Archive for the ‘Amanda’ Category

November

Friday, November 2nd, 2007

It is November 2nd. I am not sure how or why the flipping of a piece
of paper over that has November written at the top can make me feel so
out of sorts.  I am not sure I have ever shared this but I am going to
now.  I HATE the month of November.  October is great.  Allison’s
birthday, my birthday, Halloween, and the beginning of fall are all
wonderful things and great ways to make memories with my children.
November has Thanksgiving and the beginning of The Christmas Season. At
first glance November shouldn’t be all that horrible right?

Holidays are always difficult after you have lost a loved one and
especially a child. But usually you feel grumpy and crabby the day or
the week or month they actually died. Or I see their Birthday being
difficult. For me Amanda’s birth and death came on the same day in
July. But I don’t tend to get upset, angry or sad in July. I rejoice at
her short life and the people she touched.

Its November that is my sad depressed grumpy time of year. It comes
each year just like the flipping of the Calendar with the word November
glaring at me reminding me whats coming.

Why November you might be wondering. Well to be honest I didn’t
realize it until last year. For the past 3 years I have been a total
grump in November. I pick fights with Tony. Throw the equivalent of a 2
year olds fit when decorating the Christmas tree the weekend after
Thanksgiving. In general I am a pain to live with.

November 2003 is when we found out we were pregnant with Amanda. The
day after Thanksgiving to be exact. November 2003 is when we decided
adding to our family is what we wanted and the time was right. November
2003 was the last time I thought I had the perfect life the perfect
family.

We were so excited about adding to our family. Never in my wildest
dreams did I ever consider I wouldn’t get the story book ending.

So it seems every November a dark gloomy cloud parks itself over me
and goes away as mysteriously as it shows up when the Calendar changes
to December 1st.

So for the next 28 days if I don’t seem all the cheerful I am sorry.
Its almost like I combine all my bad days into one month and do it all
at once instead of spreading them out over the year.

Even though I know what is causing it and that its happening it
doesn’t always help me stop the irrational anger and sadness that shows
up unannounced to those around me.

To top it off this November Pastor Robb is leaving our church. He
has accepted another call at a mission church not to far from us.
Pastor Robb was with us that day in July 3 1/2 years ago. My heart and
prayers go with you and your family to your new church home. But it
makes my heart hurt to see you go.

Kim

October 15

Monday, October 15th, 2007

Today, October 15th is Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Day. Everyone is invited to light a candle on October 15th at 7 p.m. in all time zones, all over the world.

If everyone lights a candle at 7 p.m. and keeps it burning for at least one hour, there will be a continuous WAVE OF LIGHT over the entire world on October 15th.

The candle burns in loving memory of all babies lost through pregnancy and infant loss.

Kim

Odd things

Wednesday, August 8th, 2007

I lurk on a Bereaved Parent Message Board. I do not post much these days but some how find comfort in reading.

I have noticed a few things in the past 3 years. There are things that the Bereaved Parents talk about that no parent should ever have to worry about much less discuss on a Message Board!

1. Did you put your baby’s middle name on their headstone?

2. What outfit did you bury your baby in?

3. Concerns over Airport Security with Cremated Remains

4. I must not be a mother, I never got to feel that Love.

5. Happy Angel Day. Instead of Happy Birthday.

6. Poems and Songs about the death of a child are everywhere on these Message Boards.

Here is one I recently found that I like

Little Snowdrop

The world may never notice
If a Snowdrop doesn’t bloom,
Or even pause to wonder
If the petals fall too soon.
But every life that ever forms,
Or ever comes to be,
Touches the world in some small way
For all eternity.

The little one we long for
Was swiftly here and gone.
But the love that was then planted
Is a light that still shines on.
And though our arms are empty,
Our hearts know what to do.
Every beating of our hearts
Says that we love you.

– Author Unknown –

Holidays are very hard, especially Mothers day and Fathers day. There are many posts about how to deal with their own pain for these holidays and also how to deal with Society not recognizing that they are indeed parents.

But whats hard for me is seeing the new names the new losses on these Boards. Moms and Dads everyday join this exclusive club that no one wants to be a member of.

Kim

One Missing

Thursday, July 19th, 2007

July, 19 2004

3 years ago today was the memorial Service for Amanda.

This is where we are 3 years later.

One Missing

Two little children
Sitting side by side
Posing for a photo
Our emotions collide

Beautiful smiles
Happiness abounds
But someone is missing
One child’s not around.

