Saturday, April 27, 2019

Toddler Dress - Done!!

(Topic: Knitting)

Hi Friends,

Remember that knitted baby/toddler dress I was working on? I finished it!!!!!

It came out really well. I'm really happy with it.

I seamed using a whip stitch. I would have liked the blue stripe to line up a bit better. I think a mattress stitch would have helped, but I'm not actually 100% sure that I got exactly the same row count (since it was done flat, rather than in the round, and the instructions were "until it measures x inches", so it's possible I didn't count out rows accurately on the second side.

And here's the finished product!!! I decided to make the "ribbon" by braiding the same yarn used for the blue stripe at the bottom. Super cute, right?




Yours,

Sarah

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Resource list: Visit my spreadsheet at www.tinyurl.com/infantloss

Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Angel quote

(topic: death, quotes)



Hi Friends,

Just something simple today.

When I was recently watching Little Women (the PBS/Masterpiece version from 2017, with Angela Lansbury), there was a quote that really caught my ear (side note from the historical fashion side of me: some of the dresses are great. Some of the choices, though, are really odd... ).

The quote that I heard, which I found by Googling, was actually from Hans Christian Anderson, and was written in 1844 (which, by the way, was earlier than I'd realized he was around!).
http://hca.gilead.org.il/angel.html

Here it is:

Then the child opened his eyes and looked into the glorious happy face of the angel, and at the same moment they found themselves in that heavenly home where all is happiness and joy. And God pressed the dead child to His heart, and wings were given him so that he could fly with the angel, hand in hand.

If you read the whole little story at the link, it's a fairly typically mid-1800s sickly-sweet too-perfect story, but at the same time it's quite sweet. And I really love the image of God hugging the little boy.


Yours,

Sarah

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Resource list: Visit my spreadsheet at www.tinyurl.com/infantloss

Sunday, April 21, 2019

Thoughts about Easter

(Topics: Grief and Anxiety, mental health, Easter/Religion, cemeteries)

Hi Friends,

The other day, I spent the day with Charlie.

I have been feeling really, really sad and overwhelmed lately. Sometimes, when I'm feeling heavy, it's very hard for me to figure out why - and knowing why makes it easier for me to either live with the feelings, or to find something to do to help.

I felt like I've been having a harder time than usual staying steady when life threw me curve balls (as life always does, on smaller and larger scales). When my hubby also commented on that, I decided to call my therapist to see if I could get in for an extra session.

(Side note: there is NO SHAME in asking for extra help! I know it's hard. It's hard to know when to ask, and it's hard to ask. It can be hard to admit that you aren't able to do it all yourself. I encourage you to set up support systems so it's easier to ask for help. For instance, I have friends who I trust, who know my whole story and things I struggle with. I can easily vent to them, because I don't have to explain anything. But I also don't want to burden them - so I also have a therapist. Therapists are AMAZING, guys. If you try a therapist, and you don't feel comfortable, it's ok to go to a new one. FIND THE RIGHT FIT FOR YOU 💗💓. Once you find someone you like, the point is that they are trained to help and trained to listen - but they are OUTSIDE the situation. They won't get hurt feelings, and they won't get mad. They JUST HELP. And it's AMAZING 💕💓.)

I got an extra session to get help, because even things that seemed like they should be little were feeling big. My therapist is my outside perspective, and helps me find my rational brain but also helps me acknowledge my emotions.

In this session, she helped me identify stressors that were overwhelming me, or stressing me out, or triggering my grief - even when sometimes it was super subconscious.

I actually prepare a little for my sessions by taking notes on rough days, of what bothers me or big things that happen. This helps guide what we talk about and helps me feel like we use the time a little more effectively (this is not everyone's style - you do you!).

Above the line, notes to tell the therapist.
Below, notes written afterward, with some of what we talked about.

After we went through my list, I asked - WHY?? Why is everything so hard right now?? And she literally sat there and counted things off on her fingers, guys. Counted things back off to me, that I had told her about, but also helped me identify a few more things that had been in the background, that I had not yet seen clearly enough to name.

One was that, the last time we moved, it was not only right after Charlie died, it was literally because Charlie died. We had planned to wait to move until he was 3-6 months old before we moved. Instead, we were in our new place about a month after. So since we're moving sometime this summer, that might be a reason that packing and planning is so hard for me to work on.

One of the other things she pointed out is that Easter is - like Christmas - about a mother, but this time about the son dying. And coming back again...
Mary is a complicated figure for me. Really complicated.

