Thursday 31 December 2015

NYE



This is the day I have dreaded all year, the new year countdown.  This time last year we were arranging for our two older children and close family to come to the hospital and meet Freddie before his breathing equipment was removed.  At noon everyone said their goodbyes and left Simon and I to hold our youngest close while he slipped away... only he didn't... not straight away like we thought. My CT scan was postponed (I remember point blank refusing to move - as if you'd forfeit any second with your child!), we sang songs and took videos and I think we probably convinced ourselves that he might even stay - despite his lack of vitals.  So at 11:50pm when Simon left the room to call his brother, it was a huge shock when he decided it was time to go.  Simon arrived back just as Freddie took his last breath, just before midnight and I remember the registrar coming in to confirm his death as fireworks went off and people in the corridors sang Auld Lang Syne.  A part of me remains convinced he meant it this way, a lesson or gift, making the old year firmly his own... I don't know.

His birthday passed by peacefully, brilliantly and positively a few days ago - it felt wonderful to have a day all about him and I've since wondered why it was so much easier than I expected. Some of it is possibly because I have no memory connected with his birth, I wasn't conscious. I didn't get to see or hold him for well over a day so perhaps this disconnection has made his actual day almost blissfully ignorant for me; if that makes sense.  I remember the events leading up to arriving in hospital but there is no sharp focus memory of his arrival.  Unlike today.  This day last year I remember it all, so I've been thinking all year that I wouldn't survive the celebrations going on around me this evening, that I would have to go to bed with ear plugs (for ever more). 

However, I'm lying here thinking about death and renewal, and whether that's the crux of the new year, not leaving anything behind as such, but a bow and a curtsey to the old year and a look towards the new with a view to new opportunities and growth.  This thought has made me smile because I feel it's another lesson from Freddie.  I don't need to have a wine in hand and a big old knees up, or see the new year in with a drunken kiss, because this New Year is about contemplation and new beginnings.  2016 will bring me a little sister for Freddie - whatever happens she exists, her heart beats and I feel her tiny feet in my tummy. It is so difficult to outwardly acknowledge her for fear of tempting in the title of "that poor woman who lost two children".  I guess it won't be OK until it's " OK".   But still, she exists within me, she is not Freddie, she is she, my gift from Freddie. I am enrolling in pottery classes and I hope that I can find a way to start learning reflexology and ultimately work for myself. Freddie has brought me so much already - a deeper understanding of myself and a need to rediscover my creativity. 

I suppose what I'm trying and failing to say, is that when the clock strikes midnight tonight, I want to acknowledge that and not hide away.  I want to say thank you to my boy for bringing so much love and wisdom to my life, and I want to thank him for the opportunity of another year to live life for the two of us.  This may be blind optimism of course, it's so difficult but I'm trying.  In some ways the New Year is an hourglass reset, it is the green light to put away the things you don't want to carry with you any more. Guilt, anger, isolation.   It is permission to discover new paths.  All of these are more than possible whilst still carrying those you love.











Wednesday 23 December 2015

Freddie's 1st Birthday poem

This year we have gazed so many times upon your face
Studied your slumbering philtrum
In which you carry your Daddy's genes
Your peachy skin and clenched up fists
We've studied you so very well that
You are imprinted behind our sad eyes.
I've carried you within me for a double gestation
And kept you alive within my soul
On my ascent each night I walk past you
And every time ache for the yesterday and tomorrow missing within us.
I swam furiously until I realised
I wasn't going to drown
And you took me to another place where you gently made me submit to your absence
I finally found some peace in our deepest grief and gave up struggling to mend..
For whatever I do my heart always wakes up full for you, despite the journey of before.
And when I light a candle for your big day
I will hold you close
And tell you that you have taught me my true self
Imperfect, sad,  happy, self centred but full of endless love, newfound patience and acceptance.
My heart is fractured for the loss of all the times I haven't got to teach you things too.
The pots and pans and wooden spoon you never got to bang,
The mushy rusk you didn't throw on the floor
And the first tooth I didn't go sleep starved over.
Your firsts have been my firsts
We have to create our own unique future.
#FJB

Tuesday 8 December 2015

Tis The Season To Be Jolly Grieving

So here we are.... December.  The question that keeps entering my mind is "how is it possible to survive a year without my child?".  It obviously is possible because we've nearly done it - another three weeks and Freddie hasn't been with us for a whole year.  A first birthday without presents or a party, without kisses and cuddles and wows at his latest achievements.  A visit to his grave and a look at his beautiful face in our few photos.  The little face which never grew big enough to smile and laugh.

I can't even sum up this year, in part because it isn't over - because I have his first Christmas without him coming up.  And because I know that hearing a joyeous rendition of Auld Lang Syne will be like my life ended all over again.  How on earth I will live the rest of my life having to endure the memory of life leaving his body as people began to sing that.. well I don't know.. we survive.   The one thing I have come to accept this year is that I AM brave.  I have picked myself up and endevoured to give Sam and Tilda the best I've got.  For Freddie.  For them.  For Simon.   Sometimes I wonder how I do it,  I wonder if I'm fake, or dysfunctional because I don't wail into a pillow every day.  I wonder how I manage to keep going when people ask me how the baby is or when people who I expected more from miss Freddie out of the equation.  I wonder how I stay sane when people look at my bump and ask me lots of questions that no longer seem safe, relevent or polite.  They are presumptious, naive but at worst well meaning.   When are you due?  How many children do you have? (me: "four" them: "wow you're brave, bet that's a handful") or when people know what happened to Freddie and tell me that things will be fine this time - amazing how psychic people become when they don't know what else to say...

But back to Christmas and New Year;  I am driven by the need for my children to know their brother and remember him, but to also never feel that his death has disadvantaged them.  I don't want them to be burdeoned by an eternally grieving mother; to be sat in therapy in ten years time saying how their mother was essentially emotionally void and vacant post their baby brother's death.   I want them to be able to speak without fear or shame but with conviction that life goes on and they have been happy and nutured and loved despite this tragedy.  So this Christmas and New Year, as much as I want to run and hide is going to be met face on.  The tree is up and Freddie's bauble and angel sit on it.  I grieve terribly for the boy who didn't get my promise of a lifetime together and didn't get to be so completely loved and doted on.   I will cry often and sometimes Tilda and Sam may ask what's wrong.... but really they know... and that's ok.  It's ok to miss him, all together.  It's ok to acknowledge the insanity of him not being with us for a whole year, it's ok for us to collectively mourn the empty space as we open our presents on Christmas morning.  But it is doubly ok for us to carry on loving and laughing during this time, in fact more so.  Freddie existed because of our bond, he was wanted by us all, and our strength together during this difficult season will keep his memory safe and warm.

Friday 21 August 2015

Longer than with you

Freddie, you were born thirty-four weeks ago.  In two weeks time we shall be on the cusp.  We will have been apart longer than we were together and infact already we are apart longer than I knew we were together - complex and difficult as that is.    I feel mixed up about this.  There are moments when I'm glad the passage of time has happened - I'm grateful for the element of new normality that has rebalanced my family, but then caught up in the torture of what should have been.  This morning I cried for a while thinking of the children you'll never have,  I mourned that for you - your entitlement to the richness of life.

The thirty-six weeks of pregnancy with you were fraught.  I convinced myself something terrible would happen and spent a rather embarrassing amount of time going to and from the doctors and fretting about mortality.  These days I have a rather philosophical outlook on our time - I'm a worrier - what happened was an awful coincidence.   I didn't cause nor predict your untimely death, I merely worried because I love you.  And now at the dawn of a new journey I have to recognise this trait within myself and surrender as such to fate.  I can be the best that I can be, I can protect your brother and sister to the best of my abilities and whatever else happens I accept that life is frequently unkind and unfair.  Freddie please don't take this to mean that you have taught me to give myself up to the Gods and accept cruel fate; in fact you have taught me to savour both good and bad.   Surrendering to sadness is as important as immersing myself in laughter from the belly.  Emotions these days are clear,  better understood and much easier to allow - I am in far less conflict.

And so worry not little one, our physical time together was shorter but your legacy is my lifetime and I teach your brother and sister your lessons.  I will never forget the desperation I felt to be with you, knowing what little time we would have.  When we united you gave me as much as you possibly could and I bow to you always for giving me the greatest gift of your company for those twelve hours.   I miss you endlessly.  You are my courageous little lion forever.

