Born on Christmas Eve

She learned she was pregnant while the late summer sun was hot in the sky.

Two tiny pink stripes of motherhood and two flushed pink cheeks as she excitedly dashed and waved her wand of victory at her unsuspecting husband.  The information still over his head, her eyes ablaze with thrill calculating every decibel of the crinkles on her lovers face as the revelation broke through his own ever widening grin.

The season was quickly moving into autumn, and the smells of freshly sharpened crayons and the sites of bright yellow school busses seemed to her to be a message that the entire world was preparing for developing young children.

Halloween decorations across the front yards of her neighborhood seemed to whisper adoringly to her small but busy middle that we each of us can dare to dream to be anything or anyone we want to be.

Magic in the air.

Rain drops brought the end of summer and as such seemed to usher in the whole end of the year.

Shopping malls seem to long desperately to duplicate the vibrant colors of October deciduous trees by ushering in the brightly colored packages ornamenting their shelves and tempting consumers to long for.

She observed how autumn seemed to proliferate a sense of longing, a desire to be like others.  She marveled that this maturity in her thinking just happened to emerge while she achieved pregnancy, a destination she longed to travel to since being a pig tailed little girl toting her dolly in her backpack., peanut-butter-and-jellied chubby fingers pressed stickily in her mamas warm grasp.

“I’m here,” she whispers marvelously at herself, the subconscious joy becoming so pervasive that her hand finds its place on her ever growing yet unobtrusively small belly, more often than she even senses her hand there.  Her hand and her baby, simply, unnoticeably, harmoniously, perfectly together.

She prepared Thanksgiving dinner in her home – a large affair, with great extravagance and beautiful detail, even through her sheer exhaustion.  She wanted it to be perfect when she and her husband announced to their too-distant family that they are expecting their baby.

The Christmas tree went up early, per her insistence.  She wanted the tree up before Thanksgiving and her husband conceded, yet with a grin, caught by the contagion of his wife’s pure, blissful joy.  He was delighted too.

The Thanksgiving feast was stressful, difficult, and marvelous.  That night, when the house was once again quiet, her husband found her, hand on belly, gazing at their Christmas tree.  She was worn, socked feet crossed lazily on the ottoman.  He slid in next to her on the couch, wrapped one arm around her shoulders, and placed a small, brightly colored package adorned with a crisp red bow on her lap.

Face flushed from exhaustion, her dreamy eyes were brought back from their wandering and met his gaze, and the two held a beloved moment of peace, serenity and thanksgiving before she opened the gift.

An ornament.

“Baby’s First Christmas” it read.

He stammered something about how the first Christmas probably really won’t count until next year, after the baby is born, but, that he couldn’t pass it up.

She was sure she felt the baby moving.  She pressed his hand onto her middle and said, “No, you’re right.  This counts.”

She remembers these things, as she labors.

As her contractions build while she stands, rocking, holding her belly.  She remembers these things, as she looks down at her middle, realizing she is wearing the same shirt as that Thanksgiving day.

She is rocking, walking – it is a rocking walking that is a laboring mother’s kind of dance.  She rocks and walks in this way until she is in front of her Christmas tree.  She reaches out and touches the ornament – Baby’s First Christmas – that was placed just a few weeks ago.

She holds the ornament with one hand, her belly with the other, as she heaves a cry from the depth of her soul.

She heaves cries like this in succession.

Her husband stands near, now reaching in for a kind of standing, leaning, embrace.  She falls easily into his arms.  He is strong, and he holds them up, his family.  He is weeping, but she can’t see his tear stained cheeks from where she is.

She labors.  For long stretches of time, she labors, drinking ice water with cucumber slices, changing positions and talking.

Her husband and her midwife take turns holding her, wiping her forehead, encouraging her.

She takes long visits to the bathroom.  Her husband freshens the room after each visit, placing a firm footing onto a large, outstretched bath towel, and sweeps the area of the floor with his foot, lumping the towel into a bundle around his foot, smearing and wiping up blots of birth blood.  He opens up a clean towel and lays it down, this becoming a sort of ritual.  They have a lot of towels.

She comments on more than one bathroom visit that she is afraid of clogging the toilet.  She uses the peri bottle as instructed by her midwife.  She looks intently at her clean white tissue paper colored bright red each time before releasing these wads of red and white to fall into the crimson water of her toilet bowl.  She flushes and sighs.

She decides for a time to sit in her dining room.  She seems to collapse into the chair with a forlorn weariness.  The large wooden table has no cloth on it.  It is covered with wrapping paper  and endless yards of ribbon and gift tissue of every color of the rainbow.  Between two fingers she holds the corner of a single thin sheet of gift tissue and follows carefully to pull out a perfect sheet of thin white paper covered in gold, sparkly glitter.