So after we'd identified what some of the triggers were (there were about a half a dozen others, too....), we talked about how to find some relief. Some comfort, and a way through, through the sad and the pain, because the stress isn't as heavy when the sad isn't weighing me down.

The other day, I spent the day with Charlie.

The main solution she suggested was to let myself feel. To spend some time with Charlie, if I could, but to remember and feel and cry and just be, with my pain and sorrow, and weep if I need to.

The universe (God?) listened to my need. I had been worried that I couldn't find time, since it's a decent distance to Charlie's grave; and to sit and feel, I couldn't be rushed. But one of my scheduled items got cancelled, and suddenly I had a whole day ahead of me, to go to my little boy.

I spread out my blanket, and opened the umbrella to keep the sun off (and in case it rained), and I sat down with Charlie, and lay with him, and talked to him.


I told him how much I missed him and how much I wanted to hold him... and I wept.

Tears do cease, at some point. The pain behind my sternum, the pressure in my throat does ease, as though the tears wash out a tightness and release something.

I weeded his garden, and touched some of the decorations and memorials we have for him there.

And I lay with my chest over where he is buried. The closest I can come to holding him.

The other day, I spent the day with Charlie.

It means so much to me, to have a place to care for, that is just his, and his alone.

I have a complicated relationship with Mary, Jesus' mom. Her baby was born alive, which hurts at Christmas. She gets to see him grow up. But she suffers through his death. I imagine that she hurts inside, behind her sternum, so tight it hurts to breathe. I imagine she weeps so deeply she convulses in Joseph's arms. I imagine she knows this pain. But. He lives again. My Charlie doesn't yet.

Jesus died right before a Jewish holiday. That meant that his body had to be dealt with before the sun went down that Friday, and couldn't really be tended to properly until the Sabbath and the Passover was over. Joseph of Arimathea was the guy who put the body in the tomb in the right cloths. He made sure the basics were taken care of, that were important.

But women went to care for his body, to lay him to rest and to say their last goodbyes. Those are the women I watch, in this story. They prepare the ointments to rub on the body, to do the rites of burial and death from their culture, to make things right, as much as you can when someone dies. They go back after their holiday, to finish things.

We know who those women were, because they were the eyewitnesses that Jesus was gone (alive, risen, back).

I care who they were, because they were the grave tenders. The ones who would have placed the headstone and served the funeral lunch and planted flowers with his mom, if it were now.

The book of Matthew says it was Mary Magdalene and the other Mary. The book of Mark says it was women including Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James the younger and of Joses, and Salome (so that was a pretty large group). The book of Luke says it was the women who had followed Jesus from Galilee, and also lists them as Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Mary the mother of James, and the other women. In the book of John it's only Mary Magdalene.

No matter who it was, they cared. They took the time to go, and planned to care intimately for his body, hands on. I wish so hard I'd been able to do more of the funeral care myself, for Charlie. This isn't something our culture is used to, anymore. And I did not know to ask for it, and I don't know if I would have wanted it at the time -- in hindsight, though, I miss caring for my little boy, giving him the final kiss in his coffin.

I saw a picture, last month. It was a mama and a papa, tucking their baby into his coffin, into his "forever crib". Seeing that, suddenly my heart longed for having done that for Charlie.
To care for a body, to minister to their last cares on earth, is an act of pure love. Of closure. Of peace within sorrow.

As I lay with Charlie, my breast filling the hollow in the earth beneath which he rests, I felt complete and yet bereft. Filling the hole in my heart, the gaping hole in my life with the closest thing I could.

The other day, I spent the day with Charlie. 


While I was there, I read a book to Charlie. We read to Pookie regularly, and it's a thing we can hold onto - one of the things we'd looked forward to, so much. So many other things were taken away, but that we can still do.

I also read a graphic memoir, called Rosalie Lightning, written by a father whose daughter died of SIDS. His experiences - his raw emotion - reading that while visiting Charlie -
He talked of how a loss parent's attention can be grabbed by other children of the right age, how we can stare, stare at what could have been.

Today is the day before Easter. The in-between. The waiting - for us, who know how the story ends. For those back then, the second day since. Counting life based on the life-changing moment. For me, two days ago was 2 years and 10 months. Since.

Charlie is nearly three. How do you plan a birthday party for the 3rd year since a death?

I'm always aware of how old he is/would be/would have been.

Today is the day before Easter as I write this, Saturday. Some churches hold a vigil, traditionally held from before midnight until after midnight, to celebrate the moment of Easter at the turning point of the night.

We went to an evening vigil service. When the priest was preaching about the Easter life, the Christian life, is to focus on LIFE not death - all I could think was, how intrusive is death. How hard, not to think of loss, even with the promise of life.

