You Slipped Away Before I Ever Got To Hold You
There’s a little something that pulls at my heart this time of year.
I don’t talk about this stuff very much any more. I talked and talked and talked about it a lot for awhile. I even mentioned it a few straggling times once I’d mostly grown quiet about it. A lot of friends and strangers questioned my resistance to healing. I don’t know if this is just something about me, an excessive emotionality that disallows me from ever really letting go of the deepest pains.
Maybe everyone is like this. Maybe you are. Maybe you aren’t.
It still hurts me at this time of year when I think about the babies who are not here, the one who was due on Christmas Eve, the one who quietly died in my womb in December and then had to be removed. Two of my kids won’t get presents from Santa this month, nothing to do with being naughty. They just didn’t make it. They never had a chance to be naughty. They slipped away before I ever had a chance to hold either of them.
I’ve always loved Christmas. I still do. But this little something pulls at my heart now too. It’s a melancholy kind of joy I feel nowadays during the holidays.
I choose to feel the happiness of the season, because most of the time, I do have a choice.
But when the tears come, I let them take over for awhile. That’s a choice, too. A mostly healthy one, I think, regardless of what anyone else might believe. When they dry up again, I hold onto all the joy I can find, and while I let the pain visit, the joy is where I remind myself to dwell.
May you all find the greatest joys and dwell in them for the rest of this year and into the New Year. xo
The first three days. #reverb10
- At December 3, 2010
- By Lotus, aka Sarcastic Mom
- In Depression, Life, Self, Writing
4
This time of year has me in a weird place – I’m both surging with joy and childish wonder at the beauty and spirit of the season… and scraping the barrel of my emotions, coming up with fingers mired in the black tar that lies at the bottom of my heart.
When I eyeballed #reverb10 yesterday, “an annual event and online initiative to reflect on your year and manifest what’s next,” I was intrigued. I was a little iffy about signing a commitment, because, let’s face it. The very nature of depression is that it’s hard to give a flying fuck lots of days. But then I decided it’s not a legal contract, and if I want to flake out like I do on everything else I’ve ever taken on, I totally can! Yay! (?)
But seriously, and more importantly, I see these writing (thinking/exploring/creating/discovering) prompts as a chance to find inspiration and motivation to keep me going through this season, even when the anchor tethered to my heart seems the heaviest, and the chain link line the shortest.
Day One:
December 1 – One Word. Encapsulate the year 2010 in one word. Explain why you’re choosing that word. Now, imagine it’s one year from today, what would you like the word to be that captures 2011 for you? (Prompt Author: Gwen Bell)
Belong.
As in, where I do. This has been a hell of a year for me, for my family. In both joyous and heartbreaking ways, and both literally and figuratively, I’ve come from far away back to where I belong.
I feel at home again… in my body, in my home, in the world, and in the arms of my husband (who, by the way, loves me with a depth and in a way I sometimes can’t believe possible, but for which I am grateful).
I’m not sure how I’ve really been lucky enough to make it here, but I’m so glad to not be wandering in the ether as often anymore.
I’ve refound where I truly belong this year, in so many ways.
My word for next year is…
Challenge.
I’ve been far too complacent about a lot of things for some time. (I know, how much more specific can I get, right?) I’ve also allowed myself to fail at things (which is sometimes okay, but that’s another story) and I’m not okay with that right now. I’ve felt left out, unconsidered, not good enough, and neglected in certain arenas. I hate feeling that way. I hate that I feel that way about myself, ever. I’m going to challenge myself in the coming year – to overcome those feelings, to focus on positives, and to accomplish successes that will help make those first two things easier.
I need to rise above the stopping point on my comfort level and push myself to new heights, both personally and professionally. (And share it with all of you, whether you like it or not.)
Day Two:
December 2 – Writing. What do you do each day that doesn’t contribute to your writing — and can you eliminate it? (Prompt Author: Leo Babauta)
I do quite a lot of things that probably don’t contribute to my writing. I don’t see that as a problem, though, so the idea of eliminating those things is somewhat puzzling and I find it unnecessary.
Writing is a deep part of me. I do it often, share it sometimes. I write about… well, everything. When I think about this, in fact, I’d have to say that, because of that very truth, everything I do and think while I’m not actually writing *does* eventually contribute to my writing. (Which is making this feel like a moot point, but I’m going to continue with the beating of the dead horse, for s&g.)
I write about my experiences, things I think, how I feel, etc. As such, all things I do affect my writing in some way. Writing and living the rest of your life = mutually exclusive? Nah. Is life full of distractions? Sure. But I’m going to lean towards saying that time management, rather than elimination of life stuff, is the key to writing and still doing.
