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Tuesday
13Jan2009

that which reshapes the shoreline

Today's post comes to us from Loribeth of The Road Less Travelled. After trying to conceive for more than two years, Loribeth and her husband rejoiced in pregnancy only to deliver their daughter Kathleen Maria (Katie) at 26 weeks gestation. Two more years of infertility testing & treatment followed Katie's stillbirth before the couple made the difficult decision to remain childless/free, and inspired by the pregnancy loss support group they discovered after their loss of Katie, Loribeth and her husband now volunteer with the group as facilitators.

"January 12 was my 48th birthday," Loribeth explains. "In 2008 I relived, in sometimes agonizing detail, the events of ten years earlier when Katie was born still. I'm a loyal Glow in the Woods reader, and it made sense to me this month -- just over a decade from the start of our journey -- to write about the passage of time and infant loss."

 photo by s~revenge

The popular misconception, of course, is that time heals all wounds -- and outwardly, at least, that would appear to be the case.

I get up and go to work every morning. I attend meetings, send e-mails, have lunch with friends, laugh at colleagues' stories about their kids, do the banking and run errands. I clean house and cook. I call my mother every Sunday night.

For the most part, I function normally in the world.

Anyone who sees me would never guess how very different things were ten years ago, or even seven years ago when we made the extremely difficult decision to abandon infertility treatment and continue our life without children.

With the passage of time, our friends, families and co-workers seem to have forgotten our daughter, or shoved the memory of what happened into the recesses of their minds. Most of the people we've met over the past decade -- with the exception of those we’ve met through our volunteer work as pregnancy loss support group facilitators -- have no idea that I was pregnant, that we had a child, that the tragedy of stillbirth and the pain of infertility has so profoundly touched our lives. It's like I have this secret identity, this other life that I only feel safe revealing when I'm at home with my husband, or online, or with other bereaved parents -- people who have been there, done that, and understand in a way that few others can.

So outwardly, life has gone on, much the same as before. Inwardly, of course, it's another story.

: : :

My favourite line from Elizabeth McCracken's fabulous stillbirth memoir An Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination is Closure is bullshit. For me, there has never been any 'closure' following my daughter's stillbirth.

It's not that I still feel that my grip on sanity is tenuous... most days. But I freely admit that, after more than 10 years, there is not a single day -- sometimes not an hour -- in which I don't find myself thinking about my pregnancy, my daughter, my infertility, my involuntary childlessness.

It is with me -- she is with me -- always. Sometimes it's just a fleeting thought, sometimes obsession. There are days when it nudges around the outer edges of my consciousness, and days when I sit in my cubicle with work piling up around me and all I can do is read stillbirth and infertility websites, articles and blogs. Even after ten years, I still crave the validation they provide -- the certain knowledge that somebody else out there has been through this too and understands exactly how I feel.

There are obvious triggers -- babies, pregnant women, the window displays at Baby Gap. Some moments take me by surprise like a sucker-punch in the gut. The thing is, I never know exactly how I'm going to react until I'm in the moment. There are days -- and certainly many, many more than there were 10 years ago -- when I can admire a colleague's baby and take genuine pleasure in holding her. And there are other days when I have to duck out the side door at the first faint wail drifting down the hallway toward my cubicle. I've sat at baby showers where I could barely stand to see the adorable little outfits emerge from their boxes and gift bags, and at others where, if not exactly enthralled by the proceedings, I've managed to chat with the other women around me and have a reasonably pleasant time.

Parents whose children have died often hear the cliche, time heals all wounds. I wouldn't say this is true. Yet I can't deny, as another stillbirth mother once said to me: Time doesn’t exactly heal... but it does help.

: : :

Yes, I still think of my daughter all the time. Yes, grief can still rise up and strike me, leaving me gasping and reeling. I sometimes think of grief as ebbing and flowing, like the tide -- with a big wave rolling in every now and then to shake things up and reshape the shoreline.

But most of the time, I'm okay. Anyone who sees me would never guess that I'm not. And most of the time, I really am. Despite the baby I will always miss and the things I will never get to experience with her, my life is still, on the whole, a pretty good one. With a wonderful husband, a comfortable home, a job that's never boring with colleagues I like, a loving extended family and good friends both online and in real life. And I have a daughter who is still very much an important part of that life, even though she never drew a breath on this earth.

I would have preferred a life that included actively parenting my daughter. Nothing will ever compensate for her absence but since I can’t change it, I can focus on the good things I have around me. One of my favourite quotes, from Joseph Campbell, is this:

We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned, so as to have the life that is waiting for us.

: : :

Another bereaved mother and real-life friend recently asked me if I still think of Katie as a baby or as a 10-year-old and my reply was that it’s probably somewhere in between. I can picture the toddler or preschooler she would have been very clearly -- the 10-year-old, I'm having more trouble with, and don't even ask me about the teenager or the college graduate. My mother recently said to me I can't believe you're almost 50 -- neither can I, Mom! Like any mother, I think, I find it hard to believe my daughter would be as old as she would be, were she here -- that she'd be growing up and getting older as I get older too.