Friday 10 July 2015

These are the things that I know

That without love, there is no grief.  Grief is acute and painful love which has no physical channel.   I always find myself overcome at watching human emotion - love and family predominantly.  If you ever want to see the essence of what it is to be human, go and sit at an airport and watch people be reunited.  I think that may have been the end credits of the film "Love Actually" but it's true - I've done it. Several years ago I went to collect some friends from Gatwick airport and I sat quietly for a few hours watching people.  I was moved to tears by some of the reunions.  That is what it is to be human.  To belong, to love, to feel, to need and to appreciate.  Absence makes the heart grow fonder, perhaps with the exception of warring ex partners.  Grief is the emotion of extreme physical absence of one that is loved.   With Freddie I was in love; without him I am painfully and wildly in love.

What have I learnt about myself since January?   That my love is powerful... That life is fleeting.... That life isn't about happy ever afters, wads of cash or a pimp car (I can't deny I would turn any of these down...) because when one or all of those disappear - life still exists and you have to find new meaning.  I've never believed in happy ever afters as such - I'm far too much of a pessimist for that, but I did think my darkest days were behind me, I've learnt that we walk into darkness - the unknown, so try and live for the light in the here and now.  Make plans, have dreams, be excited but take stock every day of what is good right now.  I go back to something my wonderful friend taught me about listing even the smallest pleasures day by day.
Above all else love.  Just love. Love your friends, your family, love as much as you can because it's all we can do in the end.

Thursday 9 July 2015

Diluted

My blog has been getting increasingly dark as this week has progressed.  It seemed to start out in the early days as determination to not be defined by this awful tragedy and has now become everything defined by tragedy.   Inevitable I suppose.   I can't blame myself for naivety and shock at the start.   Just like being a parent for the first time,  with all these hopes and dreams and ideas,  you gradually unpick it all to find out what the real you is as a parent.   In fact I'd say this is true of any child you bear.  I had so many ideas of what kind of parent I'd be to Matilda and as time has passed,  I'm not quite the parent I thought I'd be - not worse,  or better,  just different.   The same applies for being a grieving parent.   I'm not the grieving parent I thought I'd be.  I thought I'd be gutsy and by now would be involved in some kind of bereavement work bringing a positive outcome to Freddie's death.   I'm not doing that,  in fact I'd say the last few weeks may have been some of the worst.   It's OK.   It's really ok to not progress,  in fact progression scares me and there has been a stubborness to my grieving of late.   A refusal to take a positive step because walking ahead has felt like leaving him behind.   I allow myself to waiver,  I allow myself to fail.   I'm still learning to mother him and it's so much harder without him here.

The blackness has temporarily been lifted.   I brought home a kitten yesterday.   I wasn't sure this was the right thing to do AT ALL.  I've been resisting this all week,  I bought kitten things and then didn't go to a viewing.   I sent Simon a heartwrenching email about what a failure I am because I couldn't even make up my mind about a pet; but then I saw a bigger picture.   I saw two children who didn't ask for such horror and desperately want some happiness and distraction.  My rawness and sadness is acceptable to a point because I firmly believe emotion isn't something to hide behind closed doors, however of late it needs diluting.   I began to imagine my kids in the future talking of how, after their little brother died mother was never the same again.  How she shut herself away, how the house became sad and lifeless.  This is perhaps just me being "histrionic", whatever, I felt they deserved some life back.  Tilda has been asking for a pet for a while and the time for them seemed right.  Strangely I found the act of bringing a pet home more of a moral dilemma than whether to have another child.   Up until the kitty was placed in her carrier I was wanting to run and hide.  Perhaps somewhere in my psyche I felt I was trying to substitute and knew that it wasn't possible, but I also felt this guilt at separating her from her mama.  I'm either a psychologist's dream or worst nightmare at present.

 As it turns out it's quite fun having a little playful ball of fluff.   Therapeutic if you will.  I still sit here worrying that I'm sadly trying to quench the insatiable thirst of loss - and by next week I'll have lost interest because it hasn't fixed the hole in my heart.  Then I remember it's not all about me,  my children have a new lease of life and new excitement and smiles.  And they deserve it, because life is just as much theirs as it is mine and Freddie's.

Sunday 14 June 2015

Dirty grieving

The hardest times are the ones that others expect are the easiest.  I remember feeling taken aback at Freddie's funeral because I didn't really cry and I remember laughing at the Castle afterwards at something and getting looks as though I was crazy or disrespectful.  But it didn't feel real, and it wasn't.  There were people around me, I had total love and support from those I chose for it.  Freddie wasn't far away and everyone focused on him.  I almost felt proud that everyone thought so much of him.   The hardest times are when life has continued. The kitchen still needs cleaning, relationships still need nurturing but yet this living is a function.  The hardest times are when you realise not much else is happening between the duty and the sobbing down country lanes in the dark.

This week may have been the hardest, yet I thought that about the week before and the week before that.  When there's just pure grief for Freddie it is almost a relief because the pain is real.  The rest of the tangles and traumas make little sense.  "Dirty grieving" is how my psychologist calls it.  When one is unable to grieve properly because of other mental distress.  Bounteous mental distress.  Where to begin there.  If I had a penny for every time I have sobbed "is it not enough to lose my son"....  The trouble is life is not as we believed the earth once was.  It is not simple or empty, static nor flat.  Life is a screaming avalanche of beauty, loss, laughter, tears, success, failure and ultimately death.  We can try to counter much of the negative aspects but even whilst locked in a cupboard and packaged in bubblewrap we still age and think and die.  What I suppose I'm trying to say is that I can't grieve Freddie at all purely when life around me kicks up the dust.  Work, whether to have more children on my shortened biological clock, mistrust in my body felt not just by myself, worry for ones family and so I drivvle on in total self pity.

The goal here is to grieve healthily - it's achievable of course.  I've spent the best part of a day compiling a leather bound photo book online, only to discover I've ordered it with a screaming typo.  My mother is "Mr mother"... And so begins another email argument where I have to pull the "poor me" card.  Poor me I really did double check the pictures and spelling three times over, I really am trying.  But you see that grieving has made me tired, and clumsy. I thought I'd spent so long looking but the loss has distorted my sense of time.  Some days eight hours go by and I realise I've only had a tin of soup and have stared at my phone, aimlessly trying to find ways of remembering a dead child.  Biodegradable balloon releases and the like.  Other days I feel alive again and time skips alongside me.  I start to feel like achievements are possible only for them to be undone by careless errors or reminders of other people's lives which are glaringly more normal and even more obviously less painful.  However the person at the end of the email helpdesk probably doesn't give a shit.   So that's another good day.

My psychologist tells me I have an issue with creating tabloid headlines in my brain which cause anxiety.... Given that I've just created a crappy day before its even started I'd say he has a point.

Thursday 11 June 2015

Semantics

One of the very first things you learn when you lose a baby is that there are NO WORDS.   People say this to you,  you feel it back.   Sometimes there is nothing.   No explanation which can trip easily off the tongue,  no articulation of what your poor brain is struggling with and no adequate description of the pain and suffering which winds so far into your future that the present is too terrifying to exist in.

When you log into Facebook and see another birth announcement shortly after a conversation when it becomes clear life is going to take a step away from new parenthood,  when you try and involve yourself in a project related to your dead child only to be reminded of the joy of those living ones.   That other planet which people exist on where they spend a lifetime taking a child for granted.  And so they should.  Every small child should occupy the surroundings of a parent.   Every child should be made up of atomic love.

There are no words to explain my juncture.   Bed negates the need to even try.  So I stay here a lot at the moment,  waiting for an epiphany of some sort.   The event horizon.   The dawn of new words.


Friday 8 May 2015

Growing up

I read an article in a broadsheet about three weeks after Freddie died, by a lady who had lost her third baby.  She explained how she had grown up as a result of the death of her daughter and how, right up until the catastrophic event and even with two other small children, she had led a charmed, carefree existence with her husband.   At the time, her blunt observations on her own grieving and ultimate maturation, made bereavement sound like an unending terror at a time when I was desperately looking for hope.  She described how she would drop news of her stillbirth into conversations with unsuspecting randoms and how alienated it made her; how she walked along streets sobbing openly and how cold life became.   The article was saturated with blue; the meaning of her daughter's name, the description of a rapidly distant New York in winter, the sadness and bleakness of her tone. This all horrified me beyond belief.   I didn't want to lose myself, I didn't want life to become a echo of the three colours trilogy; drenched in pathos.  But this IS how things ultimately are; when one has stopped fighting and wrestling with such dark thoughts and accepted they are household furniture.  They belong to your child and your child belongs to you.

