Category: Loss of a child

  • Church

    Church

    Steve and I went to church today with the “baby.” When I brought Nathan home from the hospital thirteen years ago I taught you the sign for “baby”. It didn’t occur to me then that someday you would still be calling the six-foot one teen age brother “baby”. You loved it when he came with us on our outings, especially Target. He loved playing with you and giving you hugs. He hurts deeply now that you are gone.

    I have been reading about “care giver crash” lately. It isn’t a medical diagnosis but is a psychological and physical collapse that occurs when prolonged caregiving suddenly stops. I guess my body was in chronic survival mode. It helped me to stay alert, sleep lightly, and wake quickly so I could care for you. The adrenaline, hyper-alertness, cortisol, and purpose I had for twenty-four years are cruelly and abruptly no more. Apparently it is my nervous system’s way of finally saying “It’s safe to stop now” and years of exhaustion surface all at once. I detest it.

    Then the collapse… exhaustion, bodily heaviness, trouble concentrating, waves of grief, headaches, muscle aches, sleep disruption, feelings of disorientation. Unbeknownst to me, my nervous system was carrying a huge load for a very long time. It didn’t feel like it because it was all in the care of you and it was my honor.

    Add grief over losing you and gravity is much more than 9.8 meters per second squared. Even the weight of my body in the world is different. Steps are heavier. Sitting up feels like exercise. Everything is a challenge.

    When your big brother Emerson was little I remember watching an anime with him where the hero went to another planet to train. The gravity was much heavier so when he went back to his original planet he was stronger, faster and could jump higher. The extra gravity worked to his advantage. Perhaps that will be my case. I hold on to hope still yet.

    But I went to church today. Gravity made it hard to stand. The music started. I lifted my chin and sang the words. As if enveloped in thick mud it took all my strength but I did it, sweet boy. I raised my hands in worship. Worship isn’t an emotion. It is not a feeling. It is a necessity and I felt better for it knowing God is worthy and realizing you are on the other side of eternity singing praise. For a moment, once again but altogether different, together we sang.

    We were going to go out to eat with Grandma and Aunt Dolly later but I just couldn’t. We never did that before because the few times I did go to church I always had to go straight home to catheterize you. Today wasn’t the day to start that tradition. It just didn’t feel right yet. It may never feel right but, I hope, it will eventually feel less wrong.

    On the way home Aunt Dolly started coughing. I still said out loud “Aunt Dolly coughing. Better do something!” even though you weren’t in the car to laugh. Do you remember how I started that game because you would get scared sometimes when you started coughing? Whenever you were scared we would make a game of it and suddenly the fear was replaced with laughter. The unintended consequence was every time you heard someone cough you would laugh.

    I came home and collapsed to the couch. The doorbell rang and it was a friend who has traveled this road. She gave me a book and told me it helped her on her journey. There is something profoundly beautiful when someone who has walked through hell comes back, holds out her hand, and shows you the way.

    find me there.

    where sunsets glow

    but it never gets dark.

    where pain doesn’t exist

    and comfort is always felt.

    where everything you’ve ever loved

    finds its way back to you in the end.

    the place you went to when

    your heart fell asleep.

    my time will come

    to see you again

    and you can

    find me

    there.

    sara rian

    I am so lost without you, my sweet boy. It is an agonizing pain worse than anything imaginable. I find solace that you don’t feel this pain and you are where it is never dark and all you know is comfort. And someday, my child, you can find me there.

  • Home Depot

    Home Depot

    Two weeks ago this day your heart beat for the last time. It feels like two decades at times and two minutes at others. Time is cruel.

    I went to Home Depot today. You hated Home Depot. It was your least favorite store but we also had fun there, especially during Christmas. We would push all the buttons and watch Disney characters sing songs just for you. You would give me enough time to look at plants and then would let me, and the entire store, know it was time to leave.

