Nolan Eason

At 1:03AM on Friday, March 30, 2012 my first child was born - a son. We named him Nolan Eason. 21" long, 5lb 3oz. He was beautiful and perfect in every way, except that he was stillborn. As we searched for answers to his untimely death, we also searched for comfort. This blog was created as a way of working through my sorrow by trying to find something beautiful in the world each day. Hopefully, along the way it will help others to heal as well.

Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Day 11: Glow in the Woods

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.



Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Day 10: Words

Capture Your Grief Day 10: Words

Putting pen to paper was my first outlet for grieving. It's my best way of communicating my thoughts and always has been. In addition to blogging, I also created a personal diary to my son Nolan. I would write personal things to him that I never shared on my blog or anywhere else. Perhaps I will one day if when I reread them I see value in the thoughts and feelings. Putting words to paper is always raw and emotional for me. Even now, 3 years later, when I sit down each night to write my daily blog for Oct I usually find myself in tears by the end of the writing. But the words are healing and the tears are cathartic.

Today my words are going to be fairly simple and sweet. 

Son

Son sans sun
Rainbow son
Sons

Heavenly son
Earthly son
Sons

Son, son, sons
Son, sans son
Sons


Day 9: Family

Capture Your Grief Day 9: Family

On the surface my family appears to consist of myself, my husband Marshall, our 2 1/2 year old son Ronan, our dog JoJo and our cat Lucy. I still get asked often if Ronan is our only child, although far less often than when he was an infant. I used to loathe being asked if he was our first or our only. I just didn't know what to say. To complete strangers that I would never see again I learned it was easier to just say yes and be on my way. With people I was bound to spend more time with and get to know better, I tried to learn the best way to say no without becoming the elephant in the room. It took some time before I could say no, we had another son who would have been 3. In fact, it is probably just within the last year that I have been able to answer this and not get choked up inside. 

To all my family and friends, they are made well aware of my two sons. They know both of their names and know how deeply we were affected by Nolan's death. But we might just be somewhat of an anomaly. I also now quite a few parents that have also lost children and never talk about them. I had many of these women reach out to me when I lost Nolan and tell me. Women I had know for years and years and yet never knew this secret of theirs. Everyone grieves differently and for some those cannot bare to talk about their loss and some couldn't even bare to name or hold their baby. For us that wasn't an option. Perhaps my husband could have done without taking photos but for me I wanted to be able to remember Nolan. We have beautiful keepsakes up in our house to remind us of him - his urn, a beautiful photo of a sunset with his name written in the sand, a photo of his feet, a heart with his name and birth weight and a Molly Bear (weighted bear that weighs his birthweight). 

My son Ronan already knows he has a big brother and his name was Nolan. Sure he's too young to understand it all, but we talk about Nolan frequently to him and celebrate Nolan's birthday every year. Nolan has a stocking we hang every Christmas and an ornament we put on the tree. For our family, we will always be a family with two boys - one on earth and one in Heaven.


Day 8: Wish List

Capture Your Grief Day 8: Wish List

I have a long list of wishes when I think of my son Nolan. Wishes that I have long given up on. But the wishes I have today in talking about my son is that it will perhaps help another grieving mother, struggling to cope with the loss of her child, help another friend figure out what to do or say to help their friend who lost a child or help people who are blessed enough to walk through this world and never know someone firsthand who has lost a child to understand the gravity and frequency of this occurrence.

I too once was uneducated. Like most I though once I was past the touch and go first trimester the rest was home free. I thought the worst I would have to worry about was labor pains and pregnancy pains. To say I was shocked to learn my son had died would be an understatement. I was shattered into a million pieces. I was angry at the world. I was angry at myself. I was just plain angry. And then I was numb. I felt as though I was a zombie walking through the motions of life but not really feeling any of it. I became a really good actor in those coming months. And then there were the days that I was terrible at it. I couldn't put on a brave face to save my life.

I remember the first time I heard someone else was pregnant. This deserving couple had every right to be happy and even though I knew about it before the "public" announcement at work, when it was made I felt something well up inside me. I ran out of the room as fast as I could without drawing attention to myself. I dialed my husband and by the time he answered I was in the stairwell bawling my eyes out. You know the ugly cry where you are heaving so much there is no way for you to sensibly talk. I remember my first baby shower after Nolan died. I spent the entire time drinking mimosas and watching the clock for a reasonable time for me to exit. In all fairness, my friend told me she completely understood if I didn't come. But I knew I would have to go to one eventually. I never had one when I became pregnant with Ronan. There was really no need. As with most second children of the same sex, we already had everything we needed. Unlike most second children, Ronan wouldn't be using worn hand-me-downs. 

