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.
Sunshine
November 6, 2013 at 9:32 pm | Posted in Grief, life after loss | 6 CommentsTags: blogs, child loss, gratitude, hope, new not so normal, Sunshine award
Thank you so much to My Hope Jar and Hang your Hopes from Trees for nominating me for a Sunshine award. After looking into more information about the award it is a virtual way to connect bloggers who are writing about the same things and want to acknowledge each other. I am honored and pleased that they (or anyone) finds my blog helpful and inspiring.
The Sunshine Award is also kind of like a chain letter with rules and everything. I am not a chain letter person but there is something about spreading sunshine that I could not ignore. There is so much darkness in the world. We can all use some more sunshine. So, here it goes.
Rules of the Sunshine Award:
- Include the Sunshine Award icon in your post.
- Link the blogger who nominated you.
- Answer 10 questions about yourself.
- Nominate 10 other bloggers to receive the award.
- Link to your nominees and let them know you nominated them.
Questions about Me:
- Why do you blog? I am hoping that I can help others get through their difficult journeys. I want Jake and Sawyer to be remembered. I want to carry on their purpose in life (whatever that purpose might be)
- What is your favorite movie? Princess Bride
- What is your favorite food? Kale
- What is your favorite thing or memory about your spouse? He proposed at an ice cream store and had a flavor of ice cream named after me. When he asked me to marry him he was so nervous he got down on both knees instead of just one
- What do you do to relieve stress? Running, yoga (exercise in general)
- Who or what inspires you? All 4 of my children
- What is your biggest fear? Outliving all of my children
- What is your biggest dream? Happiness
- What is your best piece of advice? Sometimes there is not a happily ever after or a perfect ending. Gilda Radner said it much better than I ever could . . . “Now I’ve learned, the hard way, that some poems don’t rhyme, and some stories don’t have a clear beginning, middle, and end. Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it. . .” – Gilda Radner
- What are you most proud of? My children
**(I answered the questions from My Hope Jar because it was the first nomination)
My Nominees
- My Hope Jar
- Hang Your Hope from Trees
- It’s Dilovely
- Chasing Rainbows
- Four Plus an Angel
- Still Life with Circles
- Living Without My Twin Sister
- The Spohrs are Multiplying
- Rockstar Ronan
- Carly Marie Project Heal
My Questions
- Why do you blog?
- What is your favorite movie?
- What is your favorite food?
- What is one of your favorite quotes?
- What do you do to relieve stress?
- Who or what inspires you?
- What is your biggest fear?
- What is your biggest dream?
- What is your best piece of advice?
- What are you most proud of?
Thank you again to My Hope Jar and Hang your Hopes from Trees for sending sunshine my way. I truly appreciate it.
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.
All Hallows Eve
November 1, 2013 at 10:51 pm | Posted in Jake, Sawyer | 9 CommentsTags: child loss, Day of the Dead, death of a baby, Halloween, holidays, new not so normal, perspective, thoughts
October 31st is not only Halloween but it also starts the celebration of the Mexican holiday Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead). The tradition focuses on celebrating and remembering friends and family who have passed away. Unlike Halloween, the celebration honors those who have died with food, festivities and an elaborate altar. The observance is on November 1st and 2nd, which coincides with the Catholic All Saints’ Day and All Souls’ Day. November 1st is for celebrating children and infants who have died. It is called Dia de los Inocentes (Day of the Innocents) or Dia de los Angelitos (Day of the Little Angels). November 2nd is for remembering all friends and family no matter what their age. In some beliefs, it is a three-day holiday beginning on October 31st, All Hallows Eve, when some believe the souls of young children arise at midnight.
I have never made an altar but I am very thankful to one of my close friends who includes Jake and Sawyer’s pictures on her altar. Maybe one day I will try to make an altar. There is a part of me that wants to make Halloween (along with all days) extra fun and extra special for the twins because I cannot ever do these things for Jake and Sawyer. No worries, I do know that the twins deserve fun and extra special just because of themselves.
There is a house in our neighborhood that has crazy blow ups for every holiday. I try to drive the twins by the house often during Halloween. Here it is during the day:
Here is the house at night:
And here we are (minus Evan):
Bereavement Training
October 24, 2013 at 10:14 pm | Posted in Grief, Jake, NICU, Sawyer | 6 CommentsTags: baby loss, bereavement training, child loss, compassion, death of a baby, gratitude, kindness, life after loss, new not so normal, ways to honor the memory of your child
Today I, along with several other parents, spoke to a group of nurses as part of their bereavement training. This is the second parent panel I have been a part of in the last few months and I have participated in several others over the years. At times, I find talking about Jake and Sawyer cathartic. I am always hopeful that sharing our story can somehow help others. After each of these panels I have come away with lists of suggestions for nurses and tips for NICU parents.
There is a common theme in all the stories. All bereaved parents want their child/children to be remembered. There will not be the lifetime of memories that hopefully other children will have. The stay in the hospital and every aspect of it is very often all the parents have. The doctors and nurses are big parts of these memories. The kindness and compassion of the medical professionals is so important. I am thankful that bereavement training exists.
No matter how small the baby is or how long the baby lived, parents want their baby treated like every other baby. They want to be treated like every other parent. One mom said she just felt like she was in the middle of a really bad Lifetime movie. We are all hoping that we can change the channel or wake up from the nightmare of outliving our child/children. Unfortunately, this is our reality. Thank you to all those who help us along our way.
Shifting
October 22, 2013 at 8:46 am | Posted in Grief | 4 CommentsTags: baby loss, child loss, Jake, life after loss, new not so normal, perspective, Sawyer, thoughts
Awhile back I mentioned that Jake and Sawyer’s nameplates, which are part of the headstones, have shifted. The bolts had become loose and then inexplicably disappeared but they were repaired. However, the cemetery grounds people explained that because these are not the original bolts they might not hold. I have been watching them shift again over the last few weeks. I really still cannot understand how it is possible so I brought Evan to confirm.
He took one look and verified that yes, the nameplates (mostly Jake’s) have shifted again. He did offer up the explanation that perhaps Jake and Sawyer are just like any other children giving their parents something to worry about. I sort of like this idea. It goes along with the theory that my very sweet cousin pointed out Jake and Sawyer are just being boys playing together and being mischievous. They could just be playing Halloween tricks.
We are going to call the cemetery to have the process started to replace the nameplates. This is still odd and not okay but we can get it fixed. I have to keep it in perspective. Jake and Sawyer are not in danger. Nothing can harm them anymore. This we can do something about.
Of course, all of this reminds me there are so many hard and heartbreaking events in life that we cannot control. Illness, accidents, disasters, bad things happening to good people. These things all happen, and seem to happen far too often. They will continue to happen too (though I feel like we have had more than our fair share lately). But a break would be nice. And fixing things that we can control helps, at least a little.
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!
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