No matter how old both my mother and I get, I will always be her little girl.

And Katie will forever be mine.

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Reader Comments (17)

Wow Loribeth - you always manage to move me.

You're right, there is no closure, I've found. Maybe some people have found it? I don't know. TIme really only softened the raw edges for the most part for me; I became practiced at the art of living and grieving at the same time. A lot of the time it was just relearning to do the things I had been able to do so easily before - breathe, function, smile, laugh, find joy again. That it was okay to do those things, that it was <i>necessary</i> to do those things again.

{{hugs}} and birthday wishes dear friend.

I love the title - because it also made me think of the glass we use to find along the beach when we visited family in Maine. I was always amazed by what the constant turmoil of the ocean water could do to those broken, jagged shards of glass. They became smoother, pollished - perhaps a bit scratched and marred in places - but amazingly beautiful.
January 13, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJuliaS
This is so beautiful and powerful, Loribeth. Thank you for point me in this direction on your own blog.
January 13, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterannacyclopedia
There are so many meaningful lines in here, Loribeth: Validation, for starts. That's really it. I get comfort form the computer, but validation too. And I think that's what I miss most in day to day life -- that no one else can see it or confirm that yes, it's a tragedy, and I should hurt. still.

Reshaping the shoreline? Perfect. That's it exactly.

The life that awaits? I guess I'm still living in some purgatory where I still expect to wake up some day and discover that I never even tried to get pregnant a second time. It's not exactly denial, but it's not exactly moving on either, is it.

Very rich and full post, and all of it achingly beautiful. Thank you for writing here.
January 13, 2009 | Unregistered Commentertash
i think that Campbell quote will resonate with me for a long time, Loribeth. thank you indeed for writing here, and for sharing your story and Katie's.

i too feel most free to be myself among those who recognize my firstborn as a part of my ongoing life...and those people are often easier to find online...whatever that says about real life...so i'm grateful for this community too.
January 13, 2009 | Registered Commenterbon
Thank you so much for this post. My husband and I are struggling with whether or not to attempt another pregnancy, not because of infertility issues but because of the intervention it would take to have an 80% chance or so of delivering a healthy baby. The worst thing is when people see us with our living son and say "So, when you gonna have more?" or some comment to that effect. So thanks, at least I know that if it's not going to "go away" or we're not going to "get over it" at least we'll learn to hide it.
January 13, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKatherine
Achingly beautiful, indeed. I hurt for you as I read this post and yet, I'm awed (envious?) that you can feel such a clear sense that Katie is with you, even if she's not here. It's beautiful, really, and I wish I could believe it for me as much as I believe it for you. Strange, I know.

I continue to (want to) believe that there will be an end to these feelings, this grief, the heartache, although, in my heart of hearts, I know this is an impossibility. You are proof of this and you continue to write about it so honestly and powerfully.
January 13, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterc.
you're an inspiration loribeth. thanks for your post and for sharing katie with us.
January 14, 2009 | Unregistered Commentersally
Beautiful, beautiful post. Your way of describing how things feel ten years down the road is stunning. You've articulated what I've believed now for some time~ that time doesn't heal, but helps some.

Thanks, Loribeth. You and Katie are in my heart today.
January 14, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterHeather
I love the last line. Wonderful post.
January 14, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterColleen
Thank you for this post. It comfirms my thoughts that time only lessens grief, but does not take it away.

I found it interesting that you can picture Katie as a toddler, but not as 10. I still think of Noah as the almost 3 month old he was before he died. I look at his twin, now 2, and struggle to picture him the same age as his brother. I always think there should be two when I look at Monkey, yet I have a hard time visualizing Noah any older. Funny how our minds work.

Thank you for sharing you story with us.
January 14, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJennifer
Sweetie, this made me cry. Especially the last part, imagining her as a baby and a toddler, but having the older years fuzzy in your mind. I wish she were still here with you.
January 15, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMel
Gorgeous post, Loribeth. It took my breath away. Thank you for sharing with us all.
January 15, 2009 | Registered Commenterjanis
What a tribute to your beautiful daughter. Each of us reading is picturing her, hearing her in our minds, celebrating her.

Very moving, Loribeth.
January 16, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterLori in Denver
Wow, this post is just beautiful, and it's something I needed to hear. My husband and I are in the thick of fertility treatments, and I'm starting to realize that there is a very good possibility that we won't get a child out of all this. I've been trying to imagine how things will be if we don't ever have children, and this post is both real and comforting in a way. Thank you for your honesty.
January 16, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJennifer
So true. Every word. Time doesn't heal. It just smooths the rough edges a bit.
January 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterSuzanna Catherine
so true...........it does get easier, but it is never easy..............
January 17, 2009 | Unregistered Commentersarai
Loribeth, thank you so much for sharing your story and feelings about Katie. It is rare and wonderful for us to get a ten year perspective, and one so sensitively written.

Another source of help for families suffering a loss is the March of Dimes bereavement kit. (http://www.marchofdimes.com/pnhec/572_15999.asp) It is free and many people have found it helpful.

All the best to you.
January 21, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMoDLin

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