everything but Silas, part 2
Our house and our hearts were filled on Saturday. It has been so long since I have felt as calm and peaceful as I did after we returned from the ceremony at the park.
Inside our apartment was madness, though. I was whipping up press pots of coffee as my aunt shoved food into the oven and people wove in and out of the rooms and between bodies pressed close together. A bag caught on fire. I dropped a pie while rearranging the refrigerator. The cats scampered in fear as our cousins and nephew chased them around. Conversations and chatter filled the rooms and the yard, and it was right.
Music played through the stereo as the Mets fans in the family piled up on the couches, watching the game. Pizzas were ordered, food was brought out and furniture and tables were rearranged on the fly, everyone chipping into do whatever was needed at that moment. We had a plan, but it was loose and success depended on everyone adding their little piece.
It was the same out at the park, when we planted Silas' tree. The three shovels were passed many times and at the end, everyone laid a rock on the fresh mulch under the tiny branches filled with small, vibrant leaves.
We intended to have a marker or plaque, but we just never got around to having it made, and by the time we were mentally prepared to do that it was too late. Instead we figured we would maybe wait a year, until the tree got a little bigger, and have it created and placed then.
Our friends were one step ahead of us. They had Silas Orion engraved on a large, amazing stone, and brought it with them on Saturday. It was exactly what we wanted.
Even the weather was right. A bright sunny day would have been too gorgeous and stark for such a sad event. The low, menacing clouds matched the tenor of my emotions. All day I was calm but unsettled. I felt sad, apprehensive, and that low-grade burble of terror softly churned in my belly. It's like feeling butterflies, but with razor-winged dragonflys instead.
As 2pm approached only a few people had arrived. And then suddenly everyone was there. The house went from empty to overflowing in a matter of about 15 minutes. It was great to see so many friends and family, but it was terrible as well. That twisting, complex emotion made me feel disconnected and a little disoriented. There was a feeling of celebration, having everyone together, but it was also desolate and sharp. "Yay it's everyone we love!" mixed brutally with "No no no no no not everyone. That is why they are here."
But we did it together, and that made all the difference. We walked to the park in small groups. I locked up the house and waited for stragglers and then brought up the rear with some of my oldest friends and one of my brothers. Across the expanse of the park I could see the colorful gathering of our friends and family. The center of their loose arc was immensely small compared to the thick, old trees standing tall all around.
At the park, next to the sapling, I shoved my spade into the earth forcefully, and then asked everyone to come closer and circle around. My father welcomed everyone and then recited Hard Times Come Again No More. I said the Hopi Prayer, and then Lu stepped forward to tell everyone why we picked an Acer Rubrum “Red Sunset” Maple tree to memorialize Silas. "The colors will be brilliant in the fall, when Silas was born. And he was born here, in this town so we wanted the tree to be here, too," she told them, and then she asked for everyone's participation to help us finish planting it.
Before they took up the shovels, though, I stepped forward one more time, because there was something else Lu and I wanted to say to everyone. I was barely able to speak at this point, but it was something we felt needed to be said.
"We do not believe that everything happens for a reason. We do not believe that we are being punished or tested by God. But we do believe that the only way we can can get through this is with all of your love and support. And we are so thankful that you are here with us today to help us, and that you will continue to be there for us, because we need it. We need it so much."
Family stepped forward first to shovel on some dirt and fertilizer, and then suddenly it was done, I was no longer the focus. As each person took hold of the shovel their total attention was on the tree and the task. This was their moment to physically connect with the ceremony, and in turn, our missing son. The action of their arms and hands on the handle, the scoop of dirt, the arc of pebbles and soil in the air as they each helped fill the hole around that tiny tree made the ceremony visceral, complete.
I loved seeing that look on their faces. I needed their sadness and attention to this everyday fact of my impossible life.
It's almost a little sadistic, I'm afraid. I wanted everyone to hurt yesterday. I needed them to feel the bottomless ache I live with every day. It gave me a sense of peace I have not felt for a long time. I didn't have to bear this alone because everywhere I looked on Saturday, I could see pain and sadness and understanding in everyone I loved. My load was lightened because of their hugs holding me up and their tears joining mine.
It turned out that I did not need to demolish the park as part of the ceremony on Saturday. I want that tiny tree to have good role models all around it. I want it to grow up tall and wide and strong. I want it to grow so tall and so wide, that I cannot get my arms around it when I'm out there some day down the line, holding onto it for dear life, because I still can't get my arms around my beautiful, missing son.

Did you perform a ceremony to remember and honor your child? What was your favorite part of that terrible day? What prayer or poem or song lyrics did you use in the ceremony? What changed for you before & after that day, if anything?


17 Comments
Reader Comments (17)
The funeral was brutal. The words were beautiful, we played our favourite songs (she was buried as The Shins "New Slang" was playing) the family and love around us was amazing but Simon and I were utterly horrified and could barely hold each other up. It was graveside, and Simon carried her tiny white coffin to the grave. I don't think I have ever seen anything so sad. And I don't think anyone else had either.
