Monthly Archives: October 2013

CarlyMarie Project 2013 – Day #20

Hope

Getting through each day after Clara’s passing took work.  I had to find something good to focus on.  It was those small things that helped me to focus less on how awful my loss was and to realize that my tears were because I knew how wonderful each day with Clara had been.  I really found finding ways to celebrate her life gave me hope.  Hope that maybe, some day, we could find a way to help end SIDS.  Hope that the awareness we try to create will save another family from this profound sadness.  Hope that when we think about her we will smile more often than cry.

My hope will always be that each newly bereaved family can find this hope too and some day smile as much as we do.

The other thing I hope for others, who just entering this grief, is that they are gentle on themselves.  It is easy to blame yourself and question everything.  It can consume our lives and our hearts.   Grief is overwhelming.  The days feel long and the nights even longer.  Be gentle.  Take time for you.  Don’t listen to others bad advice or harsh words, they aren’t feeling what you are.  Don’t rush into packing up your little ones things or to hold a baby because you don’t want to make someone feel bad.  Do it because you are ready.  Be gentle on your heart.  Love.  Hug.  Pray.  Find hope in each day.
Your heart will never be whole but work towards a heart that holds beautiful memories of your little one.

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CarlyMarie Project 2013 – Day #19

Support

My husband has been by my side every day. He is so supportive and together we have learned how to understand each other feelings.
We have been there to pick the other one up when one of us starts feeling down. I can’t imagine this journey without him and fear the day when he won’t be by my side.

There are so many friends and family that have been there for us. You truly see the work of God as he brings someone into or lets someone fade out of my life.
He knows just the right person to help me, support me, guide me, hug me.

Brianne your care package was the best thing I could have ever gotten. We are so thankful to remember our baby (and yours) each year.

Tanya and Sara I know I can talk to you both and know that when we are done, I will have me heart in the right spot and my tears will be dry. You listen and offer so much support and I am blessed to have you to talk to.

There are so many others that offer support as well… Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Your love brings a smile to me every day 

#CaptureYourGrief

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CarlyMarie Project 2013 – Day #18

Release

One of the hardest lessons in life is letting go. 
Whether it’s guilt, anger, love, or loss. 
Letting go is never easy, 
you fight to hold on, you fight to let go.

Last year when I did this project I found myself able to let go of all the hurt and anger I felt toward others. I found that reflecting on it, writing it down, and closing that chapter really helped heal some wounds in my soul. That is why I chose to do this project again. Sometimes release can be feelings and sometimes it is something more tangible. This year I want to be able to let go of the material things that remind me that Clara’s life was real. Clara’s bedding, clothes, toys, shoes. Having had our last child it is time for me to let go of many things we bought for Clara’s birth and chose to use with the rest of our babies rather than replace. Haleigh has now outgrown all of the clothes Clara wore and is wearing the ones she never got to. So it time to give them to another family. It makes it easier to shared these clothes now that Haleigh has worn them because they are no longer “Just Clara’s”. Yet they are all we have left of Clara too. So this month I plan to pack up a few special items and release the rest. I have realized in my journey that Clara has been and always will be a part of my life and I don’t need every material thing that was hers to prove she was here.

“Some of us think holding on makes us strong but sometimes it is letting go.”

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CarlyMarie Project 2013 – Day #17

Time

It has been 4 yrs, 5m, and 5 days since we last held Clara.

As time has passed we no longer count the time in days or months but in years. What seems like an eternity ago sometimes feels like just yesterday. Our life is forever split by “before Clara” and “after Clara” when we refer to memories. No one knows when our time here is done…remember to hug and love the special ones in your life.

“Time is too slow for those who wait,
too swift for those who fear,
too long for those who grieve,
too short for those who rejoice,
but for those who love, time is eternity.”
~ Henry Van Dyke

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CarlyMarie Project 2013 – Day #16

Seasons

The frozen blossoms are a perfect example of both the season Clara was born in and also the season she passed in.

We had no idea when she was born that such a beautiful blossom would be taken by the coldness of the last winter freeze and a little bud would be forever frozen in our hearts, memories, and pictures in our home.

#CaptureYourGrief

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CarlyMarie Project 2013 – Day #15

Wave of Light

Today is October 15, 2013 and Pregnancy, Still birth, and Infant Loss Awareness Day.  Tonight at 7pm we light a candle to remember those gone too soon.

