marked
When we found out Lu was pregnant last January it was one of those rare moments where we knew beyond any doubt that our lives had just changed forever, and that the transformation would be an ongoing process for years, forever, really. We were right about impending change, but wrong about the true nature of what was to come.
Now, over a year later we aren't even back to where we started. I am not back to any place that feels anything like the life I used to have. Everything appears exactly the same and that sameness feels utterly wrong. I look the same, my life rolls on the same way as always and yet within I have been transformed.
It is as though I have been enlarged by grief, and I'm still learning how to carry all this extra soul-weight on body that was used to moving lightly through the world. I had no proof of this, though. No son to show around that says "Now I Am a Dad." That expansion was supposed to be Silas and parenting and a whole new, challenging and invigorating way of life. Instead, that expansive, beautiful life was turned inward and invisible, into a black and dense weight that lives at the center of my being. My tattoo is a physical expression of that pain and loss, and it is helping me.
Lately I have felt less angry about people not remembering or not knowing about Silas. I can't just bring him up, but yet at the same time I cannot go through every day distant and angry, waiting for someone to acknowledge my loss, to speak to me about him. Oh the seething rage or sadness sometimes can't be denied, no doubt, but I work hard to face forward and get through it. In the end, other people can't help me if I can't help myself.
My tattoo in honor of Silas is a way to do that.
Since the tattoo is in a very visible place I know people see it. I am certain that they are aware of the mark and I like that. It is sort of like I'm sneaking Silas into the conversation. He's accounted for, whether they realize it or not. I'm surprised, though at how many people have not asked me about my ink. I figured it would be something people mentioned, but now that I think about it, I can't recall a single time I've asked someone what their tattoo meant.
I guess I just figured if I asked someone about their tattoo that at the least it would be a banal response about alcohol and spring break, or at the worst, well, me I suppose. Our story. And who wants to hear that? So I guess it makes sense that people don't ask me what it means. I'm not even sure how I would respond. I suppose some would get the truth while others I would be more gentle.
"It is to honor someone very close to me that has passed away," is probably the simplest way to put it, but the lack of specificity reduces that sentence to near-garbage. But on the other hand, "it's for my son, who died the day he was born," is so brutal and awful I can see people's souls short out when the words hit their ears. Their gaping, moving mouths and wide eyes make them look like a fish drowning in air. Which, incidentally, is how I always feel anyway. Welcome to my world. Here, have a sip of this. Cheers. To Death, that creepy, invisible intruder that rots the couch and bends the bed springs.
This tattoo is a talisman against the decay of memory and the reductive friction of time.
In a way it's a booby-trap, too. It is there to be seen and wondered about, but god help you if you ask. You just may get the truth. We're dangerous like that these days. There are a lot of things you don't want to ask us when you first meet us. And I worry about that now, in a way I never have before. I always looked forward to new friends and fun parties but now those situations are rife with potential disaster. Kid conversations are out whether it's about your new one or if we have any. Complaining is not an option as idle chit-chat with me. Can't handle it, don't care, will walk away if you keep it up. Plans for the future? Oh yeah we have one, but we had one last year and look where we are now. So we can do movies or music or better yet we can just talk about you because you don't want to know me. But if you do, if you really think you want to be my friend, go ahead and ask about my tattoo and I will tell you everything.

The tree is based on designs of the Tree of Life because Silas means "of the trees." This tree is dark though. It is black and gray and it swirls with an alien strangeness that I thoroughly enjoy. And although this Tree of my Son's Life appears dark and dead, tiny yellow fruit adorn several of the branches. Their pattern reveals the constellation of Orion--Silas' middle name--which rises in the autumn and rides high in the sky through those cold winter nights.
Silas was born on September 25th, so we were looking forward to teaching him about his stars as his birthday rolled around every year. Now that distinctive pattern of stars mocks me as the shape of a man he will never become. All winter those stars were brighter than the sun to me. I could barely look at them without the endless chasm of grief cracking open at my feet. I hate them and love them and drown in their cold starshine whenever my eyes capture their interstellar glow.
