Having sent from on high, O King of all, and taken the blessed infant, like a pure bird unto the heavenly nest, O Master, Thou has saved this soul from snares of many forms, and has united it with the souls of the Righteous who are enjoying the delights of Thy Kingdom. ~ From Jacob's memorial service

Purpose of my blog...

And so here I am...10 months post my son Jacob's unexpected death and writing a blog. I am not sure what I think about this but I do know that as everyone lovingly, yet haphazardly, always asks how I am doing this is the only way to sincerely and honestly let everyone know without spewing it all out each time. In person, I usually say the standard and most comfortable for others "I'm fine...how are you?" but here I can truly be honest. This is all very personal but I have found that an event such as the death of a child is still such a taboo in this society that people have lieterally no idea what this experience is like or how to react, help, or handle it when it happens to a freind, loved one, or even themselves. Selfishly, this blog is also a way for me to find my way through the fog of this year and try to figure out where I am. I have hesitated writing this as I don't want to be thought of as self-indulgent or a total bitter woman but I pray that in sharing, for someone, it will make it easier to understand how this experience has affected and continues to affect me and our family and maybe help someone out there to be a little more compassionate and kind to someone that they know that finds themself going through the same thing. So, for those of you that are still reading to this point and really want to know...well, here it all is...

Thursday, February 28, 2013

The answer to "Isn't this so hard for you?!"

The one resounding thing I've received, feedback wise, from friends and family in regards to writing these chapters is that people seem to think that it must be so hard for me to write all of it, excruciating, devastating  emotional, etc.  So I wanted to have the chance to clarify what it actually has been like.

In actuality it has been a relief in the truest sense of the word.  I feel like I have had to bottle this all up for almost a year just to make others more comfortable around me and not run away from me in fear.  After Jacob died I could sense the unease in people around me, that they did not know what to say, or they said nothing for fear of saying the wrong thing...would change the subject as soon as I brought it up myself therefore leaving me no other choice than to either have a outburst saying "Why won't you let me talk about my baby!" or the choice I always took,  just letting the conversation wander away into something more "comfortable" and "normal" for everyone else.  That and the flip side of people that are overly concerned and treat me like a fragile egg that will shatter into a million pieces at any moment.  That is just as hard for me to deal with at times because I feel with some I'm constantly saying, "yes, I'm fine right now" and the truth is that I am fine a lot of the time.  There seem to be so many "expectations" from others about how I should be feeling just by how they conduct themselves around me.  Sometimes with the ones that are overly sympathetic, I want to go run and look in the mirror to see if I forgot to wash my face or something and last night's mascara is sliding down my face as if I've been crying all night.  Do I look that bad?  With others, that don't bring it up at all, or change the subject immediately even when I bring it up, I wonder if they are thinking in their heads..."please don't bring your dead baby up, please, please, please because I don't know what to say".  It is completely understandable that people are uneasy, but so very isolating, and I already felt pretty isolated as the only mom I knew at the time that this had ever happened to.  I just wanted to talk about him with people that could just listen to where I was at on any given day and with people that didn't feel the urge to insert their own interpretation of why this happened or told me how hard it was for them, or tried to make me look at the "bright side". Honestly, in this, the first year since Jacob died, there has not been much "bright side".  I think and believe that that truly just comes over time and lots of it.  For some reason though it is very uncomfortable for people to let something just be what it is and that is that things in life are just plain  hard sometimes.  Jacob dying unexpectedly was hard and sad and bad in many ways.  Not everything has to be cheery or "fixed", not everything can be fixed.  I never expected anyone to "fix" what happened to us so for others who chose to only express their sadness that they could not "fix it" and then did nothing else, well why say that? Why chose to say the one thing that you know you could never do, fix it?  So you can feel better?  So you can try to make me feel better? It does not work because it's an offer that I know is impossible.  I think people are uncomfortable with what we, Dan and I, have to face day to day because for many they have never faced something like loosing a child the way we did.  I wish people would focus more on what they can do.  Call and leave an encouraging message, send a card, an email, just say they are thinking of us and praying for us.  All of that was the most comforting and by far the most helpful.  Wishing has never gotten me very far and others wishing they could fix this is not a true action.  The above that wonderful friends did were all actions, calling, dropping food off, an encouraging text message, praying, all very seemingly simple things but THOSE things made the biggest difference and still do to this day.

