The story of a mom trying to figure out life without her daughter...one day at a time.
Friday, August 31, 2012
This is not where I belong
This song has really hit home since losing Avery. The first time I heard it since she left us, I was on my way to visit the cemetery for the first time by myself. It came on the radio and I just listened and cried. This world truly isn't where I belong and I realize that now more than ever.
Dreams
She’s fallen asleep in her car seat, hand pressed against
her cheek-her favorite sleeping position.
I don’t want to wake her but I can’t get enough of her. So I slowly take her out of her car seat and
snuggle her in the crook of my arm. She
starts to coo, I say her name softly, “Avery, Avery.” She slowly opens her eyes, still slightly
crossed as she tries to focus, and looks deep into my eyes.
I melt. I am so in
love. I kiss her sweet, chubby
cheeks. Then, I hear the gas and feel
the diaper start to fill. It keeps going
and we have a blow-out. I call for my
husband to get the changing table ready.
I laugh as I bring her to her room to get changed grabbing a new diaper
and a new onesie. What a mess, but still
we are so in love.I bring her into her room; yell at my husband to close the dog out of the room. We undress her and I notice her umbilical cord has fallen off while she was gone. I smile at her beautiful pink smooth stomach. We laugh about how much it intimidated it us when it was still there and are thankful she is past that stage. I grab a diaper out of her monkey diaper holder, pampers, with little bears on the front. And then it happens…I wake up.
Thursday, August 30, 2012
Anxiety
I went back to work August 13th, the day after we
marked her 2nd month in Heaven.
I had been out on leave since June 4th just 2 days before she
was born. It’s now going on the end of
the 3rd week since I’ve gone back and I still haven’t made it
through a full week without calling in “sad.”
Some days, I think I am doing well. Yesterday, I was in the office a full
day. I dealt with the normal employee
issues that come along with being an HR Manager. It was overwhelming at times and I wanted to
give up but I pushed through. I got home
from work and we ran errands. It was one
of the more productive days I have had in the past 3 months. But it all hit me last night as I was trying
to go to bed. I spent most of the day not allowing the grief to overtake me but I cannot fight it all day. Last night was hard; I missed her-missed everything about her, I felt empty and the house was too quiet without my baby cooing beside me and waking me up to feed. I felt like I hadn’t spent the day yesterday remembering her on her 12 week birthday, remembering her the way I should have. I felt like I neglected her. I felt it all last night; depression, anger, guilt, hurt, etc. It was a rough night, I couldn’t sleep and when I dreamt dreams of babies and children, dreams where I long for her but she isn’t in these dreams.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Numb
It’s amazing to me the range of emotions I go through within
a day or how one day I can be a hot mess of emotions, unable to get out of the
house and the next, I am actually able to find something that makes me
smile. However, some days, I feel
nothing and I don’t want to do anything. That’s how I feel today, numb. The dictionary defines numb as incapable of action or of feeling emotion. And
that describes my feelings, or lack thereof, exactly. I really don’t feel anything; I
am not sad or upset (which is amazing since it’s a Tuesday, see this post), I
am not happy or excited about anything; I am just numb.
I hate feeling this way-feeling nothing at all. I think about her just as much as I do when I
am crying in bed all day or able to actually function like a human but on my
numb days, no emotions take me over when my thoughts go to her. How I feel today is a far cry from how I felt
last week, this weekend or even last night.
It’s amazing to me how quickly feelings can change. Just last night I cried myself to sleep. Yet this morning, I feel nothing.
Friday, August 24, 2012
Reality and Faith
I like to be able to solve problems. It’s something I do on a daily basis at
work. I always have an open ear to my
friends and try to lend helpful advice. You
lose your job-it’s ok; you’ll find a better one. Relationship troubles-they will pass. Family drama-give it some time and then talk
about it. But this problem I cannot
solve, I can’t fix.
Avery is gone and she isn’t coming back. Nobody can fix it, nothing I do or anyone
else does will ever bring her back. The
finality of it all really hits me hard. There’s
normally a light at the end of the tunnel, some solution to offer, words to
help comfort, but nothing, I mean NOTHING is going to make this all go
away (well at least nothing in this world).
The fact that my daughter, who I planned, carried, gave
birth to, brought home and mothered for 6 days is no longer here absolutely
kills me. Yet, this is my reality; I
have to live with reality this for the rest of my life. There is no solution, this problem isn’t
temporary, and it won’t resolve itself. The
finality of it all is almost impossible for me to wrap my mind around.
Fear of the Unknown
Most days I try not to focus on why my daughter is not here
with us, why she left us so early. She
was healthy for 9 months of pregnancy and released from the hospital after the
normal 2 day stay. 6 days after birth
she was gone. No obvious warnings, nothing
or was there?
Did I miss a fever? She never felt too warm, too cold. She never got sweaty or seemed cold.
Was her slight bit of fussiness
that night a warning sign? I had trouble
burping her during a big feeding that night so I wrote it off as gas. She seemed to feel better once she burped a
few times and went to the bathroom.
Did she sleep too much? I thought I was lucky that she slept well
and was told by Dr. Google and my parent friends that babies like to
sleep. It wasn’t like she slept
24/7. She was up at least every 4 hours
to feed and would get active when we changed her.
Was she having problems feeding? I wrote off occasional latching issues as us
getting adjusted to breastfeeding. I
also consulted the lactation consultant, Dr. Google, the What to Expect 1st
year book and other moms who told me that if she fed every few hours and had at
least 6-8 diaper changes a day, she was doing fine and she was, I kept record
of every feeding-the length, the start time, which breast, etc., and record of
how many diapers I changed and whether they were just wet or dirty too. Once she was latched, she was good to go.
My mind likes to play tricks on me and tell me I missed
something. My mind likes to place the
blame on me. Obviously a healthy baby
just doesn’t stop breathing for no reason.
I had to have missed something, my mind tells me over and over until I
am full of guilt and anxiety. This paralyzes
me; I sob uncontrollably, my chest tightens, my breaths become short and I am
at a point of no return. I let it
overpower me until I am physically and mentally exhausted and slowly I just
become numb.
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Distractions
As I sit here attempting to “work from home,” I laugh to
myself at what so many people said when I decided to attempt to start back to
work after losing Avery. Over and over,
since our loss, people have said, “well that will be a good distraction” or
that will help you get back to feeling “normal.” Whether it was because I was going back to
work, we were going out of town for the weekend or I was just doing something
to get out of the house, this was the general reply.
While I don’t take offense to these statements, I really don’t
think these well-meaning people really get it, and how can they unless they
have been in my shoes (which is something I wouldn’t wish upon my worst
enemy). Yes, I understand that at some
point we will be expected to go back into the world and having a routine will
probably help us with our grieving but going back into the real world will
never make this all go away. Getting
back to “normal” as many people say is never going to happen and there is
nothing in this world big enough to distract me from the loss of my daughter. In the past 2 ½ months I have come to loathe the words, “distraction” and “normal.”
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