“How ironic” she speaks softly “that my baby may be caught in tissue.”

“It is because she is a gift” her husband speaks, almost croaks, his first full sentence since this began.

Nobody knows the gender for sure.  This is the first mention, and it is especially powerful because the mom has been hoping for a little girl.

In time, the mother is later squatting, with her husband behind her, her midwife in front of her.

In time, her baby emerges into view.   The mom slips from a squat into a sit, leaning into her husband’s chest.

The mother’s hand, finds her baby, still.

Mother holds her baby, and husband holds his wife.

Midwife holds the space.

The mother looks up at her twinkling Christmas tree.  She can’t see the trunk for the gathering of hope, the message of affirmation of love packaged as gifts to her from her beloved waiting below the tree.  This mother marvels aloud, at the vibrant splendor of the beautiful colors of tissue paper, for the wonderful surprises that they hold.  She quietly decides then, that gift tissue will forever remind her of her baby.  An affirmation of love, packaged as a gift, waiting for her.

“Baby’s First Christmas” she utters.

Her doula scribbles onto a journal as fast as possible to keep up.

This is her story.

 

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{This is a story compiled and edited from birth notes written by an SBD doula, and approved by the mother to share.  As with all stories shared here by others than the parents, identifying information is omitted and only the message of fondness and love from the writer to the family is conveyed.}

 

Midwife of Thanatology

Death is, at best, an uncomfortable subject, and at worse, a terribly frightening thought that most would rather run from.  We have even gone so far as to say that it is normal and right to cast off any conversation, let alone thought or planning about death.  To prepare for this inevitable event is to be thought suicidal or just plain weird.

The truth is, though, that for many bereaved parents, this is the exact treasure we learn and grow from the death of our children: we will live fully, so as to know that our babies at least died well.  We can still purpose life from death, still grow hope and dare I say joy from excruciatingly impossible darkness.

And just as much as stillbirthday enters into the space of birth, providing options, information and resources for the Welcoming, we just as much provide validation, love and support for the Farewell.

While our comprehensively trained and certified SBD Doulas are well equipped to enter into any birth situation in any trimester, including coming alongside you in the places where birth and bereavement meet, to offer their expertise, professionalism, personalized attention and deeply devoted care, there is yet an0ther level of care that we offer here at stillbirthday, the Midwife of Thanatology.

Where an SBD Doula, who is a companion, might not feel he or she might take on a leadership role, an SBD Chaplain, who is a Midwife of Thanatology can offer authoritative support not only in the role of your doula, but also as a chaplain, officiating the farewell celebration that is right for you, and providing tangible support in the burial, cremation 0r other decisions you might make for your family.  He or she is knowledgeable in your right of sepulcher and other relevant laws or policies relating to what farewell options you have.  Visit this page to learn about both roles.

One of our SBD Doulas who owns her own business now, Blessings in the Belly, shared this article relating to “death midwifery“.  The thought of dying well might seem foreign to you, but is a profound and deeply valuable concept.

From the article:

The parallels between birth and death are numerous and remarkable. Like birth, dying is often associated with pain, uncertainty, and fear. In both cases, there is lots of waiting, certain signs occur reliably, and the final timing is not predictable. In neither case are health professionals in control. In death as in birth, patience, kindness, and privacy can make the experience more healing, bringing out more of the good and less of the bad in people. And a health professional with appropriate training and experience can do a lot to help patients and families negotiate both transitions.

This speaks substantially to the benefit of a trained SBD Doula.  Just watch this little video for an even better understanding.  This video, incidentally, was shared to me by one of my clients I had the enormous honor of serving:

 

If you feel a compassion, an empathy, a desire to connect your love to others, please consider joining our globally recognized comprehensive birth & bereavement doula training and certification.

And if you are already one of our amazing SBD doulas, I encourage you to consider joining our Midwife of Thanatology program, becoming an SBD Chaplain to provide an even more holistic support to the families you serve.

 

We currently have two wonderful opportunities for registering for our doula training:

  1. An SBD Doula is donating $200 into the doula program in 4 $50 increments as scholarship opportunities on behalf of her beloved children.  Is that not AMAZING?!  Here is her first one.
  2. Register for any 2014 session before the end of 2013 to enter a drawing for a free computer.  No, really.

 

If you’re already an SBD Doula, check out the Steve Butler scholarship!

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61 and 41 Years Later

Told by: Joyce

I will never forget the nurse who saw me pacing the floor the night that I had my full-term stillborn son on Oct. 28th, 1972.

She took me to a room and started to cry and said “I had a stillborn child 20 years ago…”

I think I was stunned because I stopped crying. I thought, 20 years ago!  

It is now 41 years later and I can fully understand her reaction. I happened upon this site through the book “I’ll love you forever“.  Both of my adopted children have been read this book over and over. To this day I’ll sing off with I’ll love you forever…..