Right then, two 3-year-olds started to get restless and play.

My Charlie.

I should have been dealing with a restless Charlie.

Every day, I spend the day with Charlie.

No matter what, he's on my mind. This is a holiday (holy day) about life, promise of life, promise of future life, power over death.

My son is dead.

My religion gives promise, hope.

But everyday, my son is not in my arms.

My son is on my mind. My son is in my heart. Everyday, he is with me. I'm the one staring at your son, thinking of what my son might have said, might have done, and hurting.

I'm the one rocking a teddy bear, because my baby is dead.

I understand the hope with my head, but not yet with my heart. I have to take any tiny bit that my heart can understand.

To the lady who passed the peace to my bear, please know that in my heart, you passed the peace to my son. Thank you. I may cry, but my heart is lighter.


💛

Yours,

Sarah

To subscribe, find the "subscribe by email" note in the left column and enter your email there. Links to posts will be emailed directly to you whenever I post them! Nothing else gets emailed.

Resource list: Visit my spreadsheet at www.tinyurl.com/infantloss

Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Visiting Charlie in January

(Topic: visiting grave)

Hi Friends,

I'd like to share with you a little bit about visiting Charlie. At the moment, we live about 45 minutes away from where he's buried. Pretty soon we're going to be more like 2 hrs and 15 minutes away...

This means that we visit Charlie whenever it makes sense to go in that direction. I rarely drive there just to visit Charlie and nothing else (it feels a bit far for that) but if I am doing anything else in that direction, I'll make time if at all possible.

This means that I end up going in all sorts of weather! And that I keep certain things in the car for those visits, too.

Generally in the car I have:
  • a plastic ground cloth (for under the picnic blanket if the ground is damp)
  • a picnic blanket
  • a camp chair, for when I'm going to sit and visit for a while
  • a bucket, in which I keep:
  • gardening gloves
  • sometimes a hand cultivator (for stubborn weeds)
  • any decorations or cards that I want to leave with Charlie next time I go
I also always have (for Pookie):
  • a sling
  • an Ergo carrier
This means that I just have to be dressed for the weather and have appropriate footwear, and it's easy to visit! Hubby comes along whenever he can, but so often I'm there on a weekday, so he's busy. That means that I pass along his love to Charlie, but also means I take a lot of pictures to send to Daddy at work! We take far fewer pictures when we're both there :)

In January, it had been a while since I'd visited, and weather had been iffy, so when I finally got a chance to visit, I jumped at it! I geared up, though, and knew I wouldn't be able to hang out long without freezing.

Pookie in a sling, so my hands are more free. I'm bundled up! That's the river behind us, that flows scenically along the low edge of the cemetery.

Goodness. We got a lot of snow! This visit was on January 11th.

Peek-a-Pook!

There's even a snow hat on Charlie's stone!!

You can just see the pine "grave pillow" peeking out from under the flag! Even the dragonfly has a little snow hat!

Butterfly has a snow burden... This is a "Charlie Butterfly" to us, since Charlie is our little Tigger/tiger, we now call monarchs and other orange-and-black butterflies "Charlie butterflies" since they make us think of him!





Yours,

Sarah

To subscribe, find the "subscribe by email" note in the left column and enter your email there. Links to posts will be emailed directly to you whenever I post them! Nothing else gets emailed.

Resource list: Visit my spreadsheet at www.tinyurl.com/infantloss

Saturday, April 13, 2019

Folia Cowl, post 3 (work in progress)

(Topic: Knitting)

Hi Friends!

Remember this gorgeous yarn?


Look at that hand-dyed shading! Swoon!
You may remember this yarn from the leafy shawl I posted about here, here, here, here, here, and here (it took a while to finish!).

I also bought these buttons, but didn't use them on the cedar leaf shawlette.

On my current pattern, the Folia Cowl (which WILL use the buttons), I already posted here about figuring out the gauge and starting the initial seed stitch band.

Then here I posted this picture, of the first full lace repeat:


Well, I'm now well on my way! It's not nearly done (I think I'm about halfway) but the lace repeats are fitting together nicely and looking leafy and wonderful.

A drapey picture with TERRIBLE lighting. It's not this awful color.

A much nicer picture. Isn't it GORGEOUS? I think it needs to be about twice as long, and then I'll finish with a buttonhole band, and add the buttons to the end already done. And of course I'll post pics of me wearing it! At this rate, though, don't expect anything till at least fall...
I'll keep you updated. Progress may be slow, but I'm loving how it's turning out!


