Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Balloon
Loosing a baby is one of the hardest things to overcome, I believe. People have told me I need to write a book on what I went through with my daughters life and death. I often feel that would be a very depressing book so thus I have never sat down and wrote anything on the subject. I do however journal occasionally about the way it has changed my perspective on life in general. With this life change, I have been looking for an appropriate way to put onto paper an accurately portrayal of the depth of change I have experienced.
So lets start at the beginning with me. I was born into an unstable household and had a unique child hood. I learned to ride horses at a very young age and became a professional horse trainer at 16. My First paid gig was a thoroughbred that just needed to be ridden in order to be "tamed" for younger children to be able to ride it. It was a year long gig and I had a lot of fun. That was when I came up with the idea I was going to be a horse trainer and really just "go for it". I had dreams of going to the Arabian nationals show and the Olympics as a groom, just to be able to go really. I figured that would be the easiest way into them. lol While a senior in high school I took an auto class to fix my vehicle. I met an Army recruiter there and he put the idea into my head I should try the army. I was game for basically anything, so I went for it and two weeks out of high school was in basic training. I had not thrown my dream of being a trainer away, I was training horses and children to ride while I was in. So not all was lost. I tried out for the mounted color guard and passed all their tests. My commander said that since I had not been in the Army that long (4 months) he didn't want to let me go. It was a one year special assignment where you get to work with horses everyday. I was completely crushed. I didn't give up, I just kept at it until I had another chance to try out again.
So by now you are most likely asking yourself, is this going anywhere? The answer is yes, but you have to understand the back ground in order to fully appreciate the story.
I met a man while in, I married him after knowing him 6 months. I was 19 and felt like I was on top of the world, I had it all. I had a husband, horses and a baby on the way. My first daughter was a honeymoon baby. I had waited until marriage to do any experimenting as well. So when I found out I was pregnant two months after we were married I cried. I was way too young to have a baby, I was still a baby. In no way mature enough to care for a baby.
Once you have a baby you go from being a baby yourself to a woman in an instant. Well at least for me this is the way it happened. I was so scared I would drop the baby or hurt the baby while pregnant, but the instant I had her I couldn't believe the rush of hormones that all of a sudden made me confident I would be a wonderful mom. The love that overcame me was something I had never felt before as well. It truly was an amazing day in my life. I will always hold that dear to my heart.
Six weeks after my daughter was born I had to return to work. My husband had taken a week off to help me around the house, as I had a c-section and couldn't hardly move. I also had ripped my staples out of my stomach while on morphine and caused a lot of issues. Upon going back to work I realized that I wasn't even healed fully from the c-section and was still changing dressings on the wound and still had to go to the hospital every day to get it cleaned out and bandaged up again. I looked at that and said to myself "well if I can do this then why can't I try out for the mounted color guard again?" So I did, I tried out again, this time making it with a written recommendation that they could really use my riding skills and would be a valued member of the team. I was confident I would make it this time. For some series of circumstances my paperwork stalled and never came back. I walked it up by hand 4 times the last time to the general of the base. He commended me for my bravery with talking to him directly, but nothing ever came of it and I was just not ever written orders to go to the mounted color guard. I was crushed again!
So my First sergeant ordered a PT test for the company two weeks after I came off maternity leave, and since I was no longer on profile I had to take the test. I failed that test, by 2 sit ups. Before my daughter I was so in shape I never even came close to failing. I would average 285-290 out of 300. I was so dismayed by my failure. I was immediately put into the "remedial" PT program that is for soldiers that fail their PT tests and need to work to get a passing test again. I worked out 3 times a day for 4 months and took another test. I failed again by 2 sit ups. I couldn't figure it out, I had done everything I could and still wasn't able to pass. I got a memo that I would be on written orders to go overseas. I was terrified. I did not want to go to Korea. So I didn't open the memo for three days. When I finally opened it I was excited because it said Germany. When you relocate overseas while in the army there is a lot of paperwork, blood draws, and physicals to check to see if you are still fit enough to go. I went in for my first physical and found out I was pregnant. So immediately I knew why I wasn't passing my sit ups, I had a human inside me. Hmmm, what to do now.
Since I was on orders and only had a month or two before I left they did not give me any prenatal visits. They said I could get that when I went to Germany. I would be 5 months pregnant by then. I figured that was the way the military worked and didn't question that decision.
When I got to Germany the first thing I did was find a doctor and get checked out. I was fine, baby was fine. I noticed I was considerably bigger than I was with my first. I had a belly much earlier and I was already past my full pregnancy weight of my first. I took that as a good sign. I passed all my tests for gestational diabetes and anything else that could go wrong so I was was confident that I would be ok, just a lot bigger. I completely doubled my weight in that pregnancy. I got huge.
The doctor wanted me to go into labor naturally so they let me go super late into the pregnancy. Since we were in Germany, we went to German doctors and had to follow their rules. I didn't mind, it felt like we had been taken care of a lot more than when we had our first. They were much more protective of everything. They let me go to 43 weeks and 5 days before they decided I would not have this baby without some sort of induction. So that is why I doubled my weight because I was allowed to go that far into the pregnancy. In Germany your prenatal doctor does not deliver your baby, they have separate doctors that do that job. So I went off the recommendation of my prenatal doctor to find a doctor who he had known for 25 years that was a delivery doctor. We went to him.
The day my baby was born will forever turn my life upside down. Since this time in my life is so stinking depressing I am going to skip over it with minimal amount of attention.