I truly know what that means after 41 years and 60 years of living. I know all of you on this site will understand.

 

 

 

Shame

Grief is the hardest challenge I have ever been faced with.

You would think, that bereaved mothers share something universal, something collective, and that we each, would treasure our cup that we carry into our global community pool of tears.  That we would treasure one another’s cup, as well.

The reality is, we don’t.

We speak of the things our loved ones can do better, but we are hurting one another within our own circle.

We try to push others out of the circle.  We try to push ourselves out of the circle.

Divisiveness becomes a way to protect our very fragile wounds.  We bereaved mothers often discriminate, often divide, based on:

  • age of the baby.
  • family structure.
  • choices made prior to the birth.
  • choices made during birth.
  • choices made after the birth.
  • definition of loss.
  • religion.

And while I tend to think that these divisions most often come from a place of fear, what we need to know, is that these divisions fester something terrible, in ourselves, and in each other.

Shame.

I don’t deserve to be part of community, because _________

  • I’m too young.
  • I wasn’t as far along as you.
  • I’m lesbian.
  • I’m older than you.
  • I’m not married.
  • I didn’t do what you did, or what you would have done.
  • I’m not religious.
  • I’m confused about what I believe.
  • I am religious.
  • I should have known better, and I should have done things differently.
  • I haven’t had enough losses.
  • I’ve had too many losses.
  • I have more to be thankful for or happy about than others.
  • I have made mistakes, and I am unforgiveable.

Stop!

These are all lies!

Shame is a facet of our grief.  It just is.  And as we peer into our cup of tears, we are terrified to think that ours is the only one that holds shame.  We fear that if we dare pour our cup into the community pool, that what we have to bring will taint the well.  It will stain the waters and will ruin the gathered source of healing.

So we try to scoop it out.  We try to pat our damp hands on our sides, hoping we got it all out, hoping nobody will see.

And our community source of healing is terribly dry because of it.

The more options we learn that there are, prior to birth…

The more options we learn that there are, during birth…

The more options we learn that there are, after birth…

…the more that shame can loom in, casting out a shadow that we are tempted to flee and hide behind.

Shame, just like grief, is something we have silently learned to run from, but shame, just like grief, is something that stillbirthday invites you, with tenderness and with sensitivity, to learn to lean into.

I am the founder of stillbirthday, and I strive continually to find the next option, the latest choice a family may have, the newest wonderfully healing opportunity for families enduring their darkest of days.  And in the process, I can say with all certainty that yes, there are things I would do differently in my own darkest of days, if I could do them all over.

But the process also reminds me, that it’s never too late.

I am worthy of healing.

I have beautiful choices now.

I can learn to mother my mourning.

I can learn to release myself from the bondage of shame.

I can remember and I can believe, that we are all, in this together.

With a little bit of courage, with our circle of community and with a little bit of creativity, we can show love – to one another, to our babies, and to ourselves.

 We do not have to forget or forfeit our own experiences, morals, interpretations or beliefs, nor do we need to have others forget or forfeit their own.  We can give – and get – love, just the way we are.  And by so doing, we will deepen, we will grow, we will heal.

 

The Missions Field of Mourning

Pregnancy and infant loss knows no boundaries.

It touches every continent, every culture, every community.

Stillbirthday aims to do the same.

 

The perspectives, traditions, customs and philosophies surrounding birth & bereavement are many, and include the aspects of:

  • pre-conception
  • conception
  • gestation
  • birth
  • personhood
  • motherhood
  • parenthood
  • family structure
  • death
  • mourning

When we think of the missions field, stereotypical images and words may be the first to enter our minds:

Savages.

If we’re honest, we think of exotic lands filled with savages, and if only they could know that Jesus Christ is a very real person, who really died for them, who is the only way into Heaven

if they would just listen to us

then we could bring them their only hope and their only beauty:

Salvation.

And if we’re honest, those who are not Christian, think of those of us who are as sharply arrogant, justifying our own divisiveness in the name of the Lord but who, in the same breath, claim to be the victims of outrageous discrimination; we Christians can be ruthlessly narrow-minded.

Persecution.

So, what is it like, to be a Christian, Caucasian American woman who is the founder of a global resource for birth and bereavement?

It is so much more than a hobby, an idea, a ministry or a work.

Birth & Bereavement is a missions field.

But to articulate this correctly, I do need to make sure that you know what I mean by a missions field.

  • 1. Birth & Bereavement is a place filled with real people, who hold to traditions, customs and beliefs that are as ancient as history and feelings as fresh and raw as rain.

It is never the one sided giving relationship most people might think it is.  It is always an exchange, that grows everyone involved.  It faces stereotypes, emotionally charging terminology and starkly different morals, values and beliefs in ways that promote a shared humanity and reveal an uncharted potential for love.