Having just recently found out that our very dear friends three month old daughter was diagnosed with Leukemia last week and that they are looking at two years of rather intense treatment many friends of ours were still concerned about letting us know.  It is hard knowing that, and accepting that most people are still uncomfortable and not sure of what is and is not okay to say around us.  I vividly remember realizing the night Jacob died that people would probably start to treat me as "that woman who's baby died" and it was  a painful thought.  That everyone around me would forever act differently towards me and Jacob's death would always act as this big elephant in the room. In their shoes, I'm sure I would have been the same way before this happened to me.  I am not disappointed really, just sad that this is the way it is.  If anything, we feel like we can kind of see what they, our friends, are going through.  It's not the same, but the shock of your whole world flipping upside down in an instant, that I'm sure is very similar for anyone that has experienced it, either in loosing a child or hearing your child is very very sick.  All these friends helped support us when we lost Jacob, so now I just look at it as we get to finally repay some of the kindness that was bestowed upon us.  It was our time to need help then and now it's their turn and we are happy to help and hope we can help in a more meaningful way than we would have been able to before Jacob died.

The truth is that I love to hear his name. When others are comfortable talking about him it allows me to be comfortable talking about him and lets me be "myself" now; who I am now.  In doing these chapters I have felt like I can finally say everything that I've had to keep zipped up over the last year just to avoid more uncomfortable conversations than we already experience.  And being able to say it without seeing peoples responses is a blessing too. I know that everyone just will not be comfortable with me talking about this in person and I accept that.  I think people tend to think of how they would handle our situation if they were ever in it and maybe many think they would always be a mess and therefore expect me to always be a mess.  But now that it has happened to me, I just have good days and bad days like everyone else.  It's just that my bad days are always underscored by the added loss of Jacob.  It has taken time to figure out how to navigate life since Jacob died, especially when bad days come and it's something I think I'll be figuring out forever.  It does not take much to make a normal bad day as a parent that much worse or to have a small pity party if it is a hard day, an anniversary, a holiday or just a Saturday at 10:02.  As much as I have contemplated how this happened to us, I have accepted that it did and it's okay to have bad days and get emotional, because the bad days always pass too.

This blog has given me a way to remember Jacob, remember his story, our story, that he really existed and share it with others in a "safe" way.  Nothing is as hard as that week was right after he died. Nothing.  Writing about it and reading it together with Dan reminds us that it did happen, it was not all a dream (even though it feels like that to us sometimes) and how hard it was at the time.  We can honor that, but remembering it and talking about it does not bring us back into that horrible week.  Luckily, we only had to live through that week once in real life and now we can just remember it.  The sting is gone and that is the blessing of time.

I hope if there are other moms reading this who have lived through a similar experience you will feel free to comment on the things that were the most helpful for you if you are comfortable sharing.  I think it helps others who have not been through this to have a better idea of how to help friends who may go through it.  

Sunday, February 17, 2013

11 months and counting...

So, this very moment 11 months ago I was lying on a table looking at Jacobs little fist, waiting, waiting.   This day was not hard but I fear that next month will be; this hour of time that passed almost a year ago.  It's easier now but still surreal.  Did it really happen?  I look at the little white memory box we left the hospital with, the only thing we left the hospital with besides the blankets Jacob had been wrapped up in for hours and an array of medical pads to get me through the next few days post labor.
 
It did happen. 
He's not here...
my 11 month old
my sweet Jacob. 
 
