Just recently I started reading Knocked Up, Knocked Down by Monica Murphy LeMoine. I had found Monica's blog early on in my journey and felt a huge connection with the way she was able to write openly and honestly. She had a way of writing that made me feel like we were having a conversation. I didn't actually feel like I was reading someone who actually "knew how to write." She wrote from her heart....and wanted to share exactly the way she felt as to touch others who were going through some of the same emotions. So, in November, a month after Kennedy's heaven date, I finally ordered this book on Amazon. I finally felt like I was ready to read a book from someone who was "real", almost brutally honest in her journey. I have yet to finish the book, but there was a part in the book that hit me like a brick wall....it hit and made me realize how much I connected with this author, yet have almost been afraid to admit it.
In the book, the author experienced pregnancy with two of her best friends. She formed a "Mommy's club" with these two other women and the shared the joys and downfalls of pregnancy. The author writes about how she had imagined the three children growing up together and the everlasting bonds that their families would share. When the author lost her little boy in the last month of pregnancy, she realized how alone she was. How disconnected from Earth she felt. How disconnected she felt from the two women she called her best friends. As the author goes through the first few months of grief and the births of the other babies, she talks about how she isn't sure she can continue to be friends with these ladies but that "being excluded from her little snow-globe world of prego-friends and happiness disappearing, was more than she could bear." When the author visits her friends and their babies, she talks about how "wrong and fake" it feels. She even goes to express that she feels that her "carefully cultivated and much-worshiped relationships are changing beyond her control." As a final statement in her chapter titled Ashes on my Hands, one of her "best" friends comes up to her at her son's memorial service and gives her a hug. The author describes it is as a "goodbye." "Goodbye, friend. Our roads are parting. Catch you on the flip side."
This is a very real feeling for me. I know what it's like to meet someone you totally connect with....and want to share the same journeys with. I have many best friends who are at those stages in their lives. They have been happily married for three to five years and are now ready to add a little bundle of joy to the picture. This is where I thought I was two to three years ago. So, I happily talked about what it would be like to have children at the same time with many of my good friends. And it really was all panning out to be that way (despite the fact that things in life really weren't as good as I wanted them to be--but that's another part of the story). So, there I was pregnant, about 9 months after one of my best friends, 6 weeks ahead another, and nine months ahead of one more. It was all going to work out so perfectly....yet, as you all know, it didn't. And here I stand on the outside. I stand on the outside looking in at friends who continue to get pregnant, have already had their babies, and are even on their way to thinking about having others. I watch as they talk about what their babies are doing, how "magical" Christmas was with them, how glorious pregnancy is, how "easy" the heartbeat is to find, etc. I feel the pain in my heart every time I read the card that says, "Dad's name, Mom's name, and baby." I no longer belong to this club...and my little Snow-Globe no longer exists. It's been eliminated by the fact that my baby isn't here on Earth. So, that's one club that I really don't belong in. Because I'm a mom, but not to a baby here. But I'm also not someone who has never carried a baby, so where do I belong?
Then there is the club of "happily married." I don't belong to this club either... And since I would prefer not to go into great detail about this part of my life yet, I will just say that in late September, I chose to remove myself from a sad and difficult situation and separate from my husband. We have currently been separated for about 4 months now. So, as many of my friends are living their "June and Ward Cleaver" life, I look from the outside there too. I'm not single...but I'm not really married either. So, where do I belong?
As someone who really always felt connected to groups of people....I somehow have ended on the outskirts. The people that I once called "best" friends are losing their role in my life as I am in theirs. It hurts something terrible to have this realization...but it's a very real fact. Until these parts of my life somehow come together again soon, I feel that these friendships and people are going to end up too far away to catch up to or with. But maybe that's the way it's all supposed to be? My Aunt Kathy, from Texas, who has been a huge support for me for the past year and a half, told me over Christmastime that she sees only "big" things for me in the future. She sees Kennedy holding the light out to me....as if to show me what other things in life I can find happiness in. She talked to me about how I have to hold out for that "hope" that things will be okay. That things will work out. And that those people who have been there for me will always be there...even if it might look or feel different. She also made me think about the new people I have met through this journey....and how those friendships are a sign or gift from my beautiful daughter. She wanted me to find people....and feel connected. Kennedy knew that would be important to me.
So, as I find myself continuing to search for somewhere to belong that includes, but is not limited to: a place to call "home"; friends who I feel connected with and loved; a job that always brings a smile to my face; a sense of peace of what my beautiful Kennedy means to my life now; and a way to be happy with someone, I continue to hold out for hope that this "somewhere" is possible. I have to believe that there is a place for me. There is a plan for me. I just don't know what it is just yet. Keep holding out that light, Kennedy. Show me, sweet girl. Show me what this world has in store for me.
Repeat: Subconcious Levels
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14 comments:
I just finished reading the same book and that exact chapter hit me as well. Like the author, I have two friends who were pregnant with me, both were due a month after I was. I have seen both of these friends since I lost my baby boy, but I have yet to meet their children. I just can't bring myself to do it yet. These children were going to be my son's friends. We were going to have playdates and send them to the same school. I'm not nearly as brave as the author,, I'd never dream of inviting them all over for the afternoon.