 

  • 2. It is filled with the most gorgeous hues of hope, the most stunning shades of life and the most vibrant colors of love.

It is to sojourn to a land that is familiar and foreign all at the same time.

Just as in the very word “missions”, Birth & Bereavement is so much more than many people would think it is.

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  • 3. It is riddled with darkness, despair, wars on many fronts and attacks from all directions.  Intruders in the night creep in to rob us of the very sustenance we need, to rape our vulnerable spirits and to plunder our hope.  The persecution is real. 

And, no, I do not use these descriptives lightly at all.

  • 4. It is an all-consuming work.

It is a misunderstood work.  It is a lonely work.  It rips into every belief we have ever held.  It requires sacrifice to the deepest degree.  The result of these conditions can eat into our own health, in every way and on every level.  It requires explanation of the umpteenth time to our loved ones – and to ourselves – why we persevere.  It offers little rest.  Each need is not the next to serve but is the first all over again.  Preparation, education and training are essential, but so is humility and so is endurance.  It requires a delicate dance of daring to allow ourselves to be seen while simultaneously mirroring back to those we are serving.  It demands vulnerability.

  • 5. The fruit of the labor is global, and eternal.

It is neither a denominational effort nor a doctrinal agenda.  The rewards are not shiny and the accolades are not shouted.  The feedback is but a whisper.  It is in the breath of the bereaved and weary mother who sighs in forlorn, as she wearily pulls her feet forward anyway even when the will to live has escaped her.   It is in the unseen moments, long after our work is done, when the weary traveler discovers the bend in the journey where grief unfolds into healing.

 

It is a work that requires workers of all skills and abilities and demands the participation of many degrees.  Here are but a few:

Whoever you are, wherever you are, you are invited.

What’s more, you are needed.

 

 

 

 

 

Student Sharing

As we start a new class, inevitably friends and supporters of the SBD doula students want to have a peek, an inside view of what the student is learning, how the student is being challenged, and in what ways the student is being inspired.  Here is a place for SBD students themselves, to comment and share a bit of their journey.

Week 1: fertility, pre-conception, conception, diversity in beliefs about pregnancy, birth and loss

Week 2: prenatal bonding, nutrition, partners, physiology of childbirth in every trimester

Week 3: medical support options during childbirth in every trimester

Week 4: non-medical support options during childbirth in every trimester, birth plans, building a doula bag & networking

Week 5: physical postpartum in all experiences, NICU

Week 6: emotional postpartum in all experiences, hormones, grief

Week 7: mourning, the emotional experience of the doula

Week 8: the practical, professional and business aspects of the doula

1miniu

 

What is the SBD training?

A powerful interview of Elizabeth Petrucelli, author of All That is Seen and Unseen, was held by Denver Natural Mom. 
Click the link above or the photo below, and you can listen in.

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Some of my favorite moments are:
“the ah, ha moment” at 10:00
Personal truth about bonding on 12:00
Doula: stoicism and performance/support fears at 13:00
“Even though it was a tough program on so many levels, it prepared me for what I do now.
I’ve taken other trainings but nothing is comparable to what I received from stillbirthday.” (minute 14)
What a birth & bereavement doula does – minute 15:15 – 23
Why and how SBD doulas benefit hospitals – minute 21-23
About mentoring – minute 21
“The bereavement doula is designed to help the family recover, but slowly.”
“The hospital can’t follow up as often as the bereavement doula can so this is an excellent way for hospitals to provide the highest level of support for families experiencing pregnancy and infant loss, and it is my hope that hospitals pick up on this idea and hire some.
This is one of my goals.”
“It is above and beyond what a hospital can provide without them.”

