Friday, August 19, 2011

A Tale of Woe....

"A Tale of Woe" - (noun) a sad story, a list of personal problems, an excuse for failing to do something

So I had two recent experiences that have made me stop and reflect on my own personal "tale of woe". The first one is that I met with my new OB/Gyn. During my first appointment I had to give him my reproductive history. He started out standing up and by the time I finished my ridiculously extended story, he was sitting down with a dropped jaw and was speechless. It was the first time I shared the entire story, with all the details, to someone who didn't already know. And it was a stark reminder of what the crap I have been through.

And then I was organizing some of my digital photos on my computer. And again, it was a reminder of what the crap I have been through. There is almost an exact pattern over the last nine years of my reproductive life. Excitement, bedrest, happiness, depths of sadness, hope, bedrest, fear, happiness, hope, disappointment, hope, disappointment, confusion, hope, depths of sadness, bedrest, happiness, depths of sadness, confusion, hope, disappointment. In between these reproductive miseries, there were lots and lots of pictures of me looking and feeling good and being my normal adventurous self.


But in between those pictures were the ones of me covered in bruises from shots, laying in hospital beds hooked to IVs, looking obese while on months and months of bedrest, tombstones and oxygen tanks, etc., etc. Gosh dang it. It is no wonder that when Josh asks me about trying to get pregnant again, I literally have panic attacks. Every cell in my body screams "NO! NO! NO! NO!" and I put a very fake smile on my face and say, "If you ask me again I will kill you." It's a very loving marital exchange, I assure you. :o)

Now don't get me wrong, I would love to have another adorable kid just like Maddie. I would love to have the family that I dreamed of. I would love for Josh to have a son to take to baseball games and for Maddie to have a sister to stay up late giggling with. And I would love to have more children as a defense against old folks homes, in case Maddie ends up hating me when she grows up.

But these last two very recent experiences made me realize that this incredible panic that I feel at the thought of doing it all again really isn't that crazy. Now, I have never felt the need to explain myself to ANYone. Until now. Because this is kind of a big deal. There are grandparents who would love more grandchildren. And there are friends and family that want us to have a "happy ending." So, let me try to explain with the least amount of words and pictures that I can.

This is me at the ripe old age of 21. I was perfectly young and optimistic and energetic. Josh and I just found out that we were having a baby and were so excited and overwhelmed with the possibilities. I remember when this picture was taken I was thinking, "I'm too young for this! I hope I can do this..."

And I did. And our dear sweet little Evan was born. What a gorgeous little calm baby he was. We were so happy! But a little every day I kept noticing something was weird. Something wasn't right. I took him to his pediatrician and to an emergency room and tried to get the doctors to take me serious that something was wrong, just to be brushed off as a young ignorant mother. But when I took him to a pediatric neurologist, I was completely devastated by the news. Terminal? What!? Babies don't die in this country and century. We thought we would have years with our Evan, but it was cut short. Shorter than we could have ever imagined. All we could do was hold him over the next few days until he took his last breath. I remember the completely helpless feeling and just wanting to fall apart, but using every ounce I had to keep it together so I could give Evan a peaceful and loving death. And thinking, "I hope I can do this."
And I did. There is no doubt in my mind that his experience here, including his death, was filled with love and peace. But this was not what I had planned. I remember standing here in the cemetery, picking out the spot where I was going to bury my baby. I remember thinking, "Burying my baby!? I'm too young for this! I hope I can do this..."
And I did. Somehow, I pulled myself together enough to speak at his funeral and bury his little body, and then get out of bed the next morning. When Evan died, I remember feeling very hopeless. I knew we could never have natural children again but I also knew we couldn't afford the grossly expensive procedure to have more children. I also very much felt like a mother in my heart but I had no child to take care of. This was the lowest point in my life. Then my mother offered to loan us the money to have more children. It was the most selfless gift anyone has ever given me! I gave myself 57 shots over the course of a few weeks and let me tell you it was miserable. But I never again thought, "I hope I can do this." My thoughts had changed to, "I can do this."
And I did. Despite the miserable procedure and the medical complications, I succeeded. I was pregnant with my little Maddie. But this pregnancy was when I realized that I wasn't like the other women in my family. I always assumed that having babies wouldn't be an issue for me because my grandmothers and aunts and mother all had about a hundred babies each. This would be no sweat! Alas, I was born under a reproductive black cloud. This pregnancy was hard. I spent the first three months of it on bedrest due to complications from in vitro. Oh the boredom! The misery! And just when I started to feel healthy and wonderful again, I went into preterm labor at five months along. I was determined NOT to lose this baby, so I spend the last three months on strict bedrest taking medication that stopped the contractions and only getting out of bed to shower and pee. When I look at those pictures, it was obvious that I was depressed. Wouldn't you be if your husband was working full time and finishing his last year of law school (and therefore was rarely home), and while you laid in bed with no cable (and before Netflix and Tivo existed), and were so full of drugs that you couldn't read a book because your mind couldn't concentrate? I was so incredibly miserable, but I was so determined, with my new mantra being, "I can do this."