I’m never going to regret that I didn’t spend that hour writing, for deadline or for pleasure, rather than building an epic train track with my son or sharing some wine and my heart with my husband.
What I would regret is if I let everything in my life get in the way of ever writing. So “balance,” once again, is the word of the day.
When I’m not wrapped up in my son, my husband, photography, cooking, gardening, Twitter/Facebook, fart jokes, Dexter, wine, or menial chores/errands/tasks that make me want to stab a pencil in my eye (clearly a favorite)… I’m writing.
Where the most time is devoted ebbs and flows, and I’m totally okay with that.
Day Three:
December 3 – Moment. Pick one moment during which you felt most alive this year. Describe it in vivid detail (texture, smells, voices, noises, colors). (Prompt Author: Ali Edwards)
This makes smoke float out of my ears as my brain fries to a crisp. It takes me eons to choose from the menu at a restaurant, deciding what to wear has the potential to cook up Angst Soup with a side of ARGH Salad, and any Bio or Profile where I’m required to list 3ish favorite books/movies/songs throws me into a mindlock of epic proportions.
I might be a little indecisive.
This task was difficult for me. Really difficult. REEE-HEEEAAALY.
And I’m going to bend the rules, here, and tell you that this is ONE OF THE moments when I felt most alive this past year. Seriously, I FEEEEEL way too much, far too often. There is no way ONE moment can be the MOST of anything in a whole year.
In any case, right up there hovering damn near the top moments when I felt most alive? When John, Braden, and I walked through this house for the first time, in the middle of the night, after having traveled nearly 1000 miles to get here.
Something pleasantly electric ran through me.
During those first moments in this house, my heart was so full it seemed it might push its way up through my throat and out my mouth, finally floating away. I took a photograph of myself, reflected in the back patio door… I think you can tell how I felt?
It was a dark, quiet night outside, and inside there was an air of neglect and loneliness, like the house had been alone for too long, waiting for someone to love. Our voices rang out as we passed through together, seeking the room we’d put our air mattress in for the night.
I felt alive because this (this town, this neighborhood, this house) is where I belong, where we belong, and I knew it, felt it. Maybe the house did, too. When I woke up the next morning, it didn’t feel alone any more.
And hopefully, it never will again.
Pain and joy mingle.
We purchased this year’s tree on a Sunday while John was home for a day. That night, I put the lights on it. The smell of a real Christmas tree is something I love so much that I don’t exactly know how to put it into words. The olfactory sense can trigger some of the strongest sense memories we have, and I think this smell is linked into the magic and joy that laces my memories of Christmas as a child. We never had a fake tree, so when I smelled this smell – a real pine, cedar, or fir – it meant Christmas was coming. And that meant magic, love, and light. It meant my soul would lift and float for awhile.
This year, before we bought our tree, I went in search of something I’ve had in a cabinet all year long. It is a glass spice bottle with a black plastic lid. The glass is very heavy, and the plastic is thick and sturdy. It appeals to me in some way, and so I saved it to use for something when the spice ran out. I had no idea when I put it aside that later I’d be gathering fallen needles to place inside.
Last year, I lost a baby (Davin) right at three months into the pregnancy. It was my second miscarriage of the year and, for many reasons, it throttled me in different and harder ways than had the first one (in April).
I found out on December 9th during a prenatal appointment that he had died. A D&C to remove Davin from my womb was scheduled for December 16th.
I had carried him for a week, knowing he was no longer alive. It was both maddening and oddly comforting. On the one hand, I felt insane knowing he was inside of me and he was not alive; my body was incapable of doing anything to help him. On the other hand, I got to be with him and say goodbye, come to terms with him being removed.
On December 15th, the day before the surgery, I asked John to go get a tree. I didn’t tell him, but I wanted that tree in the house with all 4 of us. That’s how it was supposed to be, and in my fractured state of being, I was going to have it that way, regardless.
When last year’s tree came into our home with all of its wonderful smelling glory my child was still inside of me. The next day, he was all the way gone. I was sedated for some time after that. When the pills ran out there was still wine and liquor. I got tipsy regularly; I ate crappy food. No matter what I ingested, I was empty.
I was empty in more ways than the one that made my uterus ache as it healed.
That tree sat in the living room with me. I watched those lights flash and dance through my bleary eyes. I sat here, numb, with that happy smell. Each day rolled by and I tried whenever I could to enjoy them, even if it was an altered, forced experience.
I cried a lot. I was angry and sad. A lot of days I was just nothing.
The tree was there.