Her smile can’t be seen
Her face no one knows
One sweet baby girl
Died three years ago.

So as everyone else looks
At the picture they see
We remember the one
That would have made three.

Mommy and Daddy Love and Miss you

3 years ago

Monday, July 16th, 2007

July 16, 2004

Leaving the hospital with out a baby after having a baby was probably the hardest thing I have ever done.  Even though we left Amanda in the care of the staff at 11 am on July 13th, I don’t think it really truly hit me that I was going to walk out of that hospital with out a baby until I had to do it.   Alex was still at Nana and Pawpaw’s house and Tony and I left the Hospital alone.   Leaving that place knowing she was not coming home with us was so difficult.

From the time we got home that Friday afternoon until Monday afternoon after the Memorial service I don’t remember much of anything.  I was in shock, numb and completely just a walking Zombie.  Which totally makes me glad that we made all the arrangements ahead of time.

Tony’s family came in town at some point and went home after the service.  We did go to church on Sunday.

The thing I remember doing is becoming very protective of Alex.  All I wanted to do is sit and hold him all day.  And thankfully he was a fairly cuddly kid and let me do that as much as I wanted.   At 2 years old he didn’t understand anything that was going on, but on some level I think he did understand that Mommy was sad.

Kim

Ballon Release

Sunday, July 15th, 2007
Ballon Release

Yesterday we had a small party for Amanda’s Birthday. I made a cake which tasted good despite the fact that it was slightly lopsided. I might need to stick to cookies.

We also did a small balloon release in her memory. We did this last year also. Alex and Allison really enjoy playing with the Balloons so this is a fun part of her birthday. Oh they like the cake too!

Balloon Release

View the Video

Kim

Happy Birthday

Friday, July 13th, 2007

Today Amanda would have been 3 years old! Has it really been 3 years? It seems like it was just yesterday but also seems like a diffrent lifetime.

I have been posting the 3 years ago posts leading up to today. I am not going to rewrite the Birth story. It is here if you want to read it again.

Today’s post will be 3 years later! How are we doing? We are doing ok. When I think about that question I always come up with the answer OK. Never great or wonderful, we are just ok. But Ok is not a bad thing. We get up everyday we have 2 beautiful children to drive us crazy. After 3 years I can say I think we have found our new normal. The day to day things seem to come easily. We don’t dwell on the sadness. We laugh and enjoy our children and our lives.

I do however still see a toddler not yet preschooler running around the house. I have moments where Alex and Allison are playing and I imagine what it would be like if all 3 of my children were laughing and playing together. I wonder what kind of chaos that would add to our home.

I miss her with every fiber of my being. My heart hurts for her! And my heart hurts for Alex and Allison who will grow up knowing they have a sister but won’t get to know her.

I remember weird things about Amanda. How soft her skin was, how tiny she was but she still looked chubby because she was short, and how she had Tony’s dark curly hair.

I remember her trying to cry when she was born. How she never opened her eyes. I have no idea what color her eyes were.

I remember how the hat I made for her fit perfectly. It wasn’t to big it wasn’t too small. It was perfect! She was perfect!

I found this poem a few days ago. I fell in Love with it!

Celebration
by Gail Fasolo

This day will be a celebration
Of the short time you were here.
You will always be remembered
With great love and sometimes tears.

But only to feel pain and sorrow
Would not be quite fair to you.
Your life meant much more to me
More than I ever knew.

You were here so briefly,
I wonder if you know
All the ways you’ve touched my world
Since the day God called you home.

Now, my child, you’re with
our heavenly Father above.
I see not only what I’ve lost
But my capacity of love.

There will always be a big void
My soul will grieve forever.
Will I forget or stop loving you?
No, not now, not ever.

As this sad day is upon me
Oh! How my heart still hurts.
But even as I mourn your death
I celebrate your birth

Happy Birthday Amanda Rose! Always my sweet Angel

Love Mommy

3 Years – Almost there

Saturday, July 7th, 2007

3 Years ago today I had my final regular doctor appointment. Little did I know in 6 days I would be giving birth to our perfect Angel. The last month of Amanda’s pregnancy was very emotional, both good and bad.