After Freddie died there has been a loss of innocence and a sense that we've finally become the grown ups, after trailing in the wake of them for so long.   We now feel aged like a battered leather chair;  weathered perhaps.    We have observed profound and undeserved death in our arms.    We have watched life leave our child and we can never laugh with the same sense of joie de vivre again.  From the point where Freddie died onwards we have become the last gateposts between beginnings and ends and we bear the weight of responsiblity for it.  Freddie has aged us, like all children should and left us better parents to his siblings.  But we inhibit a more sombre space now, knowing life at it's cruellest.   We trust nothing, we suffer no fools, we raise a cynical eyebrow whilst holding on to each other tightly.   We look back with envy at such casual hopes and dreams when all we wish for now is existence.

Heavy hearted

Baby boy we've been without you for a while now.  We function reluctantly,  your brother and sister keeping us going daily. You exist through them, through your brother's tender charm and kindness and your sister's exuberance and tenacity; the way she delights in saying your name and the insistence of drawing you whenever an opportunity rises.   I look at them and feel you nearby but it is like Narnia; you are through a wall of ice, a children's wardrobe,  through the parting of an ocean.  I know you are around but I can't reach you.   Some days it's too painful to look at my photographs, I can't acknowledge your passing because it renders me incapable.  I am trying to exist and then I remember what happened to us and I can't put a foot in front of the other.  The fear of never seeing you again.  It's like I left you at a shop in your pram and got home to the front door before remembering, it's like I've left the house and thought that I can't leave you on your own.  It's like I forgot to check that you are warm enough.  The nausea that comes with a feeling of panic - something might be wrong, but never having the dropped shoulders of relief.  Then the depths of despair that this is it, we've had our fill of your lifetime.  There is no more.

I manage most days to celebrate you through the sadness, to find a way to ensure thoughts of you are nourished and positive.  When I look at your now over studied photographs I manage to feel overwhelmed with pride at what a beautiful boy you are.  I manage to box away the jagged sorrow, the bitterness and turmoil that festers, I manage to lock it deep inside for most of our glorious moments.   Then I can enjoy you.  I'm like any parent who is busting to tell everyone how amazing you are.   But the days when I can't look at your face are the days that those darkest thoughts get let out on day release.  I've learnt to accept them, the unwelcome guests at my pity party.  I have to relinquish control, put on my hat with the big "V" and be a self proclaimed victim.    It isn't fair and it's ok to wail about it, but I won't let it consume me and I won't let it sully our relationship.  

I began to think about work today Freddie,  and it made me feel a little like the old me again, which initially felt good.  But the old me didn't have you.  I don't want to go back as if nothing has happened.  I don't want to be pitied by others, pitying myself is enough.  I don't want to walk back into work without giving everyone a lengthy and unasked for progress report on my baby boy.  I don't want to go back in without crying with acute separation anxiety and several calls to your nursery to check whether you're managing with a bottle.   I don't want to go into work without your dribble and mashed food down the back of my coat.  So it felt good to use my brain again until the darkness came and reminded me of how things should be. 

We miss you every second of our waking moments, and I dream of you in the gaps inbetween.   I'm learning to balance without the weight of you,  though my heart is heavier than us both.

Sunday 3 May 2015

Little Bird

Mother wait, I am not ready
- implored the little bird
Let me hear those songs I loved you singing From inside my little world,
These wings they are not yet steady,
It's not time to leave my nest,
I want to lie with you a moment longer
Because I love you best,
But when you are ready we'll make a vow
To meet again one day,
And I'll feel your kisses on my cheeks
As I prepare to fly away.
I know you'll want to come with me
To protect me as I soar,
But mother you know you have to stay,
Because life holds so much more.
And as you journey forth without me
Worry not - the little bird said
For I fly free with endless love from you
And in your heart I thus embed.

Saturday 18 April 2015

Let there be light

Everything is solar powered.  If I don't see the sun, life takes a turn for the worst.  I also become vitamin D deficient and a bit of an arse ache to live with.  But today has been sunny and productive.  After over two years of talking about what we might do to the garden, we actually sorted the vegetable patch out.   With a little help from the FIL.  Freddie is tied into this really as it's my hope that one of our new flower beds will become his - a wildflower meadow where I can find some time with him.  So that combined with an offer of help, sort of kick started things.  Two days in the sunshine creating new memories which include him.  It can't be a bad thing (now that the bad thing already happened).


Let there be light on my skin to guide my soul outwards, to share in others and take down the walls of grief.  Let the sun melt away my worry and gently place freckles of hope across my body like particles of him.
Let him shimmer across all living things.  Let him be part of the crab apple tree that grows from his grave.  May the birds and bees enjoy the blossom and apples.  Let them carry his atoms and spirit across the sky to become a part of everything around and below.




Friday 17 April 2015

The Madness of King George

We're now approaching anniversary territory... Nearly a year since my beautiful boy was conceived.   As far as anniversaries go I understand it's not the most profound but to me it marks the beginning of a journey in utero which was the only meaningful relationship I had with Freddie.  This combined with various other issues has made me a bit mentally unstable.   I seem to remember The Madness of King George being something to do with blue urine; so I'm not quite in the same league, though I do have a bladder infection and some very strange digestive issues which in my bat shit crazy world at the moment probably means something serious.  I mean now more than ever I've realised that terrible things can happen.  To me.  So why wouldn't these health issues be a precursor to something more sinister.  Sadly this thought has festered,  along with a crushingly awful wave of grief, my period and also a confirmation of school for September for Tilda. I've got to let my daughter go (in my mind this is far more profound that the actuality), and face the empty space left behind.  So I've been so anxious this week I can't sleep.   The level of anxiety is unprecedented - it has completely taken me by surprise.   I can feel it pulsing through my veins like some dodgy psychedelic drug and I feel peculiar.    Sometimes the panic is about Freddie, other times for Sam and Tils and the rest reserved for me and try as I might to be rational, it just ain't happening.

The oil drum soup that I have made during this journey is thick with realities, fears, sadness and desperate hope... But it's consistency is like jam, I can't stir it freely to make these thoughts more fluid and elastic - it is clogged, tangled and stuck.  In short nothing is making much sense apart from an over arching fear that I'm cartwheeling down a precipice with momentum propelling me further and faster - my life is out of control and sinister.  I have moments where I'm able to be rational and tell myself that it won't always be this way and it will pass, but rampant panic normally blocks out the less ludicrous thoughts.   In the weirdest moments I envisage my final resting place and wonder how near I can be to Freds, not that I'd know, but it's comfort of a sort.    I think of that night when I was rushed to theatre and I imagine my life before, and I wonder if on some level I knew I was hurtling towards this catastrophe.   But this is madness, the worrying, the missing, the ache.

It seems that blue urine and a title may be marginally more preferable.

Tuesday 14 April 2015

The End of Perfection

As I drove along in the car yesterday,  Lou Reed's "Perfect Day " played on the radio and it occurred to me that for the rest of my life no day can really constitute as a perfect day again.   No family outing can truly hit the blissful heights again with the absence of Freddie Bean.   The closest  thing I have got to perfection since he died was Mother's Day where we all sowed wildflower seeds on his grave.   In the context of loss,  this was a perfect thing to do,  but no day can ever be bathed in absolute brilliance.

It is not necessarily an unhealthy thing to lead a life of lowered expectation.  Suddenly one finds pleasure in moments that would have previously gone unnoticed,  one ekes out the goodness from trivial things.   I watch a robin build a nest in the garden intently,  in a way not done before.   I notice the season of spring enter with such a profound and bittersweet sense; the blossom sweeping in as the snowdrops fade away.    Where previously spring brought me unbridled excitement,  it now brings me a sense of melancholy.  I am further away from the little gasping breaths of my son,  but nearer to a formed relationship with him.   I'm still learning.   One day,  when grief has comfortably found refuge within me,  perhaps I won't feel betrayal at moments of almost complete wonderment. 

Sunday 12 April 2015

The comfort of feeling miserable

Grieving for a child involves unprecedented levels of guilt.  Primarily because being a parent means you protect your children..and infants don't die.  So that assumes you did something wrong and because of this you then spend an inordinate amount of time self flagellating over what that may have been.  When you have finished (if in fact you ever do) feeling guilty over the actual events leading up to and during the passing of your child you then move onto the next batch of tortuous thoughts and feelings.   I found those early  days agonising and I would liken them to waking up in a horror show again and again.  The moment just after your eyes have opened,  before you remember.   The moment you go to look for your infant either with hands on stomach or eyes to crib.   The guilt and sadness of those early days and weeks overpowered me,  I was wrestled to the ground by it daily and I spent most of my time wishing I could go back to him, wishing I could die, and most of all wishing the pain would stop.    I lived in fear of eternal pain, not knowing how to fit its enormity into my sad little frame forever.   Grief at first is a death sentence.  Grief must be negotiated,  learnt and branded.  I am personalising grief with my continuing relationship with Freddie.


