Sweet Sawyer (& Spam)
November 14, 2013 at 9:18 am | Posted in Grief, life lessons, Love, Sawyer | 6 CommentsTags: baby loss, child loss, dark days, death of a baby, hope, life after loss, new not so normal, thoughts
Last week Evan sent me a very wise email with the subject line “Charlie Brown knows. . .”
If only we could . . .
Miss you so very much Mr. Sawyer. Love you always.
P.S. So sorry if you recently received spam from me again. I have changed my password and hopefully I should be spam free now.
Song for All Seasons
November 8, 2013 at 11:15 am | Posted in Jake, life after loss, Love, Sawyer | 12 CommentsTags: #DPchallenge, child loss, death of a baby, hope, new not so normal, songs
My mom sang this song to me when I was little. We sang this song to all 4 of our children. Now 2 of them sing to us. . .
The second verse was tougher for me especially after Jake and Sawyer died. There were many mornings when I woke up hoping that I was holding our other 2 sons.
The other night, dear, as I lay sleeping
I dreamt I held you in my arms
When I awoke, dear, I was mistaken
So I hung my head, and I cried
I will keep singing this song (now with the twins). And hoping for more sunshine.
Strong?
November 4, 2013 at 10:44 pm | Posted in Grief, Jake, Love, Sawyer | 10 CommentsTags: baby loss, birthday, child loss, death of a baby, grief, life after loss, new not so normal, thoughts
Dear Sawyer,
It is me, your mom. It is almost your birthday. And again, there will be no party. You are still gone. We have made it through 3 other birthdays without you. I know that we will make it through this one too. Thanks to your older brother, Jake, I know that we can make it through a 4th birthday without the birthday boy. In fact, I can make it through every day with out you both. I just do not want to. . .
I miss you. I love you forever.
Fun Friday
October 18, 2013 at 12:08 am | Posted in life after loss, Love | 8 CommentsTags: hope, hugs, life after loss, new not so normal, perspective, thoughts, What does the fox say?
I have always wondered what it would be like to write something light-hearted. The twins have Fun Friday at school so I was thinking I should give it a try too. Here are two things that made me smile this week.
1. The Facebook page Amazing Things in the World posted this picture a few days ago:
Did you know that koalas sleep cuddled with their young to protect them at all times? I think it sounds like a perfect idea which would resolve many of my paranoid parenting tendencies. The twins would so not think it was perfect and they would most likely make a similar expression as the one on the baby koala’s face. Snuggling in a stationary position would not work for them because they prefer to toss and turn while asleep. Perhaps in my next life I can be a koala.
2. Have you seen the video “What does the Fox Say?” It is super funny. The brothers Vegard and Bård Ylvisåker, members of a Norwegian comedy group produced the song and music video “The Fox.” They created it to promote the upcoming season of their television talk show, Tonight with Ylvis. Disclaimer: If you watch this video, the song could get stuck in your head for days.
Just wanted to share the smiles with you all. Hope that you have a good weekend.
Wave of Light for October 15th
October 15, 2013 at 5:12 pm | Posted in life lessons, Love | 5 CommentsTags: baby loss, child loss, death of a baby, miscarriage, Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Day, Wave of Light - October 15th
Every October 15th is Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Day. We remember our children every day but tonight we will light candles.
Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar
October 14, 2013 at 10:26 pm | Posted in life lessons, Love | 5 CommentsTags: book review, child loss, grief, hope, life after loss, new not so normal, thoughts, Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life from Dear Sugar
The book, Tiny Beautiful Things: Advice on Love and Life, is a compilation of advice columns by Dear Sugar. It is written by Cheryl Strayed, who was formerly the anonymous online advice columnist, Dear Sugar. The book is a collection of letters written to Dear Sugar and her responses. Dear Sugar writes advice to questions about love, life, death and everything in between.
I previously wrote about one of Dear Sugar’s advice columns to Stuck. Stuck is a bereaved mother. Stuck’s baby died. Sugar offers some very powerful advice on how to get unstuck. In another post, in response to a letter from Living Dead Dad, Sugar wisely writes:
“I don’t know how you go on without your son, sweet pea. I only know that you do. And you have. And you will.”
“Your boy is dead, but he will continue to live within you. Your love and grief will be unending, but it will also shift in shape. There are things about your son’s life and your own that you can’t understand now. There are things you will understand in one year, and in ten years, and twenty.”
There was a time after Jake and then after Sawyer’s death that I could not concentrate long enough to finish a sentence let alone an entire book. Now, I am able to concentrate while I read, although I have to admit most of my “reading” is actually listening to books on CD in the car. I am so glad that I stumbled back upon the book Tiny Beautiful Things and listened to it in its’ entirety.
Spreading Awareness
October 6, 2013 at 9:14 pm | Posted in life after loss, Love, silver lining, why I write | 9 CommentsTags: Atlanta 2 Day Walk for Breast Cancer, Atlanta Walk to Remember, baby loss, child loss, death of a baby, hope, Jake, March of Dimes, new not so normal, ways to honor the memory of your child
This past weekend, I walked in one day of the Atlanta 2-Day Walk for Breast Cancer and in the Atlanta Walk to Remember.
In addition to walking, Evan has been talking as well. Last week he went to Capitol Hill with a group from the March of Dimes. They spoke to members of Congress about the importance of newborn screening and funding prematurity studies.
This week, Evan spoke at the Atlanta Walk to Remember. Below is his speech:
“Dad and Father”
I am the father of four children,
but I am “Dad” to only two kids.
