Quote From: derevna33
I do understand her pain. When I was first married, I promised to wait and begin our family when were in our early thirties. I was 23, and it meant waiting for seven years. My husband finished his education and had a better job at the newspaper. He started out as a photographer and sports writer, and he progressed to being managing editor.
One night, I woke up convinced I was finally in labor. Larry had taken the week off as a vacation from work so he could be there. It was a beautiful night, the first day of May. I was in a bit of pain. In the labor room, I was puzzled as to why the nurses were digging with stethoscopes into my side. And then, I knew. It was so awful, I promised I wouldn't get upset until my doctor got there. Larry was blissfully unaware--and only about half awake.
My doctor informed me that when "You can find a heartbeat with three stethoscopes and the Doppler, it is because there isn't one." There is no graceful way to tell a mother that she is in labor, but her child is dead. I had a full term stillbirth. The first thing I ever did as a parent was sign my child's death certificate. He was a handsome little 8 pound boy. I named him Charles Laurence, after both his grandfathers.
And, my heart broke.
I was deeply angry that God did not allow me to die, too. I knew that Charlie was in heaven, but I sure wasn't. Six weeks later, my pap smear results returned, "suspicious, probably malignant." While awaiting my second biopsy to see if I would be having a hysterectomy that summer, I tried killing myself. True, I wasn't being rational. And, I didn't take nearly enough pills.
Living after your heart has broken isn't as simple as "thinking positive thoughts." I was in no mood to be cheered by my husband or my family or my friends. I had a major depressive illness, and it was gonna be a life sentence. True, the surgery and medication helped slow my cervical cancer.
The following summer, I became pregnant again.
I was worried sick. I felt as if the roof had fallen in on me. And, I strongly suspected it would happen, again. I wasn't convinced that my second baby would live. I found the only defense to my predicament: I would not love my baby. If that's what it took to keep Jesus from taking my second baby to heaven with him, I wouldn't love my baby.
I had learned from watching Star Trek that people are not logical!!! No one is capable of feeling, logically. If you say how you feel about something, it is going to sound silly. I did not care that my best girlfriend stared at me in disbelief. My sister explained the Christian viewpoint, several times. I was in no mood for listening.
I was a Steel Magnolia, and I didn't know it.
When i saw the title Steel Magnolias I nearly lost it, then I really lost it when I kept reading. In the couple years that I've been posting/reading posts on Dr. Phil's boards I have yet had any post to completely break my heart in two, until this one. Your story truly brought tears to my eyes. I, in no possible way can sympathize with you or the mother who lost her daughter to brain cancer, but my heart goes out to both. If you don't mind me asking, how did your second pregnancy turn out? And the cancer?
My mom suffered two seperate mis-carrages between my sister and I. She wasn't far enough along to determine eithers gender. To this day she talks about them and says she'll get to see her angels in heaven one day. I'm kinda curious what they would have looked like too.