Learning to cope with losing him and with how to grieve has now brought me to a startling revelation.   I have discovered the unthinkable.  I CAN COPE (mostly).   I can find ways to love my child, I will always be taught important lessons through the rest of my life by my child, and he is always with me. And repeat.  This doesn't mean I have tucked a chapter under my belt in cavalier fashion and am striding forth with purpose,  quite the opposite.    Our old friend guilt would never allow it even if it were something I chose to do.   Guilt likes to encroach whenever more positive or strong behaviours emerge.  Guilt likes to remind you that you shouldn't smile, or laugh or feel that life is once again worth living.   I find that a few hours of watching a film, or finding some giggles and love again with my husband, or getting lost in a furniture project are wonderful but shortlived, because guilt tells me I am dishonouring my son.   If I don't think of him, guilt tells me I am a terrible mother.    But we can park guilt to one side when we consider this;  we are multifaceted creatures.  Mothers, lovers, wives, sisters, aunties, best friends, counsellors.  If Freddie were here I would still seek out that time for myself, but the stakes are higher now because he isn't.   His absence means I have to try harder to keep him alive in my thoughts, because if I don't think about him then he isn't anywhere.

So with guilt at arms length,  I've recently realised that there is comfort in all that pain.  I've realised that when I cry, something different happens - I no longer fight it and I no longer have the awful fear that life is forever ruined.  I feel soothed by the sadness, for when I cry he is with me.   I see that life can't be ruined because Freddie has left behind a subtle legacy.   I quietly write, I think, I garden, I watch, I drive in the sunshine to see him and sometimes I laugh and smile.   All of these things I do are because Freddie was born, and the poignancy and sharp focus of every emotion and act is an honorable tribute to his being.  So when the pain and suffering come along, triggered by anything from finding his little baby bath in the cupboard to watching something on telly or just simply waking up and feeling despair at his absence, I embrace it.  I cry willingly and wholeheartedly and indulge in it.  This is the closest I can be to him.  The comfort of crying for something precious beyond measure.  The sadness that makes my son the most important thing in my day.  I no longer mind feeling that pain because it is as real as he is.

Friday 10 April 2015

One New Years Eve

A labour ward bustling with pregnant promise sets the scene for the sad farewell,
No balloons or smiles they gifted him but no time for sense to dwell,
The chaplain came with furrowed brow and blessed the sleepy cot,
While the family encircled him etching a time never to be forgot.
The children played with their yearned for brother for a moments first and last,
And then ushered away leaving Mummy and Daddy to nurture his path as he passed.
Twelve hours of loves last lingering tune, they bathed him til golden he shone,
And as midnight approached to bring in a New Year, in three breaths their baby was gone.
The corridors rang out with traditional song as fireworks lit up the sky
And instead of making their promises new, they made vows which were wrapped in goodbye,
That night as a mummy slept next to her crib in a ward which was bringing forth life,
Her baby lay quiet and needed no fuss from the tearful and present midwife.
When morning crawled in, the world carried on, unaware of what had departed ,
Leaving parents behind at the tick before midnight, desperate to stay where they started.
And so to a father who steps out of the room to spread the expected joy,
But instead he is calling a burial ground to give rest to his newborn boy.





Friday 3 April 2015

Don't weigh me down

Grief would be easier to process if it weren't for the constant feelings of anger for other people's ineptness.  For instance when someone who should know Freddie's name and should also be aware of the need to hear it,  doesn't.   When someone doesn't acknowledge my loss when I've outlined it to them.  When someone reads out from an NHS database that my next of kin is Freddie Bean.   This list is by no means exhaustive.

Grief is a heavy backpack, it is rocks in your shoes,  it is a heart made of concrete.  When someone gets things wrong who shouldn't,  it adds weight.  It clips an added ball and chain around your ankles and extra longing in your soul.   We know people will get things wrong,   we wait with clenched fists and anxiety knowing an unfortunate comment will fly our way at some point.  But for some reason when professionals chuck an extra stone in our rucksacks,  we are caught off guard and vulnerable.

Disempowerment scares me deeply.  The idea of being powerless at your most pivotal life moments - and doctors and hospitals do just that to me.  I find myself speechless in our follow up consultants meeting when he tells us "you were lucky that it happened between shifts as we had double the staff to deal with it".  Define lucky, my son was born brain damaged and subsequently died.  This consultant never once referred to my son and never once said "sorry for your loss".  I find myself desparately trying to convince an NHS out of hours doctor who hasn't bothered to read my notes that I'm not pregnant.  By the time my appointment has finished I'm wondering if I am pregnant and if I just don't know myself at all - despite the fact we use contraception and despite having a period the week before.  And finally, amongst a catalogue of unfortunate comments by professionals, a hospital receptionist asks me to "confirm that your next of kin is Freddie Bean".  How hard can it be to not put someone's deceased child as their go-to contact in an emergency.   But instead of asking to see a manager - instead of making an immediate complaint, I am too ill, I am too tired, I am too shocked.  Another day where my luggage gets heavier thanks to the incompetence of those I place my health and mental wellbeing in the hands of.

To people with power, to people in charge of my health:  grieving is baggage enough, be mindful in all you say and do so as not to make it impossible to bear.

Monday 30 March 2015

For my boy

She held her new baby with such pain across her face,
Hushed tones from all the medics while the family embraced,
Gazing upon their perfect child who knew not how to cry
While whispering tenderly and softly not a hello but a goodbye.
They pushed her through the labour suite and out the other side,
With nothing but a memory box which said that nature lied.
She saw the other mothers nursing lusty babies at their chests,
And sobbed as she was given tablets to take away her swollen breasts
Back at home there is no chaos,  no muslin cloths lie on the floor,
Just a steady stream of flowers and stunned cards pushed through the door,
And there upon the sofa weeping, two loving parents sit,
Wondering how to miss their child eternally and how to muster up true grit.
The phone begins to quieten now as life returns for others,
Leaving them in a lonely new club reserved for bereft fathers and mothers.
The days bring unwanted initiations, the first times of each event,
"Do you have any children?", "we're having a baby!" does the pain ever,  ever relent?
But there is hope amongst the sadness, and light beneath the shade,
Some people stay the course and of their grief are not afraid,
They come around for coffee, they speak the baby's name,
In memory he lives on,  nine months were not in vain
Darker days become gentler months but tears will always be spilled,
For she will always look back with the saddest eyes at a life so unfulfilled
I know she will make it through, I know because she is me,
And the boy stitched inside her heart is my darling Freddie Bean.





Sunday 29 March 2015

Life without Freds

These last few days have absolutely underlined that life without Freds is bullshit.  I feel as though a day defined as "good" is one which involves getting through the day without thinking.  So one which involves a myriad of tasks which don't allow any thought on Freddie not being here, finances, which friends still haven't called/text/messaged to see if I'm still breathing/what I might do about work/how I'm feeling etc etc.  My mind tricks me frequently.  I feel paranoid, anxious, overwhelmed with sadness, angry, and just occasionally like I can't imagine breathing for another second -  I want life to end like a reverse big bang - an immediate vacuum where everything immediately stops and is hoovered up by a higher being.   This latest downward spiral was precipitated by a random act of kindness from some people that my parents know giving us a free car.  Simon and I have car shared for years and recently had realised the arrangement no longer worked and we needed to find another car but currently lack the funds to facilitate it.   Cue the free automobile aka Reginald Trashcan.  Rather than feeling grateful for such an act of kindness (though I'm viewing this with more cynical spectacles now and I'm more inclined to see it as an act of laziness to avoid the hassle of scrappage), rather than being good humoured about it; Reginald Trashcan seems to represent everything that is awful in my life.   He magnifies my lack of money, he magnifies my loss - afterall I doubt if Freddie was here people would be so concerned about me getting out of the house.   Most of all he magnifies my uselessness.   He magnifies how much I'm pitied.   He puts the spotlight over a festering wound and seems to sprinkle a bit of salt on it.

