Tag Archives: grief

S is for Stop (and sit with the grief)

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Be strong. Don’t cry. You should be happy. He wouldn’t want to see you like this. Don’t let him see you like this. Don’t cry. He’s in a better place. You should be happy. You’re lucky. Just try again. Be strong. Keep busy. Just have another one. Don’t think about it. Move on. Let go. Move on. Life goes on. Don’t cry. Be strong. I’m hurt. I’m hurting, too. Don’t make people sad. You’re making people sad. You should be better. You should be healing. Let him go. Don’t dwell. Don’t cry. Move on. Be strong.

The weight of those words, those demands on my grief and mourning, were enough to shatter me. I have no doubt I would have found myself in need of long-term, intensive psychological care if it weren’t for these words: Sit with your grief; honor your feelings.

Sit with your grief; honor your feelings.

These seven words were my refuge. I built a new home with them. I stacked my walls with everyone grieves differently and curtained my windows with there is no timeline. This is where I began to find solace, in my shelter that was fortified with words against words. I built my home out of words that gave me permission to cry and to be angry and to hurl those damn eggshells hard against the ground.

S is for stop and sit with the grief - unpacking grief

I made my bed of missing and wishing and prayers and reliving the morning I gave birth to my son and held him and saw him in his father’s arms. I made that bed. And I lay in it. And that’s how I regained life. I fed off the words of other grieving mothers. I drank of the tears that spilled freely despite don’t cry don’t cry don’t banging on my door and move on move on urging through my windows.

I sat with my grief. I was still. Not in the physical sense, because the sobs did wreck me. I was still with my grief. I was still in letting it rise like fog or fall like rain—whatever it needed to do. I breathed it in, honored it like it was my child—It’s what I had left. I breathed it out. I exhaled my mourning into words and art and prayer and intention. This is what brings me comfort. This is what saves me.

What does sitting with grief mean to you?

What does it look like? What does it feel like? How often, if at all, do you find yourself doing this?

And because we all find solace in different places, where do you find yours? What helps you cope? How do you mourn?

This post is a part of a series called Unpacking Grief, which I began as part of the Blogging from A to Z April Challenge.

<3, Crystal Theresa

“Because Grief is As Real as Love”

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One Who Soars and In Mourning BraceletsThe title of this piece is from the In Mourning Band™ Campaign. Louie and I wear these bands for our babies.

Because grief is as real as love, I mourn.
I mourn my babies
by saying the same things over and over,
by finding different ways to say these things again and again:

I hear them with each step I take—
I love them in the rising.
I miss them in the falling.
I want them in the touching down.

I feel them in my breath—
I love them at the inhale.
I miss them at the pause.
I want them at the exhale.

This is nothing new. My blood flows to this cadence:
I love them. break. I miss them. break. I want them. break.

I wear my grief–
I carry it around my neck and above my heart.

It adorns my eyes, my lips,
—It wears on me with each micro-nano-milli-moment that passes without them.

<3, Crystal Theresa

R is for Regrets (I really, really want a redo)

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There was one point where every single night I would have trouble falling alseep because I was reliving the day Calvin was born and trying to make it right in my head over and over. I would imagine everything I would have (should have) done differently.

I kept thinking about how I should have insisted that they try to take Calvin’s footprints or how I should have offered to take them myself. I would have this conversation in my head, and sometimes I would end up with a perfect, tiny set of footprints. Other times, I would just have unrecognizable smudges, but it didn’t matter because I would know they were his. On bad nights, it felt like the nurse lied about his feet being too small and just said that to not tell me that his lower body was missing; those nights I hated feeling so morbid.

I would think about how I should have opened his blanket and looked at every part of him—I didn’t even see his hands or feet. I felt like he was too fragile to touch. I only knew his weight through the blankets. That same fear about his body being incomplete, I felt it at the hospital. I was holding Calvin after I got out of surgery to remove the placenta, and I started to open up his blanket. Then I froze with fear. I think maybe it was the anesthesia still messing with me. I wish, I wish I could go back to that moment with a clearer mind.

R is for Redo - Unpacking GriefOne of the photos from the disposable camera the nurse gave us. We went home holding this memory box instead of our baby.

I agonized (I still do sometimes) over not holding his hand in my fingers. I feel so jealous, and sometimes like such a failure, whenever I see photos of a baby’s tiny hand on their mommy’s fingertip or when I see photos of babies holding their parents’ wedding rings. If he wasn’t too fragile to be dressed and cleaned up by the nurses, then I should have been able to touch him—Why could I have figured this out then?

I would also get frustrated with myself over not having more photos of him. Why didn’t I think to take pictures? Why didn’t I ask someone to bring a digital camera? Why didn’t I use the entire disposable camera on photos of Calvin?

My biggest regret from that day though is not sharing Calvin with our family. If I could only change one thing, as much as I would love to see his hands and feet, to kiss his little fingers, I would choose to go back and let my family see and hold him. I would allow them that physical connection of knowing his weight in their arms and being able to look into his face directly, not just through photographs. I would imagine Calvin held by my family and cry at the thought of how I fractured their relationship with him. I keep telling myself that we chose what was right for us at the time, but I feel like I robbed my family of knowing my son a little more. It still really hurts thinking about this.

With each of my babies I wish I could have a redo. I wish I could go back do some things differently. I wish I had my own “Ground Hog Day,” so I can go back and do right by my babies, so I could do right by me, so I could do right by everyone else I love, so I could have had a better chance of keeping them.

What is your biggest regret?

If you could go back and change things, would you? What would you do differently? How has this regret affected you?

This post is a part of a series called Unpacking Grief, which I began as part of the Blogging from A to Z April Challenge.

<3, Crystal Theresa

Q is for Questions (and no good answers)

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I have been struggling to write this post for a while now. I’ve been writing it over and over in my notebook, then drawing big X’s over the words, because I just couldn’t get it to feel right. There was no doubt that Q would stand for Questions, but I couldn’t articulate how much this has been a part of my grieving: questioning, seeking answers, realizing that sometimes there aren’t any answers, and learn that even if there are, sometimes no answers will ever be good enough. It is often much easier to convey what you want when you show instead of tell.

So, here are my questions:

  • Why did my babies have to die?
  • What did I do wrong?
  • What didn’t I do right?
  • Why couldn’t the doctors save him?
  • What couldn’t the doctors prevent me from losing them?
  • Why am I the rare statistic?
  • Am I being punished?
  • What went wrong?
  • Am I (still) a mother?
  • Am I a bad mother?
  • Am I a broken woman?
  • Am I still a woman?
  • Does my husband blame me?
  • Will my husband want to leave me for a fertile woman?
  • Do my children blame me?
  • Was it my fault?
  • Did the flu shot harm Calvin?
  • Did the resin harm Rainbow?
  • Did my anxiety harm Gaelen?
  • What should I have done differently?
  • What haven’t I learned that makes me keep losing my babies?
  • Am I meant to be a mother?
  • Will I ever having a living child?
  • Will I only mother children in heaven?
  • Does wanting more children mean I love them less?
  • Do my babies count?
  • Do I count?
  • What if I forget?
  • Why couldn’t I save them?
  • Why couldn’t I keep them?
  • Why don’t I have them?

What are your questions?

I think most life changes come with their own sets of questions. The good ones, though, are accompanied with more of a sense of wonder at how one’s path led to that point. With loss, the questions become more painful, desperate even. Have you asked any of the same questions? What other questions would you add to the list?

This post is a part of a series called Unpacking Grief, which I began as part of the Blogging from A to Z April Challenge.

<3, Crystal Theresa

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