But I get to feel his sister kick and that should be a great and amazing thing.  Another moment of joy and  sadness all twisted together, gratitude and agony, faith in a brighter tomorrow and devastation at the little boy that is missing.  I want to be all cheerful, happy, grateful for what I do have, present THAT to everyone, but it's just not real all the time and for this moment it is more sad than happy.  Moments pass though and enough moments get you to today, 11 months later.  Sometimes it feels like each breath, every moment, has been a fight and other times it's been a big blur of time passing with no real achievements, nothing to show for it, other than two somehow well adjusted kids that seem to be floursihing despite my internal and sometimes external floundering.  But I am still here, so that is an achievement, and as I got through the last 330 some odd days I'll get through the next 30 and then the thousands after that hopefully.  But now, for this minute, I just miss him. 
 
11 more minutes or so before they called his time of death.  Seems like a good place to stop for the night. 

Friday, February 15, 2013

Trip to Jacob

So today is just two days shy of Jacob's 11 month birthday.  Sadly one of the nuns who I've talked to several times at the monastery where he is buried is currently in hospice care and not expected to live long.  Dan was asked to make the coffin for her so he is downstairs working diligently to finish.  We have a van that is too small to fit the kids and a coffin so after a LOT of calling yesterday, finally one place had a truck to rent so we can go to the monastery together as a family and also visit Jacob's grave. Something we don't get to do very often as it's three and a half hours away. 

Last night, for the first time, probably of many times to come, I had the experience of picking out flowers for Jacob's grave.  To even write that sentence seems unreal, much  less actually doing it.  Gazing over the array of flowers at Trader Joe's I found ones that reminded me of our wedding and some white hydrangeas which I've always loved.  Not the way I've ever spent a Valentines day in the past and nothing I ever thought I'd have to do, even in old age. Is flowers what I want to bring? What do you take to your son's grave? What would be more meaningful? What kinds of questions are these? Sometimes the reality of what my life has become since March 17th, 2012 is too much for me to still even wrap MY head around.  It seems surreal, like a dream, or some weird alternate life.  I'm not overly sad today, but I'm not overly happy either.  It's that weird space in between a space that only a mother who has lost knows.  The space between Heaven and Earth where you have to try to find a compromise between reality and desire.  A place where space and time seem to go by so slowly and our true desires, to be with our babies, will never be achievable on this earth.

I remember the first time we went back to Jacob's grave it was just Dan and I about 5 months after he died.  I'll write about that more later in a future chapter but one of the most meaningful conversations I had that day was with Mother Lyubov, the one who is dying right now.   I told her how I felt so bad that I'd not been back more to see Jacob.  She told me how her mother had lost a child, one of five or six children that she did have.  They never went to her brothers grave and when she was older she asked her mom why?  Why didn't we go? She said her mom very simply said, "because I had 5 other living children here to take care of that needed me."  She comforted me in that statement and in the wisdom her mother had.  Her brother was not "there" and neither is Jacob "there".  They are in a far better place and I believe that with every fiber of my body.  Mother Lyubov also said that she suffered one or two miscarriages herself and mourned the loss of her babies.  She warned me to not do ultrasounds as you never know the effects.  I have thought about that several times since we met that day.  Last night, not sleeping, I thought how interesting it was.  Here is a nun, someone that has dedicated the second part of their life to God and even she, in her amazing faith, still questioned what we do as standard practice in today's culture.   I am not sure that she herself had ultrasounds but she knows other moms do and still wants to find a way to stop such a painful loss.  Dan and I always do ultrasounds and are not worried but I am not sure if we'd had a miscarriage instead would that have been a question I had.  And honestly even if you do find something abnormal in an ultrasound and know ahead of time, it does not make the pain of loss any easier.  A loss is a loss at any point and I fear the pain is the same.  A lot of the moms that I know and have talked to that have had a miscarriage or stillbirth wonder, what if we had or had not done this or that in regards to why their baby didn't make it.  I feel blessed that I at least know the why, that Jacob didn't have a trachea, however why he didn't have one, I've wondered that several times.  Should I have been more diligent about taking my prenatal vitamins? Was my egg damaged in some way or Dan's sperm?  How could everything on Jacob form so perfectly except that one thing, that one MAJOR thing?  It's a pure miracle that he formed as beautifully as he did and that I really did get to hold such a precious baby in my arms if even just for hours and dead at that. He was beautiful in death, not scary and not to be hidden.  