The act of grieving for a little baby I imagine is very different from grieving someone (a child even) who has lived for a time.  I have such small memories of being with Freddie but eight months of promise and excitement.   The thought of the pregnancy turns my stomach because it reminds me of a multifaceted journey which finished with a traumatic goodbye rather than a besotted hello.  I know his face so well in my head,  but those rushes of love that one gets for ones baby have nowhere to go but into the depths of grief once more - it is a constant uphill cycle but never nearing the summit.  My little prize, my little reward is no more.   When I think of my Grandad, when I miss him - I remember his quirks, I remember the way he talked, I remember stories.  With Freddie we have to disseminate information out of a small box - there is very little for our tired brains to latch on to and feel comfort.  Even the sight of a beautiful photo can start off a week of suffering.   Walking past a perfect little baby in a pram is an excruciating exercise in composure, patience, tolerance and will.  Why did my baby not live like all babies should.

I always come back to the thought that the only hope of dulling the pain is in giving Freddie a little brother or sister.  Perhaps then my daughter won't talk about death nearly every minute of the day.  Perhaps then I can walk past a pram and smile.   Perhaps then Freddie's death will have facilitated the birth of more love.

Saturday 21 March 2015

Sliding Doors

I have always been a little fascinated by the idea of the film "Sliding Doors", that small moments in our lives can create complete divergences.  Our lives can become layers of an onion, with many scenarios and outcomes based on the most seemingly insignificant decision.   Losing Freddie was no small moment and so there is an irony  of a sort that life without him is mostly all about him.  Instead of having his little physical being, we have a life filled with thoughts and ideas and people as a direct consequence of him.  This seems to be in conflict with the sliding doors notion of a relationships demise leading to a life filled with everything but the person who has exited.

Today I went to the florist on the way to the burial ground.   Before Freddie died I didn't know the florist existed.  The usual lady wasn't there, I said to her "I don't know you....I come here a lot to get flowers for my son, he's at Sun Rising..." etc etc.  We started talking started.  We couldn't stop talking.  Her son died four years ago at the age of 35.  He is buried at Sun Rising.   She practices Reiki and Crystal healing.  She looked at me intently, intensely and insisted that i have the necklace from round her neck.  Her mother gave it to her.  I said I couldn't possibly, she said she had to.  She spoke a lot about stepping stones and how I needed an invisible shield - to imagine it when I don't feel safe.   When I left her we hugged, I cried, she kissed my cheek and we agreed to see each others sons graves.  So I did just that.  I found her sons grave and told him how lovely his mum had just been.  

After this I thought of another person brought into my life because my son left.   More kindness and support.   As I hiked across Sun Rising with my eldest we talked about the kindness of strangers and how different life is - how we would never be walking over to the compost heap at the burial ground to dispose of more of Freddie's old flowers if he'd stayed.   My son said "we would never have met all these amazing people".  I snapped back "I'd rather have my son".  And then I remembered that of course we would.  We would all like to go back to the station platform and not miss the train next time.  But perhaps Freddie, in his physical absence, made sure I was surrounded by kindness.  Without these unique and caring individuals I would be stuck at the station, not knowing which way to turn. Instead I'm being gently guided on a different path.  It's not one I want, but I have no choice and thankfully I'm not alone.

Thursday 19 March 2015

Permanence

Do any of us truly understand permanence?  There's a line in Tim Burton's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory where Helena Bonham Carter says "sometimes when adults say forever, they mean a very very long time'".   Our forever is a perception issue, just like when we have an argument and say "I'm never talking to you again.   Permanence in most of our lives is maleable.  It has flex.  We can change our minds, or create solutions to indulge our needs.  So it's no wonder that we grieve so deeply when someone dies.  We have lost our control over finality, we are powerless to change the discourse by offering solutions or apologies.   When we suffer a relationship breakdown, we suffer a form of grief.  We mourn what once was, but closure is in the eye of the beholder.   An ex partner for instance may still harbour hope that one day they will reconcile.  Death shatters all illusions,  there is no hope - we dream of meeting again, we dream of waking up in another world where our loved one still exists.

Children find permanence a particular challenge.  This is largely down to an inability to explain what death is in age appropriate terms.   If you start mentioning sleep,  "nanny is sleeping forever" a child's forever could be til next week.  There is no finality in sleeping, nanny is probably going to wake up at some point.  We try to tell children that when someone dies they no longer breathe or smile, their skin is cold, they no longer need to eat.   But this still doesn't explain forever,  and do we ourselves actually understand this either?   The concept of losing a child in particular is a terrifying thought for parent and sibling.  It bends the rules of modern society, medicine, mother nature and mortality and rips open taboo.  The parent has to accept that they will live beyond their child, that they created life and then watched its untimely demise.  They were powerless to stop it and powerless to change it.   Siblings have to negotiate a less innocent existence.  They have to grasp permanence, that forever is at least beyond all future experiences,  and this is the best that us adults can do too.   We will mourn our loss for the length and breadth of our lives, and after that - forever becomes someone else's game.  

Wednesday 18 March 2015

Uncomfortably Numb

I'm not sure which stage of grief I'm at,  and I'm not altogether sure how normal my current behaviour is.  I'd prefer to think that as there is absolutely no rule book, this is just my way.  Alternatively I'm a fruit loop and may require intervention at some unknown point in the future.   I feel uncomfortably numb.  It's not that I don't feel anything - quite the opposite.  I think of Freddie whenever my brain isn't completely focused in on something important (like overtaking a lorry on the motorway on a very windy day).  But when I do think of him, I don't cry like I did.   I do quite often feel like I'm at the top of the big dipper about to plunge into insanity but it stops before the freefall.  Do I consciously stop it?  When I feel like that,  I roll up my sleeves and charge into all things Freddie.  I delve into his photo album, I dash down to this amazing florists I've found where they do wildflower bouquets, I sing, I talk about it him to the unfortunate person who probably only came over for a quick cuppa (bad luck, you're in it for the long haul now).  I don't know whether this is masking or coping.  I don't know whether my ability to get though each day feeling far more positive than negative is, in fact, complete denial.   The worry of this makes me uncomfortable but yet somehow unmoved.   I feel as though I am travelling down a road that has a dangerous bend coming up, I know it's coming but I don't know when, and I also don't know what's around the corner.  On the one hand it could be a breakdown, on the other just more crying.  I look at his pictures and see my furry monkey and feel pride and longing.  He was a little king who now rules another world.  Our little scrappy-do who fought his hardest against a shit hand and in the process taught me peace on a level I can barely yet understand.   What I am feeling is something I've never experienced in my life so far.   Aside from the grief and indescribable pain,  my son has taught me to let go and stop finding solutions for everything.   I don't think I am in denial, I think I am out in the open watching a comet streak by.  The brightest, most beautiful comet that can't stay, and I'm heartbroken that it passes quickly but I'm in awe of what it leaves behind.  I'm cold and I haven't got a coat, but I'm learning not to shiver.  This trail of glowing dust, this shroud of sparkling particles.  Now I'm crying.  Now I know it's real.

Monday 16 March 2015

Show us your bump mama

I finally managed to access our photo and video files today.  Then I saw a file marked 'xmas vids'.  I can't remember Christmas any more, that was my old life.  Simon points the camera at me and says "show us your bump mama" and I duly oblige.  I barely fit in the shot being the whale that I was, I was pretty big for 35 weeks.  I look tired, but so blissfully unaware.  Four days days later he was gone.  I replayed the video over and over, looking at my massive tummy desperate to see the outline of him.   But more curious than my obsessing over that, was how little I felt the desire to be pregnant again.  That shocked me.  Up until two weeks ago all I could think about was having another baby - though I suppose I should have twigged that I just wanted Freddie.  Desperately wanting another boy might have been a screaming siren but in my head it was justified with the practicalities of already having boy's clothes.  Get real girl!

This last couple of weeks I've found some zen, if you can call it that.  I've largely been in a bit of a trance. A Freddie trance.  I've gone down to his grave a lot, volunteered at the burial ground and have been able to go through his memory box and put things in frames.  This is parenting of a different dimension.   As this new phase has drifted in, the thoughts about another pregnancy have drifted out.   Freddie isn't coming back.   My counsellor has achieved her goal of making me let go of future plans, dreams and ideas and has put Freddie and I in the spotlight.  I now completely understand what she meant about this being a special time.  It's not special in a deliriously magical way, but it is an extension of our brief time together.  I have time to learn how to solidify our bond, how to forge a relationship with a baby who will never grow older.  

The video fascinated me because it's of him, he was there listening to us, it was his Christmas too, and he's there squished up in my tummy alive and kicking.  The last documented time it was all Ok.  And at the end of the video, after I'd wearily exposed my bump for the camera, Simon murmurs "it's beautiful, so very beautiful".   Yes he was just that.

