Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Fading


She is fading from me. I think this is normal and healthy, though I don’t want it to happen. The truth is I don’t feel like a mom. I know that I am one, but I feel less and less like a mother every day. I have difficulty remembering her. I am only able to do so when I read the words I carefully recorded here and in my journal. Only then am I overwhelmed by the powerful emotions that remind me of my brief and tragic experience with motherhood.



We are looking for a new house. This one is haunted. It is haunted with nightmares, fear, devastating disappointment. These walls are silent witnesses to our sorrow, our desperate, ineffective prayers. They have absorbed each sob wretched from our souls. If I am quiet enough with my memories, I hear the sound of our weeping echoing through the rooms. I’m not quite sure what to do with her room, with her things. I’ve just left everything the way it was.



We had our first visit to the psychologist last week. It was good. Nothing earth-shattering, but I didn’t expect earth-shattering. It’s a place to start. We talked a little of making peace with what has happened so we can move forward. I think I’ve made my peace. I am living with it. Mike is having trouble with the “living with it” part. When I talk with him and ride the merry-go-round-and-round-and-round of questions, I realize just what we have lost inside of ourselves through this: faith, trust, hope, security. I worry that Mike will never come back. He borders on agnostic and I understand. I have the same thoughts; I’ve just come to a different conclusion.



When I look back, I feel foolish. I feel foolish for hoping, for “acting in faith”. I should have just accepted it like everyone else who’s had to walk this wretched mile. My heart is sick. A friend told me something she heard about parenthood: “To have a child is to have your heart walking around outside your body.” In my case to have a child is to have my heart buried six feet under the ground. Sometimes I wish I really was dead. Sometimes I imagine being in a terrible accident and dying. I think of how wonderful that would be, except Mike and I would have to be together. I can’t leave him because I’m the only good thing he has that is keeping him going. I know this because he told me. We will be flying together on a trip in September. I am secretly hoping we will be in a plane crash and not survive. I understand this is morbid. I’m not suicidal. I imagine anyone who has held death in their arms has thoughts like this.  I also understand why people go insane. Not mental illness, but slipping through the elusive window of insanity. Ah, how sweet that would be. The simplicity and freedom would be such a relief.



I’ve made my peace, though, and I am happy simply functioning in my little corner. I thrive on the average mundane, the busyness of my work that takes me away each day. I spend my days in a room full of nine bright little minds that can’t get enough of learning about the world around them. It is my connection to reality. Thanks to these little ones, I won’t be finding that window anytime soon.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

Quiet


For the last two or three weeks, things seemed to be going really well. I was surprised, but pleased.  I wondered though if the pain and sadness were simply lying quiet underneath the surface. This week showed me that it is indeed still there; a poison slowly killing the soul.  The search continues for a grief counselor; someone to help us navigate the dark, uncharted waters of loss. It is difficult to find someone from a list of names in a preferred provider directory. I don’t know if they are any good, or if they specialize in grief or loss. I googled the names of doctors. I googled “grief and loss counselors”.  I eventually came up with a name that was on our list and also a search result for “grief and loss”.



Mike checked at work for coverage information and found out our insurance will pay $50 of the amount remaining after we pay the copay. Do they not realize that the average cost of a session is between $130 and $200? They probably do and that is why they limit it to $50. Also, Mike can never need the assistance of a professional again because the plan stipulates he can use it once in a lifetime. It will be worth it because it is important to the wellbeing of our lives and future, but we are already financially set back following birth and funeral costs. In a discussion this morning Mike made the statement that one person is not going to help him get through this. I agree. It is a little bit here and a little bit there. It is a process, a journey. I gain a little bit with each person I talk to. I pick up little pieces of healing and peace as I go along. I know that a grief counselor will probably not help much with the spiritual devastation. We have a couple resources of pastors who are certified counselors that may be able to help. I was reminded today that this will never really go away. Our lives are irrevocably changed.



I found an article on grief I found somewhat helpful.