My wish list is that people stop pretending stillborns aren't still prevalent in our world today. The fact is, in just my tiny beach community of Wilmington there is a little group of angel mommies that grows by the month. Yes month. In the year or so we have had a Facebook group we have managed to accumulate over 40 members and these are all women that have been added personally by someone in the secret group. It's a space where we can vent our frustration that nobody on this planet can possibly understand, announce our new rainbow babies with an appreciation no other parent could possibly understand and just be there to support each other on days like our Angels' birthdays. 

I remember hearing a few years ago that a coworkers' wife died during childbirth and I thought to myself, "wow, I didn't even know that was a thing anymore." In reality, nearly 800 women die a year during childbirth in the U.S. I imagine a lot of my friends, coworkers and even family said the same thing when they heard my son was stillborn. In reality, 1 in every 160 pregnancies in the U.S. end in stillbirth totaling 26,000 stillbirths a year and most remain unexplained.

 

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Day 7: Memory

Capture Your Grief Day 7: Memory

Some memories escape us, some memories fondly stick with us and then there are the memories that haunt us. When I think about my first son, I have some of all of these memories. I'm actually glad I wrote a lot down the first year after Nolan's death because with my second pregnancy, lots of what I experienced during my time as a pregnant woman has become muddled. I don't entirely know what I felt when and with what pregnancy anymore. I do remember enjoying a time of ethereal bliss during my pregnancy with Nolan which I never experienced with Ronan and will never experience again with any subsequent pregnancies I may experience. It was a time after we surpassed the delicate first trimester and before I went to the hospital that fateful night. For 20 weeks, between weeks 14 and 35 gestation, we lived happily ever after. We put together the most amazingly zen nursery, we had baby showers, we picked out a name, we nested, we took baby classes and we dreamed of the very near future. We took weekly pregnancy photos, went to ultrasounds every 3 weeks and by the end of my pregnancy I waddled every where I went. I had gained 30 pounds with Nolan. My feet were swollen, I couldn't tie my shoes myself with any ease, my back ached and I felt swollen everywhere. I had stopped wearing my wedding bands the week prior as my fingers were just too swollen to allow me to get them on. I counted carbs my entire pregnancy and took my blood sugar 3 times a day. It certainly wasn't the fun pregnancy I had romanticized it to be, but I only had one bout of morning sickness my entire pregnancy and I was more than excited to welcome my baby boy into this world. It was all going to be worth it. But then it wasn't.

Nolan moved a lot early one but as the weeks passed and he got taller and taller he moved less frequently. I assumed he was running out of room. At 21" long, he was quite curled up in my short torso. I remember nearly every ultrasound the technician commenting on Nolan's height - his long legs, specifically. Then they would look at my 5'3" stature and ask if my husband was especially tall. Nope he was pretty average height for a man. No idea where our son was getting his height. I had heartburn like crazy nearly my entire second and third trimester. Old wives tales will tell you that means your baby has a lot of hair. Ultrasounds confirmed all the hair and sure enough when Nolan was born with a thick head of brown hair I knew there might actually be something to the old wives tale after all. 

There were some major difference between my pregnancies with my sons. My husband and I actually clung to the differences as a sign of hope that things would be different the second time around. I was never diagnosed with gestational diabetes with my second pregnancy, despite the three different glucose tests they gave me just to be sure.  I also didn't gain as much weight the second time around, although I didn't lose all the weight from the first pregnancy before I got pregnant again 3 months later. I never got bloated, my feet never swelled and I was still wearing my wedding bands when they made me take them off in the hospital before my c-section. They never did figure out what happened. There are no answers as to why Nolan passed away, although there is some speculation. Obviously, the most clear images and memories I have are the few short hours we spent in the hospital with Nolan after he was born.

I remember how delicate his skin was. I remember being afraid to really touch him for fear he would fall apart like a china doll. I remember being so afraid to bathe him and dress him and so thankful the nurse was there to help. I remember thinking it was silly they put a diaper on him, but then realizing they had to to preserve his body. I remember his perfect little lips and how quickly they changed as his body withered away by the hour. I remember his long, skinny fingers and perfectly manicured nails and how Marshall thought those were perfect pianist hands. I remember putting the little hat I had knitted him on his head for the only family photo we would ever have. I remember his ears and wondering if he would have been able to hear. I remember never seeing his eyes open. And then I remember him in his bassinet as the nurse wheeled him out of my room for the last time. That was the last time I would see my son's body. The next time I would see him would be when the funeral home handed me a box full of his ashes.