A candle lit in memory of Clara (1/21/09- 5/12/09) and 1 for our miscarried baby (5/21/12). Thinking of all the babies lost too soon.

#CaptureYourGrief

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CarlyMarie Project 2013 – Day #14

Family

Our family has grown since we lost Clara. I had no idea that in 4.5 years of marriage I would have 4 kids!! We can never replace Clara and we wouldn’t want to. Each year we are blessed with the opportunity to get a family picture that includes Clara. We pray that we get this opportunity every year.

Thank you to Lach's Legacy for hosting the annual "Run for Their Lives!" 5K run/walk each year.

I thought I would also share the family picture below as well. I think the wall decal describes it so well…. Super Heroes & Fairy Tales. It is bittersweet when school picture time comes and we change them out. Each year 5 little faces change so much and 1 stays the cute princess face we can only dream about.

Family can mean so many things.  I would also like to include my “family” of SIDS and infant loss.  That family, sadly, continues to grow.  It is this family that listens and understands my grief.  I am proud to call all of you family.  I only wish that our group no longer had to grow and that no child had to leave this earth so soon.  God Bless you all!!

#CaptureYourGrief

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CarlyMarie Project 2013 – Day #13

Book

One of the best books for me was SIDS & Infant Death Survival Guide (http://www.amazon.com/SIDS-Infant-Death-Survival-Guide/dp/0964121808/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1381685730&sr=8-2&keywords=SIDS+%26+infant+death+survival+guide).

I got this book with the care package I received from Brianne & Lach’s Legacy.  I found a lot of help in it and comfort.  I read about so many other families that had experienced a sudden loss and how some of them handled different situations.  I found great tips on how to handle the comments that would come from not having a girl visible in out family, even though we do have one.  I also read some of the comments that might be said to me and that were, for the most part, said to me.  I felt prepared to go back to the real world with a realistic expectation on what I would hear and how it might make me feel.  I was able to be pro-active about coming up with ways to talk to my kids, daycare, husband, family, and most of all how to let those “comforting” words from others fall off my back without being a burden of hate.  I recommend this book to anyone whether you have experienced a loss or not.  If you have never experienced a loss, you will finish with ways to comfort and help someone who has lost an infant.

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CarlyMarie Project 2013 – Day #12

Article

Until recently I didn’t have an article or poem about grief.  I never was able to put to words how I felt either.  A friend of mine posted this on her daughter’s caring bridge site when God called her baby home.  It is always on my mind.

“We live in a society that doesn’t know how to deal with sadness. We are a people who have a hard time feeling without doing. The hard part of living in grief is that that there’s only a limited amount of “stuff” to do. After my son died, I grew to hate the language of grief in our society. We talk about a “grief process” or the “stages of grief” or doing “grief work”, almost like there’s a checklist that a person can work through to ensure adequate and proper grieving. I have learned to consider grief as a state of being…I am ‘in grief’ in the same way we talk about being ‘in love’. I think of the sadness of grief as being in a large body of water, like an ocean, and my only job is to get to shore by whatever means necessary. Gradually, the grief becomes shallower and easier to move in. And, even though I will someday have my feet on dry ground again, I will always live in view of the water, and will occasionally get my feet wet. The challenge for the people around me is accepting that only I can get me to shore- I can’t be rescued from grief. But the beauty of that is that I learn not to be afraid of the water, because I’ve also learned how to swim.”

While we are in the ocean swimming we sometimes have to find something to help us stay afloat.  I think of it as putting on a life jacket so I can swim to shore.  That life jacket can be something like trying to focus on the positives in each day or really anything that keeps you above water.  For me I find my life jacket to be God.  As long as I keep him on I can stay afloat.  I may not move toward shore but I am not sinking either.  If I take off the life jacket thinking I can do it by myself…I might be okay for a while but I am going to get tired of swimming and treading water.  It is at that point I am forced to make the choice to put on that life jacket again or face the reality that I might just sink.  I don’t want to go there so I put on that life jacket and keep on going.

