Saturday, February 26, 2011

Because All This World Is Just A Stage

In the folder of information that the hospital gave us to take home are several different pamphlets and booklets that describe the grieving process. The traditional "five stages of grief" are denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. One provided pamphlet notes, "People often think of grieving as going through stages that progress in a linear fashion. However... know that it is very unlikely that you will experience these feelings on a certain timetable or as 'stages.'"

If only it were that easy.

On Friday we found out our baby had died. Cliche it may be, but I couldn't shake the feeling of a bad dream that just wouldn't end. Surely soon I would wake up? I asked the doctor if he was sure, made him show me proof. Later, in the hospital's labor and delivery ward, I asked again. The world felt off-kilter, reality seemed indistinct.

Early Saturday my baby was born. I cried during the delivery, and then, empty and tired, I slept.

On Sunday I put on a brave face and at times actually felt brave. Sunday was a day of many people, many hugs, much love and support. I spent most of the morning trying to hide the shaking of my hands, the trembling of my chin. And I cried on that day too, sometimes with great uncontrollable sobs, sometimes silently. At some point I wondered, if I can just manage to stay calm will others recognize grief?

Monday was the worst. Monday found me doubled-over in the shower, gasping from a sadness that felt like a sword through my chest. It is startling, how physically painful sadness can be. That, in and of itself, is a shock.

Tuesday was a good day. I don't remember Tuesday.

On Wednesday the depression arrived. Just sadness in another form really, like a heavy wool blanket thrown over my shoulders, weighing me down, draining my energy. On Wednesday I accidentally drove by the grocery store I had been heading to, realized it several blocks later, kept driving. At Target I forced myself to read and reread my shopping list to try to fend off a peculiar propensity to wander aimlessly through the aisles, looking at everything and nothing. I discovered that smiling at strangers, even polite or kind ones, required more than I had to give. So I kept moving and prayed that I wouldn't see anyone I knew.

On Thursday the depression blanket was heavier and seemingly woven with sharp metal wire - anger making its first real appearance since the short burst of fury I had felt in the ultrasound room right after the doctor had left us alone with The News. I recognized the anger, an old tormentor in many ways, and kept questioning myself, who am I angry at? God? The doctor or hospital? Anyone and everyone? I never could successfully identify a rational target. But I realized that I felt cheated, robbed, and, unable to pinpoint The Robber, I directed my anger at the universe in general. I felt the first temptation to bitterness, the feeling that I had been wronged and had earned the right to take out my pain on others. After what had been taken from me, who could dare to hold me accountable?

Yesterday, another Friday, I got up (again! again and again and again) and went to a different hospital to be with my brother. I wore myself out with thinking other thoughts and grieving other griefs.

And now it has been a full week. A full week of being without child. A full week of emptiness. Everyone keeps asking me, "How are you doing?" At times, I have dreaded that question. I recognize that I have asked that same question to others many times before. I know there is really no other question to ask, and I know that it is motivated by love and concern. But I feel so at loss as how to answer. What does "good" or "bad" mean in this situation? It has been a full week of emptiness, and I have denied and raged and sunk low in depression, and I have even in some small ways (is there any small way?) accepted. Which parts are the good and which are the bad? Toward the questioner I sometimes find myself thinking, well, I'm here aren't I? I'm dressed, I'm standing, I'm looking you in the eye. I'm not somewhere curled up in the fetal position, lost in some mental oblivion. That's good right? That might not be the normal measuring stick for good, but what measuring stick do I qualify for right now?

How do I answer that question? Does the other person (often just a casual acquaintance) really want to know? Do I really want to tell them? Can I even figure it out for myself? Can I put it into words?

On Monday I forced myself to put on non-maternity pants even though they didn't fit. I couldn't bear to put on a lie. On Friday, almost without realizing it, I pulled on another pair and snapped them without trouble. I can't stop looking in mirrors, hypnotized. The belly is already almost entirely gone. And yet, sometimes I still think I feel the baby move.

On one day this past week, I can't remember which, Peter and I had a good talk. And I confessed. I would rather relive the delivery over and over and over than wake up to a new day each and every morning that does not contain some last connection to my son. I don't want to say goodbye. I don't want to be separated from him. I would rather live in pain and hold him than heal and be alone.

And that, all of that, is the grieving process. And it is not linear.

5 comments:

Katie said...

glad you were able to put this here, i hope it was in some way cathartic to write it. i appreciate it, because it gives me insight on how to pray for you guys, and i want you to know, we ARE praying for you, steph. love to you. hope we can see you soon, maybe mobot again, once spring is actually here.
katie

Shanelle Little said...

we are with you Stephanie... even in this... you can be nonfunctional, even if you fall apart, even in your anger, even if you get asked a million times are how are you doing and the answer is I don't know... your friends are sitting with you in this, we may not understand but we grieve with you.

I love you so much.

Anonymous said...

Stephanie...we spoke of this entry tonight at church. I came home and went right to it because I knew it would be gut level honest and for me there's no other way to be. This statement..."I would rather live in pain and hold him than heal and be alone.", is very interesting to me. I'm thankful that God is big enough to carry you in your grief. I give you complete permission to speak if you want to...to cry if you want to...to be silent if you want to...wherever you are whenever we cross paths...I don't want you to ever feel that you have to pretend, put on a smile, have a pastor's wife word to say. I can handle your real self...in fact would be honored.
People always told me that in time all would be better...all would heal. And time does keep marching on. But I can't throw that cliche out to you. Because you will never have your son on this side and we both know it. So you carry loss...it becomes deeply a part of who you are and will always be. And your story moves forward even if just by inches as Peter talked about last Renewal weekend. I can tell you this...we are coming closer every day with every breath, with every sunrise, with every event of our lives we are coming closer minute by minute to the other side. That might not bring you any relief right now...but maybe in time it might. This is not permanent even if it feels like it is.
Stephanie I pray peace over you. I think of that video Peter showed a few weeks back in Vespers about that unique thing we all have in our bodies...that was shaped like a cross and literally holds us together. May God hold you together when you feel like you're coming all undone. And may you know that you walk and live among a people who are all undone.
I love you and pray that for whatever reason that I randomly decided to start a book club and chose a book on gratitude at a time when you probably feel least gratitudy...that God is able to use that book...in whatever way He had already preordained before we knew what would happen on that Friday.
Love,
Ruth
Keep writing...I'm reading every word:)

Katie said...

Stephanie, I am convicted by your thoughts on bitterness, it is true, it is some sort of justification for taking things out on the world. I make excuses every day for my mishandled words, angry thoughts, etc. If anyone has an excuse, you do. I'm praying for you right now. For strength that doesn't come from you, and that everyone who sees your heart here would glorify your God for his faithfulness and your honesty before Him. I continue to learn so much from you. Thanks for opening your heart. Katie

Allison Hughes said...

I keep trying to think of what to "comment," but honestly there are no words. Only just to say that I love you and I am so sorry for your loss.