To the memory of my beautiful son in my belly.  Now stitched inside my heart for eternity



There is no simple narrative for grief

My husband and I have recently hypothesised on the reasons why so many relationships and social networks seem to collapse after the death of a child.   Certainly our own experiences currently tell us that people fall into four possible categories.    When I say people, I am talking about those who at the time of the bereavement are in your circle.  They might be family, close friends, people you supported, people you had some kind of ongoing thread with.  I wouldn't for a second suggest that those who suffer a loss immediately draw up shitlists for everyone they've ever known.  My cousins for instance are lovely people and we see each other every few years but at the time of losing Freddie I wouldn't have expected more than a card.   We would all like to think we have a good idea of those who will pull through for us right?  Well it might come as a surprise to learn that most people who I have spoken to since losing a child or family member suddenly, unexpectedly or just simply before their time are lonely.  Their friends and family start disappearing, leaving a few stars behind.

The first category are those who do not leave your side - whilst perhaps not always physically there,  they are present on the end of the phone,  they text,  they call,  they don't worry about saying the right thing because they recognise there is no right thing.  They just speak.  They are part of your journey and because of this their company feels safe.  In fact group one are so safe and easy you can pretty much expect that they instinctively understand.  This means there is no pressure to fill the gaps in contact or in fact in conversation.  It's basically cool.   It seems highly likely that the majority of group one have experience of bereavement from someone younger than say a grandparent.

Group two are a little bit out of their depth and worry but they are still present.   It doesn't come as naturally and they may not be as consistent but they are determined to be there and are regularly in contact.   They ask questions, they want to learn and they always listen.   They may get it wrong but they own it.  They don't poke you all the time asking for updates on how you're coping - they just let you know that you're loved.  In turn you probably tell them that's all you need.

Group three are the frustrating ones.  They wait to take your lead but then miss (or ignore out of fear)  the signs that you'd like contact.   They apologise for being rubbish but yet do nothing.  They promise to call and then they don't.  They try and draw parallels with their own life events which bear no similarities.  They speak to you but avoid talking about your child,  they ask how you are in hushed tones or just don't ask at all.   They say they are "giving you space " but lack the capacity to realise grief is already a wide open space.   In fact last night we established that for some people,  "space" was actually a convenient term for either discomfort/forgetfulness/disinterest (delete as appropriate).   Grief does not make you immune to bullshit.

Finally there is group four who just disappear.   This is devastating but at the same time less frustrating because there is no false hope or pretence - group four when cornered are more likely to own their absence. My parents experienced group four recently in the form of their neighbours.   Whilst getting in her car my mother caught the eye of the man next door.   He simply said to her "I'm sorry we haven't been in touch, we're just not good with the subject matter "... It's pretty shit isn't it but it's honest,  it's self aware and it is filed under "this person is not in this chapter of my life ".  That's fine - supporting someone through grief is an individual choice.   We don't expect unconditional care and attention and actually group four, we still trust you because you were honest to admit your inabilities.  This may mean though that things are wildly changed in our future dynamics, we may not see much of you anymore, but we don't need to dwell on this.  You promised nothing.  Just be aware that if you do decide to get in touch in the future, you still can't escape the subject matter.  It happened and it is part of our fabric.

I want to explore the problematic nature of group three.  The others take care of themselves and expend very little of your time and worry which is,  quite frankly, taken up over intense grief and loss for your child.  Group three are difficult because you feel repeatedly let down.  Death is not something which everyone can handle and the loss of an infant is shocking.  There is no blame attached to fear, and fear is the facilitator for a lot of clumsy comments,  silence,  avoidance or misjudgement.  As a grieving parent I recognise not everyone will be brilliant and supportive,  and that sometimes bereavement triggers underlying traumas of which I have no right to undermine.   The issue here is that group three are the ones who drift away without even realising the damage being done.

Last night when my husband and I spoke, we realised that there is no simple narrative for grief.   One is competely unable to meet for coffee and fill someone in on how their bereavement is going to someone who has not involved themselves in the process.   It is impossible to say to someone "well last month I woke up every morning having a panic attack but this month I find myself able to look at the pictures the staff took of him in the mortuary.  So how are you? ".  Of course it is possible to say these things but it doesn't do grief justice and is relatively unpalatable to hear for the person who has so far kept in awkward,  sporadic contact.  It does neither party any good.

When someone dear to your heart dies unexpectedly, you are fundamentally and profoundly changed.   What sadly happens when you are given space to grieve is the space grows and is unlikely to be completely refilled.   If someone leaves their friends and goes traveling, everyone sits back and awaits news.  The traveller might send postcards to let everyone know what a great time they are having.  On their return they'll likely have a few drinks and recount some tales and everyone will laugh and life goes on.   When a child dies the parents leave their social circles for a time, but they don't send postcards.  They won't send an update on what happened at the funeral or the time they had to go into the nursery and start packing away the baby things.   When a child dies we don't reach out because we are reaching in.  We are clutching at ourselves, trying to make sense of it all.   We don't reach out because our arms are tied,  and unlike the traveler who returns from his journey, our journey never ends.   There is never a time we will dust ourselves down and meet at the pub to tell everyone all about it over a pint.

Group three probably lack the capacity, skills or desire to provide the support they perceive a grieving parent might need.   Or they may even just lack the self awareness to recognise the detrimental effect that feeding space does.   There are solutions found  in honesty, in simple gestures which don't require expending unlimited time and energy, in subtlety and in love.

For what it's worth here's my advice to group three.  Firstly it is brave to be honest, and the benefits for all parties are far reaching.  It is more than Ok to say you can't imagine the pain - you would be right.  It is ok to own your own issues - this is about humanity, the meat and bones of us.   We are not infallible and we are fragile in mind and body - all of us.  If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen and join group four!   Don't make promises you can't keep.  Don't flail around in the sidelines thinking that there will be a curtain call for you.  There won't.  Grief and sorrow are largely silent and private but that doesn't mean we'd shut you out for caring.  If we aren't ready for company, don't make it about it you and feel sorry for yourself.  There is a bigger picture but we will never forget that you tried.   There are no prizes here, but if you do want to invest in something (and sadly there is a cost here whether you like it or not) you've got to put something in the bank.  You want your account to stay open? Promising the cashier money that never comes won't work.   If you can't do it group three, just be honest with yourselves.  It is desperately unfair to let people down in their time of need and it doesn't have to be that way.  If you promise something but don't deliver - who feels better?  It might ease your conscience for a while but our bullshit radar has just gone off big time, and just as we will never forget the good in our support networks, we will find it equally difficult to forget the bad.

So suppose group three do want to help but just don't know how?  Let me leave you with this;  my most cherished family and friends are the ones who do the most simple of things.   One friend has sent me a text every day since Freddie died.  It always says the same thing - "hugs".  She doesn't tell me she's going to, she doesn't expect a reply, she just speaks a thousand words with one.   Another friend and I are unable to currently speak much due to each others circumstances but she sends me little pictures and memories of things we did as teenagers every so often.  A little hug from a far.   Another friend sent me a little card with the letter 'F' on the front.   I don't need a counsellor (well I do and I have one but you know what I mean), I don't need someone to fix it because it's broken beyond repair, I don't even need a shoulder to cry on as my tears are usually well hidden from view.  What I need is to know the radio is not silent and you care.

Monday 9 February 2015

Up!

Despite another night of raving insomnia I'm actually amazed at the postive vibes today.  Fred is never really out of my thoughts but it's a day of acceptance that occasionally comes along and tempers the storm a little.   He is gone, it's unfair and tragic but I understand what happened and it can't be changed.  Another day won't feel as rational.  The oozy raw wound has got a temporary bandage.

We went to the eye hospital this morning and Tils was put through her paces.  Whilst I'm obviously displeased she has a wonky eye, I do get amusement from watching her earnestly doing tasks to test her sight and squint, and be delighted with herself when she earns a sticker.  She makes me feel so proud of her for her unrelenting lust for life.  She takes it all on, with passion, I love her so much.  I then get home to Sam and he's tidied the lounge and he's made me a cup of tea.  Is it selfish to want more than this? Probably.  If I'd never have mistakenly got pregnant with Freds I would be more retiscent.  I desperately wanted a third child, but I could see life functioning as it was.  It clunked along with a degree of longing but never gnawing into my core like a septic injury.   Now, I see the beauty in my two but feel all of that pain, for me, for them.  It ought to feel selfish to want more but it doesn't.