“Stillbirthday’s Birth & Bereavement Doula training is amazing. Heidi has created comprehensive materials that far exceeded my expectations and instilled in me a strong confidence to support loss parents during their darkest hour. The human touch she weaves into the training confirmed for me that I’d made the right decision in choosing stillbirthday for this experience.”
-Jaime Hogan, part-time volunteer SBD
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“Still Birth Day is an amazing program.  I highly suggest ALL doulas take it, regardless of who else you trained/certified through.”
-Shannon Sasseville, SBD trained doula
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“Please know that I have learned so much more in this course than I had hoped and than I had learned in my five years of university. It has been an absolutely amazing honour to have been given the opportunity to meet so many wonderful women and to acquire all of this extensive knowledge. I cannot say enough about Stillbirthday and I am so incredibly thankful that my journey through grief led me to this opportunity. I truly feel that this is my calling and I will forever be indebted to you for all you do and for giving me the tools that I need to follow my dream. Thank you so much!”
-Jasmin Herchak, SBD student
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“Stillbirthday is a refuge for the heart, a safe haven where unconditional love abounds, a place of solace. I am honored to be a SBD doula. My motherhood journey began with a pregnancy loss. The loss of my baby shaped me in very profound ways. It was out of this loss that I felt compelled to take the training and become certified to help other families in their time of grief and mourning. As a SBD doula I am able to support birth in any trimester with any outcome. At Stillbirthday a pregnancy loss is still a birthday. It is a community where resources can be found for birthing plans, farewell celebrations and bereavement support. When I had my miscarriage I did not know anyone who had suffered the same loss. My arms were empty, my eyes were full of tears and my heart was so very heavy. I sought comfort in my faith in God. I knew he was the creator of the life in my womb. 2 Corinthians 1:4 says He comforts us in all our troubles so that we can comfort others. When they are troubled, we will be able to give them the same comfort God has given us. It is my desire to comfort others in their time of need. Stillbirthday is like balm for the grieving soul. Stillbirthday has equipped me to walk out the desire of my heart in a tangible and meaningful way. If you are in need of compassion because you have experienced loss or if you are interested in becoming a birth and bereavement doula please visit www.stillbirthday.info a place where all are welcome and loved.”
-Holly Lowmiller, SBD published at PaxBaby
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“In my opinion, stillbirthday is one of the most rigorous available. Furthermore, the inclusion of miscarriage and stillbirth information provides a firm foundation for helping clients through unexpected outcomes.”
-Summer Thorp-Lancaster, SBD student
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“Many people don’t understand the enormity of this training. It’s 8 weeks (you have 12 to finish it) and it can be completely overwhelming. So many people NEED the 12 weeks to complete it. I have never taken training like this before. I would say it’s close to an accelerated college course. Each week you have reading, assignments, and discussions. Some of the assignments involved making phone calls or visiting hospitals and/or funeral homes. In addition, there are 2 books reports and a community project.
You won’t be disappointed. I know many people look down on online training but this isn’t the same.”
-Elizabeth Petrucelli, SBD and author of All That is Seen and Unseen
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“I salute you Heidi for the brilliant work you have done to start Stillbirthday. It was a life changing course for me, and I hope I can now better serve the people that the Lord brings across my path. On behalf of all the other students and Doulas, thank you for everything you put into it. We can clearly see that all your heart is in this. Thanks for sharing so honestly and thanks for taking the lead in the field. Not only in the US, but also internationally. My life is so much richer with SBD in my life.”
-Rechelle Vermaak SBD serving South Africa
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What is an SBD Doula?
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“Birth & Bereavement Doula: A birth doula is an essential part of a mother’s support team during the childbearing year, especially during actual childbirth. A birth doula provides constant emotional and physical support, information, and promotes a loving, safe, non-judgemental environment for the mother and her family. Similarly, a bereavement doula goes further and provides families with constant support during one of the most difficult times of their lives. Bereavement doulas help families by facilitating healing through love, humility, and respect. It is important for families to feel unconditionally supported in the event of a loss, especially because there are often external factors that may make them feel as though they cannot express how they truly feel, thus hindering the healing process. Sometimes families do not have adequate family support or they feel as though their loved ones won’t understand. It is important to serve these families in a way that helps them identify and address these feelings, and to be able to grieve in their own way to promote healing. ”
-Brandy Crigger, SBD student
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“Doulas provide support and comfort that can make such a noticeable difference to birth mothers and the fathers too. Support during bereavement can be life changing. Memories of loss will be replayed over and over and will be remembered for a lifetime and will be grasped for something to hold on to. A doula’s support can make the difference in those precious moments that will last a lifetime. At no other time in my life did I need support as much and at no other time was it as difficult to find. During loss the family is in shock it is hard to do basic life but at that moment you must make decisions you probably never considered before. To have the service of a doula to provide guidance, affirmation, preparation, and to justify feelings. To help remove fear so that the couple may bond with their precious child. This can make all the difference.”
-Ashleigh Gipson, SBD student
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Something to Give

Told by: Kelly Gerken, SBD

This was originally written at Sufficient Grace Ministries.

Yesterday, I stood again in the place where heaven and earth meet.

It has been fourteen years since I felt Him brush past me, filling the room with soothing peace that knows no reason, and love that floods with warmth and hope, as I sang to my baby boy when he went straight from my arms to the arms of Jesus.

“Guess what I got to do,” I said breathlessly, that day 14 years ago, when I called Dinah and Ginny, after holding my Thomas.

There is nothing so sacred this side of heaven. Nothing so precious. As the gift of life.

And nothing more miraculous and astounding than when heaven and earth meet for a moment. Anything is possible. Everything you hope for is real.

Grief and joy dance with abandon.

Because life…no matter how brief…is meant to be celebrated. Soaked in. Honored. Treasured.