At some time way past Christmas there came a point when I had to admit that the tree was dried out and needed to be taken away. I cried about that, too.
When that tree came into my house, I still had my baby inside of me. Now the tree was about to leave, and I had to keep a part of it, because somehow, it was the last thing I could hold onto about Davin. Is that crazy?
I got down on my hands and knees with that damn spice bottle and I gathered up fallen needles until it was full. Then I put it in one of my kitchen cabinets.
Only a couple of times during the year, when my heart ached the very most for Davin, I went and opened that bottle. I held it, smooth, cool and heavy, in my hand. In my fingers, it felt strong when I felt weak. I stared at the needles. I opened the bottle and smelled.
Pain and joy mingle together in that smell for me now.
Not long before we got our tree this year, I went for that bottle for the first time in quite a while. When I smelled it, I wept for my lost son. The smell was still very strong and crisp. It wrapped me up; it sang to me of both sorrow and delight. Afterwards, I felt a sort of peace.
I put the bottle out as the very first Christmas decoration in our home this year.
I will think of them both every Christmas: the baby who we thought would be born in December 08 as well as the baby who died in December 08. I don’t think I’ll ever smell that happy smell or watch those dancing lights again without a twinge of sorrow. But I believe I will always still smile at them, as well.
Pain and joy mingle together, and that is not such a bad thing to experience, or acknowledge.
It is far better than pain sitting in the heart by itself.
The stuff that gets in the way.
So, I have a confession: I have been having a hard time keeping my shit together lately. See also: Hashimoto’s Thyroiditis (fatigue, joint pain, muscle weakness, hair loss, and more!), See also: Miscarriage Anniversary Looming, See also: Financial Distress, See also: Marital Issues, See also: I’m a headcase.
And it is true that I have had something like Writer’s Block for some time. I have long spaces of time when I believe I have nothing to say that you will be interested in reading. I sit down and think, “Surely I can come up with something!” And I open a text file and I stare at it, thinking. Nothing comes. Nothing is worth coming.
Then, other nights, I write things, posts, in text files and then I do not publish them. Because they suck. You would think they are stupid. (So I tell myself.) This would be more like Sharer’s Block? Blogging Anxiety? I Suckaphobia?
And then there are all the things that won’t come when I sit down to write them to you because there are other things that block them – things I can’t talk to you about. What I mean by that is I have issues I WANT to share with you, but it feels weird to talk about this thing when I know I haven’t told you about thoooose things.
Do I write about those things? Hell yes I do. Is the writing good? I think so. Will I share it with you?
I can’t.
Some things you just can’t post to the world because they aren’t only yours to post, does that make sense?
But the more of those things that I have, the harder it gets for me to come here and talk to you about everything else, like my friends. That’s kind of how I’ve always felt when writing these posts. I know it’s somewhat silly to think that way, and I’m not trying to be mushy and sentimental to win you over. It’s just the tone I always feel inside when I write to YOU.
This is not an academic essay I’m writing – though I can write those, I’ve completed tons of them in my time, and none too shabby, I’ll have you know. It’s not a performance piece, where I just need to elicit emotion with whatever works. It’s not fiction, where I can spin any tale just to delight. It isn’t a review, where all I really have to do is lay out the way it works and what I think of it.
It’s an ongoing conversation I’m having with you about my life.
When there are bumps that invariably happen from my life intersecting with the lives of others, sometimes I can’t talk about those bumps. Because it’s not my place to have the conversation that they might or might not want to have with you about THEIR lives.
So then, I guess I just have to say, Friends, there is(are) something(s) that is(are) affecting me in some way(s) that we can’t talk about. And now I have to find a path around that(them) so I can keep talking to you about my other life stuff.
And that’s hard for me to do. I’m emotional and the things I experience have a way of leaking and spilling out onto the rest of my life. I should learn to compartmentalize more. I don’t know.
And maybe this whole thing seems STUPID to you, because “DUH, LOTUS. We ALL have things we keep to ourselves. We ALL have stories we don’t tell everyone. Hell, most people don’t feel the need to tell everyone half the shit you think the world needs to know. I mean, really, you tell us practically every time you have your period. GET A FILTER.” And OKAY, FINE. But the thing is, I’m still developing as a writer and a blogger. This place defined itself to me from the start as My Blog: Where I Tell You What Runs Through My Head. My idea of “what this is” has changed. I can’t tell you what runs through my head when I’d have to tell you that Mr. C did horrible thing Y and I want to strangle his face until it turns blue and falls off. Because you know, Mr. C has privacy rights. I can’t tell you that I have a constant issue with Problem ABC and I think it’s because Mrs. W did batshit crazy thing X and it impacted me in a really profound way.