I'm crashing around like the proverbial bull in my head - stomping rather than mulling over the future.  Do I leave my family here, 3 children but only 2 of them with us and be grateful but desperately sad and confused. Or do I take a gamble, do I follow what feels absolutely right but terrifying.  I want my boy so much but I also want a happy ending and without gambling it may never feel like I have closure.   There is no telling what will happen, lighting can strike twice but then this is no different to any time before, only this time I have figures, I have knowledge.  And at least this knowledge means I have more weaponry to combat the dangers.  I want some hope for us all, a little rainbow as it were (cringe) to dilute the sadness.

Saturday 7 February 2015

6 weeks

So here we are,  nearly 6 weeks from losing you.  I'm still in shock,  I can't believe I won't ever see you again.  Why should a mother be deprived of seeing her baby live and flourish,  why were you denied the chance to do that.  I go over and over in my head our last hours of health together.  Your tiny feet.  God I miss your feet in my tummy.   We were so nearly there.  If I had gone to the hospital sooner I'd be snuggling with you right now.  You'd be smiling at me.  6 weeks.  Not even those who have walked this path can feel my pain.  Nobody felt my love - I hope in some tiny way you did,  because my love for you Fred is overwhelming.  I don't know whether it would ever have been realised as it is right now.  My love for your brother and sister is more realised these days,  I'm just struggling to show it when I'm drowning in you.  But darling boy if you knew my love as it is right now surely it would be enough to fix everything - to fix you.  I would take all your pain and suffering and absorb it for you - make it all go away.  To not be able to do that is to feel dead inside.  I feel I am nothing without you.  I am a clock with one of the hands missing - a car with only three wheels.  At first glance, from certain angles perhaps I look the same,  but I no longer function.   How can a mother breathe without her lifeline,  her bloodline.

Thursday 5 February 2015

Old Chinese Proverb Say

Today has been rough seas.  I've fought back tears in company, sobbed on poor Sam and generally been made sea sick by the height of the ups and downs.  So I felt I should cement in some positives from the day. A wise old friend taught me to try and look for the finer points wherever they may be - even if it's just appreciating the way the milk tastes on the cornflakes.  So here we are in no particular order:
1. My son helped me peel the potatoes for tea without snorting at me and rolling his eyes.
2. My son gives good hugs.
3. I was offered a job which I get priority on because I'm on maternity leave and about to be made redundant. I don't have to be interviewed for it and I can go back whenever - they'll call me in June to see how I'm doing (this is probably amazing news but just doesn't feel important right now)
4. I saw my niece who is a total sweetheart.
5. I woke up this morning next to a snoring but very beautiful Tilda.
6. I had a nice breakfast with my parents.
7. I discovered a gorgeous photo of Freddie on my Dad's camera (double edged sword as it made me cry)
8. I'm back in my own bed tonight and it's comfier (I'm digging deep now to try and make it to 10)
9. I received a few gorgeous goodies in the post from the lovely Jono and Emma. Lovely surprise.
10. Fortitude is about to start.

Wednesday 4 February 2015

Rollercoaster

There are far too many fragments and dimensions of today to know how to summarise but one minute I'm coping,  the next I'm just clinging on by my finger nails wondering why my family and I are having to suffer this.  I repeatedly have to ask myself ' but why anyone? '  nobody deserves such pain do they?  But then has anyone had to endure some of the shit I have already had to endure?  I had half an hour of feeling deeply aggrieved, then spent another half an hour feeling grateful for the things I have.  And for meeting my son.  I've also been feeling really sad hearing other people's stories,  so much sadness,  if only I could make it stop.

I am really bored of my own self pitying.  I'm also bored of the being told I'll never get over this.  I want to rewrite this ' honest ' approach to bereavement support.  I don't need to be told that my pain will be the same in 20 years time.  What I'm starting to hear in many other bereaved mothers is that we need to know there is light,  that things aren't permanently painful and that laughing isn't something which disappears off the radar.  We don't need telling that we'll never get over it,  we inherently know this - but the meaning gets tangled.  I think the pain can ease,  I have to believe it will,  and I think I will get over the shock and horror,  the flashbacks and much of the guilt.  However I'll never get over my son because I love him.  That's much easier to deal with when broken down.    My Aunt once said to me about raising children 'all you can do is love them '.  That applies to the ones you can't raise too.

Tuesday 3 February 2015

The Portrait

They huddled together,  soaking up bloodlines between them
Smelling the warmth of their bond
Quietly owning the moment of sweet sincerity
A force,  a love, four hearts, forty toes
Peeping through the blanket tassles
Unaware of time,  unfamiliar of face

Monday 2 February 2015

Another chapter begins I guess

Simon just went to work.  I hadn't really thought of this moment too deeply,  as I felt resigned to normality returning.  This isn't normal anymore though is it?  There is no ' day off' as I lie here alone with no work to get up for myself.   There is no restful silence.  He is not here.  Wherever we go,  whatever we do,  he is not here.  That is our new normal.  I continue to stare into the corner of the room where his stuff was laid ready,  I'm waiting to get used to its new state but I'm not sure I will because I fell so deeply in love with everything to do with him.  I fell in love with putting his crib together and I fell in love with his cosy sleeping bag.  I fell in love with the changing mat placed on the area Simon had so beautifully glossed.  It was all for him because I love him.  I love him so deeply at times I can't breathe.

 In my head I place his image into the memory of his crib.  I wrap him in his sleeping bag and kiss his nose.   When he wakes up,  angry and purple,  I lift him on to his changing mat singing him a song.  I'm careful to not get his poor little bum on the cold plastic and make him more cross and then when we're done and he smells of heavenly baby powder I sneak him into bed with me for a feed.  I lie down and curl him into me,  letting him graze as I close my eyes.  I did this with his brother and sister,  and now him - an age old tradition - I'm in love with it all.

In reality I'm in bed alone with his blanket that I never got to wrap around him.  Tilda has briefly jumped into bed with me to brush my hair in terrifyingly brutal fashion.  Hairdressing should never be a career choice for her!  But she has disappeared again,  she is independent, spirited and  happy.  I couldn't wait to be needed again,  really physically needed.   I am so grateful for Sam and Tilda.  There is a real dichotomy here,  when people say ' at least you have them '.  I thank my lucky stars for them,  but we have all lost something beyond precious.  I am lucky for some of my children,  Fred is one of them and he died.  He doesn't cease to be my child,  my loss is acute and endless.  I do not feel it any less than the childless mother though the wave is eventually buffered at the edge of the sea by my other children.  The wave hits them hard though.  I grieve not just for Fred but on behalf of Sam and Tilda.  I feel their pain.  Tilda is trying to grasp her place now,  she can't figure out if she is the youngest or not,  she tries to understand why he died often,  asking bright questions such as "why did he get poorly in your tummy - did he die in there?".  I struggle with this one too, because he was dying in there, but did he actually die?  He was resuscitated for a long time so had he died?  What can you tell a four year old?   And poor Sam, he just wants things to be normal and is beginning to realise they can't be. He is grappling with the idea of having a broken mummy,  one which is slightly darker than before.  I think he's angry.  So I'm not sure that I can completely rejoice for them when they are suffering like no child ever should.

I've got my period today too.  Nothing could be more symbolic of my loss.  Not pregnant, not breast feeding.  Fred should be here,  either still in utero (I feel sad thinking about my alternate universe where I'm frustrated at that),  or feeding at my breast but instead I'm menstruating.  Life is a fucker.

So I'm trying to gather motivation to get up.  Not having Simon here is a little like my spiritual leader falling down a manhole.  I had strength and meaning around me and it's suddenly disappeared.   I need to wrap my Dad's birthday present,  I need to eat.  Tilda needs to eat.  Bloody hell my priorities need reordering there don't they?!

Give me strength.


Sunday 1 February 2015

At the end of the day

At the end of the day,  you aren't here.  It's been a strange day today - Dada was saying how grief saps your energy,  we've all been so lethargic.  It took us a while to do anything this morning.  I watched the Australian Open final, I flitted in and out of my different lives.

Sometimes Fred I forget that you aren't in my tummy,  other times I'm half shut down anyway and don't really acknowledge ' life ' as such,  I guess like I'm on autopilot,  and then the rest of the time I'm fighting the intense grief of losing you - and I'm haunted by the manner in which we all suffered,  you most of all.  Anyway,  I watched the tennis in a schizophrenic fashion and then we decided to come and see you at Sun Rising.  Only my poor addled brain had forgotten your Grandads birthday so we had to go to the shops first.  Your big brother and I fell out a LOT today, I guess we're all trying to find our new places in our new world.  It's not easy and your big brother is a teenager so we'll forgive him yeah?  You would've forgiven him anything I'm sure.  I imagine you as a toddler,  with a mop of white blond hair scooting around following Sam and Tils with wide eyed admiration.

