There is a question that I hate being asked, both because it
is painful, and because there is no correct answer. That question is, “Do you
have any children?” If I say no, then I
am denying two people that I love more than anything. I do have children, but I was not blessed as
most are, to have my children alive. If
I say yes, there is the dreaded follow up of “How many? How old are they?” And
I don’t want to go into the horrible, personal details of my life with someone
that I don’t really know. There is also the case where it is a student who asks
this question, and I find myself saying “No” because I can’t and won’t discuss
that with a child.
I hate being asked this, because it is a painful reminder of
what I have lost. Because it makes me feel like a failure. I don’t care what
people say, how many times someone tells me it isn’t my fault, being unable to
produce living children twice makes me feel as though I have failed.
I was told by a doctor that I probably would not be able to
have children without medical intervention, but to my surprise about a month
later I found out I was pregnant with my first child. My joy was very short
lived. About a year later, I had been
feeling strange so I took a pregnancy test again. When it was positive, I felt
equal parts elation and terror. We took every precaution to ensure this baby’s
safety. I left my job, we left our home
and moved in with Ryan’s parents. I was
careful what I ate, and what I did. I got exercise, but not so much as to
strain Nico. I went to every doctor’s appointment. I took my vitamins. I prayed
every day for his health and safety. I loved him, and I felt him grow and move
and take on a personality. I talked to him and I sang to him. I wrote him
letters. I prepared our room for him, I
planned our lives. We had a shower and I went shopping several times to have
everything he needed.
That horrible day still came.
My body still failed me.
That made two times that I had to go from carrying a growing
life, to carrying a corpse inside me. Two times my body went into labor without
the reward at the end. The first time I was put under anesthesia and my body
delivered the baby on its own. The
second time, labor had to be induced and I spent a very long horrible weekend
waiting for my body to be ready to deliver Nico.
I felt empty.
Twice now, I had gone from feeling a person grow inside of
me, to being an empty vessel with nothing to show for my hard work and pain.
I struggle daily with finding a purpose, for a reason to
justify my existence. Two times, I thought I’d found my purpose only to lose
it. I struggle every day with seeing people with children, feeling a horrible
burning jealousy and anger. It isn’t their fault that they are so blessed. Yet I
wonder if they have any idea what they have, how lucky they are.
As I go through the motions of life, be it cleaning,
cooking, reading, watching TV or working, I find myself asking why? What is the
point? In what way is my existence beneficial to the universe? And I don’t say
this in a way to imply that I feel suicidal at all…that’s not something I would
ever do. I know that I am loved and that people would be affected by me being
gone. I am simply saying that I feel lost.
I feel like somebody dropped me off in the middle of a
desert with no canteen, no shelter and no map; and I have to push myself every
day to keep looking for water, to keep walking with hope that I will find life
and the edge of the desert. It would be so much easier to dig a hole, climb in
and give up. There is a very tiny, very quiet voice inside me giving me hope,
encouraging me to continue. Insisting
that one day it will be better. Some days I believe the voice. Some days I am certain that I will never find
what I am looking for.
No comments:
Post a Comment