Dr B. wanted to do the C-section at 39 weeks. I wanted it earlier as I was getting concerned with loosing her before she was born because she was growing so well despite all the problems. He was going to be out of town during my 37th week which really concerned me but there was nothing I could do. I wasn’t going to ask him to reschedule his vacation. So we agreed on doing the c-section around 38 weeks. This was 1 week earlier then he wanted to do it and 1 week later than I wanted to do it.

I was excited to see this part of our journey end but not so excited to start the next phase. With about 3 weeks to go until the planned C-section date a part of me had come to accept what the outcome was going to be. In my heart I knew there was a chance the doctors were wrong and she would be born perfectly healthy. But I also knew after all the many ultrasounds  that possibility faded every time we got the “no change” response from the Doctors.

At this point in the pregnancy I became almost obsessed with her being born alive. During the first weeks and months after we found out she was sick I prayed for the miracle everyone wanted for her to be healed and healthy. As time went on my prayers changed to wanting and needing her to be born alive. I needed to hold her say my hello’s and goodbyes to a living breathing child. Inevitability this was the prayer that was answered she was born alive.

At this last and final doctors appointment we scheduled the C-section date. When I got home and received the phone call with the confirmed date and time July 28, 2004 at 8am I hung up the phone and had the worst (maybe the only) panic attack I have ever experienced. I suddenly realized I just scheduled the day my child was going to die. That completely freaked me out. So much so that I now believe my stress over scheduling the C-section sent my into early labor. Over the next few days I started to have contractions in increasing frequency. My stress level just continued to climb. I was so worried about how I was going to handle the next 3 weeks of knowing almost to the hour when my child was going to die that my body completely rebelled. Which in retrospect was a good thing. Though the few days of contractions and calls to the doctor were scary and unnerving to say the least, I was given a reprieve. I didn’t have to wait 3 weeks. She came on her time not mine not the doctor’s. I did not schedule the day she was going to die. She chose her Birthday and chose the moment she would leave this earthly existence and enter a Heavenly one.

I am not sure how I would have handled the next 3 weeks had I not gone into labor early. Though I would give anything to have had more time with her, stressing for 3 weeks would not have been calm quality time. It is so much better that it happened this way.

Kim

3 years ago: ultrasound

Thursday, March 15th, 2007

Three years ago this week we had an ultrasound scheduled to find out the gender of our second child. March 16th started like any other day, rushing around to get everyone dressed and ready so we were not late! We expected to leave the doctor’s office with happy news of a boy or girl. We didn’t have a preference either way. The most tragic thing we thought could happen was that they wouldn’t be able to tell us because the baby wouldn’t cooperate.

Instead we left the doctor’s office in a whirl wind of confusion. Though at that time we didn’t realize how serious things were. We were told something was most likely wrong with the baby’s kidneys. You will need to see a specialist to confirm. There was no amniotic fluid and very difficult to get a good picture of what was going on.

The appointment for the specialist was set up for March 19, 2004. For the next two days I drank more water than I thought humanly possible praying that the problems were as simple as being dehydrated. I was on self-imposed bed rest with the hopes that when we got to the specialist that she would say everything looked fine.

March 19th came and I truly don’t remember anything before the ultrasound. I am sure I was nervous but I didn’t know what to expect. I knew kidney problems could be serious but I wasn’t willing to think about that. When the doctor told us that our baby was missing one kidney and there was no blood flow to the remaining kidney. We were thrown into a world of questions with very few answers.

We were given two options

1. Continue the pregnancy and the baby will most likely die before born. If the baby survives the pregnancy he/she will die shortly after birth.

2. End pregnancy now.

Neither option was an acceptable one to me! I could not imagine spending the next 5 months carrying a child that was going to die. Nor could I even consider being the one to decide when this child would die. I wanted a 3rd option but there was none.

We spent the next few days talking, crying and praying! We had a follow up ultrasound on March 26th. Though our prayers were for the first ultrasound to be wrong and everything would be alright. Either way we had made our decision. We would carry the baby as long as God would allow. If this meant I would miscarry in the next few weeks or that we would carry the baby to term, we knew we would give this child the chance at life he/she deserved.

Kim

Edited to Add:

I remember that day well. On that day our courage was tested, our marriage was tested, and our faith was tested. On that day when so much could have suddenly gone *wrong* in our life, so much was solidly *right* with our life.

I believe that God knows our name before we are even conceived. Sometimes the name our parents give us is not the same name as God’s name for us. In our case, I believe God made His name for our child known to us. Amanda means love, worthy of love, and precious.

