Tuesday, November 27, 2012

November 14

I almost couldn't walk in the door of the hospital. I was overcome with anxiety and fear and grief. I was not prepared, could not be prepared for this. Face red with tears we sat at the admissions desk and filled out benign paperwork and answered  simple questions but I could barely think. I just kept running through various scenarios. Would the baby be born alive, would he cry, would he need to go to the NICU, would I actually get to hold him? Was it too early to take him out at 37W5D?

We had a very friendly nurse in the pre-op area and things got underway with talk of anesthetic options, the IV, my OB arriving, being introduced to all of the nurses and Drs... everyone aware of what had happened to us last year and insisting that this would be ok but I couldn't believe them. Even with the very apparent differences between an emergency and a scheduled c-section, I felt like I was in the same place at the same time of year to have the same thing happen. My poor husband had to sit on the same little couch outside of the OR in the same silly yellow scrubs waiting to be able to come in, those same moments when Saersha's heart stopped.

In such an intense situation as this I go inside myself, clench deeply to feel something solid in all of this that is beyond my control. My OB tried for some chit chat with me and one of the anesthesiologists and she held my hand while we waited for the spinal to kick in. Finally my husband was allowed to come in and then my OB told me when the surgery was already underway. Things happened fast and she told me she saw a head with brown hair, then moments later this tiny animal sound emerged and I cried. It was so beautiful to hear him. I almost couldn't believe it could have turned out like this. He was examined and had all 10 apgars and my husband held him and brought him to sit by me as they stitched me back together.

We went to the recovery room and the nurses helped me latch the baby on and he nursed for a long time. It was all that I could have hoped for.

We decided to name him Stellan, which is a Swedish name and means calm. I hoped that he would bring some calm to our lives which have been so dark and tumultuous over the last 3 years of loss and heartbreak. 

I thought the having Stellan might be healing and in some sense it has been. We finally have the life that we have been hoping for over so many years. That feeling of being locked out of something that comes so naturally to so many other people has lessened. I have moments where I am totally overcome with love for this little creature.

None of this makes the loss of Saersha any easier though. There is still a hole in my heart that is exactly her shape. Now my heart has grown with my love for Stellan, but the hole is still there. We have even more of a sense of what we missed with Saersha and I so wish that both of our children could be here with us now.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

He's here!

I don't have it in me to make a proper post but for those few of you reading this: he's here,  he's healthy, he's as sweet as can be! He was 7lbs 9 oz and hearing his cry at birth was the most amazing thing! I am so overjoyed I can barely handle it. Thankfully he didn't need any interventions or NICU time and now we're home and getting settled in together. 
Thank you all for thinking of us.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Random thoughts on getting through a subsequent pregnancy

With 6 days left in this pregnancy, and inspired by the blogs that I read of fellow baby loss mamas, I have been thinking about some of the ways I have gotten through this pregnancy so far. When I say "gotten through" of course that doesn't mean that it has been easy. I have been at a high anxiety level pretty much the whole time, but these are some things or thoughts that have helped.

1. First of course is this baby himself and all the love and joy that I have in him. This can be a double edged sword as the more you love the more you fear that it will be taken away, but in the first trimester I did a lot of visualizations about sending love and positive energy to this baby and telling him how I would nurture and accept him if he would only just make it out alive! I will admit that this took more the form of pleading rather than anything more confident or hopeful. This was my mantra: Be My Baby 
In the second trimester I was able to hear his heart beat with my doppler and later in the pregnancy the baby has given me his own assurances with his thankfully regular movement and healthy development.

2. Denial. This may seem to contradict what I just wrote, but there were times when I just needed to forget about this pregnancy.

3. Going back to work. I was really nervous about this but I am very fortunate to work in a very supportive office and while I mostly just dove back in I knew I could take some time when I needed it. There were some days that it was tough to be there and there were some insensitive people and experiences I could have lived without but I think if I hadn't gone back I would have gotten lost in my anxiety and grief.

4. Projects. I am really terrible at it because I have zero attention to detail but I took up sewing. I had been given a sewing machine about 15 years ago and I never really learned how to use it. Before going back to work I took a beginning sewing class through the school board and I learned how to make a basic pair of pants, so then I made 3 over the course of the pregnancy. It was good to have something else to focus on in the evenings that had nothing to do with loss or with pregnancy or work. 

5. Reading. This too can be helpful in many ways but can also bring up more worries as the more you know, the more you know about what can go wrong. My top books on loss have been:Finding Hope When A Child Dies  An Exact Replica of a Figment of My Imagination  When a Baby Dies
But maybe even more of a lifesaver has been losing myself in silly fiction. I usually would save myself for more literary options but over this pregnancy I read a fair amount of fun crap. I easily read twice as many novels as I normally would over this time period.

6. Realizing that I can go forward without real hope. Most of my strategies have not centred on hope but on determination and survival. I am not sure how to make the distinction between hope (believing that events will turn out for the best) and what I feel (being willing to give it a shot because there is no other option) but I feel there is one. I did not get pregnant because I thought it would work out, I did it because there was no other way I continue to live after Saersha died. I now feel like it's ok to doubt that it will work out and not feel confident and hopeful as long as you can still find ways to get through.


So, those are my thoughts on this for now. I think this is something I will keep chewing on and maybe I will need to come up with even more strategies to get through the next 6 days.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

a year...

