I shifted my gaze from his face; pursed lips and eyes that stayed fixated on the screen... to my husband's furrowed brow... to the ceiling and the exam light above me that burned my eyes.
I was just over seven weeks pregnant.
The doctor slid the probe gently across my belly. Too gently. I wished he would press harder, dig deep for answers.
Please just give me an answer.
Any answer.
Please say, "Ahh, there. I found a heartbeat."
Or even "I'm sorry, I found the baby; there is no heartbeat."
But please give me an answer.
Uncomfortable as the place and the situation was, I was glad to be there.
Even the cold gel against my bare skin on a chilly February evening felt comforting somehow.
At least now we will know something. At least now I can get an answer as to what is going on.
Please search hard, doctor, sir. Please do everything you can to figure out what's happening. Why is my body emptying out when it should be growing a life?
My mind knew what was happening, but my heart wanted to keep hoping.
Because that’s what love does, it always hopes.
Please say something.
Don't come up empty...
But he did.
He blamed the machine, it was just an outdated, portable ultrasound machine. I was also just so early on in the pregnancy, he wasn't able to see anything more than the enlarged uterus.
He was gentle and kind, the type of doctor we had prayed we would encounter that afternoon. He explained things and answered questions, but he couldn't give a diagnosis, he was just there to operate the machine.
I held Joel’s hand as I lay on the bed, and we waited.
More nurses, another doctor. Blood work, explanations, pressing around on my belly, internal exam.
Please give me an answer to go on.
Somewhere down the hallway a baby cried. I thought about the baby we were so excited to meet in September. I thought about my three girls back at the condo with their grandparents. We weren't even in our hometown, we were on vacation. Not only that, it was Family Day.
No one plans or expects to lose a family member on Family Day.
Were we really losing the baby today?
Somewhere in the blur of words and procedures I heard the doctor speak the phrase, "...if this was a wanted pregnancy..." And I don't remember a single word after that.
If it was a wanted pregnancy?
Oh, sir. If you only knew just how wanted.
Stop.
Baby, I want you to know right here and right now: you are wanted. You are loved.
So wanted.
So loved.
They sent us back to our condo, encouraged us to pack up and drive the two and a half hours home that night, in case things were to get worse. They couldn't say for sure it was a miscarriage, although they said it seemed likely. They couldn't say for sure that it wasn't an ectopic pregnancy, although they seemed to have ruled it out. They couldn't do any more for us in this town than they'd already done so they recommended we go back to the bigger city where we could get more help, should I need it. So we did; we packed up and went home that night.
I tried to process what was happening.
Was I really losing the baby?
Was this a miscarriage?
Miscarriage.
Stupid word.
How could it be that one. word. could so effortlessly describe everything that I'd just heard, experienced, seen that day? How was it that that one simple word could waltz right into my life, unannounced, becoming an easy label for people to use to describe all of the pain in my heart and the dashing of hopes and dreams and plans?
I'd seen blood on the bathroom floor.
I'd watched my body empty out and I couldn’t do a thing to stop it. The feelings were similar to the night that earthquake shook our house; I was helpless and powerless against a force greater than my own will and intentions. I just watched this thing happen to my body, I prayed and I tried to keep on hoping that what was happening was not what seemed to be happening.
And then everything was still. The pain stopped. I soon felt almost… normal. Too normal.
If that was a miscarriage, part of me wanted it to be worse. To give my mind time to wrap around it all. But it happened so fast it didn’t even have time to sink in before it was done.
If that was a miscarriage, part of me wanted it to be worse. To give my mind time to wrap around it all. But it happened so fast it didn’t even have time to sink in before it was done.
Worse, because you were more than just a word, more than a medical term like, “miscarriage”. You were a life, and if you were being lost I wanted to feel that loss in every way.
Part of me kept hoping for the best. The rest of me just waited in the silence of the next few days.
But those days went by and it became clear. My hCG levels, those numbers that showed how much of the pregnancy hormone existed in my body, were tested again 48 hours after they had been taken at that little Emergency Clinic on Family Day, and the results came back showing a dramatically lower number. My midwife called me personally to give me the news, along with her condolences. Joel held my hand as he sat beside me, he could hear enough on the other side of the phone to know what she was saying.
That emptying out that I’d borne witness to? That was my body saying goodbye and letting go.
It happened so fast, I didn’t get the chance to say goodbye and let go.
It was over. Just like that.
That was not the answer I wanted, but it was an answer. At least now I had an answer.
I could stop hoping now.
But wait.
No.
I will not lose hope. I will not let go of hope.
I am disappointed. I am sad, and I grieve the loss of my child.
Wasn’t it just yesterday that I had rubbed my already-growing belly and smiled?
I loved carrying you around inside.
You were wanted. So wanted. So loved.
I would like to name you Ava. I always liked that name. Your daddy and I thought maybe you were a boy, because you already have three sisters, but we never got to find out. Your tiny body had not yet formed into what you would’ve been here on earth. But now I would like to name you Ava, because Ava means desired. I don’t want anyone to ever think you were not wanted, and I want everyone to know what a blessing your short life was to your mama. I wanted you so very much. You should have seen the way I smiled and laughed and ran to show Daddy when I saw the lines form on that pregnancy test. September seemed like the absolute most perfect month to welcome you into our arms; into our home; into our family. You were due on the second day of Fall, my favorite season.
But Jesus wanted you more. You belong there, with Him. Dancing on those golden streets, endlessly praising Him and never shedding a single tear. I know you love to dance, because I know your sisters and I know your Daddy, and they are forever dancing to one song or another in the Family Room after dinner is done and while I clean up the kitchen. I know you are beautiful. Heavenly. I cannot wait to meet you one day.
