I'm So Happy For You
Babies are appearing everywhere, and the afternoon light is such that I expect for us to be expecting, too. The late-setting sun blasts through the windshield as I turn off the exit to my house. The angle of those rays are filled with meaning.
This is the season of my almost-fatherhood. This is the time last year when all I could think about was everything that I thought was to come.
There were so many plans and hopes in the works. Spring and summer were full of boundless potential and imminent adventures. The full bellies and multi-strollers all around foretold our amazing future, and I was thrilled to be on the cusp of fatherhood.
Fulfillment, success, perfection, they were within my grasp and now all I hold is dust and desolation.
Since it is impossible to grasp dust, and because desolation rots the soul, I have stopped trying to hold anything.
This has become my summer of the willing suspension of disbelief. I'm working hard at accepting the World as it is, and dealing with whatever is exactly in front of me.
I learned that from my parents. My mother has had MS since before I was born, and over the years they have shown me how to handle the impossible trials of their everyday life. Do the next thing first and then deal with whatever comes after that.
Do it right, do it with humor, don't stop until it's done. Don't rely on anyone else. Don't be surprised when it doesn't go at all the way you think it will. Don't give up and don't stop loving the people around you. Those are the lessons they taught me, and I'm working hard at most of them.
I'm stuck at Don't Give Up, though. I know there are people around me ready and willing to support me with their love, if only I would return an email or make a call. The ball is definitely in my court at this point. For phone-tag I am IT a thousand times over.
It is beyond me right now, though.
Reading through the interview below I was struck by how clearly I identified with all of those Phases, but I was surprised in that I seemed to be experiencing them completely out of order.
I feel like I've been through Confrontation and even a little Accomodation, but that Avoidance is where I stew these days.
It is a nuanced Avoidance. I don't stop thinking about Silas all day. I don't pretend that my life is anything that it is not. I know to the core of my being the depth of our loss. Or at least, I know how deep it seems to go from here. I have few illusions left at this point. I'm not avoiding his name, or the pain of losing him.
I am always ready to talk about Silas but I attempt to avoid all external reminders of what we should have.
That list includes: newborns, babies, people that just had babies or are pregnant, talk of the trials of having kids, strollers, carseats, first birthdays, the Internet, driving, walking and being awake. As long as I keep all of that out of mind & sight, I should be just fine. Ha!
Another part of the problem is that I'm starting to feel bad about how bad I still feel. I don't want to talk to friends because it's the same goddam fucking sob story every fucking time. I'm sick of hearing myself sometimes. I'm sick of hearing my soul's lament, sick of my mind devising strategies to fix our broken lives, sick of my heart oozing despair and ichor whenever another scar is peeled back, or a new, surprising wound pierces my defenses.
July was brutal. Three of my closest friends had babies this month and essentially all I could do was ignore them. Didn't stay in bed moping. Didn't drive off to the wilderness and leave everyone behind. Didn't stop working or playing or living. But when it came to those three, they were mostly out of my life.
I kept in contact until the day of birth, but after they each went perfectly, I had to cut them off for the moment. I feel like an asshole of the highest order, but I had to do it in order to save myself.
The idea of even talking to them on the phone to congratulate them, knowing they were holding their perfect new child in their arms, it took the push out of my fingers for every digit of their phone number. These are people I love and care about and all I can do is nothing.
I'm active and alert and fully engaged in most of my life, but the new babies are impossible right now. Once I start thinking about my friends, I think about everything they are doing with their new child and those thoughts completely immobilize me.
I know babies. I love babies. I don't mind the cheesy puke or the weird, wide alien eyes or the tears of hunger or confusion. I used to love babies.
But there is a period of time between birth and 'baby' that I really don't know anything about. By the time I've met most children they were at least a few weeks old, if not months, and I've never had that true newborn experience. I thought it was going to be a special, beautiful time with my son and first-born, but that was not the way it happened. So now, when I hear about a new child in the World, it fills me with a mix of hope and dread and joy and fear that is impossible to parse.