I hope you find your place where you feel you belong. One thing I have learned is that often, we still fit in places even when we don't think we do.
Sending strength
I too struggle to belong. The only place I feel that I truly belong now is amongst fellow mummies and daddies who have lost their precious babies. The description of the friend saying goodbye is so powerful, I also feel that many friendships are ending (or have ended if I am honest). That's hard but I too have made many friends amongst the baby loss community and they are my new friends. I hope to travel the road with them.
I'm sorry for all that you have been through and for all that you have lost. I feel that I have also lost some friendships since losing my daughter but I've also met many amazing men and women through the support networks I've used since her death.
I hope that the world has many beautiful things in store for you and that you find that place just for you. Remembering Kennedy xo
Oh I am so sorry... So very sorry... Our worlds are so different from the ones we thought they'd be... So very different.
Hugs...
What a beautiful, honest, and heartbreaking post. I hate that you have lost so much and that the worlds you were a once part of feel so distant now. I will hope and pray that sweet Kennedy's light shines brightly in 2011 and that you might find new places that you feel a part of. Sending you love and comfort.
I too found Monica's blog soon after my loss and bought her book pretty quickly. It was so reassuring to me to read the words/expereinces that were in my head, and ones that I couldn't quite name. And like others have said, I too have struggled to find/figure out where I "belong." I don't feel like I fit in like I used to. Life has changed and so have I.
Thinking of you as you create and discover your place in this big 'ol world. :)
What a beautiful and honest post. I have felt the same way, like an outcast who just doesn't belong in this seemingly normal world. I feel like an outsider a lot of the time. Thanks for sharing that blog and book, I will have to check them out.
I love what your Aunt said. Good things will come to you. Kennedy will make sure of that...she will always be there guiding you. Lots of love and hugs to you, my friend!
I've been meaning to read that book for a while now. This post was so honest and true and I'm sure we all can relate to it in some point or another. I think your Aunt is right, the people who have been there for you will continue to be there, and the new friendships you find are a gift from Kennedy. Don't know if it helps, but you belong here with all of us. :) ((((HUGS))))
I'm searching too. For many things. All those things that I took for granted, friends, home, family, a job, everything, it all really just disappeared when my babies died. Now I have my husband and my cats, and I'm struggling with the rest.
I feel the same way with many of the friends that I befriended when Jonathan was a baby....I just cannot relate to them like I used to be able to after Mikayla died. Most of them are or have had their second babies, and sometimes it's just too painful to see that picture of what should be for us too. Your situation is technically different, but much the same. I am thankful that our babies have brought us together though. I find myself just wanting to surround myself with BLMs right now, and that's ok too. I do believe that many of these friendships I feel I've lost in this "season" of my life may be rekindled in another "season" of my life....but what fuels my fire right now and keeps me strong is surrounding myself with others who get it without having to explain. I found this quote on Mattie's blog and it hit home. "It's as though people who have lost someone precious speak a different language. I don't have to explain things. There is a clear understanding that is so comforting."
I hope that you continue to reach out to those that can be of comfort to you sweetie, you are a wonderful person and I do believe that through all this pain good things are going to happen for you.
Thank you for speaking from the heart. This journey is far from over, and I pray that many blessings come your way in the near future. Hope is definitely something we all must hold on to! Thinking of you and your sweet angel. Much love, my friend.
I, too, feel the same way. I feel that I don't belong anywhere, that I'm neither here nor there. The death of my son has changed me in ways family or friends can't see or even accept. I also have a friend who was pregnant a month ahead of me and we both shared our joys about our pregnancies. When Kai died, she had her son alive and healthy a month after. Back then I thought we would be on our motherhood journeys together, we would continue sharing our experiences and hopes for our sons, but our paths took a different turn. Now I just couldn't share in her joy anymore. I feel like a bad friend, but things have changed for me. I changed. Her world, the world I was supposed to have too, is not mine anymore. I admire Monica for her courage to meet with her best friends and their babies. It's not an easy thing to do to see the life that was robbed from you in others. This pain, this grief have made outsiders of us all. But you are not alone in this, we may have different circumstances from you but we are also fellow outsiders, longing and looking in, yet holding out for hope with our lost children as our light. So let Kennedy's light shine, dear mama, let it shine for you. (((hugs)))
I guess I'm lucky in the way that I've never felt like I belonged anywhere! I've never had a large group of friends, never more than a handful at a time. So, for me, there was not a loss of "other" relationships after Blaine. But because I was not part of a "group" and didn't have a large support system, I often felt alone in the loss, at least irl, here I have all of you. I hope you follow Kennedy's light to happiness and peace! That is a beautiful image.
Even though there is amazing support in the babyloss world - I think that life after losing a baby is so, so lonely. I remember struggling with being lonely and not fitting in anywhere. I am so sorry you find yourself "not belonging".
One thing I have learned is that you never know what can happen. Or where you can find yourself a year from now. I think as babyloss moms we are afraid that what the future holds for us is only more sadness and grief - but there is just as much potential for something lovely and wondrous to happen too.
I hope your life path is filled with beautiful things - I have no doubt your baby girl will be with you at every step.
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