth.

To help you remember “pulse oximetry at +24 hours”, once we reached 2,500 “likes” at our Facebook page, we decided to run a giveaway of an Angel Heartbeat Bear.  The winner can use this for:

  • her own pregnancy, particularly if she’s carrying to term a baby with a fatal diagnosis
  • after her baby has been born, to record special words of love
  • as a gift for someone else

To enter in the giveaway:

  • If you are already on Facebook, “tag” the stillbirthday page and the Cora’s Story page together with a comment to invite others to like our page.
  • If you are not already on Facebook, simply leave a comment below, stating that you are interested in winning.

One person will be selected as the winner on March 17.

The person selected was Becky, who left a comment below.  Congratulations Becky! 

 

Heartbroken for Brooklyn

Dear Baby Glauber,

Your parents love you so much.  They spent their last days surrounded in faithful celebration of Purim.  It is with hearts full of God’s presence that they left you so suddenly.  You are a miracle they leave behind.  You are a miracle that they carried and through God’s amazing love, continue to carry.

We all around the world are praying for your safety, for your health, for your life, that one day you will meet with God’s presence and feel the same supernatural joy and goodness that they, your parents, felt for you and with you in their last days here on earth, and in that meeting, you will trust that you are a miracle, you will trust that you are loved, and you will trust that God can purpose the biggest tragedy of your entire life, the biggest displacement possible between you and your parents, into a supernatural transformation that brings you even closer to them, to their wisdom, to their discernment, to their love, than ever would have been possible without this enormous tragedy.

I am so sorry.  I am so, deeply, broken and sorry for the death of both of your parents, that you won’t ever see their delight in you, you won’t ever feel their physical touch of adoration and affection for you.  I beg the God of the universe to bless you in your breaking moments, that He supernaturally provide for you these gifts in incomprehensible measure.

You are valuable.  You are loved.  You are a miracle.

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.