Day 6: Books

Capture Your Grief Day 6: Books

When Nolan passed away a few people sent us books on grieving, losing a child, how to cope, etc. At first I didn't have an interest, much less the focus to read any of them. What I did do immediately was begin writing. I started a blog entitled Something Beautiful. I focused on not only pouring out all the crazy, angry, confused and hurt thoughts I was having but also tried to focus on something I found beautiful that day - a sunset, a thoughtful message, a quiet moment during the storm. 

It wasn't until some time later that I started to read the books sent to me. While they were nice and thought provoking, none really spoke to me. I just couldn't really relate to them as they were discussing different types of loss and grief than what I was dealing with. So I continued to blog and in doing so I started receiving messages. Messages from friends, messages from friends of friends, and then messages from complete strangers. One way or another they caught a piece of my story, or stumbled across the entire blog and began to read it from start to finish and it spoke to them. I was amazed that what I was going through touched people that had never even experienced such a loss. I was even more amazed that women all across the country were writing me and expressing how grateful they were for my words and how it helped them through their own grieving process for they too had lost a child. 

Although I only write intermittently on my blog now, I still continue to receive messages from women who find peace and comfort in my writing. Clearly, for some solace does come in the form of books or reading someone else's experience. For me, the solace was the writing process and the beautiful messages I received from women I was helping. I've been told countless times I need to write a book and perhaps they are all right, although I feel as though I already have. 

http://beautifulnolan.blogspot.com


Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Day 5: Empathy

Capture Your Grief Day 5: Empathy

When faced with what to say to the bereaved, I find people turn to the old standbys, "everything happens for a reason," "God has a plan," or "this too shall pass." Or some, knowing these things sound utterly stupid to someone struggling to deal with grief, just choose to not say anything at all. Then there's the friends who turn to you and say, "I'm so very sorry I don't know what else to say." I know, I had a bit of it all. So what should you do or say when your friend, family member or coworker has a child pass away? If you haven't also experienced this type of loss, please don't tell us you know what we must be going through. You don't and I pray you never do. I have buried friends and very close family members (all of my grandparents being deceased), I even buried a very special aunt but none of these compared to the tremendous feeling of helplessness I experienced when our son Nolan passed away. 

When I was in high school my five year old cousin passed away from drowning and I remember how deeply hurt, shocked and confused I was that this could happen to an innocent child. I grieved along with my family members. I saw it destroy his parents' marriage, deeply affect his twin sister and profoundly change the way many of my family members looked at the world. But to say I understood what his parents were going through would be a complete lie. Even today I cannot understand. You see, I lost my son as a newborn. They lost their five year old. Yes the loss is similar, but different. I can empathize and I have a new profound understanding for the highs and lows they went through and are still going through, but our stories are different. 

The first thing my husband said to me when he arrived at the hospital early that morning was, "I don't blame you." He would tell me this time and time again, knowing that I still blamed myself. It's hard not to. Knowing you were the one that was carrying the baby and was supposed to be protecting him, it's hard to come to terms with the fact that there was absolutely nothing I could have done differently to change the outcome.

Perhaps the thing I liked to hear the least was "everything happens for a reason." I just can't believe that there is ever a good reason for the death of an innocent child. In fact, I don't imagine anyone wants to try to imagine the reason their loved one died, especially when it was sudden and unexpected. If you don't know what to say, the best advice I can give you is to be honest. I had friends tell me they had no words but were so sorry for me and I appreciated it. I knew they cared. I knew they realized the importance of my child's life. To not say anything begins to negate the child's life as if because you didn't see him, he didn't exist. In my Mommy of Angels group, this is often the biggest complaint. We all want to know that the world, our family and our friends all acknowledged our children. I want my friends to know I'm a Mommy of two boys, even though they only see me with one. 

We did receive a lot of very thoughtful gifts and messages but perhaps the most thoughtful one I received was the one that was probably from the person it was hardest for me to see. You see one of my very best friends was also pregnant when I had Nolan. She struggled with even coming to the hospital as she didn't want to hurt me any more than I was already hurting. I know this because she messaged my husband about it. She finally decided to come anyway, swollen belly and all. I knew it took a lot of courage for her to show up there and I appreciated it. I knew most women would have shied away from me and maybe would have dissolved the friendship over this, for in fact some did. But not her.