Holly and I had the incredible privilege of walking with a family, waiting to say hello and goodbye to their sweet baby girl. We spent most of the night and the better part of the following day, standing on sacred ground with them. It was the first time we were able to offer in person support in those crucial moments…together.

As I scurried to pack my bag to take to the family, I ran through the SGM office, choosing crocheted gowns by Marlene, and satin wraps with pink lining and daisies made by Peggy, a Comfort Bear that several hands sewed and stuffed. Others glued hearts, others cut fabric. So many involved in the making of each bear. So many loving hearts and willing hands, working hours every month, so that babies that the world may never know will have something beautiful. And the families who miss them, will find some small comfort. I put pink bracelets made by Marlene into the bag. And, the Dreams of You Memory book.

I wondered on the drive there what it will be like on the other side. I’ve been the mom. But, what will it be like to walk beside a family. Will they mind our presence? Will we be helpful? Will they feel as if we’re invading this sacred place?

We have had the training. Read the books. But, what will the moment be like?

It was like breathing.

I remembered our SBD Birth and Bereavement Doula training, and how important it is to focus on meeting the baby. Soaking in this time with her. Filling her brief life with memories. I remembered my own questions years ago, as I tried to answer theirs. And, I have never been so grateful that I was chosen to be the mother of Faith, Grace, and Thomas. Because they lived, I have something…however small…to give. Reassurance. Hope. From a mother who has walked there.

When we meet Jesus, the crowns we get for the way we serve him on this Earth…the rewards. They aren’t for us. They are so that when we see Him, and we are so desperate to have something to give…to show our love…our worship…our gratefulness….that we will have an offering. Something to cast at His feet, because He gave us so much.

And, when we look into the eyes of a mother about to say goodbye to her baby, there is nothing so desperate as the longing to have something to give.

When we met their sweet baby girl the next day, I felt such unspeakable awe of the gift that I could be allowed to behold the beauty of this precious little one. She was already wearing the wrap with the daisies that we brought for her. And, the bracelet was dangling from her mama’s arm. As I slipped the bracelet on the arm of their daughter, I felt a stirring deep in my heart. The sacredness…the privilege…the nearness of heaven whispering. It was like putting the bracelet on my own little girls. Peace filling, surrounding. Oh, I remember this place well. This is the place where He is so near that you can reach out and touch the hem of His garment. I looked down in disbelief that it was my hands He would allow to do this most meaningful task.

I didn’t get to put beautiful bracelets on the arms of my girls or an outfit on my Thomas. But, in that moment, it was if they were there too. And He whispered to my heart, “It will be this way for each baby you meet.” I didn’t do this for them. But, I can offer the opportunity for as many moms as I am allowed the privilege to meet. Because they lived.

I held her in my arms. So grateful for the beauty and gift of this little girl’s life and the family that loves her dearly.

And, as we left, I felt the urge to call my Dinah and say, “Guess what I got to do.”

I’ve struggled a little, at times, with this new identity. Being the person people think of when a baby dies. But, yesterday, I embraced the gift.

We get to go to the place where heaven and earth meet. We get to witness miracles. We get to be there to honor lives that few will see. We get to stand on holy ground. We get to offer beauty and hope in the midst of a pain.

And, because of the amazing hands and willing hearts of the women who gather to use their gifts to make beautiful items for tiny babies and their families…

We have something to give.

And…I am overcome. With the amazing grace of it all.

Please visit our new SGM Perinatal Hospice and Bereavement Services pages to learn more about some of the services now available.

 

 

My Baby Deserves My Heart

Told by: Andie

I’m a mother, been a mother since I was 17 years old.

I have four amazing children…three boys and a girl; ranging from 15 to 19 months.

I’m still nursing my littlest guy. I haven’t had a period in a long time- since I got pregnant with my last baby actually. I have however in the past few months experienced other signs of ovulation. I’ve kept track because we were wanting to try for another baby. I hadn’t had of those signs in the past few weeks…on the contrary, I’ve felt “different”. I considered the possibility of a pregnancy. I tried not to get excited, yet, and didn’t take a test. I wanted to wait a few more weeks before I jumped the gun. Well last night, as I got in the tub with my baby, I noticed a few bright red clots. Which is weird for me in a cycle. I’ve continued to have bright red bleeding, clots, and a general sense of being un-whole.

Now I’ve spent the night and day wondering and thinking if this is a period or an early miscarriage. It makes me feel blue- because if it is, I may never know on paper. I didn’t get to celebrate someone that was and is no more.

That probably doesn’t make much sense.

I am a registered nurse, and a student midwife, so I have this curse of knowledge. I’m trying to overlook some of the tale tell signs because I don’t want it to be so.

I’ve never had a loss and I don’t know how to process it or communicate it. My entire being is saying I’m losing something important and special and unique and worthy and meant to be. I’m confused. I’m feeling emotional and regretful…guilty and sad….uncertain and quite alone.