Seven weeks is young, very young, but not worthless. You were so alive, even then. The knowledge of your presence inside me filled us with such joy, and the dreaming of all you could become gave us so much to look forward to. We loved you then, when you grew inside me... and we love you now; now that you are made whole and alive with Jesus. We know we will see you some day.
Ava also means voice, song, sound. Your life is a song to me. A song of a living hope. Through the growing and the losing of you I am reminded of the hope that I have that remains unshakeable throughout any and every storm that comes my way. Your life and your passing is drawing me closer to the One who created your soul and mine. My perspective of Heaven has changed too, becoming a little brighter, dearer, and a little more real. I know I am held by Jesus as I grieve your loss, and I know you are held by Him and finally whole. He is our living hope, the One who conquered death and therefore fills us with joy even in the face of it. Jesus is the One who heals, gives grace to walk through our trials, and fills us with HOPE in situations that seem, to the soul that doesn’t know Him, hopeless.
Could it be that your sweet song, my dear, will also draw others to the hope we have? It may be that there are those reading this story of ours who have lost much, but do not have this hope in Jesus. What a joy it would be if by writing out my heart here, my baby and I could together be a voice; pointing other broken ones to the Saviour who gives indescribable peace, hope, and healing to all who ask.
So I will not lose hope.
I got my answer, and it was not the answer I wanted.
I want to be pregnant right now. I want to believe the notification that popped up on my phone screen this morning, because I forgot to turn off the app after you passed; I want to believe you are nine weeks today and the size of a grape… eyes and nose and earlobes and gums, even tiny teeth inside those gums, all forming at rapid pace. I wanted to go to that first midwife appointment this coming Monday, maybe hear your heartbeat and grin from ear-to-ear. I wanted to see you on that ultrasounds screen next week, and I wanted finally announce to the world that you were on the way; I couldn't wait to finally post those pictures I took of your sisters on my bed one afternoon, holding the shoes that were meant for you to wear one day.
I wanted to go buy little matching Big Sister shirts for your twin sissies. I wanted to video your 2-year-old sister talking about the baby in mommy’s tummy, and how she would wrap it and hold it and take care of it when it came out. I didn’t want to have to explain to her in a very simple, toddler-appropriate way that the baby isn’t there anymore. I wanted to keep researching quadruple strollers online, and toddler car seats that would be narrow enough to fit 3 along the back bench of our minivan for your sisters leaving room for your infant seat up front. I wanted to labour and birth you into this world and feel your skin against my own and let the whole world stand still as I soaked in all the glory of a fresh, new, beautiful newborn life that I got the priviledge to cherish and love and raise up for the Lord. I wanted to know you.
Baby, I wanted you.
Baby, I wanted you.
But Jesus wanted you more.
And Jesus fills me with hope that even this answer, although fiercely unwanted, is okay. He chose this answer for me, He chose this answer for you, and He never, ever chooses wrong.
This is me saying goodbye and letting go.
I’m giving you back to Jesus, Baby. You, and all the dreams I had for us. I’m giving them to Him. You, my precious Ava Hope, have strengthened my heart in ways that only a blending of grief and hope and love and Jesus can do. You are valuable, and there will never be another you.
There are those who do not realize what a gift life is. There are those who think seven weeks is too young, who think a seven-week-old life is not valuable. They are wrong, my dear, as we know. Every life is valuable.
You will forever be valuable and treasured in my heart.
You will forever be valuable and treasured in my heart.
Live on, sweet baby.
Maddie this is so sweet, touched my heart so! My heart is saddened for your loss, and I pray Jesus will comfort you and bring even more hope and joy in the days to come!! Love you!
ReplyDeleteNo words, Madi - Thank you for sharing your heart and your grief - It is a healing post and touches me in the deep places. I am sorry - I am thankful He brought you through this with hope. I am thankful for you and the profound influence you have on my life and the way He uses you. I am thankful for the great goodness of God , and how He allows things we don't understand and then is our strength and comforter...I mourn the loss of Ava in your life and will pray for you...and that He will enlarge your family. I love you....Mrs. Beeman
ReplyDeleteThis brought me to tears.. It took me back to my loss this January.. I too would have had a baby to hold and cuddle and nourish in September.. But, I was allowed only a few days to know my baby. A few days after seeing that positive test, my body started emptying out. I felt no physical pain, but I wished it was there.. as a confirmation of the baby passing and not just possible implantation bleeding. Though I've never had implantation bleeding with any of my other pregnancies, I couldn't help but hope. But there was no pain. Not physical anyway. I went to get my blood drawn and it took them 3 days to get back to me. Those 3 days were hard. Hoping, yet, that maternal instinct of knowing something is wrong was still there. She told me according to my hcg levels I wasn't pregnant. Miscarriages are never easy. Even when it's your 4th.. I have been pregnant 10 times now. I have 6 children with me and 4 wait for me in heaven ❤ Thank you for sharing Ava with us.
ReplyDelete❤ Yelena Gura
Beautifully written. We are sorry, Mqdison and Joel,
ReplyDeleteThank you, dear Madison, for sharing this. I cannot say how much this has touched my heart. It is so amazing how the Father can use disappointments, trials and even heartaches to bring us closer to Him. The Lord brought this word to me just the other day as I was struggling with some things, "The Lord gives and the Lord takes away, blessed be the Name of the Lord." I'm so thankful to hear this story and of your love! So encouraged by, "Love always hopes..." and how it fits into your story. I am so thankful for you and your life and love for the Lord! You are an encouragement to me dear sister! <3
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