    I pushed a cart today. It was abhorrent. When you were here I always pulled it because I would maneuver you in your chair in front of me. When I finished looking at the plants, there by myself I said, “Now we have to go find Grandma,” and my heart broke all over again. You were not there to hear me.

    I managed to check out and get back to the car in time to cry. You hated it when I cried. You always would cry with me even if you didn’t know what it was about. You laughed when I laughed and you cried when I cried. You never cared why only that we shared every emotion. You were the best companion.

    There were children everywhere at Home Depot today proudly displaying their craft. I cried more wondering why I didn’t get to keep you, my child. Then I remembered. I did. For twenty-four years I got to keep you closer than most mothers get the privilege of experiencing. And for that I am grateful.

    I don’t know how I am going to do this, my sweet boy. You were the voice in my head and the song in my heart. You were my purpose and every day I thanked God for giving me a child who would ensure my role as mother would always be profound because you needed me and that would never change. At least not until February 21, 2026. Your brothers will always need me as a mother but not like you did.

    I count it progress I was able to get back to the car before I cried this time. Baby steps. A friend once told me

    One step at a time. And when you can’t, just lean forward.

    I am leaning forward. Sometimes I just sit and cry. This grief is different. It has shaken my very knowledge of where I am in the world. It is physical. It is emotional. It is mental. It is overwhelmingly, seemingly impossible. But God…

    All the time I miss your beautiful love. Your smile. Your request for hugs which I honored every single time because I knew each one could be the last.

    That last one came two weeks ago today. Steve held your hand and I hugged you whispering “Mommy is here…mommy is here,” over and over until you were not.

    Someday I will be able to go to a store and not cry. Some day the clock will not remind me it is time to catheterize or give medication or have coffee together in my office. Someday I will make it through a day without crying. But there will never be a day I don’t miss you with my whole, shattered, broken heart. I hold to the promise it won’t always be so shattered or broken but do know there will always be a piece missing until I see you again, sweet boy.

    A friend sent me this poem. Your absence, the quietness of the house, the emptiness of my days tell my truth of this poem:

    Even in our sleep, pain which cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart, until, in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful Grace of God (Aeschylus, translated by Edieth Hamilton in 1930)

  • It Isn’t Just Walmart

    It Isn’t Just Walmart

    I ventured out for the first time in almost two weeks since my precious son passed away. We drove to a Walmart 30 minutes from our home, one he did not go to on our daily outings. I thought it might be easier. I thought wrong. Walmart is Walmart.

    We walked in. Deep breath. Two more steps. Exhale. I can do this. I can grocery shop.

    I glanced to my left and saw the bakery section. We used to pick out muffins and cakes to mix with his pudding. He loved lemon, red velvet, and chocolate. My heart sees him lying in bed. He increasingly and aggressively signs pudding as his patience waiting for it wore thin. The boy could yell at me in sign language. How he loved food.

    Deep breath. Two more steps. Exhale.

    The tears fill my eyes.

    Steve, my husband, wraps his arms around me. “I am here,” he whispers.

    The tears are almost uncontrollable now.

    Grocery shopping felt like a violation, a betrayal, a foreign country. It has been years since I went without pushing him in his wheelchair. Almost a quarter of a century talking to him constantly and asking his opinion about choices. Decades of playing “Woah Wesley” when he was ready to go but I still needed to shop. He would from angry screaming to laughing without taking a breath. Only he could turn an ordinary trip to Walmart into a joy filled, love tossing extravaganza.

    A woman came up to us not too long ago in a Walmart.

    “Can I give him something?” she asked.

    She must have seen the confusion on my face because she continued.

    “I have been watching you and your son. I have never seen someone so full of love and so loved. I just want him to have something. I have this gift card. Will you buy him something?” she asked.

    We hugged. That was the magic of Wesley. His presence, his joy, his love could leave two people hugging in Walmart, grateful to have crossed paths and being forever changed by it.