And I did. Somehow, despite my body's best efforts, I was able to hold out for eight months and then Madeline London was born. And she had thick brown hair and was gorgeous. And I thought, if I am never blessed with more children, at least I have my Miracle Maddie. And she really is a miracle. Because as soon as she was born, it was obvious something was wrong. She wasn't breathing. And never cried. And I knew it was serious when the nurses ran out of the room with her before I could hold her. But I never could have guessed that the doctor would call Josh and tell him to go say goodbye to our Maddie because she likely wouldn't make it through her first night. I was numb. Completely numb. Did I cry? No. Because there was no way, NO WAY that this was really happening. I remember Josh wheeled me into the NICU and I saw these huge machines in the corner, and all of them were connected to my tiny baby through wires and tubes. She was so covered in wires and tubes that you could barely see her body. I wasn't allowed to hold her or touch her or really even talk to her for a week, so as to avoid any stimulation. They didn't want her to move because a machine was breathing for her. I would just sit in the NICU and watch her. And I remember feeling this incredible strength coming from her and thinking, "She can do this."
And she did. She survived that first night, and after two weeks in the nursery she came home with me. But not without a whole lot of baggage. The doctors said she had weak lungs and that there could have been brain damage because of how long she went without oxygen when her lungs and brain hemorrhaged. Once again, I remember thinking, this isn't how it was supposed to happen! I brought her home from the hospital that night and laid her in her crib and that was the first time I had a panic attack. What if she stops breathing? What if she is brain damaged? What if she dies! I had these thoughts every single time I laid her down for naps and bedtime for her entire first year of life. Can you imagine!? An entire year!! Until I got her out of bed on her first birthday and she was looking up at me as gorgeous as ever, and with a huge smile. And I remember thinking, "Huh. That's weird. I think she is going to stay."
And she did! Despite my reproductive black cloud and all the odds, this one got to stay. How crazy is that? And not only is she still here, but I actually like her. And she is smart, and gorgeous, and sweet, and a miracle! And I was hopeful again. Well, obviously if in-vitro worked once, it will work again! So I did it again. And again. And again. And it didn't work. Why didn't it work?! Any little thing that could go wrong did. I was practically killing myself (not to mention our finances) trying to have more children through in-vitro, and it wasn't working. And I was hopeless. And we stopped, and took a year to think about it. And we considered all of our options. Including the one that we knew we would never consider again. What if? What if we actually tried another natural conception? The chance of a perfectly healthy little baby would be 3 out of 4. Maybe those weren't such bad odds after all? If we could just have one more healthy baby I would be done and just grateful for the two that I was given. And I distinctly remember thinking, "Surely, surely a mother wouldn't have to go through that twice!"

But I did. My little Charlie's pregnancy was the hardest thing I have ever done in my life. Can you imagine having to get out of bed every day for the remaining six months of your pregnancy, KNOWING that your baby would die? At three months pregnant, I heard the devastating news that he was, in fact, going to have SMA. I cried for 48 hours straight. And then Josh said, "We are keeping this pregnancy. And we are going to hold our son. And we are going to give him the same life of love and peace that Evan had." And I felt complete calmness. Yes. That's exactly what we were going to do.