A couple of months later I returned to work out of town and after being in my work apartment for a few weeks I received a care package. It was from my pregnant friend. In it contained a beautiful letter, some fun things to make me laugh like crazy socks and hair ties to work out in, a purple cuddly blanket (she knew to be my favorite color), some awesome smelling candles (because I always stole her candles at our Christmas gift exchange), and a beautiful nightlight to represent Nolan. She knew I had gotten a nightlight for his nursery at home so she thought I might need one to remind me of him while I was gone. It was so very touching and the most perfect thing. She followed it up by sending my husband a Father's Day card that summer. 

Not many people acknowledged us as parents that year, but she did. And when her daughter Harper was born 5 months after Nolan passed, she was the first baby I held after him. I wouldn't hold another baby until Ronan was born 7 months later. I have a lot of great friends and family that did tremendous things for us after Nolan passed, but none made quite the impact. Although it was often hard that first few months to be around her and her baby, I did it, knowing that our friendship meant too much to me to not be there. I'm glad she felt the same way.  Today our children play together and I hope that they grow up to understand the importance of friendship and maintaining it even when the days aren't sunny and bright. 


Day 4: Dark + Light

Capture Your Grief Day 4: Dark + Light


There's the old adage, "when life hands you lemons, make lemonade," but when life punches you in the stomach and rips out your heart it's a little hard to find anything sweet and worth salvaging from it. Some might think that it's just the days following the death of our son that were the darkest, and while they might be right, they certainly weren't the only truly dark moments. There were the days which if we told anyone else other than our friends who also buried their babies about them, we most likely would be critically judged. The what ifs and why us persist long past the time most people think it probably should. The why them is the harder one to admit. Yes, I admit it. There were several times when we found out someone was having a baby that was less than suited to be a parent and it just made us want to scream! It seems like every cocaine addict on the planet can have a perfectly easy pregnancy with a healthy baby while parents that do everything right and want a baby so badly are stripped of it and told by doctors there is no reason they can find that it happened. Then there are the days that are just dark for no reason. They days you wake up crying and fight with your husband for absolutely no reason.

But the absolute darkest day for me I barely remember. It started at about 1am when I was told they could no longer find a heartbeat. My husband was 3 hours away for work and I was in the triage room by myself, waiting for my mom to arrive. I had drove straight there from work after not having felt the baby move for a few hours. My worst fears were coming true. I watched the ultrasound of my baby and the blank face on the doctor. He had to bring another doctor in to confirm. As if being told it the first time wasn't hard enough but I had to be told a second time. Then I was given the decision. Stay, be admitted and be induced to give birth to your dead baby or go home and wait it out; eventually my body would go into labor naturally to rid itself of the dead baby. Wow. What wonderful choices you give me. I just looked at my mom unable to even speak. She asked a few questions, I called my husband told him our son had died and heard him just bust out sobbing and screaming "No, why!" 

The rest of the morning hours became a blur. I was admitted and the induction process began. It hurt like a mother f-er. I mean seriously? My baby dies and now they torment me? I was beginning to think I made the wrong decision but then again, was there a better option? To make matters worse, I began to run a fever. By the time my next Doctor came on duty, my husband was there, my friends were there, my extended family was there and my fever had spiked to nearly 105. The new doctor immediately took me off the induction meds, assuming I was having a bad reaction to them. I was only dilated 2cm at the time. Less than 30 minutes later I was a 10, in excruciating pain, active labor and no epidural yet. The amazing nurse I had was running around like crazy trying to get me an epidural while I screamed in pain "why is this happening to me?!" I finally got the epi and the doctor asked me if I wanted to push. I snapped no and she left me alone. Remember there was no urgency. I wouldn't be birthing a living baby. Some time passed and I'm pretty sure I slept and then she came and asked me again if I wanted to push. I agreed, knowing I would have to eventually. See most women could have mustered through the pain knowing that the outcome would be their beautiful baby they would take home. For me, labor was the beginning of the end.

