A Loss for Two Mothers

Told by: Chris

My wife and I met in college, and like a storybook romance, fell in love.

Unlike most couples, we knew in advance that we would have a difficult time in growing our family, so as we set out to buy our first home together, we compared neighborhoods with the best likelihood of adoption to fit our needs.

And, it was not easy.

So we lived in our apartment, waiting impatiently for the day to grow our home and grow our family.

We watched our friends moving into homes.

We watched our friends getting pregnant.

We watched our friends having babies.

We kept waiting.

Eventually, we turned our efforts to medical assistance.

We have a special friend and a brilliant doctor who both gave everything they had – about literally – for us to grow our family.

After years, after incredible debt, we were finally pregnant!

The next nine months were sheer joy – specialist appointments, baby clothing shopping, feeling the congratulations of our loved ones.

The day that we learned we were having a son, it felt like the biggest day of my life.  Of my life!

We were, finally, a family.

We chose the name Kayin.  A name that means we have waited a long time.  It sort of reminds me of “cayenne”.  A speckle of fire.  He’ll have to be.

And then, just days from Kayin’s due date, something happened.  My wife woke up, rubbing her beautiful belly.

Over breakfast, she sat at her familiar posture, hand over Kayin.

She looked worried, though, so I kissed her forehead and asked her what was bothering her – already sensing it might have to do with our baby, somehow.  Maybe worried about the birth, I shrugged.

No, she told me she hadn’t felt him moving yet that morning.

The words somehow opened a dam, and panic poured over her.

We moved to the sofa and sat together, hands on Kayin, and waited.

And waited.

And, waited.

The waiting all over again, bringing fears under the surface, the kind of longstanding fears I’ve secretly held for years.

I think we were different people who first sat on those cushions that day than the two who rose from them.

Suddenly things went from slow to whirring fast.

Dashing through the hallway, trying to find shoes.  Phone.  Keys.

Calling loved ones, running out to the street.

Slipping into the car.  Whizzing through traffic.

Fast, fast, fast, toward that red sign, the red sign that spoke what we could not – Emergency.

Steps meeting pavement, a walk that is more like a sprint.

Wheelchair to the maternity level.

Machines beeping.

Nurses talking.

Shoes squeaking on shiny floor.

“What is happening?  Is our baby OK?”

Silence.

Silence.

Silence.

Waiting, to know what this means.

Kayin is dead.

And the whole world broke open.

The floor looks much closer now.  I see the black flakes in the tile.

The black is closing in, I am being swallowed up, swallowed up by the fullest emptiness of my entire life.

Now I’m the one in the wheelchair, but I don’t really understand this yet.

The ocean is in my eyes.

After a few hours, or maybe it was a few years, I’m told that I have to leave my family.

Somehow, the demons who haunt me found audible voice to my greatest fear.  Hearing these words dropped me into an abyss I didn’t know could be possible when already at the bottom of the ocean.  My fear found a crack in the ocean floor, and it opened up to this new hell.

The words are repeated.  To make sure I hear them.  I don’t know that I did ever really hear them, but somehow my inner mind, still working, knew how to translate the words into the searing message that cut to my soul.  And my body responded.

I have to leave my family.

Lightening flashed.

Thunder rose from my gut.

Fire from every corner of my body.

This is my wife.  This is my son.

I will never leave them.

“Are you family?” a nurse looks disgusted.  Is it the vomit that slipped out of my mouth and onto my shirt, or is it the words I managed to croak?

“She is my wife.  This is our son.”

I manage to catch her look and see that she is actually confused.

“I’ll have to check with the doctor.”

And there I sat, shaking the ocean away, trying to find land to steady myself.

Waiting, again.

The fate of our son’s arrival and my best friend’s support in the hardest experience of her entire life waited for the verdict of a stranger.

He is more qualified to determine my value and the value of our marriage and love than we are.

We waited.

I reached out to hold her hand.  She looked so far away, so scared, so young, so vulnerable.

I wanted to scoop her up and run away.  Run, run away to a safe place.   A safe place for our family.

That day was many days ago.

We met our son that day.  We met him, together.

We touched him and kissed him and loved him.

We love him still.

The days between that day and this day are filled with gloom.

Despair.

Fog.

My sweet wife, she doesn’t sit on that sofa anymore.

She spends her days in the rocking chair in Kayin’s room.  Holding his bear.  Looking away from me.

I don’t blame her.  I try not to look at my pain, too.

I try not to think that I destroyed her.

That my love for her, my mighty desire to do anything to please her, my wish to do anything to make her happy, did not bring her to the worst hole of hell.

Who am I, even?

What did I do?

Should we not have gotten pregnant?

Before then, should I have tried to suppress my admiration of her shiny hair and sparkly eyes, her heart to give compassion to every single creature on this planet?

Am I the walking abyss of destruction, popping open to kill the life out of such a gentle and caring person?

