Life

Breaking the Silence

Recently I sat around a table surrounding a group of women and the subject of infertility and miscarriage was raised. Days prior, I walked into an unwelcomed conversation regarding my own struggle with infertility and my most recent loss.  Both of these experiences triggered very different emotions. While listening to another woman openly share her experiences with infertility and miscarriage, the room suddenly fell into a deafening silence. I felt uncomfortable. But not because of the content of the conversation; I was uncomfortable with the silence that took over the room and with how the woman with the open heart who took a risk must have felt. Here’s the thing about this. You either talk about it, or you don’t. Whether you are fighting or are a survivor of the infertility battle, suffering from the excruciating pain of miscarriage or other loss, the listening ear or the silent one, you are on one side of the fence or the other. I am not typically the silent griever but when I was approached by a woman only known as an acquaintance days prior, silence filled the room. Suddenly my open heart closed up to the unsolicited comments and advice coming from the woman who believed that she was serving virtuous counsel to her receiver. 

I walked away from both conversations which took place just days apart with a heavy heart. I am, and always have been dismayed at the two very differing perspectives that surround these heavy topics. But I learned something. In a world full of unique, we cannot all possibly share the same idea on the journeys of life and how we are supposed to approach them; infertility and miscarriage included. But for those of you who are like me; who openly, and even silently, grieve your losses and battle with the unpredictable journey of infertility: I get you And maybe that’s all we need to hear someone sayI offer you my story today because I understand your journey.  I have been a pilot on this same voyage and to be completely honest, it is quite unstable. The particulars and the conditions of my story may differ but I have felt your pain.

Five years stand between two of the biggest losses that I have ever endured in my 29 years of life. My second pregnancy was unexpected and my third I fought like hell for. I was as equally elated for the two miracles that I had been blessed with, even under such differing circumstances. After 17 weeks into my second pregnancy, however, another unexpected twist of fate surpassed my elation and I gave birth to a sleeping baby boy. I remember being wheeled to the operating room just hours after a difficult labor to have a procedure done.  Tears streamed down my face as I processed what had actually happened and what was about to occur in the room next door. To this day, I remember the demoralizing words that were uttered from the attending nurse just before going under. Oh, hunny, don’t be scared. You’re just crying from all of the hormones.  From that day forward I grieved my loss in silence. I was afraid to talk about the tiny little human being that grew inside of me for 17 incredible weeks and then was gone without warning; my son that only in my dreams I would come to know. I assumed that by being silent I was sparing everyone else’s feelings. And if I did talk about him, I expected that people thought I was foolish for identifying him as person that deserved to be acknowledged. So, I rarely mentioned his name and pretended as though I was a mom of one. Eventually the dark moments got a little lighter and with time the nightmares faded into pleasant dreams. A genuine smile replaced the tears that had stained my face and I allowed laughter to fill a once dark and quiet room. I tucked my memories away into a drawer and never visited them again.

Life began to unfold the way I dreamed it would when things were hard. I found love again and together we pursued the journey of conception. Only, we soon discovered that it wasn’t as easy as we hoped. After two and a half years of routine date nights, one surgery, a misdiagnosis and several different medications, we gave in and found ourselves at an infertility clinic pleading for the chance to have another child. Our despairing desire to have another child came at a cost. Our entire lives were on a fixed schedule and one that, for once, I did not create. We took three hour road trips sometimes twice a week and then attempted to do our jobs as parents and in the work realm with bags under our eyes. My emotions were on a roller coaster ride from all of the hormones I was taking and there were days when a car commercial could bring me to tears. I felt so out of control of something that I should have been able to govern on my own. Meanwhile, friends and family struggled to find the rights things to say. Your time is coming. Don’t worry, you’ll be next. It will happen when God wants it to happen. You’re still so young. At least you have your daughter. I had to remind myself that they didn’t understand this journey. To be fair, I don’t even think I did.