I can tell you about how I feel, but I can’t always tell you why. And that’s kind of douchey. But Mr. C and Mrs. W own their own stuff, and I can’t tell it for them.
My family and friends have privacy rights. Those assholes.
So let’s just say, that among other things, it’s taking me time, in fits and spurts to keep telling you my stories without telling you their stories.
Maybe one day there will be a time to talk about those things. Perhaps there never will. I’m trying to find a way to be okay with that and hoping I can just move past it.
I’m learning that it IS okay not to tell you everything (zomg) but I have to say it out loud for some reason. I think, if I say this out loud right now, it’s going to help me move this block.
For now, maybe just saying to you that I’ll tell you most of everything, but not some stuff, will help me climb over this boulder, that mountain, and occasionally kick those rocks out of my way, so we can keep walking this path together.
I mean, it would be such a shame to miss the colors this season with you. The foliage is so beautiful just up ahead.
Puppies: They’re just better.
I wrote a very, very short and moody, desperate and pathetic post a few weeks ago about getting hit upside the heart again by the desire for my lost babies.
It really never goes away. It just hides a little sometimes, lurking; waiting for the right time to shit on your world. Or mine. Guess I can’t really speak for others.
Or yours, maybe, is true, since I’m publishing this crap.
I thought about sharing that post with you now that the bewbs of BEWB Fest 09 have been filed away… because really? Sharing it with you right at the same time as going, “OMG LOOK! IT’S BEWBS!” just didn’t feel right. And everything about bewbs generally feels good, so why ruin that? I mean. Really.
So I thought about sharing it with you now, in all of its deep and philosophical questioning glory (read: whiny and pathetic yearning-filled, demanding inquisitiveness). I thought about making you read trite crap like, “I’m stuck whining the same things, being the same pathetic empty, yearning bag over and over again.”
And
“When will it get so old that my heart just implodes from feeling the same tortured longing one.more.time?”
And the rest of it, too. But no, I saved it as a text file entitled, “baby nonsense.”
I did make you read part of it, now, didn’t I? Manipulative, emotional arse, I am. But you’ll not have to read that in its entirety.
Instead, please enjoy looking at this cute puppy.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/conwayl/ / CC BY-ND 2.0
I like puppies.
They are way, way better than fetuses that are ripped out of your uterus.
Of course, then they grow up and pee on your baseboards and shit on the kitchen floor.
I have such a positive outlook.
I could use a few glitter coated unicorns flying out of my ass on rainbows during times like this.
When that moment of toddler stubborn brat behavior is AWESOME.
Definitely should have gone through his bookshelf and reclaimed this one already.
I won’t lie and say I haven’t seen it and thought about that already. I have. I’ve noticed it over and over again. Why did I leave it there? Honestly, I have no idea. Maybe I WANTED him to ask me about it. Maybe it’s just like the bottle of Prometrium. Or maybe it’s simply another one of those things I haven’t had the energy for lately. I wouldn’t doubt it – that list seems to grow exponentially.
When Braden brought this book, “I’m a Big Brother!” to me to read yesterday, it was one of those Big Sigh Moments. What was I going to do? It’s not like I could tell him, “Oh, no, Braden. Mommy can’t read this to you because you AREN’T a big brother! Mommy’s attempts at elevating you to that status were what The Internet likes to call a FAIL. In other words, Braden, U can haz babee bruthr? #NO.”
So, I just did the Internal Tamping of Emotions and took the book, opened it, and prepared to read it to him. With perhaps a few edits, or maybe even an entirely fake story. “This totally looks like a baby, but it’s really a rocket ship headed for outer space! Weee!”
He had one of those ultra I CAN DO IT MYSELF moments suddenly, however, and he snatched the book back because he had decided he didn’t want me to read it after all. He wanted to read it to himself. He employed toddler gibberish style reading… something along the lines of, “Sebbah litte bear and a shhh shhh bee bee alla beb and too and no no no hahahahaha, then daddee so hehe see? Hahahaha!”
Much better than anything I was going to make up. And definitely a moment when I was so glad that he inherited my his dad’s control issues.
A new day, a new gig, a happier me.
Things are looking up; my mood is lightening a little more each day, and the sunshine and warmth that’s been poking around these parts lately has had more than a little to do with that. For a stretch of days last week and the beginning of this week, it has been sunny and in the 70s, and that is RIGHT up my alley. I’ve had the opportunity to prepare garden beds and plant flowers. The physical work, time outside, and thoughts of beautiful gladioli, dahlias, cosmos, and yarrow bursting open some time in the future all swirl together to make my step a bit more sprightly.
