leavetaking
The little green box sits in a drawer now, a fine layer of dust collecting from god knows where. I do not open it anymore. I know he is not in there.
I thought I'd said goodbye long before I really did. The first time I held him, he was dying. And though I whispered, it's okay, it's alright little one, you can go, mama loves you, it's okay...I was only trying to ease the passage, make him feel safe since I could not keep him safe, since I could not keep him. But that was not goodbye...in my heart, I was still saying hello.
The last time I held him he had been dead twelve hours, lividity darkening one side of his small face. I waited for them to bring him to me, shy and eager as if before a date. I remember most the adrenalin taste of my anticipation, the leap in my heart even though I am a sane-ish sort and the joy I felt awaiting him feels ridiculous, even macabre in the recounting. But I did not believe he was alive: more that life and death were irrelevant, for a minute. It seemed enough that he was himself, and would be with me again. I think I thought that I wanted to say goodbye, though I couldn't have said those words aloud then...too maudlin. I think now that I was wrong, that goodbye was nowhere on my radar. I just wanted my baby. And I would want him with a keening ache for a long time after.
Our culture tells us that goodbye comes with death, or at the very latest with the last leavetaking of the body of the departed. The dead leave visible holes in the fabric of our lives, and we know them gone by the gaps.
But with babies, especially those who never came home at all, the thresholds are blurred. Waiting for a baby, a parent's life and selfhood shift to accommodate the coming addition...but the changes are private, woven in secret thread, invisible. When the baby dies, the leavetaking comes hand in hand with - or before, or in place of - that first magical hello, and all the anticipation and identity shifts of the parent-to-be are left hanging, shredded, irreconcilable with the fabric visible to the outside world. The usual rules of goodbye suggest that the absence of someone who was barely, in fact, present should be a simple thing.
But if it were, this corner of the internet would be a lonely place.
Pieces of goodbye crept up on me, crowded in. Each time I called him into being aloud, spoke the reality of his death, he slipped a little further from me. Each time realization fell and the obvious clicked: that I would never see what he would have looked like as a five year old, that I that there would never be a photo of all my children - if I eventually had other children - together. Each one tore at me, ripped open again the wound where all the futures I'd woven for us had been. Each one was invisible to the outside world, unremarkable to anyone who did not realize that my heart still held him whole long after his body had been relinquished to the fire. I knew he was gone, knew it in every part of me...my spread hips, my leaking breasts, my empty, searching hands. But it was the rituals of living without him that forced me to acknowledge what I knew, internalize it. Each time I moved forward without him, I let go a little. And I hated that. We had had so little time, he and I.
Then one day I opened the little green box to finger his small hat and when I held it to my face to breathe him in all I smelled was dust. No trace. And I sat, alert, surprised, as if suddenly realizing that he'd been gone a long time. I felt...odd, caught out...as if someone might be watching, as if I'd been discovered mothering a box.
are you there, little one? I whispered.
No answer. And it all clicked into place.
I felt the shift deep inside me, just as I'd felt it all those months before as I waited for motherhood...the quiet sea change where what was once incomprehensible becomes, simply, who you are. Still a mother. To a child I'd never see again. There it was: goodbye.
And yet I felt him, too, closer then than I had in a long time, that brightness and sweetness of the moments holding him in my arms. you're gone, I said quietly. I miss you.
Did you say goodbye? All at once, or in pieces? What does goodbye mean, to you?
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this is my own goodbye, of a sort...my last post as a regular contributor here at Glow.
i will be reading, still, walking alongside, but almost four years out from Finn's death i feel another shift taking place in me and the urgency i long felt to write it all out has waned. i still miss him, but that missing has become something i want to sit quietly with for awhile, and let other voices rise here to continue weaving our song of Medusa-hood, of love and grief.
thank you, all of you, for making this place a community.


25 Comments
Reader Comments (25)
Thank you for saying it, these are the words that describe me perfectly right now, and I couldn't find them.
Thank you for your words.
