Even Better Than Before
It was a full six weeks after making a heartbreaking choice before I had even a glimpse of feeling normal. My loss was in February, 2000 after
learning that my baby had irreparable heart defects and Down syndrome. I had found the AHC Web site, but it took me until April to screw up my
courage and share my story with strangers via the AHC Yahoo listserv. That was when my healing actually began: The time before that was like being
at the bottom of an ocean of grief. I carried a dishtowel with me to mop up the tears that sprang out every time the Teletubbies baby appeared on
TV or a pregnant woman happened by. I clung to my husband and toddler daughter through those first weeks and waited for time to separate me, if only
just a little, from my tragedy.
I felt like a complete failure. Two years earlier, I had left a satisfying career to stay home with my then one-year-old daughter and attend
graduate school. I wanted a second baby and just couldnt imagine taking another newborn to daycare, as my job had demanded with my first. Now my
daughter was approaching age three and wed lost our baby. Because of the emotional stress and the medical and funeral expenses involved, I had to
drop out of my graduate courses. I was rudderless and could not see where my life was going.
When I first joined the AHC listserv, what helped the most was the encouragement from other mothers whose losses were years, months or in some
cases only weeks ahead of my own. They offered hope and words of hard-earned wisdom. They offered advice for getting through the tough times: the
anniversaries and due dates, the dealing with other peoples pregnancies and births, the insomnia and nightmares, the spiritual dilemmas. They
offered the kind of sympathy, empathy and practical advice that can only come from those who have been there before you.
I learned that I was not alone in my exquisite grief. I learned that some peoples losses were even harder than my own. Many had never experienced
a successful pregnancy. Some faced termination after years of infertility treatments. Some did not have supportive families or husbands. A few had
lost twins. Some learned that they had as high as a one-in-four chance of conceiving another baby with the same defect. A couple of mothers had
even been faced with making heartbreaking choices more than once.
Reading their stories precipitated a shift in my all-consuming grief. As depressing some of their stories seemed, they reminded me that I was
not the unluckiest woman alive. As the others gradually went on to adopt or get pregnant, get good test results, and give birth to healthy babies
I realized there was hope for me too.
Gradually I moved from soaking up sympathy and advice to offering it to the newcomers. I'd made it through that early grief and because of that
I had sympathy, support and war stories of my own to share with them. Nothing was more healing to me than being able to help others.
We still wanted another child and seriously considered adoption, but after learning of the expenses involved and that our own risk for a
recurrence was relatively low, we opted to try for another pregnancy.
The following November I became pregnant again. This time was so different than the last two. There were no giddy announcements, only waiting
with grim determination until I was far enough along to take the CVS. Unfortunately the test was at the very same hospital and with the very same
doctor who had performed my termination. I dreaded going back there, but actually doing so made me realized that I had survived the nightmare. I
really could scrape together the courage to face that place and that doctor once again.
On the way down to the hospital, my husband and I heard a radio ad seriously proclaim "there is nothing worse than when your baby has a
cold." Every time things got a little too tense on that trip, one of us would deadpan that almost offensively naive statement. Our mocking
of the ad gave us strength, because it reminded us that we'd we'd already made it through something more terrible than luckier parents would dare
imagine.
Our doctor refused to give us the faster FSH results, so we had to wait out the agonizing 12 days for the more reliable full karotype report. On
a Friday night when we still had not heard back, my husband called our genetic counselor and got the news. She told us we were expecting a
chromosomally normal baby, a boy. I could finally stop worrying about whether I was having a baby or an abortion, and start enjoying my pregnancy.
The following summer I had an uncomplicated natural childbirth and welcomed my new baby into our family. It was such a relief to take him home
with me. I don't know how any mother can appreciate her newborn quite so much as one who has already lost a baby. One day when he was a few months
old, we were in the car when he started to cry. Instead of feeling anxious or annoyed, I found tears of joy welling up in my eyes and exclaimed to
my husband We had a baby! He is ALIVE! We both laughed and cried at our great good fortune, and in a few minutes were home and snuggling our fussy l
ittle bundle.
Today he is a hardy, happy, affectionate and bright four-year-old who looks just like his father. Our family feels whole again, and we have
learned not to sweat the small stuff. Every day I still think of the little baby that we lost and I know that if it wasnt for our tragedy with him,
our four-year-old son would not be here.
All in all, I feel the loss has strengthened me as an individual. I know that I can go through emotional hell and eventually come out not just
intact, but stronger than before. I know I can make and follow through on the right decision, even when doing so goes against every fiber of my
being. It has made me less judgmental of others, yet at the same time more brave and vocal in standing up for what I think is right.
It has forced me to scrutinize my belief system and cast off all that was illogical to me. The end result was that I let go of my religion: A
religion whose blind and mindless worship of life with no consideration for quality or compassion, had scorned my choice and left me in the cold
during my deepest time of need. Today I am a registered Bright and content with my worldview.
I find it comforting to know that random things happen, both good and bad, and there is not some almighty deity trying to punish, reward or teach
a lesson. Or, as atheist writer and actress Julia Sweeney so eloquently puts it for the first time, knowing too much didnt ruin it.
It has also strengthened my marriage. Because of all weve been through, I know my husband is someone I can count on through even the most
difficult of times. As we went through the worst of it, he held me and said that our little family was like an island, and that we were completely
awash right now, but that eventually the waters would recede and we would still be here, and the sun would shine on us again. He was there for me
every minute until it did. Our experience showed us that even when wed lost all hope we could still maintain our dignity and our belief in one
another.
It has made me a better mother to both of my living children. I understand only too well how precious and delicate their lives are, and how lucky
we are to have them. It also has made me more accepting of their little foibles and imperfections, because having faced so great a loss puts the
inevitable minor crisis, accidents and illnesses into their proper perspective.
It has also helped me figure out who my real friends were: those who have stuck by me, and even those friends I gained later who are able to
accept my past without judgment. I find I have better, more open friendships now than ever before.
Life is good now, even better than ever before. As long as you have the courage to work at it, to embrace the good and let go of the bad, and
most of all to pursue your goals in spite of your fears, your life will be good again one day too. You can lean on and learn from those who have
been there before you. Let them help you, and before you know it you may be the one offering comfort and advice to the newly bereaved.