As we prepare a final resting place for Mother Lyubov, I can't help but be a little bit jealous that her road is almost over.  That she is so very close to meeting her children that she never did get to hold or lay her eyes upon but that she's mourned all these years.  One thing I have from Jacob's death is that although I do not seek it out, I am not afraid of death anymore.  I'm not sure I ever really was, never really thought about it much, but having a piece of Dan and I eternally on the other side, separate from me that I can't see or touch, knowing it will hopefully be a very long time until my time comes, when the time does come, there will be a joy in my heart and a peace and eagerness to breathe my final breath and finally look upon Jacob's precious face again and be with him for eternity.  Please keep Mother Lyubov in your thoughts and prayers as her road ends.  

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

There is a movie in post production....

In relation to stillbirth...based on a true story and I am excited. I hope this will help to shed light on something that 26,000 families go through each year...that is 3 stillbirths an hour in the US.  I hope this makes it to theaters!

 Return to Zero

Saturday, February 9, 2013

more complete...finally! Chapter 7 is up

To those of you that have been following, it's taken a lot longer to get these next few chapters completed.  All of them are in regards to the services that we had for Jacob.  For those of you that do not know about Orthodox Christianity, much of our services are sung.  Below I have posted a link to some of the music that was sung at Jacob's service.  This is not Jacob's service but one for one of the beloved Archbishops of our church that passed away in 2011, Archbishop Dmitri.  There are many clergy at this service, hence all the vestments you will see.  The song they sing is Memory Eternal, the one I talk about in Chapter 7.  They sing it in English first then Slavonic, Spanish then Greek.  It really is beautiful and powerful.  This particular church is in Dallas, TX.
 
 
 
I really wanted to find the music to "The Last Kiss" which was sung at the end of Jacob's service but I can not find it anywhere.  The words alone are beautiful and if anyone reading this does know if there is a choir on YouTube or something that has this melody please let me know.  Until Jacob died I have never heard it in reference to a baby so the words were even more meaningful to me. 
 
The last kiss is not just a song but an old tradition that the Orthodox Church has held onto over the years.  Having lost Jacob and being probably the most distraught person at his services it has a new meaning to me.  The last kiss was/is traditionaly done at the end of the funeral service.  Obviously, in order to do this the coffin is open which is something that seems more and more rare in modern day funerals.  Family, friends, and mourners are invited to come forward to give a last "kiss of peace" to the departed.  Generally you kiss their forehead and the cross or icon that they are holding in their hand as well.  The hymns that the choir sings as the mourners say goodbye are meant to be solemn, moving and assist in the grieving process.  I am grateful to say that I would not have changed one thing about any of Jacob's services.  The choir was amazing, the people were supportive and if it had to happen, I was so grateful for all the people that brought this service together so quickly for us.  May God bless you for your time, energy and love for us and especially for our sweet Jacob. 

Friday, February 8, 2013

Words of Wisdom I Just Found...

"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate, our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure, it is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us, we ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented and fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God.

We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us.  It's not just in some of us, it's in everyone and as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give others permission to do the same, as we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others." 

Nelson Mandela 

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Chapter 6 added...

I was not sure if I would ever get this part written.  This has been the hardest part for me to remember, the days and hours before we had the services for Jacob...how I got through the days and nights...this part really is a blur but I think I managed to remember enough to fill the gap of time before we said our final goodbye's to Jacob.  I have talked to so many of you that have read all the chapters I have written and seem genuinely moved by them.  I again thank you for all your kind words. Knowing people are reading has been a great extra push for me to keep on going, keep remembering, keep writing.  I hope everyone can see how much we truly loved Jacob, still love him, and that everyone can see how he is still so much a part of our lives, even though we don't live in the memory of that awful week day in and day out.