And we did. This picture was taken on the plane ride back from the SMA specialist. We had just received the news that his SMA would be as severe as his brother's. And I remember thinking, if I just hold him really tight he can't go anywhere. He would just stay in my arms forever.
But he didn't. Once again, I felt the incredible helplessness of holding my baby while he struggled with his last breaths. And this time, it was much uglier. It was no where near as peaceful as Evan. Charlie was a fighter. And he fought hard. Really hard. And it was hard to watch. Really hard. And it broke my heart all over again. But this time I was older and wiser, and I knew that we would be okay eventually.
And we were. Evan had taught me so many lessons, and Charlie was the one that tested me on it. And I felt full of life and love and hope again, despite everything in my life that could have turned me in the other direction. But Charlie also reminded me that Josh and I create the cutest freaking kids on Earth. And despite feeling incredibly exhausted, I thought, "Okay, I can do this one more time."

And I did. And it was the hard. Really hard. I actually almost died. That blasted reproductive black cloud was hanging over me again! I remember riding to the hospital in an ambulance thinking, "I just have to survive this. This is my last time. It will work. It has to work!"

And it didn't. Seriously? &$%# @&?% $*@? And every other four letter word I can think of! Cause now I'm sitting here wondering how many times I thought to myself, "This is the last time." And the answer is, I told myself that every freaking time! Although I am only 30, I feel very old. My body is tired. My heart is tired. I am tired. Just looking back at these pictures has aged me at least five years.

And it makes me think that I no longer care when everyone asks me, "You only have one kid?" "Are you having more kids?" "When are you trying again?" Or when people think Maddie is spoiled because she is an only child, or when mothers of four look at me and think I'm lazy or selfish because I only have one.

And I am suddenly aware of all of the benefits of a smaller family. On the positive side, she is really cute. And I have never had to scream, "Stop fighting with your brother!" And it's like I now feel peaceful about the way my life is instead of wondering what it would have/could have/should have been. And when I read this quote the other day it was like the world stopped turning for that moment and everything made sense: E.M. Forster "We must be willing to let go of the life we have planned, so as to have the life that is waiting for us." Yes! Thanks E.M.! That's exactly what I have been trying to express!
Of course, there are still the times when Maddie says, "I just wish I had a brother or sister," that nearly breaks my heart. (Although she also says, just as fervently, "I just wish I had a ____" [fill in the blank with any kind of pet or the newest toy]). And it equally breaks my heart when Josh says, "But I never imagined my family being like this. I always imagined more kids. I always thought I'd have a son to take to baseball games." And when I kindly explain to him that I could do invitro all day every day for the rest of my life, and I still may never be able to give that to him, he says that he will need to mourn the family he once imagined. And I say I understand that, because so do I. And I say I will forever be sorry that I couldn't give him that family we both imagined. And then he curses our SMA genes. And so do I.

But the story isn't necessarily over. We are aware that there are other options out there. And we still have eight frozen embryos in a freezer in Virginia. And who knows, maybe one day I will actually give in to Maddie's requests for a puppy. But just know that right now, I'm okay with the way it is. And for the first time I don't feel this insane pressure and drive and sadness pushing me to hurry! Hurry!

And I just want some time to take pictures of me looking and feeling good and being my normal adventurous self for a little while.....And if that is the "happy ending" that is waiting for us, I think I'm okay with that too.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW OUR SURPRISE HAPPY ENDING 

20 comments:

Jamie Smith said...

I love this and I love you. That's all. :)

Heather said...

Wow, that was therapeutic for me, so thank you. You do whatever you feel like and enjoy the life waiting for you. I have a feeling it will be a great one=)

Jessica Tingey Hansen said...

You guys really do create the cutest freaking kids on Earth.

Cindy from CA said...

I am sure we will never meet, but I read your blog. I admire you so much. You are a great lady. Be happy!!

Anonymous said...