There is a heart hidden in my tattoo. That is because Silas is my heart. And because he is hidden, too. Around the edge is a pattern, a border. It is an S repeated over and over like the way I say his name to myself over and over, all the time, but it is also an Eternity symbol that is broken to reveal how he is lost to us.
This tattoo represents a private part of my soul that I demand to have revealed. I require this mark as a feature of who I am because without it, without a conjuring of Silas, I am not complete. It is a channel for my sadness. It is a badge despite how fucked up that sounds to me sometimes. It is a symbol for his life because that's all we have. We don't have his life, so a symbol is used as a poor, paltry placeholder. It is memory insurance.
So far, no stranger has asked me what my tattoo means and I was surprised by that, but it makes sense now. Yet, in the last week three people have out of the blue stopped me and told me that my tattoo was beautiful. I thanked them and smiled and they continued on their way. Inside I whispered over and over that it is, but you should have known my son. This is nothing compared to him.
Do you want people to ask you about your lost child? Do you initiate conversation about him or her? How do you commemorate your child? Necklace? Ink? Photographs? What objects or images link you to your child?
This post is a part of The Body Shop at Glow in the Woods -- a month of themed reflections and memes that explore what we do in an effort to occupy these physical selves with grace after babyloss.


24 Comments
Reader Comments (24)
Outside of our home, the most visible reminder of Katie would probably be the little Precious Moments angel figurine (for the month of August) that sits on my desk at work. My birthday is in January. I don't think anyone has ever made the connection (if they have even noticed the angel). I didn't feel comfortable having a photo at work, so this is my little (unnoticed) signal to the world.
I'm very much like you when it comes to conversation about our baby. I don't want to be the one to bring up the subject, especially among people who don't know about it, but I get ticked off when it appears the people who did know have forgotten.
Most of the people I work with now were not here 10 years ago, so I very much doubt they know my story. I'm not sure that those who were here then really remember either. Certainly, nobody has brought up the subject. Even when I ask my boss to sign some paperwork connected to my volunteer work with our bereaved parents support group (we can apply for company donations in recognition of employee volunteerism), she does so without comment.
We lost our baby during that first twelve weeks of gestation. That period that's kind of a gray area where people don't really consider it the same as losing a more developed baby. While I understand that, it still hurts. It also hurt when people pretended our loss never happened. This probably goes double for my husband. I think people thought it didn't affect him as much as it did me, which was so not true.
I'm so sorry for the loss of your son. If I knew you, I'd ask about your beautiful tattoo and let you talk about Silas as much as you wanted to...
I often mention Iris to people I don't know very well. Mainly because I'm pregnant, so people often ask if it's my first and I say 'no it's my third' and if people ask for more details I say 'I have a 2 1/2 year old daughter called Ava, and I have another daughter Iris who passed away'. I sort of learnt the hard way on this one when someone caught me off guard a couple of months ago and I ended up inventing a living 9 month old little girl, which was half comical, half horrifying.
I think in some ways I mention her out of a misplaced sense of defiance. I sort of feel like 'I don't care if it makes you uncomfortable, it's nothing compared to the hurt I feel everyday.' I'm a much angrier person since we lost her.
In some ways this anger in me is part of the reason I don't think I'm ready to tattoo myself yet. I want to see it and feel love and remembrance rather than fury and bitterness.
I loved the last line of your piece, the whispered 'you should have known my son...' that internal monologue seems very familiar to me.
Beautiful post. For me, it's been a struggle lately that no one mentions Calvin. We had him and his twin sister Georgia in a city five hours away from where we live because of the specialized care Calvin needed for his heart defect. Because of that fact, none of my friends and very few of our family actually met our son before he died. It upsets me to no end that no one mentions him except me anymore. It's only been five months and I feel like he's being forgotten. I hate that more than anything. I want my son to be remembered. He was such a beautiful baby and we had so many hopes and dreams for him...
