Showing posts with label sick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sick. Show all posts

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Good. Grief.

When I used to hear the word 'grief,' my immediate thoughts were of someone having lost a person close to them. It meant someone had died, and it was not a word I wanted to know personally. There was also the 'Oh, good grief, Charlie Brown!' thing...but never before would I put 'good' and 'grief' together in a serious way. And I always assumed that grieving was something that happened to someone after something very bad had happened. I didn't see it as a process that one partakes in, that one must partake in at times in their life in order to move forward. I also used to assume that grief was linear, but no longer.

I was ignorant about grief years ago. My life wasn't easy, but it wasn't hard. And then in February 2001 I started going to the doctor for unexplained symptoms, and this went on until he diagnosed me with an auto-immune disorder more than a year later. Four days before my wedding. Casey and I thought, 'Well, if we can get through all of that hospital craziness (one week) and this diagnosis...we can get through anything!' I thought this was my grief. My valley.

Miles was born in April 2006. I was finally rid of the hospital on July 19. Celebration. Recovery. I thought I was moving on. It wasn't until September, when Miles was five months old, that I began to realize all that I had missed in his life. I remember breaking down in the shower one evening, sobbing uncontrollably because I hadn't been able to celebrate my first Mother's Day, hadn't carried him home for the first time, hadn't been able to breastfeed like I'd wanted, hadn't even taken one picture of him until he was four months old. I had dreamed of taking photos of him as a tiny, newborn baby. I had missed that.

Still ignorant about how my grief was working and how I had to be a part of it instead of just waiting for it to 'happen,' I thought that with full physical recovery would come full emotional healing. But the joy I felt after my final surgery in July 2007 was short-lived. Grief was upon me again, and I was just starting to get it. No one had warned me that the emotional pain can long outlive the physical pain. I thought that kind of pain only came with 'real' loss. I was still just beginning to grasp how much I'd lost, and I didn't even know the half of it until we started trying to have another baby in March 2008.

Fast forward to the present day. Grief is not linear. There can be ten steps forward and one hundred steps back. There can be two steps up and four steps down. There can be a valley after a valley -- it's not always valley-mountain-valley-mountain. Your pain is your pain, and it can be a lonely place if you let it -- sometimes even if you don't.

I have handled my grief in both good and bad ways. I don't know that anyone handles it perfectly. It frustrates me greatly sometimes that I can't press a pause button on life so I can have time to grieve and then be caught up with everyone else. I am almost always 'stuck' behind and I don't know that I will ever be able to catch up, but I am learning to accept that.

One thing I've learned, sometimes grudgingly, is that I will never be the exact same person I used to be. Life looks different to me now, but I believe that there are better parts of me that might not have been if I hadn't gone through what I did. And my joys...they are sweeter and dearer because of my sorrows. My pain is deep, but I hold the tiniest moments close to my heart. I don't think I would have done that had things been easier.

I write about all of this because of something that sounds extremely simple, but for me has been a thing of dread. And instead of continuing to avoid it, I decided to walk through my pain because I knew that there would be a bit of healing on the other side. Grief is not a friend of mine, but lately I'm seeing that I have to sit with it in order to heal. There is no other way. I could try to avoid it my entire life, but what kind of life would that be? I am tired of pain, and I know I will grieve certain things until I die, but the deep sadness is something I must be with so that I can move on.

Now, the simple thing I mentioned? I have recently decided to go through every bit of Miles' clothing since he was born in order to sell what I can at consignment next month. That's five years of my little boy's clothes. There were many pieces I set aside, unable to part with them either right now or ever. Ask me about that again next year. But that still left a lot of clothes that have to be washed, sorted, priced and tagged. Today I began washing the clothes and hanging them up until I can price them. But before washing them, I would inspect each piece of clothing to see if they had any kind of stain that needed treating.

I knew it would be tough. It had been emotional just going through them the first time. But today, holding up each onesie or tiny shirt or pair of pants, I felt my anxiety building. And building. And by the time I had started the first load of laundry, my heart was racing and I was finding it hard to breathe. There I stood in the laundry room, crying and asking God to be with me. When I recounted all of this to Casey later on, I cried even more, and as I sit here typing I am still not finished with washing those many tiny clothes.

But guess what? As painful as it has been, and as many memories as it has brought up (both good and bad), I have decided to let grief in my door today...and though I am not at the end of it, I have at least moved in a positive direction. Let's face it: when we're in the middle of it, grief is not where we want to be, right? But if we figure out that there is something good on the other side and we can walk through it, life doesn't seem as scary anymore. At least not to me.

That is good grief.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Knitted With Love


 I started working on my first ever cable pattern, Lion Brand's Tree of Life Afghan, last August or September. I was knitting it for my mom -- not just because she's my mom and I love her, but really it's for one main reason.

