welcome

Parents of lost babies and potential of all kinds: come here to share the technicolour, the vividness, the despair, the heart-broken-open, the compassion we learn for others, having been through this mess — and see it reflected back at you, acknowledged, understood.

Many thanks to artist Stephanie Sicore for allowing us to feature her little bird in our banner.

subscribe
categories
search
Powered by Squarespace
« Pull up a chair | Main | right where I am project: 979 Days »
Tuesday
Jun072011

When These Mountains Were the Seashore

Mrs. Spit's son Gabriel was born fifteen weeks too soon, in December 2007, as a result of severe pre-eclampsia. Catapulted into the swirling world of grief while trying to grow her family, Mrs. Spit lost four pregnancies after Gabriel. Earlier in the year, she made the decision to live child free. She blogs daily at Mrs. Spit . . . Still Spouting Off, writing with equal fierceness and love about her life as a wife, a friend, a knitting-gardener, boss and occasionally, as the mother to a dead child. Mrs. Spit is the kind of compassionate warrior that is not afraid to write about politics and religion and all the thoughts in between. And so here, she just fits perfectly. Please join us in welcoming her as a regular contributor and fellow Medusa. - Angie

 

My name is Mrs. Spit. It hasn't always been this, but to some - in a small corner of a particular universe - I am Mrs. Spit. I have many names: I am wife, I am friend, I am project manager, I am boss, I am employee, and oh, yes, I am sometimes mother.

Like all people, I didn't start out with these names. Like all people, these names started out as a title. A name is after all, a personal thing. I took on a new title in March, a title that I am trying to make a name. I am now perpetually childless. I am now "child free". After three years, a perinatal death as a result of pre-eclampsia, four miscarriages and more medical specialists than you can imagine, Mr. Spit and I decided to stop trying to have children. We decided to be done - forevermore.

So, here I am, trying to find my way in a new world once again. Here I am with a new title that I am trying to make into a name. This wasn't, I should tell you, where I planned to start this post. I planned to start with the title, which is the title of a song by a musician called Hawksley Workman. As inspiration or at least incentive, I planned to play that song when I started to write this blog. Instead, because I got a new keyboard for my iPad, I wound up starting ahead of myself.

Instead of being in my favourite coffee shop in Jasper, AB, in the middle of the Rocky Mountains, listening to one apple device while typing on another; I am in a hotel room typing away. I should tell you I'm like that. I think that I will go one way and then all of a sudden I find myself on another path entirely, not quite certain how I wound up there but knowing I'm heading in the right direction.

For point of reference this is exactly how it came to be that I conceived my son. I went to go and see my gynecologist to get an IUD and I came out of his office convinced I should conceive instead. I went to go and see the fertility specialist in February of 2011,  attempting pregnancy number six and I walked out of her office knowing that we were done having children, we were done getting pregnant. Indeed, we were just done.

The reason I thought I would begin with Hawkley's song is not just because it is the sort of song that is so achingly beautiful that you wonder at the ugliness of the world around you, but because it talks about what I am doing, turning from one thing into another. Metamorphosis.

That's what I will be writing about. I don't have all the answers. I probably don't have any of the answers. I am only starting to ask the questions. A good question, I would posit, is at least as important as anything else. You can't ever get to any sort of good answer without it.

So, I am asking questions. It would be easy enough, I suppose to just decide to invest in some sort of permanent birth control, empty the basement of baby things carefully stored and paint the nursery so that it becomes completely my office. I could do this. I am doing this. But I'm not sure it's wise to act without asking questions. I’m not sure reaching decisions without asking questions takes you anywhere.

In my scheduled posts at Glow in the Woods, I will be asking those questions. I’ll be asking about how you find meaning without children. I’ll be asking questions about how to live the rest of my life - deliberate questions about what is next.  

I know for some of you, this idea of living without children in the newness of your loss is impossible. It is a bridge too far and a cut too deep. I have been there. I can remember the days when I could not consider life without a living child. It has taken me three and a half years to reach this point. Where you are now is where you should be.