    Wesley picked out a “Bluey” hooded sweatshirt with the gift card. It sits untouched now in a drawer I cannot open. Not yet.

    The tears now are uncontrollable.

    “We can go back to the car,” Steve tells me as I cry on his shoulder.

    “I have to do this. I have to learn,” I tell him even though I wanted nothing more than to run to the car, cry, and never go to Walmart again.

    The pain, I knew, would be there today, tomorrow, next month. Time would not make unentangling myself any easier had it been postponed.

    The grief inside me was irrepressible. I quickly walked to the bathroom, closed the door, and collapsed sobbing.

    It wasn’t the first time I cried in a bathroom over Wes…


    When Wesley was three weeks old Gary, my (now deceased) first husband, and I along with Wesley and his older brother, Emerson, traveled to Omaha, Nebraska to see Dr. Bruce Buehler. He was board certified in pediatrics, pediatric genetics and pediatric endocrinology. If anyone could tell us what Wesley’s diagnosis was, we hoped, it was Dr. Buehler.

    The nurse showed us to a very large room with a small table for the children to play, some books, and an exam table in the corner. I sat at the little table next to Emerson, then two and a half, as he watched Shrek on his portable DVD player. How I wished I could be as he was, oblivious to the gravity of the situation.

    I could hear cowboy boots coming from down the hall. The sounds grew louder as he turned the corner, entered the room, and with a smile stuck out his hand to greet us.

    “Dr. Buehler,” Gary said extending his hand.

    “Call me Bruce. No one calls me Dr. Buehler except my wife and that is only when she wants me to take out the trash,” he said with a deep belly laugh.

    He motioned to the table and we sat down as he opened Wesley’s thick chart. By the time we found our way to Omaha the list of abnormalities discovered within Wesley had grown. New doctors had been introduced and before he was even three weeks old Wesley already had a pediatric urologist, neurologist, cardiologist, and gastroenterologist. He had a social worker, a speech therapist, and an occupational therapist. I had to purchase an expandable accordion file to keep track of all his medical needs. The fuller the file became the emptier my heart felt realizing how much my tiny baby had already been through and was yet to face.

    A colleague of Dr. Buehler’s joined us and they asked me to place Wesley on the exam table. As a mechanic inspects a car, they examined every inch of his little body.

    “He has a high arch and cleft palate. Did you know that?” the other physician asked.

    I shook my head somberly no. Another anomaly.

    They excused themselves to confer. Shrek played. His father and I could not speak. We knew when they came back in through the door, our lives would forever be altered.

    After roughly twenty minutes they returned with two textbooks in their hands. Dr. Buehler flipped open the gigantic, blue book. With delicacy he looked at each of us and said,

    “We believe your son has Rubinstein-Taybi Syndrome.”

    Syndrome.

    The room began spinning. Words became incomprehensible even though we walked in that office suspecting he had a syndrome. Gary was a maternal fetal medicine specialist. They had a “rule of thumb” when it came to anomalies. One was probably nothing. Two might be something. Three was almost always a syndrome. Wes had more than three, but when it was confirmed by a triple board-certified physician my entire world collapsed. As if hope, no matter how small, was the only reason my world continued to spin in the only direction I had ever known.

    Then he said it. Syndrome. An obscure, uncommon Syndrome.

    The clinical definition is “a group of signs and symptoms that tend to occur together and characterize a particular condition.” The emotional definition in my heart was “unknown everything” and it was scary. It was world shattering.

    I could not have known then that the words he spoke would actually be my greatest blessing. It would bring me immense heart ache but also extraordinary joy. It would shape me into a better mother, wife, daughter, friend and human being. Later I would pinpoint that one sentence as the moment in time I began to become who I was meant to be. As it was happening, however, the only thing I could feel was utterly and completely crushed.