I'm thrilled for the parents. I'm thrilled the child is alive and healthy. I'm jealous beyond words that they have that child to cherish and nuture. I'm terrified by how close they came to living in my World without ever considering how bad it can get, and I'm enraged at myself for my inablity to do anything but look away.
All I can do is say how HAPPY I AM FOR YOU and look away, look away. I look away and try to feel Silas and hate how much his name sounds like Silence.
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What is your collateral damage? Where do you feel stuck? Are there certain aspects or phases of grief that you find particularly daunting? What do you avoid? What do you seek out?


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xo
Not touching the hot pot is something we need to do in order to function. It's sad sometimes when the pot is something we used to embrace. I've lost people in this phase, too. Some I've returned to -- some I haven't.
When people asked what they could do for us, we responded "Be patient." For people who had babies shortly after Maddy, this was a tall order and not all have been able to deliver our wishes. For the others who were understanding, we've returned. In fact, I realized the other night that my friend's daughter born six weeks after maddy -- who I used to blatantly pretend wasn't in the same room -- no longer really bothers me. I don't know if it's because I'm further out, or she is. I didn't lose a toddler after all, I lost a baby, so what's to miss anymore when I see her?
Because of that, I'm jealous of all mums and dads. I'm jealous of everyone who gets to KEEP their baby. I'm jealous of all pregnant women, because chances are that they are ENJOYING their pregnancies, and chances are their babies won't die.
I'm scared of newborns. I'm jealous of their parents, but I'm scared of the babies. I've decided that I don't "do" babies. I'm hoping that if this child lives, I'll be ok with not just my baby but other people's babies. But at the moment I don't "do" babies.
If that means that I don't communicate with my friends and family who have newborns, so be it. I'm not doing it to hurt them, I'm doing it to protect myself.
Last year, about six months after my son died (he was 7 weeks old), we visited a friend (my boss) who had just had her baby. The whole time I was there, I looked at him and waited for him to stop breathing and die. (That's what happened to my son.)
That's not normal -- my behaviour was not normal. So until I can find a balance of "normal" for me around babies, I'll just avoid babies. Thank you.
Not all that surprisingly then, my collateral damage (for right now) seems to be fear. I've developed a fear of flying and I'm a fearful passenger in cars these days, too. I spend far too much time worrying about when the next bad thing will happen. I'm terrified that I'm going to lose another child. These fears aren't debilitating; I can live around and with them, but they take up energy and time I'd rather spend on other things, and I resent having them at all. Life is precarious for everyone, but I'd like to be one of those who wasn't burdened by an awareness of things that can go wrong.
It is perfectly logical for you to avoid those friends, and you are NOT an asshole. They know that, too.
It's fine to keep feeling bad. Nothing has changed. Silas has not come back.
But someday that sunshine will make you happy again.
The guilt, jealousy, anger and distancing in close friendships has been one of the hard things to bare. I managed to stay open for about a year after the death of my daughter. Like you, i now avoid pregnant people and new babies where possible. I figure they have the rest of the world to share in their joy and cheer thm on.
If you have to be starving it is easier to do it away from those who are feasting.
But it is another grief added to the heavy load.
Thanks for sharing.
Although my situation is different and I acknowledge that I can never understand what it is like to lose your only child, I can identify with some of the damage you describe.
Yesterday, I saw my first born newborn baby since the NICU. I thought that I would could handle it but I burst into tears. I couldn't stop staring at this 'tiny' baby and crying. I don't know what the baby's mother must have thought of me. I should have tried to explain why I reacted that way but I just couldn't.
Amen to that.
We've lost friends, faith, trust... so many things.
And there is something about July babies that just... makes me sick to the stomach, and I feel bad for the babies and their parents and feel like I am a sick person myself.
But, I realize that it is a protective mechanism, that my grief for my daughter is still resolving, even after all these years, so my mind just skips over the babies when I see them . I
Oh, and this? "The idea of even talking to them on the phone to congratulate them, knowing they were holding their perfect new child in their arms, it took the push out of my fingers for every digit of their phone number. These are people I love and care about and all I can do is nothing."
Aside from being divinely expressed, I'm nodding. I know that feeling.