Friday, January 31, 2020
My Will Surives
Roll over.
Throw the blankets off.
One foot on the floor.
Two feet on the floor.
Walk.
I will myself to start the day, because that is the hardest part.
Soon, the girls will wake up and I'll be too busy to notice that I am grieving, but I will feel it with every step.
Though some days are harder than others, not a day has gone by since this day 9 years ago that I haven't struggled just to keep living. I wonder daily what right I have to breathe when my son cannot. I wonder why I simply couldn't take his place and give him, with all the potential of a new life, the opportunity to live.
But I did give him life. I carried him, even under circumstances where most women wouldn't, and every single day that I carried him I knew he would be something special. Even when those dreams shifted, even when I knew his life would be short, I knew it would be meaningful, because he was unique, his own person, with his own destiny and his own purpose in life.
Some days those thoughts carry me. We aren't promised a long life. Not a day is guaranteed. It's cosmic. It's scientific. It's the way things go.
Other days - today - I can't understand how the world keeps spinning, how the sun goes on shining, why business is still conducted, why people still drive the streets and still drive like such assholes and I hate them all, every single one of them because they dare to be on the road with me on this day that the world ended yet still somehow went on. How is my heart still beating with this tremendous hole deep inside of it?
Nothing makes sense. My baby had just started moving; how could he be dying already? My son has died; why am I still alive? My heart is broken; how can it still love? My daughters are healthy and thriving; why isn't my son? The world ended 9 years ago today; so how is it that life has gone on?
Determination. Hope. Gideon. Will power. Promise. Whiskey. Noelle. Clients. Mock Trial. Marcos. Eden. Delilah. Spring Training. Love. Every day I search for a reason, and every day for 9 years I have been able to find one. I search for the reason, I will myself to start the day, I get through the hardest part. Life is hard. It is fragile. It is unfair and imperfect and sometimes it's short. So I take every day I am given. I take every day because my son only got ten of them, and I take every day because I pray my daughters have thousands of them. I take every day, the weight of Gabriel's death weighing deep in my bones, bleeding from my heart, eased by the hope that I will see him again some day. That is how I get by in this post-apocalyptic world - Finding the beauty in what remains, and hope in what is to come.
Monday, January 6, 2020
The Couches
One fine day, I reported for an ultrasound.
The baby was not cooperating, and I should go walk around a bit.
"Something's wrong," my child's father asserted.
"You're paranoid."
But actually, he wasn't. A few moments later the tech told me to wait for the doctor and a few moments after that, a doctor who ruined my fucking life brought my world down with three words: "Incompatible with life." In two weeks we would see a specialist, who may or may not confirm the diagnosis.
So I did what anyone would do.
I shopped for couches.
"We're having a baby. We need something to bring a baby to."
With all the moronic faith in the world I turned over the pittance of a tax return, our first as a married couple (and as it turns out, one of only two we would file together), to buy a sofa and a loveseat.
How stupid of me, to believe.
It didn't fix anything. Not long after, a specialist confirmed the words of that bitch ass whore slut idiot doctor. My baby had anencephaly. He would die.
I had options, but there was no choice for me. I did the only right thing, and I carried my baby, and I had my baby and 2 days after his birth, Gabriel and I were discharged from the hospital and sent home. We laid on those couches and lived and cuddled and loved and fought and snuggled and after eight days on those couches, he died. In my arms. On the couch.
I waited long hours on those couches for Gabriel's father to come home, drunk. I crawled from the depths of my despair, some days dragging myself from my bed only to get so far as those couches. When I was divorced and needed a roommate to help with the rent, I relinquished the couches to a stranger as a part of communal living space.
One day, sitting on the sofa writing thank you notes my baby shower, I became quite aware my unborn child would be born that day, and Eden came barreling into the world hours later.
Those couches were picked up and moved to our new home and the memories of my son were stretched thinner as I built a new home and a new family and new memories of those couches.
We decided to buy new couches, and I could handle that. But the old couches, The Couches, must stay in our living room until we were sure that the new family sectional was a good fit.
So every morning the memories and couches greet me, assaulting me with reality. People live, but people die. My beautiful daughters don't know how every breath I take both rewards and punishes me. They still jump and play on the old couches, unaware how The Couches are haunting me.
It's January. And I'm fucking sad. I'm sitting on my new reclining sectional, plugged in to its power source, with my cocktail in its built-in cup holder, grieving the 9 year old couches in the next room. Grieving the Andrea who died the day she learned her son would die.
Countdown to D-Day has begun.
The baby was not cooperating, and I should go walk around a bit.
"Something's wrong," my child's father asserted.
"You're paranoid."
But actually, he wasn't. A few moments later the tech told me to wait for the doctor and a few moments after that, a doctor who ruined my fucking life brought my world down with three words: "Incompatible with life." In two weeks we would see a specialist, who may or may not confirm the diagnosis.
So I did what anyone would do.
I shopped for couches.
"We're having a baby. We need something to bring a baby to."
With all the moronic faith in the world I turned over the pittance of a tax return, our first as a married couple (and as it turns out, one of only two we would file together), to buy a sofa and a loveseat.
How stupid of me, to believe.
It didn't fix anything. Not long after, a specialist confirmed the words of that bitch ass whore slut idiot doctor. My baby had anencephaly. He would die.
I had options, but there was no choice for me. I did the only right thing, and I carried my baby, and I had my baby and 2 days after his birth, Gabriel and I were discharged from the hospital and sent home. We laid on those couches and lived and cuddled and loved and fought and snuggled and after eight days on those couches, he died. In my arms. On the couch.
I waited long hours on those couches for Gabriel's father to come home, drunk. I crawled from the depths of my despair, some days dragging myself from my bed only to get so far as those couches. When I was divorced and needed a roommate to help with the rent, I relinquished the couches to a stranger as a part of communal living space.
One day, sitting on the sofa writing thank you notes my baby shower, I became quite aware my unborn child would be born that day, and Eden came barreling into the world hours later.
Those couches were picked up and moved to our new home and the memories of my son were stretched thinner as I built a new home and a new family and new memories of those couches.
We decided to buy new couches, and I could handle that. But the old couches, The Couches, must stay in our living room until we were sure that the new family sectional was a good fit.
So every morning the memories and couches greet me, assaulting me with reality. People live, but people die. My beautiful daughters don't know how every breath I take both rewards and punishes me. They still jump and play on the old couches, unaware how The Couches are haunting me.
It's January. And I'm fucking sad. I'm sitting on my new reclining sectional, plugged in to its power source, with my cocktail in its built-in cup holder, grieving the 9 year old couches in the next room. Grieving the Andrea who died the day she learned her son would die.
Countdown to D-Day has begun.