    I excused myself to the restroom just across the hall. Closing and locking the door behind me I collapsed to the ground sobbing. How could my life, I wondered, have changed so dramatically and drastically in the amount of time it takes to hear a single sentence? I stayed curled up on the cold, bathroom floor for a while weeping for all I lost. My dreams and my family’s future, I thought, were gone. I could not imagine I would dream new dreams and be given a future far more glorious than one I could have ever created for myself. But hope, you see, had not yet been born.

    How I wish I could speak to that scared, heart broken mother there on the floor with all the wisdom I have found over the last twenty something years. I would say…

    Hope is coming. Hold on. This child will be your greatest teacher without ever speaking a word. In his weakness you will find your strength. You will be his voice and fight for him with all you have. You will reach a new level of exhaustion. You will want to give up. But then you will persevere. You will become a better mother, daughter, and friend because he was born exactly as he is. This isn’t the worst day of your life. This is the day you become who you were meant to be. Grieve because you have lost a significant dream. But then get up. You’ve got work to do.

    After a few minutes I gathered myself, wiped away the mascara that was running down my face, and returned to the exam room.

    “Will he be mentally retarded?” I asked with a whisper. (That was the acceptable term back then).

    “I don’t like to put labels on kids. It can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. But yes, he will be,” Dr. Buehler said gently.

    “Does he have a normal life expectancy?” I asked. I knew at that moment I could handle anything required of me. The one thing I could not handle was losing him. Whatever challenge or syndrome my child had did not matter. I just wanted to keep him.

    “It will be shortened. By how much we are not sure, honestly,” he said with compassion.


    As I sat in the bathroom stall in Walmart 24 years later sobbing, I realized I have to learn everything all over again. I have to learn to drive our wheelchair van with no wheelchair and no sweet Wesley. I have to learn to grocery shop without my constant companion. I have to learn to drink an entire Starbucks coffee and not save half for him. I have to learn to not receive fifty of the best hugs each day. I have to learn who I am because who I was until February 21st was entirely wrapped up in caring for him. I would have joyfully done it as long as God allowed.

    And the cold, hard, cruel, beautiful, merciful truth is that I did.

    Twenty-four years from now what wisdom will I have that I wish I could speak to the scared, heart broken mother sobbing in a Walmart bathroom? I think it will be something like this…

    When I got home from Walmart I cried some more. I then opened my computer and looked back on my writing from 2018 and found some of what I have edited and shared here now. These words were written 8 years ago to not only share my journey with others but as a roadmap to remind me now.

    When an harmful agitator enters an oyster, it’s natural defense mechanism is to protect itself. If the oyster can’t remove the foreign object, it covers it. It secretes a fluid to coat the harm. Layer upon layer of the coating is deposited until a pearl is formed. It can take months or years but the oyster doesn’t relent. It takes something that didn’t belong and was harmful and creates beauty.

    And once again, there it is, hope is born.

    This isn’t a harmful agitator. This is the death of my beloved son. I know it will take God and time and often, it feels as if they move too slow. But they do move. Layer upon layer what could destroy will become beautiful. Right now it is nothing but destruction and nothing could ever match the cost of losing my child. But hope and solace reemerge remembering how hopeless it seemed all those years ago. Hope presents herself knowing what beautiful pearls came from all I didn’t know and all I feared.

    Unlike the oyster, my natural defense mechanism is not to create something lustrous and valuable from adversity. It is not natural nor my truth. My truth is it takes incredible effort. It takes conscious decisions. I must choose to see the good even when it feels nothing but bad. I must choose to hold on to hope. On some days I choose to hope for hope. I must choose my focus and change it accordingly. I must choose to not allow bitterness and anger come close. I must choose to battle when they come. And they do. I must choose patience to endure. I must choose to hold to the promises of dreams unrealized. I must choose gratitude. I must choose resilience and perseverance. I must choose to be unconquerable. I must choose faith. I must choose the only way I, personally, know how to obtain all those things. I must choose God.

    Each and every time.

    Especially this time.