It feels somewhat contrived to say, especially given the name of this place, but I feel like Liam's presence ( / lack of it) was at first this raging inferno in me, this thing that could not be ignored. I was walking around, my head shooting sparks and flames. I wanted to scream I AM ON FIRE but I felt like no one would believe me. And now I feel a movement towards where you are, a year and a half later, to what feels more like the kind of embers you'd toast a marshmallow on. And I think perhaps it stays that way, this fire you think is out, most of the time, but that still, somehow, gives off heat and crackle from time to time.
I just loved this so much, Bon. thank you.
As you write, "But that was not goodbye...in my heart, I was still saying hello." That's it. That's it exactly.
I haven't said goodbye yet, although I've tried. In spite of all common sense, in spite of knowing it's impossible, I'm still calling out, "Come back. Please, come back." I think saying goodbye will mean that I've accepted the fact of Teddy's death, that while I'll still be deeply sad about it, I will be able to stop crying out for the impossible, that I'll be able to relax my death grip on memory and guilt. Maybe. That's just my best guess and hope for now, though. At not quite six months out, it's very possible that saying goodbye, if/when I manage to do it, will mean something else.
This piece was....stunning. I don't know what else to say about it, I'm practically speecless.
I too have not yet said goodbye. I'm almost at 6 months, (my Hope was born just before your Posey) and it feels like goodbye is letting her go. I have not reached any level of acceptance yet, and i'm not sure when I will. But perhaps with more children and the passing of time, things will become clearer to me, as they have for you.
I hope you are able to keep stopping by, Bon.
Yes, this was the most painful. Moving forward without...is like being slowly torn apart.
"...the quiet sea change where what was once incomprehensible becomes, simply, who you are"
Beautifully, beautifully said.
Which is where I still am, every day. But less so, now, for life without him, while hard and at times lonely, is sweet as well, full of all the other blessings I've been granted.
Goodbye, Bon. I have always enjoyed reading your posts, and I will miss reading your take and perspective on being babylost.
I too have a green box and a pile of stuff near it in my room of her things, along with a backet of cards people sent us when she was born/died. I also have a drawer with a book of memories and such. In the beginning I looked at those things more often, but now I shy away from them. I know that to continue my grief and healing process I will need to confront them again one of these days and when I do it will probably be healthy for me. I hope in time I will be able to look through them and find some peace and joy in reliving the life and memory of my daughter. Anyway, reading your post today brought up a lot of emotions for me and I had a good cry. Thank you for sharing and all you have brought to Glow and our blogging community.
On a personal note, I feel blessed to have found you...to be able to call you my "internet friend" (as my mother says)...to have someone to walk with during the last four years. Thank you. I hope that you always feel peace and love and hope around you wherever you travel.
I know that shift. It has happened for me too- maybe even awhile ago. I feel some guilt in slipping away. I do feel a responsibility to offer some glimmer of hope to those still in the trenches, but I also need to tend to the life that is all around me. I don't know if I can stand in both places anymore.
You are a treasure, Bon. I am grateful to have met you.
Thank you for your words, love and support. I wish you peace.
With Love,
Carly x
I feel like the goodbye ebbs and flows. Sometimes I think I am finished with it, and then I wake up one day and realize that I am not.
sometimes someone says something unintentionally hurtful, and I feel like I'm saying goodbye all over again. You're absolutely right, it's incredibly impossible when hello and goodbye are entangled like that.
Thank you so, so much for being here, writing here. Your thoughts and words never cease to amaze me. You will be missed.
That's so lovely. I just wanted to say that, and thank you, and say ditto.
I don't know that I have said goodbye yet. I remember in the early months knowing I should say goodbye and not being able to do so. But it has been nearly 2 1/2 years now. Goodbye comes in pieces.
I pulled out her blanket a week or so ago and all it smelled like was my cedar chest :(
Thank-you for sharing.
i can't imagine ever being ready to say goodbye to silas, especially since there really was never a hello. i want the passing of time to heal me, but i also hate the idea that i'm getting further and further from having held him in my arms, or having him inside me.
much love xo