Every step of this road has proven to tell me that I’m wrong, that I’m gross, that I’m bad.

I’ve tried to shield her from such hurt, but she’s known.  She’s been told these things, too.

We held hands and we kept walking.

We held hope and we kept waiting.

Kayin.  We have always wanted to speak out about the wait.

Just, not ever like this.

I’m waiting, now.

Waiting for that speckle of fire to return in those beautiful mossy eyes I’ve fallen in love with.

Waiting and holding hope we can keep walking, still.

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Kathleen Garcia, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving New York and New Jersey

Email: kathleengarcia.sbd@stillbirthday.info

KathleenKG Doula Services LLC

Empowering Mothers. One Birth At A Time.

I am a Certified (SBD) Labor Doula, Specializing in Bereavement/Loss, NICU, Adoption, Surrogacy, Post-Partum, Birth Trauma, & C-Section. I welcome LGBT families and single parents.

I have been working as a labor doula since 1997. For many years I volunteered my time with teen mothers and worked for family and friends.

***My passion as a doula: Empowering Mothers. One Birth At A Time.***

Every birth is a unique and intimate experience. I am honored each and every time I am welcomed to help a pregnant/laboring woman prepare and welcome her baby into the world.

I am here to support you in YOUR birth of choice! I support all types of birthing.

Postpartum; I am able to help answer any breastfeeding questions or concerns. I will also be able to answer general questions about your newborn, babywearing & cloth diapering questions.

*My bereavement/loss services are purely volunteer. If you are aware of someone who needs a bereavement doula ( this includes miscarriage at all stages including stillbirth or a sick baby in the NICU) please pass my information along. For this situation I’m available 24 hrs a day to answer calls.*

 

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Discover what the SBD credentialed doula has achieved.

 

A Double Rainbow

In the bereaved community, we often talk about the rainbow as referring to the storm being over, and many of us refer to pregnancy or live birth after enduring loss as being a “rainbow” baby.

I don’t, but, many do.

So how especially invalidating might it feel for families who are bereaved, who are also LGBTQ+, to see a growing culture – the bereaved community – longing for rainbows, while simultaneously creating an exclusionary or hostile response to bereaved families who do not define themselves in traditional heterosexual relationships (and who, as such, might value the rainbow for this particular, different reason).

I am not at all shy about sharing my own personal journey, beliefs, values and lifestyle choices.

Most anyone who visits stillbirthday understands quickly that I, Heidi Faith, am personally Christian.  I am not merely a Christian, mind you.  I am Christian.  There is a difference, much the same as saying “I am conservative” versus “I am a conservative.”

And regarding my personal decisions regarding life in utero, I do not have the luxury to lean on polarizing political or even religious positions.  No, I have walked the walk.  My very life has at one time been threatened – forcefully – at the news of pregnancy.  Endangering both the life of my baby and my own, I know what it’s like to flee into hiding with a baby and I know what it’s like to live in a battered women’s shelter.

I say these things because we each have a particular lens through which we view life and from which we collect our values.

I have mine.

But, that does not stop me from being able to put down my own stuff, for 5 minutes, for gracious sake, to sit with someone who has a different lens than I do.

I am not scared that some psychological corrosion will rub off on me.

Nor am I motivated to trick someone into signing up for my values so that I can earn some sort of star on a spiritual point system.

I simply believe that the God who holds my own life with the most insurmountable and infinite mercy has enough confidence in His own merit that He actually delights in – and even supplies my very endurance to – give love, unconditionally.

So there you have it.

Every person impacted by loss has the right to receive love.  Period.  It is frankly and biblically and simply that simple.

I know God’s design for family, including His miraculous design of life in the womb and including His miraculous design of gender.  But, I am even more aware and convicted by, what I know God designs for me.

And I hold to my Bible, my God, and my values fiercely.

And so, without further explanation, stillbirthday now holds a logo that is free to be included in all LGBTQ+ stories shared here at stillbirthday, to give recognition to this unique journey.

Thank you, Ruthie, from Birth Without Fear, for your brilliant creativity in creating it!

A rainbow in bereavement might be a sign of hope after the death of your child.

A rainbow in bereavement too, might be a sign of hope after the silence, rejection and abandonment when your lens looks different than others – including mine.

Stillbirthday.  You just might find a double rainbow here.

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Long Term Healing/Perspectives

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SBD: Supporting Bereavement Diversity

 

 

 

This enormous section of stillbirthday provides bereavement support specific to:

gender, age, religion/faith, culture,  family lifestyle &  other diverse groups.

To add a resource, simply leave a comment below.

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 Stillbirthday Fathers deserve support as the supporters.

Photo belongs to the amazing Canary Lane Photography Studio and
SBD doula student.

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~Fathers~

Fertility Challenges

Bereavement

Other Bereavement Support for DADs

 

 

 

Media which reference Men and Fathers Grief

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{click photo for video}

 

 

 

Couples

Mentorship Program for Fathers

Keepsakes for Fathers

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You have permission to use this photo.  Just visit stillbirthday on Facebook to find and share it.