One thing I have learned is you can’t make me put on that life jacket.  It is my choice. The life jacket doesn’t save me from my grief.  It isn’t a magic thing that makes the pain go away.  It doesn’t “make me better” immediately.  It is my choice to talk, seek help, deal with my grief.  You can nudge me to put on the life jacket, even suggest it but shoving it on me doesn’t help.  It makes me feel like you don’t understand my grief or that you aren’t listening to me.  You might have been my life jacket for the day and by forcing it onto me you have removed it’s floating power.  Shoving it on and having it not work makes me feel like I am still sinking  and may scare me enough not to try it again.  It can also mean the end of a friendship or relationship.

Some day we will reach land and won’t need that grief life jacket as often.  Just as I imagine that my feet will get wet once in a while for this loss, I also imagine I may need that life jacket again for another one.  However, for now mine is  packed away in my heart waiting for another storm.

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CarlyMarie Project 2013 – Day #11

Emotional Triggers

Today I chose a picture of Clara with two of her friends.  Watching the girls grow up is a way to really see what Clara might be doing if she was still here.  It is cool to see them next to Lincoln, Preston, and Haleigh.  I can’t imagine life with four under 4 but I bet it would be exciting.  Yes, some days it stinks because it can make you really miss what you don’t have but I try not to look at it that way.  I try to be positive about it because I really do enjoy spending time with these girls.  Their hugs melt my heart.

I think really anything can be an emotional trigger but I think it depends on the day on how it affects me.  Some days it can be a movie or seeing that someone else has been or will be experiencing the pain of losing a child.  Sometimes emotions are triggered by something I read or something someone says.  It can be a song or a poem.   Days like the first day of school, her birthday, Mother’s Day, her angelversary are emotional days.  Most of the time these things will bring tears.  Some of those tears fall others wait for another day until I can’t hold them back anymore.

More often than sadness there are things that happen that create a smile.  Sometimes it is even the same triggers I mentioned before.  Like her birthday… I do feel sad because I wish I was sharing it with her but I am also happy to celebrate her life, to do something with the kids in her memory.  We also like to get a little girl off the angel tree that would be Clara’s age.  This is a way for us to shop for something we might have bought for her and create some happiness while we do it.  Last year the boys giggled when we had to walk through the doll aisle.  Then they suggested a bike since Lincoln was already riding one Clara would be too.  It brought a smile to my heart to know they do enjoy shopping for another little girl.

I think the birth of another child can trigger about every emotion the human heart can dish out.  I remember Lincoln’s birth being very hard emotionally.  He is the only baby we found out gender because we wanted to be as prepared as possible.  What if this baby was a girl, would we be able to reuse clothes, the room, take her to daycare.  What if this baby is a boy…would we be sad because of gender?  Is it wrong to feel sad because baby is a boy?  Okay, now we feel guilty, are we really trying to replace Clara?  Are we replacing Clara?  You get my drift.  It is an emotional roller coaster that we felt with Lincoln, Preston, and Haleigh.

While we were expecting Haleigh we decided that there would be no more children.  After all this was my 7th pregnancy and soon to be 6th birth.  We didn’t find out if we were having a boy or girl.  We really do like the surprise that comes on delivery day.  It also helped in our healing.  We were prepared to have a boy and hoping for a girl.  That day the delivery room was filled with such emotion and anticipation.  Not just from us but from the staff at the hospital too.  After being being in that delivery room 4 times in the past 4 years, the ladies knew us very well.  One nurse even switched her days off so she could be there with us!!  I think just about every nurse was in the delivery room with us.  It was amazing and when Haleigh was born that room erupted into cheers and tears.  It was then that I realized these ladies had been hoping and praying for us too.

Now that Haleigh is getting bigger she is outgrowing her sisters hand me downs.  Deciding what to do with them can set off a whole range of emotions.  I am aware and reminded that it is just “stuff’ but it is the only physical thing left from Clara. One thing that helps is that Haleigh wore it too which makes it less Clara’s and thus easier to part with.  Each time I give away or sell some of Clara’s things it is a struggle and yet some relief.

Last but not least, the largest emotional trigger for me… touching the cold hand or face of a baby.  I can’t even describe the panic, fear, want to barf all over feeling I get when I check on the kids and their bodies are cool to the touch.  The “gentle” shove you give them to make sure they are still here quickly calms the shaking hands of this mother and brings tears.  Sometimes those tears are because I just woke a sleeping baby and other times they are ones of relief and sadness that I know someone else just did the same thing and they weren’t so lucky.

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