When I haven’t been playing in the dirt, John and I have taken Braden here and there to various parks and playgrounds around our area. I have really missed doing that, and so has Braden. It’s not that you can’t do that kind of stuff when it’s cold – that’s what jackets and hats are for, after all – but my kiddo happens to have a serious HATE relationship with his face getting cold.
And I wasn’t too keen on seeing how he’d feel about a ski mask, so yeah.

But for days recently, we’ve been riding down slides and pumping our legs on the swings, and I’ll be damned if that doesn’t make me a gagillion times more giddy than a glass of red wine.
I do not forsake thee, red wine. I just place you aside for a short time. We shall join again, I promise thee.
Monday night, I was able to hang out with some lovely blogging ladies at the UBP IRL in Nashville, snarf some red wine and cheese, and have my husband and kiddo not far away from me. That was pretty freakin’ nice, too.
And I’ve just started a new writing gig, to which I was referred by the always lovely Sarah (Imaginary Binky).
It’s helping me find my “big girl” journalistic voice, which is kind of cool, in a challenging and frustrating way (can you say, “Lotus has to learn how to get a point across without droning on and on and on for eons?). Yeah, you could say I’m not the Queen of Brevity. And then you could say it again, scream it, and finish by stamping it on my forehead.
So I’ve been setting things up and writing my very first articles as Nashville Parenting Examiner. I’ll be writing a lot of locally flavored items, as well as many general parenting pieces. I’m planning on writing about events and activities that will be of interest to people in this area, and also publish a regular spattering of opinion pieces that anyone can get their head into. In addition, I’ll be hosting giveaways there, and giving general information that is helpful for all parents.
On top of all that, I’m planning on spotlighting Parent Bloggers I know and love (could this be you?) that I’ve built relationships with during my time on this website. Groovy, right? I think so.
I’ll be counting on page views and subscriptions to keep me afloat, so anyone subscribing, visiting, and commenting? Will make my day.
The RSS feed is http://www.examiner.com/RSS-6205-Nashville-Parenting-Examiner
The related Twitter account is nashvilleparent
So, warmth, sun, fun, productivity, accomplishments… laughter, mirth, time with family… I’m seeing good things. It’s feeling pretty good.
Why, I’ve been so inspired by happiness lately that I even shaved my legs for the first time in over a month, trimmed the ole’ 70s bush and frolicked in the sheets with my husband. And while you may think, “UH 1) TMI and 2) So?” it’s a big deal here, considering that the last time that happened we conceived a baby. Yeah. Read the archives a little and do the math. You’ll see that it’s been an awfully evil long time.
Psychologically crippling fears resist logic and desire and can put you in places you don’t want to be for even a second. And then they keep you there for indefinite amounts of time. You even start feeling that the pain that’s being caused you and your most beloved is all your fault; you should just wake up, break out, get better, damnit.
It just can’t be forced. Something’s gotta give, one way or another.
It’s giving. Finally, it is caving in and crumbling away. Bit by bit.
And as it falls off of my shoulders, I’m feeling that shine again, the one that comes from inside. Not the same shine as before, from the same girl as before, but that’s okay.
Every day of this adult life, I’m learning. I’m always in process; this is a journey. The waiting for the completion of who I am and where I’m going is pointless. I am ever changing. It is time I accept that and who I am right now, ready to welcome the next change, whatever the moments that pass may hold.
Just be, right?
I’m workin’ on it.
Space: In terms of family, it’s just a myth.

Today’s Photohunt Theme is “Space”
No matter how much space you have between you and the family members you grew up with, they can reach out and slap you as easily as if they were just whispering in your ear a moment ago.

It’s not just the fact that we are so connected nowadays, though that is what enables it. But the slap is sharp and quick because they hold a part of you.

No matter how far away from you they are, no matter how long it has been since you have spoken or seen one another, they have the ammunition to bring you to your knees.

They know things that no one else knows. They are always the quickest to offense and the most equipped to pull you down… and why is it that they always seem to opt to exercise that power when you’re finally lifting your head above your own sordid bullshit?
Many of us have stories that fall into this zone, this space of feeling and emotion.
Sometimes, I just want to stop hearing the ones that play over and over in my head. And I’d like to stop adding new ones to the list.

And if you could successfully edit the reel of memories that plays back inside of you from the past… would you even want to?
Can we appreciate the good times if we don’t have the bad times?
This double edged sword of emotions is piercing my heart today.