Our six-year-old twins call me “Dad” or “Daddy”
– or sometimes other silly things, or things I won’t mention here.
Our first child, Jake, never left the hospital
and lived only 2 weeks.
He was born 14 weeks early
and with other ultimately unsolvable medical complications.
Our fourth child, Sawyer, was born happy and healthy
and came home with us.
But six weeks later, with no warning,
and for no reason that has yet been fully figured out,
his heart stopped working.
Neither Jake nor Sawyer ever got to call me anything.
My family and I grieve the deaths and loss of our boys,
as you all grieve the loss of your children and little loved-ones.
As their father, I grieve the loss of Jake and Sawyer’s childhoods,
the big moments that they were supposed to have but never will.
I grieve the loss of their chance to grow up, to flourish,
to become teenagers, young men, husbands and “Dads” themselves.
I grieve the lost ball games and trips and adventures we’ll never have.
I grieve all the missed hugs and high-fives.
I grieve even the cranky wake-ups and bedtime fits we know so well from our twins,
but never got to experience with Jake or Sawyer.
I grieve all the truly heart-warming bedtime snuggles
that will never happen with Jake or Sawyer.
Beyond all those missed tender moments,
I also grieve the loss of my belief that horrible things won’t happen to me or my loved ones.
I am all too aware now that they can happen to anyone – as they have happened to all of us.
It’s all I can do most of the time
to just hope nothing like losing Jake and Sawyer ever happens again.
As a father, I also grieve the loss of my once unshakable belief
that I could always protect my wife Lanie and all our children
from such terrible pain and anguish; that I can “fix” their problems;
that I can always make everything all better.
I know that I cannot make Jake or Sawyer all better or bring them back.
I’m not sure that grief is something a father can ever overcome.
Of course, I have learned that you do not overcome or get past grief.
You just go through it.
I hate that my family has to go through it too,
but thank heavens I have an incredible wife and wonderful kids
to travel along with me as I go down that path.
So I guess I will always grieve the loss of never being called “Dad” –
not even once – by Jake or Sawyer.
But that doesn’t mean I am not their father.
I am and always will be a proud father of all my kids,
no matter what they call me
or what they were never able to call me.
And, I am so very proud of Jake, Sawyer and the twins’ dad and father.
Weekend Walks
October 4, 2013 at 6:22 pm | Posted in life lessons, Love | 6 CommentsTags: Atlanta 2 Day Walk for Breast Cancer, Atlanta Walk to Remember, breast cancer, child loss, death of a baby, hope, life after loss, Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness month, thoughts, ways to honor the memory of your child
Do you know that along with Breast Cancer Awareness month that October is also Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness month?
There are so very many facts that I have had to accept are out of my control. At the top of the list are the facts that Jake and Sawyer are dead.
However, I am still here. I am going to do my best to bring awareness to Pregnancy and Infant Loss along with Breast Cancer. So, this weekend I am going to walk in the Atlanta 2 Day Walk for Breast Cancer and the Atlanta Walk to Remember. I will let you know how they go.
Hope that you all have a great weekend!
Control & Clean Clothes
September 26, 2013 at 9:53 am | Posted in life lessons, Love, normal?, venting | 6 CommentsTags: child loss, dark days, Jake, life after loss, new not so normal, perspective, Sawyer, thoughts
I wish life could be a bit more like laundry. You put the dirty clothes in the washing machine, add detergent and wait. After the clothes are clean put them into the dryer. Wait. Fold.
Okay, it is not always so seamless. I have turned a few white loads pink. I will also confess that I have washed more than one diaper. It is pretty messy. However, after shaking out the clothes and repeating the wash and dry cycles everything was once again clean.
Before 2005 there were plenty of situations out of my control but Jake’s diagnosis put them all into perspective for me. I did what I thought were the right steps. I gave birth to Jake at 26 weeks anyway. He lived for 2 weeks but I could not do a thing to prevent his death.
At the time I thought that I could protect any potential future children if they were not premature. I could be in control if I could just keep them out of the NICU. Sawyer’s death let me know loud and clear that I was wrong about that too.
Lately, life seems more out of control than I would like. I just need to realize that is all part of life and hold on.
I think I will go switch the laundry into the dryer.
Odd but NOT Ok
September 12, 2013 at 2:26 pm | Posted in Grief, Jake, life after loss, Love, Sawyer, venting | 12 CommentsTags: baby loss, cemetery, child loss, death of a baby, grief, missing bolts, new not so normal, unexplainable
Dream
I am drawn quietly to his grave to check on him,
Just as I’d have been drawn quietly to his crib.
I trim the grass around his marker,
And dream of trimming bangs from his forehead.
I place flowers in his vase,
And dream of placing kisses on his cheek.
I hold his memory dear to my heart,
And dream of holding him in my arms.
Author unknown
I no longer have any way to physically take care of Jake or Sawyer. The best I can do is going to the cemetery and checking on their shared plot. I know that frequenting a cemetery does not work for some but it is something that I need to do.
Over the last month both Jake and Sawyer’s nameplates have been slightly shifting. I thought maybe the bolts were loose. I shift them back and feel better. Until yesterday.
I could not even shift the plates back. And, where are the bolts?! I do not understand.
I called the cemetery office and immediately broke down into tears trying to explain to the receptionist what I was calling about. Who calls about missing bolts from not just 1 but 2 of their sons’ headstones?! She finally understood me and agreed to send out a maintenance person.
No one can explain what happened to the bolts that should be securing the nameplates to the granite. However, they are both repaired for the moment. We are going to wait and watch to see what happens. I am so not okay with this.
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