#2 was born 10 weeks too soon. My sweet son who was due at the end of February actually arrived in the middle of December. Barely over 3 pounds and struggling for every breath, he was delivered by c-section 6 days after my water broke. Six days in a hospital bed with my feet higher than my head to keep the fluid from running out of me. Then the fluid was gone and he had to be delivered within the hour. It was the shortest hour I've ever known.
How young and naive I was that even then I just assumed everything would be alright. My life had been touched by tragedy, but it had never really touched me. Even the miscarriage I had gone through the year before was not enough to convince me that my baby could die. I was walking through life bulletproof.
Then I heard this cry in the operating room, thin, high, and shrill. This gangly bloody form was thrust into view over the top of the blue curtain and then disappeared again just as quickly. My husband brought over a blanket wrapped bundle with our son inside. All I could see was a strip of forehead between the oxygen mask and his hat. It was a nice looking forehead, and I worried about the boy it belonged to , but I never thought he could die.
For two weeks we were not allowed to hold our son. He lay in the open warmer with tubes sprouting from all over his body. We could only touch the bottom of his right foot. It was the only part of his body not covered with medical equipment. I could stroke his foot. He would scream in pain from the IV needles and I could touch his toes. This was the worst it could get, I knew it.
My heart yearned to feel his small body pressed against mine, my arms ached in their emptiness. My world swirled around my small girl at home and this impossibly small boy. I leaned on the Computer Guy for strength and he leaned back. I felt too weak to carry this burden, but this was the worst. Just keep walking and eventually you come to the end of the tunnel.
I fell into bed each night exhausted and completely terrified, terrified of the midnight phone calls I made to check on him. The "What ifs?" had just begun to enter my mind. Babies die in NICU's. I know because I've seen it happen. I saw it then. My baby was no less sweet, no less loved, no less perfect. He could die. He could die and we would be unable to stop it from happening.
My fears rose to the surface when I got the phone call, "#2 is dying. You need to come so that when he does go, he can die in his mother's arms." How bitter was this pain. Hold him at last, feel the weight of him at last, kiss him at last...tell him good-bye.
I broke. I drove to the hospital and don't remember the drive. It took 18 minutes to get there, it should have taken 40. I ran in and saw my Beloved holding the hand of our son and telling him "If it hurts too much, if the pain is too great, if you're too tired...it's okay to die. Your dad gives you permission to quit the fight. You've fought it hard and long, and you have nothing more to prove. You are already a man I am proud to call my son. If you need to die, I'll hold your hand."
The nurses had to hold me back to keep me from attacking the father of my child. The anger of the situation flooded through me and directed itself squarely at him. I felt betrayed by the only person who understood my situation.
At last I prayed.
In a jumbled torrent, I asked for help. I pleaded for my boy and for the strength he would need. I bargained my own life for his. I wept painful tears. At last I had been shoved to my knees. At last, my stubborn pride was broken. At last, I allowed myself to be a child. To be a child and ask for my Father to fix things in the magical way that only daddies can fix things. He did.
It was in the quiet of the morning as my tiny baby slept fitfully upon my chest that I remembered the prophesy of my own dear grandmother when she had pronounced me a stubborn and prideful girl and begged me to bow willingly before God or he would remove everything that held me up until I fell to my knees before him. Unfortunately for me, I've always been a "Shoved to them" kind of girl.
20 comments:
Oh. Thank you for sharing.
PS: I didn't mean for that last comment to sound cold. I just don't know what to say. Hugs.
As a father of a son (now almost 4 years old) who had a 6 and a half month stay in the NICU, I know exactly what you mean and this has brought all that back to me. Thank you!
So, I am crying now. And I knew that story already.
Love, Suzanne
Beautiful post. I have always liked your blog name and the quote from your grandmother.
Our 4yo was born 14 weeks premature. Her main NICU nurse (a devout Catholic who became her godmother) gently suggested to me a few weeks after her birth that God might have been reminding me that I am not in control -- He is. I've been trying very hard to remember that during this pregnancy.
Ah, "Mom"....I've btdt and I wasn't as fortunate (at least, in some folks' views)...
But it adds another dimension to know the story behind the name.
Give #2 a hug for me, 'kay?
Okay, no fair!!! Springing a post like that on a hormonal first time mum with no warning that it'll reduce her to tears!! ;-)
Thank you for sharing. Beautiful story.
anyone that has ever had a child in the nicu knows exactly what you mean.
I think a lot of people meet God for the first time there. I know it was a big turning point for me when Tom was there.
Wow. That was...beautiful. Thanks for sharing.
We had a similar experience with our #3. The nightmare of fear is so overwhelming. I have never been so grateful for the gift of my faith than at that time. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you for sharing this beautiful post.
What an amazing story. I have to say I now believe you have the best name for a blog ever!
Very touching. Thanks, Mom, you rock.
:')
Oh my goodness. What a heartbreaking story. I'm crying now.
Oh, but Dr G., it's the best kind of heartbreaking story, the kind with a happy ending.
I dont know how I missed this before. But it hit home for me. Hit home hard. Crying now, and grateful for the little things. :)
I just found this via a link my friend posted on FB, and like other readers, I was reduced to tears. My 5.5mo baby girl Ella has been in the PICU for going on 9wks now and is listed for a heart transplant. I have definitely been shoved to my knees something fierce this time around (she was in the PICU for 5wks shortly after we adopted her). My prayers contain more pleading than praising, more begging than blessing...Luke 11:5-13 on steroids! We're asking for a miraculous healing through the intercession of Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha...God's will be done and to Him be all the glory.
Thank you for sharing your story.
Bridget N
I remember my little sister (mis)singing the lyrics to "Victory In Jesus" in front of the congregation as a special when we were little. Instead of "He plunged me to victory..." she loudly and proudly sang, "He PUNCHED me to victory..."
The pastor preached that day on some of us needing a good holy punching now and then.
Kudos to your grandmother's tenacity and fervent effectual prayer.
16 years ago I had a surprise pg. I even called CCL to see where I went wrong. LOL.
Well, that sweet boy had a prolapsed cord upon birth. Following an emergency c-section, and continued resuscitation, we lost that "surprise". We lost our first son. My husband, daughters and I were devastated. I had someone ask me if I was mad at God. Mad at God? Oh, no, I'm too scared to be mad at Him. Did I think my life would be untouched by tragedy, when our Lord suffered his passion and death for me. No.
It was horrible, I think of that little boy and the brother who was born 18 mos. later and wonder what it would have been like to have them together. I wonder at many things, I'm struck with awe to know he is in heaven (my husband baptized him) during resuscitation.
I have had 9 pregnancies and have four living children. I hope the one lesson my children have gained is to never take fertility for granted. I was shoved to my knees, and sometimes fear being shoved down again.
Thank you for sharing your story. God bless you as you rear your children toward heaven.
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