So, we got Grandad a present and then came to see you.  I wanted to say sorry to you for not staying long,  the weather was waiting for us.  Snow!  Was that you causing mischief?  Silly Mama didn't have a scarf or gloves and it was bitter.  I hope you heard me over the wind when I whispered to you to fly over the clouds to Northend if you are lonely.  We are always here waiting.  Dada felt upset it was cold,  it's so hard for us to not be able to keep you warm and safe in our arms you see.   I'm sorry the flowers weren't from the garden,  I broke my own rule already. Tomorrow I'm coming back with a few more hyacinths that are growing in a tub in the kitchen. I need to share it all with you, what's here. Shop-bought flowers bear no history or meaning.  I've just remembered you are lying in rosemary from the garden and it made me smile.

Then we came came home and Dada and I lay together for a while missing you and missing you some more.  Then life and it's many chores take over and we're back on autopilot again.  It's a double edged sword - it helps us to get through the days but it gets in the way of thinking about you - we will learn to balance this,  to be able to think of you whilst functioning.  At the moment we just can't accept the events of 5 weeks ago.

 I need sleep again,  missing you is exhausting.  I'll come and see you tomorrow with Grandma,  Grandad and Tils.  Until then my sweet sweet boy xxx

Phoenix February

Another morning opening my eyes and having to adjust to a life without you.  I feel as though there is very little my brain can think about without it latching onto the sadness of your absence.  If we talk about last year's holiday,  or Christmas, or my job,  anything really,  I am hit by a colossal shockwave reminder that we had a complete journey together only to fail at the end.  I can't piece that together.  When I look to the future and try to make plans to heal, once again I am choking on the silence of your departure.  How can a day get filled with so much but yet be so empty.

I still sleep on my side.  All those times you wriggled and kicked in my tummy and I swore that as soon as you were here I would relish being able to sleep on my front.  But I find that impossible to do, my instinct won't allow it because if you aren't here being nursed and cuddled then you MUST be still enjoying the warmth of my body from inside.  There is no other rational explanation.  All those weeks and weeks of frustration and annoyance at how hard I was finding the physical act of carrying you, and now I find myself desperate to feel that again,  because it doesn't compare to the pain of never placing kisses on your warm body.

I said to your Dada last night that so many grieving parents are owned by their sorrow.  They are the product of the event of death and want to tell you their stories in detail over and over again.   I don't want to be a prisoner to your passing, I want to fill my lungs with life and take what I have of you with me everywhere I go.   I want to tell everyone about your life, not your death.  When I am asked about my children,  you are always my little bird,  my youngest, you are part of it all.   I will strive to turn this around for you,  because I truly believe my darling Freddie, that you will be more at peace through our love and happiness than through morose confusion.  I will try so hard for you, but for now we are taking fairy steps,  we are creeping forward with gritted teeth.  We long for recent history to be rewritten but we know your future is certain.  It all converges in the end Fred, this bit in the middle may be of little consequence.  A small speck, or blink of the eye before an eternity reunited in the same field.  We have forever to play,  perhaps for now it is I who sleeps.  Mummy can't wait to open her eyes and see you.

Xxx

Friday 30 January 2015

Dear Freds

I've been doing well today. We saw the Hastes, and your big sister and Martha were thick as thieves and tore up the house in typical fashion (she's now so exhausted I just found her snoring in bed). Of course if you were here and trying to sleep through it, it would have been impossible. You are sleeping soundly where you are though. I've started writing now because this thought occurred to me and then I felt desperately sad again. I really want to come to Sun Rising and sit with you, we could look for snakes and owls together and I could read you some Rabrindranath Tagore from the book that Aunty Ros sent me. Sadly I can't come and be with you because your Daddy just called and is stuck at the car wash and I can't drive yet - I won't be allowed for another week. When I can drive and when I have the car I'll be with you more - like it should have been. If only you knew how I miss you, and how the moments which are quiet, scream with the loss of you. Those moments were to be filled with our adventures, and now they are filled with shredded memories. Glorious pictures of you in my head are interspersed with pain, trauma and sadness. How can you not feel my love when it is so huge? I feel silly for worrying that I wouldn't know how to spread my love and affection across all three of you - you all fill my heart like a giant colourful hot air balloon! Endless love. But much of my head is full of only you, because it is all so cruel and unfair that you aren't with us, surrounded by your adoring family.

There is not much else to say today other than I miss you. I am going to survive and overcome this sadness but never think for a moment it lessens your place in my heart or in this family. Tilda will always be your big sister, and Sam your big brother. You will always be my precious youngest, my sweet sweet boy. The time we spent together was a lifetime crushed into days, hours even. But it was your lifetime nonetheless and I shared it with you feeling all the things that mothers do. Pride, awe, anger, worry, frustration, happiness, guilt and of course unconditional love - they all spilled out in a frantic wave as we struggled to grasp the briefness of our time with you. I adore you Freddie Bean, I can't believe you're not here.

Witches (29/01/15)

Today I was listening to 6 music on the way back from my first counselling session and they played 'Blister in the Sun' followed by 'Don't Want To Know If You Are Lonely', do you remember that one from our youth? It's the first time I've heard it in like twenty years; I could've sworn it was by Mega City Four but it was Husker Du. I sang along to the Violent Femmes for a bit and remembered all the times we've bellowed our way through it but then me singing it on my own felt lonely and hollow. I felt really sad but I also knew, especially after the counselling session, that I'm not well enough to see you yet.

The counsellor said I have to rip up the timetable and succumb to grief. I've been fighting it because it's terrifying. I've been desperate to be ok and to project an image of coping. I don't want to be the one falling apart and I've been frantic for life to somehow go back to how it was (with Freddie miraculously back in it too) because the prospect of being broken forever has felt like a death sentence. Anyway, the counsellor said there's no blueprint for grief, to forget the future worries and just grieve - it's ok to let go and to not have a plan for now. I'm so used to being the one giving support, being vulnerable has been too scary. I've barely even spoken to the bereavement midwife, I kept asking her what her job motivations were and what her her background was (at the funeral - how appropriate), like she was a work colleague. I didn't feel like I was a grieving mother because I went into work mode as a defence mechanism. The swiftness of the fundraising page was part of that, as was my insistence that I could cope with everything baby related. I was determined to make sure everyone else was ok as an avoidance of having to deal with my own necessary grief.

Two days ago when Little Girl Iris was born I saw that Babes in Toyland have reformed and are touring - it made me want to pick up the phone to you and say 'oh hey lets get our dresses and dockers on'. Then I remembered that I'm grieving and you are celebrating, and the world is on it's head right now. I bought LGI a gift last night. Even though I can't see her it made me feel happy, like it was something at least. I hope she gets it soon.

I keep thinking of you all smiling and cuddling her and I wish I wasn't the outsider. But I am. Freddie isn't being loved and admired too, he's at the burial ground with snow and flowers on him and he's cold and can't be cuddled and held and that makes me angry. His death has caused an earthquake and tsunami across my family and I am in the middle of it feeling as though I am suffering and losing the most. I know I shouldn't be angry with anyone; if there is blame to be apportioned anywhere the only person it can be directed at is me.  However in grief we are far from rational and I realise that I need to be stronger, peaceful and more positive in order to nurture good relationships. It's so cruel that things ended up as they did, if the dates were different none of this would be so hard, I would have your support, or at least I would be able to accept your support rather than being traumatised by speaking to you. I worry that by the time I've achieved any kind of acceptance and zen (is this wishful thinking?), you might have all moved on and LGI will be big and I'll have missed so much.  However then I'm scared that one day I'll think I'm ready to see her and I'll only see what should've been for Freddie.   I know you can't ever truly feel or understand this and I wouldn't want you to.   I wouldn't wish the feelings of loss and sorrow on my worst enemy, let alone you. To understand it means you have experienced my journey and therefore felt it too. One and the same. Sadly though it means we are worlds apart and might always be, and because of fates unfortunate hand I don't know if I can ever face LGI without looking at the empty space next to her. That space is where Freddie exists in another life, laughing and giggling with her.  It's so early in my journey so who knows what may be.  I'm doing that thing where I try and predict the future and let it make me doubly upset and anxious.

I'm writing in a really stupid, strange way like a really pretentious but crap novel. It's cathartic so I'm not too sorry. Perhaps I'll write differently tomorrow. I think I'll try and write every day, it seems to help. Perhaps months from now I'll read it back and it'll sound reassuringly ridiculous. Here's hoping.