Yours,

Sarah

To subscribe, find the "subscribe by email" note in the left column and enter your email there. Links to posts will be emailed directly to you whenever I post them! Nothing else gets emailed.

Resource list: Visit my spreadsheet at www.tinyurl.com/infantloss

Wednesday, April 10, 2019

Blueberry BlueBear!

(Topic: Pookie, Food)


Hi Friends!

Often, Pookie comes along with us to restaurants and diners, and at home he most often sits on the kitchen counter. Since he's often within range when food is a topic, we have Pookie express interests, too, for fun! I've also mentioned that Pookie and I walk at a local bog park sometimes, too.

All of this ties together today!

You see, bears like to eat blueberries. Blueberries grow in the bog, so that is "Pookie's favorite park". It also means that we say that it is Pookie's favorite food, and he always yearns for them! His nibbles are so tiny we can't see them, which is why mommy and daddy usually have to finish his blueberry foods!

I also find it fun, because not only do real bears like blueberries, but it's also a parallel: A BlueBear likes BlueBerries!

A new diner we tried. Pookie excitedly noted that there are actually blueberry pancakes on the menu!

Hooray!!


I tried a new energy bar (which, by the way, I didn't end up loving too much). Pookie confiscated this flavor! You can't see the part of the label where it says the flavor, but the color might help you guess...

Do I really believe Pookie eats? Of course not. He's a stuffed animal, and it's imaginary. But play-acting this gives us something to do together, and a way to form new memories (since we can't directly form new ones with Charlie), and - let's face it - it's fun!


Yours,

Sarah

To subscribe, find the "subscribe by email" note in the left column and enter your email there. Links to posts will be emailed directly to you whenever I post them! Nothing else gets emailed.

Resource list: Visit my spreadsheet at www.tinyurl.com/infantloss

Saturday, April 6, 2019

I'm Nearly Done with the Toddler Dress!

(Topics: knitting)

Hi Friends!

Back in August, I posted about a dress I'd started making, but I only had about 3" done. Well, I'm nearly there!!

This is the beginning of the back piece, that I showed you last time. I decided to add the blue stripe.
The beginning of the front. Notice that I've figured out better tension. This was largely due to switching from (slippery) metal needles to (grippier) bamboo needles. Since the yarn was so slippery anyway, having slippery needles made keeping even tension very difficult. It's a lot easier with a bit more grip.

The lace holes for a ribbon to be threaded through, at the waistline.


Finished back! I'm actually pretty far on the front now too, so the next post about this dress will be a finished product! The ribbon will be blue to match the stripe, and it's sleeveless, so once I put the front and back together, it's just a matter of knitting the neckline.

Can't wait to see how it comes out!


Yours,

Sarah

To subscribe, find the "subscribe by email" note in the left column and enter your email there. Links to posts will be emailed directly to you whenever I post them! Nothing else gets emailed.

Resource list: Visit my spreadsheet at www.tinyurl.com/infantloss

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Awareness Ribbon Shirt

(Topic: Grief, being in public, explaining)

Hi Friends,

Remember this shirt?




















A few days ago, I talked about how I altered the sleeves. Today I want to talk about wearing it.

Here's a picture of the front:












I first wore this in public on Mother's Day last year, and have worn it occasionally since. One of the reasons I like it is that it makes "being a mom" visible for me - I'm otherwise invisible as a mom unless you know me. I also feel that the awareness ribbon is fairly evident and recognizable. (I'll talk some other time about the pros and cons of the word "angel" in this context.)

Still, when wearing it, I have to balance being visible/recognized with being misunderstood or having to explain.

In fact, I've had two blatant misunderstandings, both leaving me baffled, when I thought the awareness ribbon shape is pretty widely understood in our culture.

Misunderstanding 1)
I wish my kid was an angel! (i.e. "well-behaved")

Misunderstanding 2)
I should have a shirt that says I'M an angel, for putting up with my wife!!!

I'm really baffled. I know I'm putting myself out there, by wearing a shirt like this, but I expected (like when carrying Pookie around) that people would say trite things and ask questions that bring Charlie up. I really didn't expect the self-centered misunderstandings that disregard the ribbon and the possible meanings of the text.

It's a truly unanticipated difficulty, honestly. I'm just not sure what to think.


Yours,

Sarah

To subscribe, find the "subscribe by email" note in the left column and enter your email there. Links to posts will be emailed directly to you whenever I post them! Nothing else gets emailed.

Resource list: Visit my spreadsheet at www.tinyurl.com/infantloss