Fourteen hours of labor, an epidural at 9 hours, and I dilated to 6 but no more. So thus no baby was going to come out, no matter how small. I had an 8 pound, 23 inch baby girl through an emergency c-section in which they found her cord to be wrapped around her head and neck and had to pull her out with forceps. She did not breath right away so they had to put her on life support. I was pronounced dead after my heart stopping. I woke up in a morgue or holding area, not really sure to tell you the truth, I know for sure that I super scared the person in the room at the time I woke up. The doctor had told my husband I was dead and to go be with the baby, who was now in a hospital across town. So he did that. When I gave him a call that morning he was so shocked he hung up thinking it was a prank. I couldn't imagine, thinking someone had passed and sitting by your baby while the person who you were told has passed calls you. How awful that must of been.
I was put into a room with a laboring mom, I rolled over, covered my head and just cried. I didn't really know what had happened at this point. Just that I had a baby, and was told it might die, as well as me. Thankfully a nurse saw me crying an had heart enough to move me to another room. This room had a mom that just had a baby. She was holding her baby, and laughing with family members. I lost it at this point, I just started yelling. I couldn't believe what I was seeing, they even left an empty bassinet at the end of my bed for "my" baby. As soon as I did, the nurses took me out of that room and put me in the hall way. They argued in a separate room for quite a while although I could not understand the language that well but I took it as "we don't have a room for her, what are we going to do?" It took about an hour but they did find a room for me. I got a closet all to myself. They were still bringing in furniture to make it look more like a room while I was in there. At this point I was I was exhausted and fell asleep for a couple hours. When I woke I had a nurse by my bed that didn't speak english but went running out as soon as I woke up. My delivery doctor came in and said "I don't like English, I don't speak well." "Your baby is going to die, and you are too". I was so taken back. I said "What?" he then told a translator in German and she told me "Your baby is going to die, and you might too, do you understand?" Yes. I understand. Through the translator, the doctor told me he had cut my bladder four times and I was going to die from infection in a couple hours or days, depending. My baby was in a different hospital and I would not know it's outcome until it's doctor was able to tell me, but from what he was able to gather is that my baby was real bad off and they don't expect it to live. At this point my question is "Boy or girl?" The doctor left, and the translator said "girl".
I was given a phone to call home and some numbers to call to get out of country with their phone. I called everyone I knew, the only person to pick up was my mom. I broke down immediately and she really did not understand what I was talking about. I was able to say "good bye" and that was about the end of the talk. I called my husband again and by this time he was at home. I asked him "what happened" he answered me with "you killed your baby". I started yelling and he hung up on me. In all honesty I believe he was in so much shock he just didn't know what to say and that slipped out of his mouth. I called him back constantly until he answered. We talked and at the end I told him "never talk to me like that again" He hung up. I just laid there in bed and cried I went to sleep for a while and woke up to my entire chain of command in my room saying their last good byes to me. I guess word had gotten around that I was going to die.
The procession was sweet, everyone was so nice. About 45 minutes later my husband showed up. He wasn't able to talk without insulting me. I still remember every single one. They still cut super deep, but not as deep as later.
I finally was able to sign a paper saying I would take my life into my own hands and they were not responsible for me any longer. I did and then got to go see my daughter. It took me 90 minutes to walk to the front door and to get into the car, another 90 minutes to get from the car to her room, and I finally got to see her. She was in neonatal intensive care unit at the biggest and best hospital in Germany. Oh to be able to see her face, to touch her skin. It was truly amazing. She had so many tubes going out of her, so many wires, monitors and beepers going off. It almost seemed unreal.
She lived for two months and 10 days, after 3 weeks I took her off life support and asked for a DNR. I signed it and basically waited for her to go.
As she was passing away, it was violent, it was awful to watch. She gasped for air for so long, and I jumped every time. When she was finally gone, I didn't know what to do with myself. So I went to work and stared at a blue computer screen for the entire day. This is after a lady took me around to get her birth and death certificates. That was awful! The next day I had to identify her body. I will be scared from there on out.
After all this, I was left with such an empty feeling. I just didn't know what to do with myself. I was angry, hurt, and basically got the pleasure of feeling every human emotion at once. Needless to say I was a basket case. I was a balloon that had been popped. Never the same.
This brings me to 10 years later. I have finally came up with the perfect wording to describe it.
People are like balloons, as we grow, we get bigger, and seem to go from one "group" of balloons to another. As a baby we are in the "baby" group, as a child we move up to the "child" group of balloons. These balloons are all different colors shapes and sizes, but all have in common that they are all still balloons and have a string holding them at some point to the same spot. As I went into the "adult hood" group of balloons, I also got to join the "motherhood" group. I was getting smarter, growing up, and now a mom.
Upon my daughters death, I as a balloon I popped. Never to be inflated again. Broken, deflated, hurt, and now in pieces. Each piece having a special meaning or purpose. All my edges are now rough and curling on themselves. I still have my string attached reminding me I am still a balloon and still belong to a group. I am also hanging with other families that get to feel this awful tragedy of life (death).
When someone asks about my daughter and what happened I remind myself I am still a balloon, but I will never be repaired or inflated again. I am able to tell them in such a way where it is not so obvious that I am still in massive amounts of pain and that the pain has never really gotten any better, I have just gotten better at hiding the fact that I am hurting.
This is for all the moms out there that have lost a baby, no matter how far along you were or if you baby was born still or passed after being alive for any amount of time. If you need to put it to words, think of yourself as a balloon. Forever changed, never the same but still a balloon. Your still a mom, your still very much valued in this world. Your pain may never get better, you may have to learn to get better at hiding your pain, I believe it is our job to remind ourselves that we still matter as much as our baby mattered to us if not more.
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So sorry that you endured this. And that you lacked the support of your husband and doctors through this. Praying for healing in time.
ReplyDeleteThank you Karen. I know your journey was rough too, I hope it brings you solace to know you are not alone. I think of your journey often as well.
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