When I was in the hospital for three months back in 2006, she devoted two of those months of her own life to watch over my baby boy. Granted, she's his grandmother, but this meant being far from her own home and very alone for much of the time. It was exhausting work, and eventually Casey and my dad and I convinced her that she needed a break.

There is nothing you can do to replace that time and effort and love that she gave to Miles in my place. Of course I wish it had been 'the normal way' -- me being home and her helping out where I needed and saying goodbye after a short time. As it was, I could barely care for myself much less my newborn baby. She stepped in without a thought, and so I knew that one day I would do something that took work with my own hands to show her my love.

It doesn't do justice or show enough thanks -- nothing ever will -- but it leaves with her a small piece of myself just as she did those four years ago in giving love to a baby who was waiting on his mama.

Thanks Mom.


Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Sick Update...And Yet Another Anniversary

Miles is thankfully doing much better. We have cut the breathing treatments in half, which is wonderful because that medicine makes him a little hyper. And he is not really the hyper type -- he will sit for long periods of time, just reading or playing. But lately, wow...it's really worn us out! Anyway, we have a better plan of action now for the next time he becomes congested. We're going to (as Barney Fife would say) nip this thing in the bud!

Yesterday was another anniversary -- mine and Casey's seventh dating anniversary. Awww. Yeah, I know, who keeps up with that stuff anyway? I do. I am hopelessly sentimental, and somehow I retain every little date in history in my head that holds even a little significance. I also retain useless pieces of information, but that is neither here nor there.

I know I've posted before on mine and Casey's first time out, that day being 9/11, but five days later was when we made things official, so that is the date we remember for the anniversary. We don't tend to do many special things or get gifts, but yesterday we did exchange small gifts. I had told Casey I wanted to get him something small, and that he didn't have to get anything for me...but he did, and got me one of my favorite things of all: a gift card to my coffee place!

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Not-so-well and Naturalization

For the past few days, we've been dealing with a semi-sick child. While I was seeing my internist for my usual six-month checkup, Casey had to take Miles to a nearby office to see his pediatrician, who just happens to be my internist's brother. Strange, yes? They are both incredibly nice doctors, and as I'd been seeing the one for a while when I was pregnant with Miles, it made sense to me to choose his brother as my child's doctor. Anyway, turns out Miles has bronchitis. Thankfully it didn't get to the stage it was in February, but it's bad enough that he's needing breathing treatments four times a day plus antibiotics. He's much better now, just a bit cranky with that congestion. I don't blame him!

In other news, today is the 19-year anniversary of my family's becoming naturalized American citizens. I really can't believe it's been that long. Last night I was telling Casey that it was nine years and then thought about it and was shocked to realize I'd left off ten whole years! So, today is a special day for me, not that I really do anything to celebrate...just remember and am thankful for the sacrifices my parents made.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Still remembering, still healing

One year ago tonight, I arrived back home after my last major abdominal surgery, the last in a very long list of things that had to be done when my appendix decided to rupture two years, three months, two weeks and four days ago when I was 34 weeks pregnant with Miles.

Casey and I feel a lot of emotions come up around these particular anniversaries. I know that I personally can feel like I'm instantly back in that moment, that day, when such-and-such was happening or a certain procedure was being performed. And we have talked about this day -- July 31, 2008 -- as being a big milestone for us, I suppose because now we are more than an entire year away from those events.

I am so thankful. I know I complain about the scars I was left from one crazy organ that just couldn't wait. I've had so many "it's not fair" moments I can't count them anymore. My eyes still very easily well up with tears when I think of some of those hospital nights, when I honestly thought it would never end.

But...here I am, telling you that I've made it to more than a year past all of that, and so I am thankful. There aren't many words beyond those that can say it quite right.

Friday, July 04, 2008

Fun Recovery Friday!

I hope everyone has been enjoying their Fourth of July so far. We made it to our town's parade this morning, maybe the shortest parade I've ever seen, but nice nonetheless. I'm trying to remember if we have been to this parade before, but I don't think so. I know we weren't there last year because Casey and I were on vacation in St. Louis. The year before that, sadly, I was on my last stay in the hospital, not able to go home for another two weeks after that. Fortunately, Casey was able to buy some fireworks, and we invited friends over the night of my hospital release to celebrate.

Speaking of hospitals...I was just there yesterday having my gallbladder removed! They did a very quick and wonderful job, so I arrived at 8:00 a.m. and was home by 1:00 p.m. Things couldn't have gone any better than they did, and I was so very thankful to be at home in my own bed last night. This wasn't an emergency procedure, for anyone who is wondering, but something we felt needed to be done for many different reasons. Now that I've had my tonsils, appendix, and gallbladder removed...I don't think there's much more to be done. Hmm...maybe the spleen? Nah, I'll just keep that one for now.

Happy Fourth!
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