We were fortunate enough to have met our victory after three long years. It had been the longest three years of my life but we knew there were those who would have traded positions with us any day. We had something incredible to look forward to as a family. Each ultra sound and every listen of our baby’s heartbeat was an infinite reminder of how grateful we were. However, we soon discovered that this journey, too, would regrettably end for us sooner than we hoped for. My former nightmare had come right back as preterm labor came creeping in and tore my baby from his safe haven. A pain had washed over me that I had never met before. I was grieving the time that it took to create him, the love that I had, have, for him, and who he should have grown to be. I grieved the empty bedroom we began preparing for his arrival and the never ending medical bills that poured in that we would have been glad to pay had they been a result of the son that we got to bring home. I grieved the empty rounded belly that I looked down at each day and every single time someone else noticed that it was empty.


Weren’t you just pregnant? 

No, I lied.

Are you sure? 

Pretty sure.

Really, because I could have sworn you were?

I had no choice but to give in. I gave her the short version and spared her all of the heartbreaking details. I even offered a sympathetic smile to the relentless and unwitting woman sitting in front of me.

Oh. Followed by a blank stare. At least he didn’t suffer. At least you don’t have to watch him suffer. 

There was a part of me that wanted to tell her how beautiful my son was. That he had his daddy’s nose and my round face. I wanted her to know that we didn’t want him to suffer – but we would have suffered if that meant we got to bring him home. Instead, I changed the uninvited conversation about why I didn’t look pregnant anymore and asked about her plans for the upcoming holiday.

Time seemed to stand still for months after we left the maternity ward. I questioned my body and it’s capability to do what women are naturally born to do. I questioned my existence, my faith, and God’s plan for me. I was dangling on a thread of hope that my husband and daughter had provided for me in those dark, silent moments, but the dark days were lonely days. People that I felt closest to left me to grieve alone and those that stayed didn’t know how to comfort me. The silent ones caused me to question the significance of my grief. And then there was the well-intended listening ear. Everything happens for a reason. You should be grateful that you have your daughter. You’re so young, you’ll have more. Maybe you’re just not meant to have more kidsGod has a plan for everyone. I didn’t believe that this was all a part of God’s great plan for my life; it just happened. And, of course, grateful had taken on new meaning when I looked into the big, beautiful brown eyes of my daughter, but being grateful didn’t make my arms feel any fuller or my heart any less tender.

I’m not really quite sure when I did start to pick up the pieces but when I did the once shattered fragments of life that fell to the ground slowly began to come together on their own. I laughed again. I danced in the car and belted out the words to my favorite country song. I talked about him. I talked about both of them. I said their names in the presence of others. My two sons, Brody and Kade. It didn’t matter what anyone else thought anymore. I stopped referring to their birth as a result of miscarriage because it shortens their lives and the impact they made on mine. Because no life is too small to leave an impact on the lives of their creators. I stopped allowing the opinions and my assumptions of others opinions to dictate my own feelings, emotions and grievances. I no longer hide behind the silent ones or run from the well-intended listening ear. It has taken me a long time to recognize that the intentions of the acquaintance, friend and family member only come from the bottom of their hearts. And that those who stay silent do not deliberately misunderstand. That the silent grievers deserve the right to choose. To those who left, well, what can I say. I realized that we are not all equipped to manage life the same just as we are not all destined for or deserving of one another.

Today, I acknowledge my sons because the only thing that matters to me is keeping their memory alive while they dance the skies of heaven. Today, I do not hide my pain in attempt to spare the feelings of others. And today, I realize that pain is felt differently by each of its receivers. My wounds are still healing but they will always leave a scar. I have discovered that to heal from these wounds I must acknowledge them. I must feel them, mend them and give them time to heal. And once they become scars I will let them be a constant reminder of who I am because they are a part of me. And when someone notices my scars, or when they are on display for the world to see, I will wear them proudly.

No matter what side of the fence you are reading this from, this is for you. Because I think that we all could use a reminder that every walk of life is treaded differently. Many times, myself along with those that stand beside me are misunderstood. But here I am, breaking the silence. I tell my story in hopes that you will be encouraged and empowered to share your own or to at the very least know that I will accompany you on your journey and assist you in healing your own wounds; because you are not alone.

Love, a mom of three.

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