Home
Home is the one place in all this world where hearts are sure of each other. It is the place of confidence. It is the place where we tear off that mask of guarded and suspicious coldness which the world forces us to wear in self-defense, and where we pour out the unreserved communications of full and confiding hearts. It is the spot where expressions of tenderness gush out without any sensation of awkwardness and without any dread of ridicule.~Frederick W. Robertson
My husband and I recently agreed to stay in London for one more year. It will be our third. Taking into consideration how swiftly time seems to pass despite the pain or pleasures life hands us, I’ve been thinking about what this place means to me, and what it will mean to return to Canada.
In the weeks following Sadie’s death we flew back to hold her funeral and to spend time with our family. Angry and desperately sad, I vowed to return permanently as soon as possible. I listened and believed those around us who said it was time, all things considered, to be closer to our friends and loved ones. It was all well intentioned; something to offer when there was no other way to help: Come back, and while you don’t have her, at least you’ll have us. We are both so loved.
I was emotionally chaotic; I viewed our return as the light at the end of a very dark tunnel. Yet after months passed and I did what was the right thing for me – getting a job – I started to doubt my hasty proclamation. Despite it being the polar opposite of what I wanted to be doing, I believed that distracting myself with work challenges and making new friends was the healthy, responsible way to channel my grief.
I began to experience this home from a different perspective. I was extraordinarily sad, and still am. But I was forging a path as a new person. Everything I looked at was at once starkly different, as though through the eyes of someone else. It has taken many months to understand how deeply losing Sadie has changed my very essence. And now, ten months later, I can see how London has been a integral part of this transformation.
I’ve always told my husband that I am an adaptable person by nature, and he knows all too well how much I enjoy change. In the years before we bought our Toronto home, I moved both on my own and with him no less than once a year over the span of six years. Needless to say, the idea of moving overseas and making a life for ourselves in a new country was particularly appealing.
I believe that being here throughout this time has taught me what I’m made of.
Now, faced with the reality of our time here coming to an end, the thought of leaving saddens me more than I ever expected it to. I know how quickly this year will fly by. This is the place where my husband and I chose to strike out independently of everything we knew and make a life distinctly our own. It’s where our daughter was conceived, and where we came to terms with what becoming parents meant to us. It is where we were fortunate enough to experience the barely describable love and joy that was being her mom and dad.
It is where we shared both the most glorious and the most heartbreaking moments of our lives.
How hard it is to escape from places. However carefully one goes they hold you - you leave little bits of yourself fluttering on the fences - like rags and shreds of your very life. ~Katherine Mansfield
.::.
Do you associate a certain place with your lost child, be it a city, home, or otherwise? How has that relationship changed since your loss?


13 Comments
Reader Comments (13)
I have not been back to the city Melbourne where I used to work. I worked up until I was 36 weeks so I was there a lot with Hope. We walked the city streets on my lunch break. We shopped and had lunch with friends. Even though I was not enjoying myself at work, I enjoyed my walks with Hope in the city. Melbourne just holds so many happy memories for me. So many of those memories are trapped in those city streets now. Work is also a place I haven't been able to return to yet, exactly five months on from her birth. And thankfully with the wonderful income protection insurance payments I'm receiving, I wont be returning any time soon. This is me time now. Time that should have been her time, but she's not here so I gotta take care of me.
And my relationship with the Spring, which isn't a place but feels rather like one sometimes, has changed - last year when everything was beautiful and blooming, I was pregnant and felt beautiful and blooming, too. I took every new bud and flower as a good sign, as reassurance that all would be well. That's not something I get to have again.
But I think for you London is going to be more a memorial of this time in your life... probably more evocative in the way all those formative places tend to be. Tough to revisit, but also, you have the opportunity to make a new go of it, a new start in a place that's either refreshingly blank or comfortingly familiar...
my home is filled with memories of my pregnancy and my mourning. the streets remind me of walking around pregnant and happy, the place where i took my prenatal yoga class and the street where my childbirth class is. i see people i know everywhere. ones who were pregnant when i was or ones who are now. ones with babies in tow. and now everyone knows our tragedy. sometimes i just want to be invisible.
i'm ready for a new home. to start fresh. new house. new community. new life.
I will visit the hospital tomorrow with a friend of mine to take some flowers to the rose garden there. I do dread the hospital but at the same time....... it is the place that I met my son.... and also said good bye to him.
yeah, its all a reminder, but for some reason, i'm ok with my life. with being in it, without silas. maybe we need these constant silas reminders? not sure.
London as the place you guys struck out on your own, the place you brought Sadie home and had those wonderful weeks with her...i can understand staying another year.
this was lovely, Jen.
http://nomatterhowsmall.blogspot.com/2008/05/relief-and-redemption.html
In case, anyone doesn't want to click through, because it does mention live babies:
"The redemption part? I'm walking around earlier trying to make things progress and I shuffle past the special room, the room where Matthew died. I always say a little prayer when I go past it....well this time I see a woman I know from my OBs office and she and I chat a minute. She is staying there because her BP is high and they are trying to keep her baby in a little longer.
So wild seeing a woman who likely will get a live baby in a place I associate with a dying child. While I am working on getting a live baby as we speak.
Redemptive.
There are blessings all around us if we just take the time to look."
That being said, since Charlotte died I think we've re-done every room in the house, which is pleasing to me. I can't imagine ever leaving the house, or moving, and I would never change the nursery that I decorated for her. But some of the rooms just reminded me of the hours of my labor where I paced in delight, not knowing that she was dying inside of me. I would open a door and suddenly see myself gleefully folding towels to soak up my broken waters; I would thump down the old wooden staircase and hear myself thundering down the stairs, 9 months heavy and laboring, running for the toilet. Was that it, I would wonder? Was it the run down the stairs that finally did her in? I was so delighted when we built a new staircase and filled the old one in with my office, where I now type. I can look at the stairs, but they don't call to me in a teasing way anymore.
The changes have helped me to love my home as the cocoon I have made for my family, and to dissociate from some of the memories that cause counterproductive thinking. For this I am grateful.