The one amazing thing, it was a very cold and brutal winter's day here, but as her coffin was being lowered in to the cold earth, the sun came out from behind the clouds. It stayed out for a good 30 seconds. Birds were even chirping. So many people commented on it. I don't believe in much, but at that moment, I believed in something big, something much bigger than me.
As for Liam, we haven't done anything beyond setting his ashes free in an everglade just after he died. And I don't know what to say about that. Two years later, I guess it circles back to feeling pretty alone in this, except when I come here.
We did nothing for Maddy; it was all too overwhelming, and by the time we got around to thinking we had the strength and nerve, it was apparent we would not have the support. We keep meaning to do something quietly, as a family, but strangely that never seems to happen either. I always thought people who kept ashes in their homes were creepy, and here mine remain on the bookshelf in the family room because I can't for the life of me think of an appropriate place for them to be. In short, I don't think I'm ready to announce her end, yet.
We have a lilac in our yard, and a tree others planted in a nearby park. I love and detest them both.
We dedicated an already planted and mature tree to her memory in our local park. The ceremony was very simple and beautiful and both David and I said a few words. David was extremely eloquent, he's quite quiet in everyday life and a lot of people there were surprised at how well he spoke. I just sobbed incoherently during my bit. A lot of my friends are actors and one of them said afterwards 'Oh wasn't David marvellous; so authentic' which I thought was possibly the stupidest thing I have EVER heard. Yes. Yes he was authentically grieving. HIS BABY DIED YOU DUMBASS.
Everyone came back to our house afterwards. It was a beautiful day and we all sat in our garden. There were loads of kids and pregnant women there which was bittersweet. Our living daughter had a brilliant time. She often says things like 'Iris is married' because the day felt a bit like some of the weddings we've taken her to.
I'm glad it was a lovely day. I'm not sure how to mark it this year. Her birthday was last week and it was pretty grim, but I'm not sure if we'll 'celebrate' her memorial day too. Perhaps it will be a more joyful remembrance of her. I doubt it though.
Chirs - I thought if you and Lani on Saturday. The tree is beautiful and the stone that your friends gave is so lovely.
I'm glad you and Lani were so surrounded with love - chaotic and palpable and present. It may be sadism, but I think that offering friends and family a way to support you, to remember with you and to grieve with you is a gift to them, too.
i can relate to the desire to have others share your pain too. i have created a card with lev's footprint and have been sending it out to all our friends and family near and far. the card has a poem and a letter and a stone (i'm going to send one to you guys). when my mom first saw it she said 'that's going to break everyone's heart' and i thought, good. i want everyone to feel a tiny bit of the heartbreak and grief i feel every minute of every day.
I heard later about how my mother hid behind one of my friends so I wouldn't see her crying.
We planted a tree, too, in my in-laws' yard. A year later, I believe it was. We didn't really have a ceremony for that. I wonder how they would feel about us placing a marker, like that stone? I see the tree from my kitchen window, now.
ciao,
rpm
Katie's funeral was 12 days after her stillbirth. My parents had already planned to come to visit us then, & my mother got her ticket changed when I called her & was able to be with us at the hospital. My dad arrived as originally planned. It was just them, dh's dad & stepmother, his brother and his wife and two little boys, the minister & us. I couldn't bear the thought of having to face the grief of the entire extended family on top of my own. In retrospect, I wish we had been more inclusive. I sometimes wonder whether that would have made our baby and our grief more real to them.
We had a very short service at our church. We had Katie cremated & her urn (pink marble) sat on a stand with a wreath of pink roses around it, flanked by two huge bouquets sent to the church by two of dh's work buddies. It was beautiful. Afterwards, we took the urn to the cemetery where we'd purchased a niche. Each of us put a rose from the wreath in the niche with the urn. Dh put a little cardboard Winnie the Pooh book he'd chosen & I put a letter I had written. We had everyone back at our house afterward for lunch.
Sad and beautiful, these two adjectives forever reside side-by-side in my dictionary ever since my son died.
Thanks for sharing, and much love to you and Lani.
Sally - Ah "New Slang", that song has made me cry since I lost my daughter. The line "New slang when you notice the stripes, the dirt in your fries. Hope it's right when you die, old and bony" makes me so sad. For Hope, for you, for Simon, for me, for my husband, of my little tiny girl, for all of us. I wish that we had only noticed the dirt when we were old and bony. I'm glad that the sun came out and that the birds sang for your Hope.
We had a short funeral service conducted by the hospital chaplain who had baptised our daughter a few days before. It gave me comfort that she was buried by one of the few people who met her when she was alive. I have only the vestiges of religious faith and my husband none at all (as far as I am aware) but we had the words from the Book of Common Prayer for the death of a child," . . .receive, we pray your child G in your never-failing care and love, comfort all who have loved her on earth . .." The funeral was very small, only the chaplain, my husband and myself. No music, no flowers, no mourners but her parents. We sat with her coffin between us. I can't articulate how I changed that day but I am a changed person. I don't know if I am changed for better or worse as yet.
Chris--your story is just so incredibly sad. My son was born just days after yours and every time he does something new I think of you and what you are missing. It breaks my heart. I see a little girl who is the exact age my girl should have been and it just fills me with such sadness.