Because I never had a pregnancy test or an ultrasound that gave me the scientific yes- I am taking on this societal NO, giving me a weight of NO:

No Andie, you don’t have a reason to celebrate, and no you don’t have a reason to mourn because there’s no certainty.

I can’t live with that. I just feel…I don’t have a good word for it…but something.

There was something and now I feel empty. My body is going through a new experience, I know my body well and this is foreign. I would have been due in February. I wanted to share mostly because I had an inner voice telling me not to, and that’s not right.

This is happening and why should it be a secret that lives only in me. I don’t want to ask permission to be sad over this, I’m giving myself that privilege.

I deserve to have my feelings and my baby deserves my heart.

Its strange how a mother can love a being she didn’t even know existed, but I do. I’m in love with the tiny babe my husband and I made, I’m in love with God’s creation, I’m in love with knowing Jesus is rocking the baby I can’t and that one day he will return that babe to my aching arms.

New Loss Leaders

Whether your experience was some time ago or has been more recent, I first, extend to you my heart, and tell you that I am so very sorry for the loss you may have experienced, that has brought with it, the desire to bring comfort to others.

Your desire to bring comfort and healing to the hurting is an important one.  I’d like to take a very transparent moment, to help you embark on this journey.

What I believe to be the most important thing to know, is that there will be feelings – surprising feelings – that you may be faced with, on your journey.

Even when I tell you what some of these are, they still may come unexpectedly.  And they may rock you to the core.

 

Jealousy. 

You yearn for bereavement to be recognized.  You yearn for the hurting to receive support.  So when another leader is recognized, why is it that your thrill is also met with a sinking feeling in the pit of your stomach?

Navigating it:

Remembering to appreciate those who have been on this rugged journey a bit longer, is so important.  Your feelings – they’ve had them too.  There will be another bereaved mother after you, and she, like you, will have a heart to use her heartache for good.  She too will see you being recognized before and instead of her.  We are all in this together, and we all bring something valuable.  Your grace and appreciation toward those who are recognized is just as important as anything else you bring to the work of healing.

Rejection.

Following close behind jealousy, disappointment may follow.  Disappointment that ties oh so closely with a sense of rejection.  You know that a great way to get your organization noticed is to apply for opportunities.  So when the rejection notices fill your inbox, why does it sting?  You feel that your loved ones should give their attention to what you’ve experienced and what you’re doing.  So when your hopeful expectation is met only with silence, feeling alone, feeling overlooked, feeling forgotten can burden your heart and leave you feeling heavily weary, feeling ashamed, feeling angry.

Navigating it:

Remembering that whomever reviewed your application still viewed your work, that your application in-and-of-itself drew attention, is helpful.  That person may remember you – and when it’s needed most.

Remembering that articulating not only what you are asking of your loved ones, but the importance you place on their response, and why, can be helpful for them to understand, and can be helpful as they prepare their response to you.  Remembering that support resources for bereaved are also available for you, is also important.

Anger.

Seeing people misusing bereavement support.  Seeing people steal keepsakes.  Seeing people steal work.

Navigating it:

Remembering to plan ahead is so important.  How will you protect the families you serve?  How will you handle returns, exchanges, complaints and other needs?  Having structure, having flexibility, and having integrity are important.

Abandonment.

“Loss Leaders” are generally bereaved, or have a very deep connection to the bereaved.  Once you step out as a leader – someone who provides a product or service to the bereaved, it can seem to quickly be forgotten that you are also bereaved.  It may seem as though people forget to talk as nicely to you.  Complaints about your product or service can seem to be directly related to the value of your deceased child or the worth of your grief.

Feeling trapped with your feelings, afraid of having nowhere safe to go to unpack them.  Fear that mourning will be looked at negatively, that observations will be construed as complaining, fear that showing too much emotion might be construed as a sign that your services are poor or that you’re being manipulative.  Feeling that showing too little emotion is contributing to others’ forgetting to recognize your grief, or making you less credible or less able to relate and to support.

Navigating it:

Remembering that you now wear two hats is important for your own emotional health.  Establishing support resources for yourself not affiliated with your customers or those you serve can be so important.  Taking up hobbies, enjoyable pastimes, or engaging in spiritually or emotionally nurturing rituals, traditions and activities can be helpful.  Finding the balance between transparently revealing your weaknesses, while also sharing how you’ve grown, and learning to offer these genuinely without condition, is something that takes a great deal of maturity, honesty and grace.

Competition.

It can be upsetting to see people choosing a different keepsake seller than you, even if your products are similar.  Professional competition can seem unnerving and seem, again, to undermine the value of your loss and the worth of your grief.  Do you badmouth the competition, lie about them, give up your work because they seem to be more successful?  Having a healthy action plan that affirms your own personal worth regardless of business success is important.

