Capture Your Grief Day 11: Glow in the Woods
When we are faced with adversity, we look to others to show us how they too overcame the same obstacle. Similarly, when we lose someone we love we struggle to find someone who can relate. While most can relate to the death of someone close to us, not many can relate to the death of one's child. This type of loss just isn't natural. Parents aren't supposed to bury their children; we are supposed to watch them grow up, get married and have children of their own. They are the ones that will have to say goodbye to us, just as we had to say goodbye to our parents. When this cycle is disrupted, the ramifications are tremendous. It feels as though we are trudging around in the pitch black woods around and around in circles searching for that glow from the beacon of light that will light our way back home again.
The days in the hospital following my son's death were mostly a blur. I remember our amazing OB/GYN, Dr. McLean. I'm telling you this woman is the most amazing Doctor on the face of the planet. She delivered both of my boys and was one of the main reasons I didn't go completely nuts during my pregnancy with Ronan. The other doctors that I had before and after I vaguely recall. In fact, I'm certain I don't remember most. I remember the nurse that ran around like crazy and was there for the delivery although now I don't recollect her name, only her face. I remember Gale, our grievance counselor. And then I remember Tifni, another labor and delivery nurse although she wasn't mine. It was kismet that brought her to me that day and I will forever be grateful. She would be my glow in the woods.
Marshall and I had become acquainted with Tifni months prior when we took baby classes at the hospital and she was our instruction. She was funny and I liked her so she made an impression. Apparently so did we. She happened in to our room while my pump was alarming (I would come to learn later that she tried to find another nurse to come and take care of the alarm but there was nobody else around). While in the room, I'm not sure who recognized who first but she and Marshall recognized each other from baby class. I was still very much in my feverish, medicated state (I don't know what they gave me but I was in and out of consciousness from the moment I gave birth).
What exactly prompted her to do it I will never know, but she sat down and began to tell us her story. She too had lost a baby, Brody. I sat up and tried desperately to pay attention. Wake the f- up Kara, this is important! I didn't hear anything else she said. I only knew she knew what I was going through. My god she went through it all and here she is delivering babies?! How? I could never! She wrote her number down on a little yellow sticky note and handed it to me. She hugged us both before leaving our room. I remember giving the number to someone and telling them where to put it so I wouldn't lose it.
Days later I went home. The first thought that entered my sleep deprived, yet no longer feverish and medicated mind was what the hell did I do with her number? I have got to find it now! I had literally just asked Marshall where it was and was frantically searching my purse when my phone dinged. It was a text message from her! Oh my freaking God! Is this woman psychic? She apologized and hoped she wasn't overstepping but she had gotten my number and wanted to text me. I thanked her profusely and told her I was so glad she did because I couldn't find her number.
That one text message started a very great and wonderful friendship. It would be months before I saw Tifni again in person but I would text with her nearly every day. I swear she texted me some days and it was as if she could read my mind. Other days it was like she was putting into words what I couldn't quite recognize yet. She was the first person besides Marshall that I told I was pregnant. The third would be that above mentioned glorious Dr. McLean who would also begin being at my beckoning texting call.
In the first year I told Tifni all my deep dark secrets. Things I didn't even share on my blog, or when I did so I edited myself. I never edited myself with Tifni. She was so raw and honest with me and I knew she probably had the exact same feelings at some point. Tifni was by no means my only support system and I had an amazing husband, friends and family but she was the only other mom I knew who had also lost a son. She also experienced another pregnancy after the loss. There was nothing I was going through that she didn't have to go through too. When I went back to work she told me about her first days back in labor and delivery and how she never though she would be able to do it again. I knew if she could manage to do that, anything I faced at work was chump's change in comparison.
I know I'm not the only one Tifni has helped. She is also instrumental in bringing a lot of us together. I now have many angel mommy friends that I would not have ever known if it wasn't for Tifni. She started a group on Facebook to give us all a little bit of Hope. Sadly, that group has grown over the year but I love to see that many in the group now have rainbow babies and we are all helping each other to heal. I know some people come into our lives for a reason and Tifni was definitely one of those people. She also went out of her way to schedule my induction with Dr. McLean so that she would by my L&D nurse. Not only did she stay late to be in the operating room with us, she also took some of the most amazing first photos of Ronan for us in the hospital and came to visit us every day we were there with him. Still to this day she is one of my most dear friends and I cannot thank her enough for all she did for me. She was my glow in the woods that led me back down the path to find happiness again.
I will always remember one of the most important pieces of advice she gave which nobody else would say. She told me to have another baby as soon as I could. She said that while the baby would in no way take the place of Nolan, a rainbow baby truly would heal my heart in ways nothing else could ever do. Oh how right she was. A year later when Ronan came out crying, my heart felt whole again.