On that day our life could have unraveled. On that day God weaved a new thread into our life that made our family stronger. And that thread had a name.

Tony

What’s in your Bucket?

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

Who Gets in Your Bucket?
By Doug Manning
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

The best way I know to picture how we receive help from others in grief, is to imagine you are holding a bucket. The size and color doesn’t matter. The bucket represents the feelings bottled up inside of you when you are in pain. If you have suffered a loss, hold the bucket and think through how you feel right now. If you are reading this to learn more about helping others, then imagine what would be in your bucket if a loved one had died very recently. What is in your bucket?

Fear. Will I survive? What will happen to me now? Who will care for me? Who will be with me when I need someone near? Most likely your bucket is almost full just from the fear. But there is also:

Pain. It is amazing how much physical pain there is in grief. Your chest hurts, and you can’t breathe. Sometimes the pain is so intense your body refuses to even move. There is enough pain to fill the bucket all by itself.

Sorrow. There is devastating sadness; overwhelming sorrow. A gaping hole has been bitten out of your heart and it bleeds inside your very soul. You cry buckets of tears and then cry some more.

Loneliness. There is no lonely like that felt when you are in a room full of people and totally alone at the same time. Loneliness alone can fill any bucket ever made.

I could go on, but that’s enough to get the idea across, and hopefully get you started thinking through your own list. What is in your bucket?

Now picture someone like me approaching you and your bucket. I also have a bucket. My bucket is full of explanations. I am armed and ready to explain why your loved one had to die, how they are now better off and how you should feel.

I am also well equipped with new ways to look at your loss. In politics they call that “spin doctoring,” but most human beings seem to know this skill by instinct. I have almost a bucketful of comforting words and encouraging sayings. I can also quote vast amounts of scriptures. I seem to favor the ones that tell you not to grieve.

So we face each other armed with full buckets. The problem is, I don’t want to get into your bucket. Yours is scary. If I get in there, you might start crying and I may not be able to make you stop. You might ask me something I could not answer. There is too much intimacy in your bucket. I want to stand at a safe distance and pour what is in my bucket into yours. I want the things in my bucket to wash over your pain like some magic salve to take away your pain and dry your tears. I have this vision of my words being like cool water to a dry tongue. Soothing and curing as it flows.

But your bucket is full. There is no room for anything that is in my bucket. Your needs are calling so loudly there is no way you could hear anything I say. Your pain is far too intense to be cooled by any verbal salve, no matter how profound.

The only way I can help you is to get into your bucket, to try to feel your pain, to accept your feelings as they are and make every effort to understand. I cannot really know how you feel. I cannot actually understand your pain or how your mind is working under the stress, but I can stand with you through the journey. I can allow you to feel what you feel and learn to be comfortable doing so. That is called, “Getting into your bucket.”

I was speaking on guilt and anger in grief to a conference of grieving parents. I asked the group what they felt guilty about. I will never forget one mother who said, “All the way to the hospital, my son begged me to turn back. He did not want the transplant. He was afraid. I would not turn back, and he died.”

I asked her how many times someone had told her that her son would have died anyway. She said, “Hundreds.” When I asked her if that had helped her in any way she said, “No.”
I asked her how many times she had been told that she was acting out of love and doing the right thing, she gave the same two responses. Many times and, no, it did not help.”

I asked her how many times she had been told that God had taken her son for some reason, and she gave the same responses- “many” and “no help.”

I asked how many times someone had told her that it had been four years since her son’s death and that it was time to “Put that behind you and get on with your life.” This time she responded with great anger that she had heard that from many wellmeaning people, including family members, and that it not only did not help, it added to her pain and made her angry.

What I was really asking her is, “How many people have tried to pour their buckets into yours?” I then said, “Would it help if I hugged you and said `that must really hurt’?”
She said, “That would help a great deal. That would really help.”

Why would that help? Because I was offering to get into her bucket with her and to be in her pain, instead of trying salve over her pain with words and explanations.

If you are in pain, find someone who will get into your bucket. Most of the time these folks are found in grief groups or among friends who have been there. It is not normal procedure. It is hard to swallow our fears and climb into your bucket.

If you are reading this to find ways to help others in grief, then lay aside your explanations and your words of comfort. Forget all of the instructions and directions you think will help and learn to say, “That must really hurt.” I think that is the most healing combination of words in the English language. They really mean, “May I feel along with you as you walk through your pain?” “May I get into your bucket?”

Healing happens in their buckets