Some of you will never need to be on this path. Some of you might find yourself with me. Some of you might not be sure. Where you are now, is where you should be. Hawksley was right, mountains were once sea shores, and the desert was once the ocean floor.

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments (15)

I'm so glad your voice will be here. You are a gifted writer and I look forward to reading as you ask yourself these questions. I'm sorry - I'm not sure if that's the right thing to say, but I am just wishing it wasn't so hard.

I had to google that Hawksley song - thanks for sharing it. I had the pleasure of seeing him play a long time ago and it was a treat. He's amazing.
June 7, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterMonique
Mrs. Spit,
Thank you for coming to Glow and bringing a much-needed perspective - I look forward to your contributions here.

with love and care,
sarah
June 7, 2011 | Unregistered Commentersarah n.
I'm glad you will be posting here. :)
June 7, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterHereWeGoAJen
I'm so looking forward to reading your Glow posts, Mrs Spit. Thank you.
June 7, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterJess (afteriris)
I am glad to see you here. I am sorry to see you here. I am relieved to see you here. Thank you for your voice here- I have a feeling I will need answers to some of these hard questions as well, and I promise to muddle through the answers with you as best I can.
June 7, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterDanielle
I'm so sorry for your losses. I wish no one had to be here. I am looking forward to reading your posts. My best friend is also "child free" (for about 14 years now) after multiple miscarriages and no answers. I'm hoping that through your perspective, I can be an even better friend to her. Thank you.
June 7, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterJ.
Thank you for this. For the first time in my life, the idea of being childless doesn't shake me to my core. I hope it doesn't end that way, but I think I will be okay if it does. I think.
Looking forward to reading more of your posts.
June 8, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterEmily
I've followed you on and off at your blog for three years, and your writing always moves me. Almost as if I can feel something physically shift inside of me when I read your words.
You are perfectly suited to being a regular here and I very much believe stories like yours need to be told.
I look forward to reading all you have to offer us here.
Love to you.
xo
June 8, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterSally
So grateful to have your words and perspective in this space. Your experience, faith, love and the way you mother Gabriel moves me and always makes me think. Much love. xo
June 8, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterAngie
Very glad and sad that you will be posting here :)
June 8, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterSarah
This was beautiful, thank you.
June 8, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterCynthia
I'm looking forward to your posts.

I'm on that path too. The "child-free" one. And not by choice. I chose for three children, but they all died. Freyja, Kees and Jet. My beautiful children. But they're gone. They are no longer alive (except in my heart). So now I have to choose. Whether to be child-free or whether to make one last effort. And that's what it is now - an effort. And it shouldn't be.

But will I find meaning in my life? I don't really have any now. And what sort of future could I possibly look forward to with only dead children? What would be the point? Tough questions, ones I think about all the time. And a decision needs to be made.
June 11, 2011 | Unregistered Commentermirne
Mrs. Spit, I am so glad you are here, writing your point of view. I was only an occasional reader of your blog. I would hop over from the Road Less Travelled. But, I am glad you are here, partially for selfish reasons. Though I do have a living daughter, my loss after having her put me in a place where I will not be trying again. I never planned on having an only child. Then again, I never planned on losing children either. I find myself relating less and less to the trying again crowd, and relating much more to those who will not be having a "rainbow" baby for whatever reasons.

I look forward to your posts.

brokenheartdiaries.blogspot.com
June 12, 2011 | Unregistered Commenterms. g
As another fellow travellers down the childless/free path (not to mention a big fan of yours already), it is so wonderful to see you here, Mrs. Spit. Kudos to the Medusas at GITW for extending the invitation!
June 13, 2011 | Unregistered Commenterloribeth
so wonderful to see you on here mrs. spit. though I don't read many blogs these days, i think of all my old friends on this journey often. thinking of your gabriel and the rest of your lost babies as your go forth in this new child free journey. will be reading! xo
June 14, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterLani

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
All HTML will be escaped. Hyperlinks will be created for URLs automatically.