That it has been a year feels completely surreal. This year of grief feels like a blur now. It feels like Saersha was just born but then it feels impossible that any of this even happened.


I woke up at about 9 AM on November 4, 2011 thinking that my water had broken. I quickly realized that it was actually blood and thought, maybe this is bloody show. As is often my habit I went to the computer to research and found that the amount I was bleeding was way more than that. Trying to stay calm, I called my midwife and had to leave a message and then several minutes later she called me back and said she would come over.
I hadn't woken my husband up yet but with the midwife on her way over I told him what was happening. 

The midwife listened to the baby's heart rate and was very concerned as it seemed extremely low and she told my husband to call 911. Things were panicked and confused as we threw a few more things in the bag we had packed.

The ambulance came and they were under the impression that this was a home birth transfer and that labour was well underway. I got on to the stretcher and into the ambulance and things felt very chaotic, I didn't know where my husband or midwife were and despite my insistence that I was not in active labour the paramedic said he had to check my cervix and feel for the baby's head. The head was still very much inside of my uterus and I think this check was embarrassing for the paramedic but I was too freaked out to really feel anything about it other than that it was unnecessary. 

I assumed that since we were in an ambulance that they would try and go faster and put the siren on but they told me that it can actually slow things down as people drive more erratically when they did. It felt like the most excruciating drive but it was probably less than a 1/2 hour. When we arrived the driver took us to the wrong part of the hospital and that lost us another several minutes and added to the stress. We would have gotten there faster if we had driven ourselves.

I was wheeled into labour and delivery and set up to a monitor which showed that Saersha had a heart rate of 140. Soon after arriving, and in front of a nurse and the OBGyn resident who were working with us, I had a huge gush of blood when I sat up. It was so massive I remember hearing the spat as blood fell to the floor. 

I don't know why but the Dr didn't recognize that this was a placental abruption. Her supervisor didn't come to see me himself and he thought perhaps it was cervical bleeding. They gave me the option of being induced with a monitor in the baby's scalp or of having a c-section. At BC Women's there is a pretty big campaign to have fewer c-sections and I think this is part of the reason that they didn't just get on with it but gave me this choice. I was so out of it from losing blood and from the stress and I had been so biased against c-sections in my birth class that it was a hard decision for us to make. Ultimately I realized that there was no way I was going to be able to relax enough to push this baby out and I signed the paperwork for the surgery.

We had to wait for a bit as the Dr who would perform the surgery wasn't available right away. It was about 12:30 when we went into the OR. My husband was getting into scrubs and waiting outside while they set me up with the anaesthetic. All this while Saersha was still holding on with a steady, although not dynamic heart rate. I still thought this would work out. We were in the right place, we were almost done, she was almost here.

It was as soon as they put in the spinal that they lost her heart rate. The surgeon was not yet in the room. I found out later that he was out side washing his hands with my husband and saying to him that he would have his daughter in his arms in about 10 mins.

The speed of everything changed then, they got the Dr in the room and the surgery began before they were even certain that the anaesthetic had kicked in. The anaesthesiologist said "Let me know if you feel anything and we'll put you under". Thankfully I did not feel anything.

It was probably only about 10 mins before she was out. I am not sure if it was because it was an emergency or whether c-sections are always like this but the force they had to use to get her out was surprising and uncomfortable. I was overwhelmed and weak and I tried to close my eyes and deal with what was going on. My poor husband thought I was losing consciousness and he was very worried. He had his head down next to mine and extreme fear ran through both of us. 

They told me that she was out but there was no cry to give us any reassurance. Her Apgars were 0. The paediatric team worked to resuscitate Saersha for 20 mins and we could hear someone say something about "calling it" when finally she was revived. She was a strong one.

After a few moments when they probably wiped some of the blood off of her, they wheeled her over to me and I saw her limp body. She was bigger than I pictured her and she had so much hair. My first impression was that she looked both like my mother and like my husband. Saersha was a pretty big baby at 8 lbs 7 oz and while she wasn't measured she was probably about 22 inches. They only took a few seconds with us before bringing her to the NICU and my husband went with her. 

The recovery room was like hell. I was shuddering from the anesthetic and very weak from all of the blood I had lost and the other women in the room had their babies with them, making little squawking newborn sounds while I was not sure if my baby was even alive. It was the first time I cried for you Saersha.

Over the next day they ran tests to see how severe the inevitable brain damage was. She was having seizures constantly despite being on several medications. She had almost no reflexes at all. She was breathing with support but really that was it. For a period of time that was enough for me. I was so desperate for her to live I didn't care about the details. Saersha was somehow alive against the odds. My husband has worked with severely disabled children though and he, along with a caring but matter of fact Dr, painted the picture for me of what her life and our lives would be like. 

It was excruciating but given her prognosis we decided to take her off the machines and spend her final hours together just the three of us. We had about 6 hours together where we lay with her and tried to make her as comfortable as possible as she slowly stopped breathing. I so wanted her to feel the love I have for her in the brief time we had.


Today I was looking at the mementos we have, casts of her hands and feet, a lock of her beautiful hair. I am grateful to have them but they are not enough. It still hurts so much to see these plaster feet which look like miniatures of my own and to feel the huge chasm between what is and what should have been. How can these things, a few photos and a tiny bag of ashes be all that is left of her? In a sense I guess I have accepted this loss and in a sense I can not even wrap my head around it even a year later.