Those among
you kind enough to have stuck with reading my blog over the years, will know
that I like to write something, every year, to commemorate the birthday of
Grace, our tiny girl, who didn't make it into this world, as she should have
done. You can read previous years' posts here, here, here and here if you want to!
This
year, I've experimented with a different form of writing, not with the aim of
eliciting sympathy from everyone who reads, but more to show the long term
impact of this sort of loss. I think those of us who have lost babies can
sometimes minimise our own pain, playing it down, because we never really 'met'
our babies, or knew them. But the trauma is real and the pain long-lasting.
Everything I've written is real and true, although I've framed it in the form
of a story. I hope it provides a bit of an insight into the long journey to
healing that baby loss involves.
Nine
years on, it's different again. I'm grateful for the many hours of counselling
and prayer I've had through the journey. There will always be more layers to
face. I know I don't have to face them alone.
Thanks
for reading.
In the yellowing photograph I hold, a woman kneels in front of a Christmas tree, unaware that she stands on a threshold, about to enter a life she hadn’t imagined or planned.
That week, she
was relishing life and all the festive season had to offer. She had journeyed with friends to a freezing,
snow-covered farm and watched her toddler climb on hay bales, ride tractors in the
yard, sit on Santa’s knee. She had
warmed herself with coffee, talking and laughing loudly, pregnant with hope.
In the photo, the
one she can’t erase from her memory, though she rarely looks at it for real,
she is smiling and the Christmas tree lights, behind her, twinkle. Her growing bump protrudes from under her
soft, beige cardigan. Like the lights,
she glows.
At a carol
service at church, she inspects the bump of another, expectant like her, comparing
due-dates and ailments, confessing fears.
The one she was about to hit, head on, like a juggernaut, hadn’t yet
crossed her mind.
The last normal
day dawned. She had lunch with friends, her doubts growing, resounding louder
and louder in her head, until she couldn’t ignore them, even with her trademark
optimism. A phone call was made. A doctor’s visit followed. A frantic search for a heartbeat yielded
none. The hospital came next, her
toddler seeing his baby sister on the ultrasound monitor, for the first time – but
the life within her was extinguished.
A strange
Christmas followed, with pain-filled nights then a silent birth.
I time travel to
the Christmas that follows, watching her pain out-work, fast forwarding through
scenes of her life; how she had wished she could do just that, instead of walk
them painfully, one by one. The first
anniversary of that Christmas hit her hard; though she was pregnant again, her
innocent naivety had gone. In her mind,
there was no longer any guarantee that the story of her growing bump would end
as she hoped and dreamed.
I watch her as
she wrestles through the night, remembering the birth – every, vivid detail of
the too-quick, too-silent cuddles, playing through her mind, prickling her eyes
with hot tears, preventing healing sleep from taking over.
Another Christmas
swings into view – Christmas songs, Christmas lights. The jollity expected causing physical lurches
in her stomach, at times. There are two
children now, in a different house, in a different place. New memories are made, through the cold
December. The pain stays in the
background, mostly, now – more of a dull ache.
Then, when something triggers it, it bursts its banks, shocking her
again and again with its devastating power.
She thinks she should have grasped this by now, learnt to ride the
waves.
She cries by the
fire, late at night, remembering, still, the little girl she didn’t get to
keep. She sees, now, too, silver threads
of hope, wound round trees, guiding her back to safety, normality, when the
forest of memory she stumbles through begins to feel too dense, too dark. She watches for the glimmers of light on the
threads, to guide her to clearings, where she can rest.
A few more
Christmases flash by – she tries different things to get through. She avoids all things Christmassy and feels
like Scrooge, empty and alone. She
embraces all things Christmassy, hurtling herself into the season at break-neck
speed, hoping her emotions will catch up, as she buys Christmas jumpers and
pyjamas and socks. They don’t and, when
the door is shut, she cries in the darkness.
She remembers the Christmas story, though and clings to it - how the
Light of the World entered darkness, just like hers, to help her find a way
through. This helps, somehow. Sometimes the light feels bright. Sometimes it fades to a flicker. But she knows it guides her still.
Eight Christmases
have come and gone. She knows a lot has
changed; she knows the Great Healer has worked and mended, restored and
comforted, put the broken pieces back together.
The ninth approaches. She is a
different person to the expectant, hope-filled, beige-cardiganed girl in the
photo. Part of her yearns for that
hope-filled, youthful outlook, absent of pain.
But most of her knows that the changes her story has brought about in
her, are good; more wrinkles, more heartache, yes – but more depth, too, more
compassion, more empathy, more love. And
deeper trust, too, in the One who keeps unravelling the silver thread, guiding
and holding her, closely, through another anniversary and through it all.
Remembering Grace Tennant, Born sleeping on the 27th December, 2009 ❤
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