I have read your blog for awhile now. I think you are an amazing mother and such a strong person. Maddie is beautiful.

Rich and Rachel said...

Oh wow. This made me cry! I'm so glad you were blessed with your Miracle Maddie, and I just have a feeling that she will have a very strong bond with you for life! I really wish there was something I could do to help you have the family you've always dreamed of. If anyone in the world deserves that, it's you.

Rachael said...

You're story is devastating yet so inspirational. It helps me realize that we all have our certain trials and that there is a purpose and a plan laid out for each one of us. And it is not necessarily OUR plan & that is important to realize, so thank you for your amazing words!

Ann said...

Rachel I love you and Josh. Your courage and honesty brought tears along with admiration. Your beautiful family is forever.

Megan said...

This post made me cry so hard. You story is beautiful and inspirational. I love that Ann said your family is forever. So true. Big hugs.

Meagan said...

We love you guys. Just the way you are. We wish you didn't have to go through all this crap. It sucks. Royally. It's not fair. E.M. is right on though. There's a lot waiting for you guys, maybe just a little different than you envisioned.

The Mecham Family said...

Wow. You and Josh and Maddie amaze me. :)

kh said...

Love it.

And maybe not as eloquent as E.M. but along those same lines..."You can't always get what you want...but you might find, you get what you need."
--The Rolling Stones

Kimberly said...

I knew you'd been through a lot, but having it laid out that way is pretty overwhelming. I hope that no matter what course you take, it leads your whole family to your own "happy ending."

Tara said...

You're a strong woman and I am so happy for you that you have found that peace you've been looking for.

For reasons much different than yours we haven't rushed to have a lot of children. People judge me too. Apparently, I am not performing like many people think I should be. It hurts but eventually I stopped caring what other people think. If in the end I only have Caden and Abbie, then I am happy with that. If I decide in the future it is right for me and our family to have more, then we will. We all have our own limits, no matter their source or how different they are. I say it is better to know your limits, be at peace with them and celebrate the life you have in front of you rather then live everyday with the anxiety, guilt and fear.

You're family is beautiful and one day you will have the opportunity to mother Evan and Charlie again. Keep smiling!

Melissa said...

I loved reading this...thank you for sharing your heart, Rachel.

Jayci said...

happy endings are always out there, right? I love you and your little family. :) What a great team you three are, and I know you have two little ones cheering for you on the sidelines. You are so sweet and always a shining example.

Tristan said...

Every now and then I stumble into blogs of acquaintances from my past. I don't really facebook much so it's fun to sometimes see what others have been up too.

I think back to all of my hopes and dreams I had for my future when I left Cimarron. I was young, nieve, and ignorant but so sure of myself at the time. I knew what I wanted. Well, I learned quickly that life doesn't always turn out as we plan and I AM SO GLAD!

I sometimes feel like you where my experiences have worn me down and made me feel tired but I have gained a strength I never could have other wise. I've learned from trusting in the Lord and that I don't always know what's best for myself even though I think I do. I'm a better person because of it.

One of the hardest things about being a mom is that for some reason we judge, we talk, and we compare. It's not fair that we do this to ourselves. When we are truly just looking at our own lives and doing what's best for us, I know that's when we find the most happiness.

Thanks for sharing your sweet story. Your family is beautiful and you are a stronger person for what you have been through. We never know if our trials are meant for us or to help us strengthen others. I can tell the Lord has lots of good in store for you. Your blog is really inspirational! :)

Good luck finding your "happy ending" whatever it may be for you!

Alesha said...

Wow I am sobbing my eyes out right now. I am not even sure where I found your blog from. We lost our baby in July at 7 weeks old. I am going through this exact thing "this is not what I planned or imagined for myself." Thank you for sharing.

Jamie Smith said...

I just re-read this. Now you have a puppy AND a healthy baby boy growing. :)

Anonymous said...

I don't know you personally but someone shared this. I admire your courage in sharing your story. Three of my siblings died as babies and I look at my parents with admiration and wonder how they got through it. I think God helps bring peace and lessen the pain.