As for commemorating Calvin, my husband designed a necklace and had it made for me for Christmas. It's a pendant with three interlinked hearts, the two on the outside are in diamonds and represent our two daughters, the middle one is plain gold with a citrine in the middle for Calvin's birthstone. It's breathtakingly beautiful. I am also getting a memorial tattoo done and just approved the design on Monday. I'm a little freaked out about it because it will take up most of my back but like you said, it's a way to wear my pain on the outside, so that it's not always invisible. I already have a tattoo on my lower back, a pink fairy sitting on my husbands name blowing kisses into the star-filled sky. Each star represents a baby lost through miscarriage. My tattoo artist has incorporated my existing tattoo into the new design and I'm very excited to have it done. The new design has a purple fairy (for Calvin's twin Georgia) reaching up to the heavens where a little boy angel is playing in a sandbox. In the background is a half circle representing the broken hub of our family and a rainbow leading to heaven, the something beautiful we hope to make out of our pain. The design looks beautiful on paper...I'm hoping it looks just as good on my back.
I am also in the process of creating a memorial book to honor Calvin's life. It has just about every picture we took of him from his birth to his death and his funeral as well as our doctors and people who played a key role in his life. We have also transcribed every condolence email and his eulogy. I don't want to forget a single moment. I also feel that it's extremely important for our girls when they're older to be able to fully understand and see with their own eyes what we went through, what Calvin went through when he died. If there is any doubt about how much we loved our son because we chose to take him off life support, it will be put to rest when the girls read the book. I hate the fact that I have so little to celebrate or "remember" our son by...if my love could transform into a monument, it would reach all the way to heaven. Thanks for such a touching and intimate look into your grief. Silas knows how much he was loved, now we all do too.
I think the design is beautiful! Thank you for sharing.
I don't often initiate conversation about her, but I so wish others would. I want her to be just like all those other children we know that are so freely talked about - only she's not here. I know its not the same, but I just want her included. She can't be here, so I want her spoken about. I guess others find it hard. They don't know what to say, they are afraid of upsetting me. I'm not sure its possible for me to be anymore upset, and if people think speaking my daughter's name will make me upset, then they don't know me very well at all.
I had already seen your tattoo Chris on your blog, but I loved learning all those little extra things about it today. It is perfect, just like little Silas Orion.
Lots of love to you and Lani xo
The day I received my necklace I felt that I could put it on as a badge of motherhood to three--not three living kids, not three dead kids, not anything more than just three kids that are mine. It has brought much healing to me. I love to hold my 5-year old and 3-year old and hear them say all three names together as they touch each charm on my necklace.
The thing that I can't get over is the adrenaline-like rush I get when people ask me about the last one with no third child in sight. I feel nervous and shifty--how do I break this gently to this poor unsuspecting person? Usually I answer with a simple, "We lost him in delivery in September." And you're right, the reactions are all across the board. Of course they are--we're talking dead babies here.
My first child, there is nothing to commemorate (probable) her - the only remnants I have are one card from a dear friend and a few post D&C discharge instructions. Nobody talks about her unless I do, and even then she's somehow "less" of a loss than Aeryn.
Aeryn, we're just barely a year out from her birth/death date, her official due date still coming, the day after my husband's birthday actually. My mother sometimes will still talk about her if I need to, my husband will listen to me talk about her, but it boils down again to nothing mentioned. Everyone was so busy distracting me for the last week that I feel like I missed something...I feel like I cheated and everyone was busy spoiling my living son to make up for there not being a first birthday party for a little sister.
I cut my hair and gave it to Locks of Love - I meant to go in and give the 13" minimum, but when the lady said "Wow, you have enough I could get 2 bundles" I said "Do it then." That's the only physical thing I've altered. I tried wearing a necklace with a charm, but my skin doesn't do well with jewelry, many days I even have to take my wedding ring off. I love the idea of a tattoo but mainly because I'm a fat (ok, obese) and quite uninteresting person with a nearly three year old practically attached at the hip I can't get near to a tattoo shop door let alone go in and ask about getting a tattoo or any of the things to go with it. So, the garden is more where I go. I putter constantly there while my living son plays in his sandbox or blows bubbles or whatever. It's easier than inside, where I look at the half-finished room we all began remodeling when we thought Aeryn would have problems so big brother could move in there and I could take center, clean, already finished room with her till she could be left alone at night and husband could still sleep in our room and get back and forth to work. Easier than inside, where I look and see her urn still sitting where my teapot should be because there's nowhere else for her remains to be. Everything unfinished, being forgotten even in ways we try to remember.
