“There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside of you.”
– Maya Angelou
It is with deep and mixed emotions that I write these words.
I didn’t know if I ever would share, but I can’t deny that I write to process
things. And I hope that any woman with this experience will find some comfort
in my words – if only to know that she’s not alone in her grief.
2 weeks after finding out we were having a baby I started
bleeding. I had been out running errands, came back home and saw that my cotton
pants were soaked. Naturally I was
freaking out. I called The One in hysteria. While he was on his way to see me I
called the local hospital (and also where I work) in hysteria. We spent the
next couple of days in and out of doctor’s appointments and diagnostics. The
end result was that it was too soon to tell anything and we’d have to wait and
see.
The doctor did observe the interactions between The One and
I. He said we were obviously very supportive of one another and to take some
comfort in that because he rarely sees couples on our level. Looking back on
this experience, I still take comfort in this.
I waited. I was worried, anxious, and even neurotic at
times. There were more visits, more diagnostics; even more blood drawn. My HCG
levels had not gone up as they should have. It was not a viable pregnancy and I
had experienced an incomplete miscarriage. I had to be scheduled for a D&C
and wait another week before the procedure would be done. I guess my body was
trying to hold on because psychologically I wasn’t ready to let go.
I give him as much credit as I could possibly give another
human being. The One was as supportive as he knew how to be. He acknowledged
that he couldn’t quite relate to how I felt. It’s true . . . one can only
really relate if one has experienced it – the slight changes my body was
making: the mood swings, the increased heart beat due to a vascular system
working even harder to pump blood down to a growing cluster of cells, the
random cravings and the tiny little things that were uncomfortable and inconvenient
– yet still brought a smile to my face because I knew it was all for one tiny
growing baby bean sprout. Sure, it was just a cluster of cells; but it was my tiny
little cluster. Sure, it’s a common experience for women; but that doesn’t make
it any easier.
The One didn’t question me when I’d sob uncontrollably
before drifting off to sleep. I never had to explain myself. Part of it was
hormones and part of it was grief and sadness.
I had missed a considerable amount of work. I knew that life
would carry on and I would need to carry on with it. When I’d start crying I
looked at the clock on more than one occasion and told myself I had 5 more
minutes to be sad. Five more minutes to allow myself to cry. Five more minutes
to grieve and feel sorry for myself. It took a couple of weeks and an unnecessary
amount of retail therapy before I stopped needing 5 more minutes.
It’s a form of sadness that has been genuinely difficult to
describe. It’s a loss of the feeling of life and a loss of the excitement over
what could have been. It’s a form of sadness that is understood only by other
women who have experienced the same kind of loss. It was through this
experience that I felt a sense of sisterhood I had not yet found among women.
In fact, I had doubted that type of bond even existed. And it was this grief
that somehow served as a conduit.
“And when the night is
cloudy, there is still a light that shines on me. Shine until tomorrow, let it
be.” – The Beatles.
It was on my last memorable night of grief that I finally
finished Women Who Run With the Wolves.
For the public record, I’m reading the footnotes . . . and then I’ll probably
start the whole thing over again from the beginning. Clarissa Pinkola Estes
wrote a footnote on the 2nd or 3rd chapter about a figure
in Mexican folklore that is known for collecting the souls of miscarried babies
and planting their seeds in another womb. So the little one never really goes
away, it’s just given a new home. It’s a nice thought. And maybe Baby Bean
Sprout just wasn’t ready to join our world yet. I’m ready when you are, Little One.
I lit a candle for you. Until we meet again, Little One.
And it was through this experience that The One showed me
just how many forms love can take. Love is when he held me because he knew why
I was crying. Love is when he held me and had no idea why I was crying. Love is
understanding my need for writing, biking and retail therapy. Love is accepting
a cantankerous old hound because he knows how much I love that hound. Love is
his amusement when I offer him a key to my bike lock instead of my car because
I’m not paying attention. Love is picking me up on a rainy night because I
managed to get lost on my bike. Love is finding the best possible attributes
for my worst idiosyncrasies.
Love was dealing with my hormonal mood swings of tears and
bouts of anger. Love was telling me I’m beautiful even though my breasts were
tender and overly engorged. Love was (and is) checking me out when I’m cringing
in the mirror at my stretch marks. Love is joking about how when we were young
and cute and thought we’d stay that way forever.
Love is choosing to see me in the best possible light and
this is a choice he makes every day. Rather than chalking my forgetfulness to
an air-headed person, he tells me I’m forgetful because I’m a writer and I’m
too busy remembering the very important details that most others won’t notice.
And obviously there’s only so much memory one person can hold.
"The best love is that kind that awakens the soul; that makes us reach for more, that plants the fire in our hearts and brings peace to our minds. That's what I hope to give you forever." - Nicholas Sparks, The Notebook
"The best love is that kind that awakens the soul; that makes us reach for more, that plants the fire in our hearts and brings peace to our minds. That's what I hope to give you forever." - Nicholas Sparks, The Notebook