Fortunately, I didn't have to push long before Nolan was born. We were given the option of having a photographer come, which I said yes to. The nurse helped me bathe him, we had him baptized, then we had our only family photos done with him. Lastly, we were talked to about our plans for his remains. Never in a million years had I imagined I would be having to decide what funeral home, should we bury or cremate our baby boy. Then I was told there was a chance my milk would come in too. To help ward it off I was told to bind my chest for several days with ace bandages. Again, I was lucky at least that worked and I wasn't forced to deal with lactating breasts.

I stayed in the hospital for several days after but Nolan only stay for a few hours with me. When they wheeled him away for the last time, I immediately wished I had held him longer, spent more time with him. But the truth was, no matter how long they kept him with me I would have wished that. The day I left the hospital my husband and I drove to the funeral home to finish making our son's burial arrangements. Those days were the darkest of my life.

No light came until the day, nearly 1 year later when my healthy son Ronan was born. Some would think that the pregnancy would shed some light on our lives but instead it just was full of worry and biweekly doctor visits. I felt as though I was treading on eggshells the entire 9 months. Every day that Ronan has been on this earth with us has brought more and more light into our lives. He is the rainbow that colors our life. We were drowning in our sorrow and Ronan was the life boat that saved us.

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Day 3: In Honor



Capture Your Grief Day 3: In Honor

Nolan Eason McGee. 
Born March 30, 2012. 
I was 35 weeks pregnant. 

He weighed 5lbs 3oz, was 21" long, had a head full of brown hair, long fingers, and perfect pouty lips.

No one expected what came our way
Only silence filled the air that day
Little fingers and little toes
A baby born, but no congrats said
Nolan was born; pronounced dead

Friday, October 2, 2015

Day 2: Intention

Capture Your Grief Day 2: Intention

I spoke with another mom today who had also had a loss before she had her healthy baby. Our rainbow baby boys now both being toddlers we shared some laughs about them and expressed our disinterest in spending much time away from them, including working. We both have take extended periods of time off since our rainbow babies arrived. Time which to some moms might seem extensive and ridiculous, but to a mom who went through what we went through to have a healthy baby there can never be enough time. 

As time passed and my son entered the "terrible twos" I found myself forgetting to cherish all the moments with Ronan, even the trying times. My intention for this year is to remember just how precious my time with him is. In his first year this was so easy as the loss of Nolan was still so fresh in my heart. But as time passes, the heart heals and I got distracted by life. 

This next year I want to remind myself that I never know when might be my last time doing a particular thing with my son. Already, we have had our last time with things. I nursed him for the last time 6 months ago, soon I will change his diaper for the last time, and in no time I will be telling him goodnight in his room for the last time. Children grow up so quickly that we often forget that we might be doing something with them today that we will never do again for them. Tomorrow they could master tying their shoes and never need us to do it again for them. So my intention this year is to try to relax and enjoy the moment. After all, the terrible twos will soon be over and as challenging as they have been I know that in a year or two there will be many things about this special time that I will miss. 

Besides, at what other time in your life can you throw yourself on the ground in a store and throw a fit and have people walk by virtually unaffected by your tantrum. If any 40 year old did that, the cops would most likely be called! Embrace the twos! (Note: today's photo is not of a tantrum. Instead he decided to go to sleep in Petco on a cat scratching board shaped like a couch) 

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Day 1: Sunrise

Capture Your Grief Day 1: Sunrise

Cloudy, rainy days have a tendency to make even the happiest person depressed. After a while the lack of sunshine and Vitamin D takes its toll on your body and mind. I remember in the days following the death of my son Nolan I felt I was enveloped in a cloud of haze; there was no light shining any where, no warmth radiating throughout my body. I was nothing but a heavy storm cloud on the brink of opening up and spewing forth all the anger and coldness inside me. Instead I walked around for days, weeks, months like a storm cloud twirling off the coast gaining strength to become a category 5 hurricane. And then the sun came out and broke through the cloudiness inside me. 

I was having another baby. For 9 overcast months I wrestled the darkness inside me, clinging to the hope that this time would be different, that this time my baby would be born healthy. Every day that passes didn't bring relief, it brought more angst and anxiety. 

It wasn't until I was on the operating table and heard my rainbow baby cry for the first time that the storm cloud inside me broke open. I cried all the tears that the past year had been gathering up inside me. I cried for my dead son Nolan, and I cried for my healthy son Ronan. I finally felt as though Nolan's death had a greater purpose - it brought us Ronan. I knew in the depths of my soul we would have never had Ronan had Nolan been born alive. My rainbow baby was here and he was truly the light after the storm.