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Healing Resources Specific to Children:

Children, Teens and Grief

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{General} Healing Resources:

 

“Niche” Support

  • While many aspects of bereavement and healing are universal, we have support resources listed especially for the type of experience you’ve had.  Just use our “types of loss” section to gather those resources.  We here at stillbirthday say that grief is a language, that each of us speak a particular dialect of it.  In the language of bereavement, we can learn to celebrate our similarities while honoring our differences.

 

Groups, Counselors and Programs for Bereavement (by location)

 

Timetables” for Grief

 

Grief and Social Networking

 

Identifying & Understanding aspects of Bereavement

 

Similar and/or Compounding Issues to Grief

 

Creativity through Bereavement

 

Finding Intentional Joy

It is important to know that you can laugh again, and that it’s not a dishonor to your lost child.  Plan intentional activities that you have always found to be enjoyable – watching your favorite movie, eating at your favorite restaurant, shopping at your favorite store.  Be safe, and let yourself hear your laughter or feel yourself really smile.

 

Holidays

 

Books, Crisis Hotlines and other Long Term Resources

 

Sexual and Intimate Relationship After Loss

 

Military Family Resources:

Military: blogs and other links:

 

Single Parenthood:

 

Special Needs / Differently Abled Parents:

In whatever way or ways an individual may be considered to have special needs, there are resources and support specific to those circumstances and what you may be facing.  It is virtually impossible to maintain a list of every diagnosis, definition or challenge that a person may be a survivor of and then place that list alongside birth and bereavement support, but what we have begun to do is collect the resources that do speak to the combination of both sexuality and disability, to provide avenues for you that ought to branch out into extensive resources.  Growing this list is important, and if you have an idea to add, please email Heidi.Faith@stillbirthday.info to send it in.

 

LGBTQ+:

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  • QTPOC (queer/transgender people of color)
  • Mommy, Mama and Me (a children’s storybook)
  • LGBTQ+ Storieslove
  • LGBTQ+ Fertility Resources & Support
  • LGBTQ+ Family Planning
  • LGBTQ+ Books
  • Loss after ART
  • Lesbian Miscarriage
  • Lesbian Miscarriage Support Group
  • Dr. Deb Rich, specializing in lesbian perinatal psychology
  • Keenan’s mothers share their beautiful, tragic story, with a powerful message:

    “We feel strongly that privatizing such events serves only to isolate people, we believe that it doesn’t allow other families openly grieve a stillborn, nor easily access support they may need or want in doing so. In acknowledging life we need to also acknowledge death, make it safe to grieve and encourage people to be present with their emotions/feelings/thoughts.”

    From their photographer, Jozi Grant:

    “Friends and family of Keenan’s mothers recently congregated at the Squamish Nation Shaker Church to celebrate Keenan with a ceremonial food offering to set his spirit free. It was held on a beautiful day with the North Shore mountains watching over us. The Squamish Minister offered an uplifting perspective on the passing of this precious boy. He explained that though Keenan’s parents may sometimes wonder if they are being punished in some way, they should know that they were, in fact, especially chosen to bring a lost soul back and facilitate his freedom. It resonated with me – such a beautiful way to look at such a painful loss.”

 

Cultural & Spiritual Resources:

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Jalisa and her daughter Jaisie at 36 weeks, just one week before baby Jaisie died.

For Cultural and Spiritual Farewell Custom Resources – please visit our Farewell Celebrations section

Fertility & Bereavement Support for Families of Color

 

Alternative Therapies:

“EFT (Emotional Freedom Techniques) is a simple tapping technique that allows you to relieve distress by gently tapping on certain acupressure points on your body while focusing on the particular issue.

With pregnancy loss, we may also be feeling trauma, anger, guilt, and fear in addition to normal grief.  EFT will not get rid of normal grief, but it can help release unnecessary distress, so that you aren’t so weighed down and are able to move through the stages of grief more easily. 

A few sessions with an experienced EFT practitioner can be helpful & give you the tools you need to help yourself when the waves of grief feel overwhelming.  EFT can also be helpful for your partner and any family members who need support with their feelings.” – Sondra Rose

Agnostic/Atheist Resources:

Shop:

We have a listing of special momentos, charms, books and other merchandise especially created in honor of various cultures, religions and beliefs, including alternative healing stones and more in our momentos section.

 

 

 

Share Your Story!

If you have utilized any of these diversity resources, perspectives and activities and would like to let other families know about them, please consider joining the SBD news team or sharing your story here at stillbirthday.

 

 

Healing Resources Specific to Mothers:

Menstruation after Pregnancy Loss

Trying to Conceive (TTC) after Loss

Returning to Other Responsibilities After Loss

Mentorship Program for Mothers

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.