Competition can also reveal itself in other, perhaps more subtle ways.

How do your loved ones support your efforts of bringing comfort and healing to the hurting?  When you have a “bad day” – when you are feeling particularly sensitive or hurt, can you share your feelings honestly with your loved ones, without fear that they will tell you to “just close shop”?  Do you feel that you are having to bottle your feelings, having to pretend you are happier than you are?

When you evaluate your emotional needs, do you believe that they have become greater since becoming a leader?  Do you believe that you have more grief, because you endure these challenges listed here?

Your emotional needs are not greater because you are serving others.  Yes, I said that, and it can be painful to accept it.  Your service may provide more frequent reminders of your emotional needs, but your grief journey is not more worthy because you are subject to these painful moments.  You have challenges of bereavement (personal), and you have challenges of leadership (professionalism).  The two can often seem indistinguishable and to magnify one another, and it takes great accountability and a great support system around you, to help differentiate the two and identify how the two may impact one another.

Navigating it:

It is important for you to nurture yourself in such a way that your emotional health does not become conditional upon the seeming success of your efforts to bring comfort to others.  The process of removing this condition can take time and practice.  It can take grit and sweat and tears and prayer.  It can in fact, be the most difficult part of your journey.

Temptation.

You log onto Facebook.  You see a page that talks about a subject that you can connect with your service or product.  They have like, a billion likes!  Surely they can benefit from knowing about you, so you kindly give them a little “link love”.  You know what I’m talking about.

Then they send you that rejection.  They deleted your link, they didn’t share it, they don’t seem interested.  It’s hurtful because you know that community can genuinely benefit from what you bring.

Then you go to your own Facebook page.  You see an unsolicited comment with a link to something that you think “I don’t know what that’s all about.  I care about my readers, and I don’t want to be leading them to something I don’t know all about.  Besides, they’ve got care here.”  So you decide to delete their link, or not share it, or not address it.

The temptation to oversee your own hypocrisy can cause you to turn to deep disappointment toward communities who really should be sharing your work, and deep agitation toward those who fail to address you as an individual.

The temptation to forget your original objective – to help the hurting.  As innocent as your work began, the feelings that can creep in can totally destroy it.  The temptation to steal work.  The temptation to lie.  I’ve seen the most known and well appreciated “leaders” in bereavement support sink to dishonesty, and as a bereaved mother myself, it pains me to see their character damaged in that way.

The temptation to give up.  The temptation to forget that any of the feelings explored on this page may probably happen to you.

Navigating it:

Remembering that you want to help, and remembering why you want to help, is important.  Considering ways to collaborate.  Evaluating, perhaps with support, those deeper feelings of insecurity, fear of rejection, and conditional placements on your perceived successes.

Remembering to have an action plan for your own marketing, having an idea in mind about what you would like to achieve, having an understanding that professional competition can be softened with your identifying others as individuals, all can be so valuable, to the success of your professional goals, but also to your emotional health.

We each bring something valuable.  Whether your product or service seems to be a re-created wheel or is innovative and new, we each, simply by having an option, help those we are intending to help.

It is so difficult to give grace when you are the one who’s grieving.  Remember that.  Say it.  Bookmark this page, and come back when you meet these feelings.

You need support.  As a bereaved individual, you need support.  As someone seeking to bring healing to others, you need support.  Remember that, too.

If I can ask you to remember five things in your journey, it’s these:

  1. Be humble.
  2. Be flexible.
  3. Be patient.
  4. Be genuine.
  5. Be supported.

Being a “leader” is a very loose term, simply to mean that you have something to offer others.  What you give to others is much more important in matter of worth than what you will ever receive in return.

CONNECT.

Here at stillbirthday, we seek to bridge that devastating chasm between the moment loss is discovered, to the time when support is provided.

And you can be a part of that.

If you have a little blog that shares your story, if you have a start up shop, if you have an announcement, I do want to know about it.   You can use the “contact us” tab above, leave a comment below, or feel free to “spam” our Facebook page with your link.

If it’s offensive, if you’re asking for private information, for things like photos, for money, for something that directly replaces what we provide here at stillbirthday, for anything that I think might hurt me, or those who walk the journey of grief – my stillbirthday family – I may delete it.  I don’t reshare anything, anywhere, of any stillbirthday family member, that can be pulled somewhere outside of the stillbirthday ability to remove it.  If it’s anything else, it’ll stay, and if you have a question about that, you can ask it.

Stillbirthday is here for you, so that you can be there for others.

Finally, I want to thank you, for your courage to help the hurting.

To date, I’ve been providing love in bereavement for nearly two years – as a lightly seasoned “loss leader”, by my sharing these embarrassing, difficult but real truths with you, it is my hope that YOU may know, that YOU are not alone.

Related: Resolving to Get Involved

 

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