I have a necklace that I'm fond of, and that makes me think of him: http://www.sweetsalty.com/sweetsalty/2008/8/25/not-a-sad-dream.html If I were going to do a tattoo, I’d want it to be that. A little bird in flight, getting free.
Otherwise, the only physical mark I have is my scar, which I didn't choose. But what you've described here is so profoundly honourable, so beautiful... you've made me think again about making a mark for him on my own terms. Thank you.
I did not know the meaning of the name Silas before I read your post. That is a wonderful meaning, "of the trees". My daughter's name meant "of the earth". My husband and I named her many years before she was born, whilst we were still at school. We've been imagining her for so many years that it feels almost natural that we have to keep on imagining her. I wish that we had not chosen that particular name now.
I feel torn with regards to conversations about my daughter. I love to talk about her but when I've had the conversation I feel uneasy, as though I should have kept it to myself. There is painfully little to say. And nobody really wants to hear it. I want to keep her close and private, fiercely protected, with me and only me. I don't even want to let her daddy or her sister in which is sad.
I have thought about a tattoo. Part of me wanted some physical pain as my girls were born so tiny that giving birth to them didn't hurt me like I felt it should have done. But I think my husband would like one and tattoos are more his thing. He already has several, this would be my first.
I had a necklace made. It has three letters on it, one for my husband, one for my living daughter and one for my daughter who died. My living daughter's initial is in the middle, I didn't ask for an order to the letters but I like her position, in the middle. Protected by her daddy and her big sister. Nobody has ever asked me about it but I don't tend to see too many people these days.
And I have her big sister's blankets and her toy elephant. I still have her ashes. I still need them. But even they are just another placeholder. That is such a good phrase Chris. I think part of me is still waiting and waiting for her to come back to me. I need to keep her place marked even if it is in vain. Even if it is marked clumsily.
I am marked in ways not of my choosing - dark circles under my eyes, "baby weight," a c-section scar. And the day we left Portland for our sad ride home, that long ride with that impossibly tiny urn in the back seat, I accidentally pulled out the small silver stud I've had in my nose since I had it pierced. After a few weeks of not replacing it, the hole has closed up. Every time I see a picture of myself from years past, with the nose piercing, I think of where I was when it came out.
I'd like to *choose* something, some symbol, some mark, and I've been toying with the idea of a necklace, but nothing seems right yet.
http://joinourjourney.blogspot.com/2009/03/tattoo.html
http://bonesandlulu.smugmug.com/photos/512898348_scbjS-L.jpg
I do crave the ability to talk about Tikva, and sometimes find myself disappointed when people don't ask. Those few delightful moments are when people stumble upon the information unexpectedly and are able to hold it sweetly, gently, without their souls feeling like they're running fast the other way.
I thought a lot about getting a tattoo after he died...I wanted to mark him on me in some way that couldn't be taken away. I don't feel the need as strongly anymore but I might do it sometime. I do have a physical scar that I didn't choose in the csection...that will be there forever and in a weird way I'm grateful for that.
We lost our Silas last March. Just today my daughter was reading Old King Cole and I said, "We almost named Silas 'Cole'. Isn't that strange?" I remember my husband coming into the ICU and telling me we had to name our son. I was stoned out of my gourd on drugs after a long surgery. I had suffered a ruptured aneurysm at 29 weeks pregnant. Rob said, "How about Silas?". I smiled the biggest and brightest smile. I didn't know he woudn't survive. But he'll always be Silas.
Last month to mark the anniversary, my husband got a tattoo for Silas on his arm. It's beautiful. It's a spiral with the letters S I L A S spread out around it. I can't believe how natural it seems. I feel like there's a piece of our Silas in bed with us at night. It's like a piece of Silas went from my body to Rob's body. I just love it.
I just have my scars, but I have thought about getting a tattoo. I just don't know what or where yet. I have been given two charm bracelets, which I wear occasionally. I like them a lot, I just don't find myself wearing jewelry every day.
About talking, I find my four year old daughter will talk about Silas more than anyone else. She sleeps with a moon-shaped that was with Silas in the NICU. She never met him, but she sleeps with that pillow cradled around her body every night. Like I would do with Silas if he were living.
Thank you, Chris, again, for sharing.