Archive for September 2010
In between two weekends.
I do wish I could remember to blog more frequently about life, rather than about death. B- Must try harder. I spend a lot of time worrying about life, trying to keep things right for everyone and annoying people by going on about it, but not perhaps quite enough time living and doing it.
Right. We got home on Monday and nothing else happened. But the girls had had a fabulous weekend with my mum, among other things getting to listen to more of What Katy Did and paint the models below, which I bought with them on a pre-emptive trip to Hobbycraft. (It’s not a site that will let you link internally, but search for paper mache.) The acrylic paints came from CraftMerrily and I must say I think they covered it really well – I’ll be using more of those (coming soon, to a blog near you….
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Maddy’s treasure chest.
Tuesday I mostly cried once I’d got the girls through some work and they’d had a music lesson, so was sent off to work instead and Max took over at home. He took them on a nature walk and brought home a quantity of tree, which they did identification work on.
Wednesday I mostly cried, took the girls to a gym lesson, cried more all afternoon and then, having got them through various bits of work, took Josie to hospital for an eye check. Then came home and wept about hospitals and cried some more.
Thursday was a big day; I went out for the day and we played with baby bunnies over at the Petit Haricots, laughed and cried with two wonderful women who I’d very much like to be related to quite honestly, came home, sobbed all over Max for a while and then spent quite a bit of time panicking. Then read my blog from April forwards, sobbed myself to a standstill and went to bed.
Are you seeing a pattern here?
Today however, has been much better. Kate came over and did her normal “pick yourself up, dust yourself off and squint till you see the bright side” routine and I’m trying very hard to be like her and keep as happy as I can. I think we’re both still gaping slightly at the role reversal that means I’ve ended up with the child dead from disability first. That was definitely a plot twist out of left field in a long friendship that appeared to have certain inevitable tragedies set in clear focus, if at as yet undetermined times. I don’t think either of us quite believe it
She helped loads – I do so love you Kate
The girls and I had also done an excellent mornings work – we mopped up maths, did loads of music, plenty of reading (Fran finished Bombs on Aunt Dainty and Maddy finished another Naughtiest Girl book while Amelie fed us facts on Volcanoes), history for Fran and various other bits from the others. Then we all sat down and started GP Junior History Book 2 which was about the Greeks. They know LOADS about that already, I was deeply impressed and we ended up discussing the Iliad and the Oddessy (which Fran has read a child version of) lots of myths and a lot of things they know from various places. Decided to do a Greek project together. Maddy also worked on her round up of the last history book some more and did story. I got my pronunciation corrected a lot. Gotta love audiobooks at bedtime.
Josie did endless pictures from Draw Write Now – must blog them, they are wonderful. Never seen any of the girls use them the way she did today
We’ve had complicated and complex (and profoundly thought-provoking) conversations on whether anxiety produced by temporary traveller camps arriving unexpectedly is similar to racism or closer to being unnerved by teenagers collecting outside a shop, which was brought up by Amelie – talked that out for a long time – very tricky to navigate I think as it is really only when a child cuts through the crap in that way that such feelings come into sharp focus. Nothing is black and white – but a child can make it nearly so, I think. Too clever for her own good, that one
We’ve been to dancing – since Fran has lost a gym session a week due to changes there, she’s going to go back to doing more dancing so starts 4 new classes from tomorrow. She’ll be doing 9 a week!
She’ very happy and I’m quite glad to be reducing dependency on one place for all her happiness.
Yesterday Fran composed (and wrote out) a little tune – today she taught it to the others using cello, handbells and glock – the tuning left something to be desired but the effort was magical – LOVE having kids who experiment confidently with music and group playing.
Amelie got Highly Commended in her Grade 1 ballet – Fran is going to try and do Grade 3 in 9 weeks with her new class apparently!

Maddy got her Green Belt at TKD

I’ve knitted more – 1/2 a week ahead now and one square 4
Right back where I started
Max and I had a weekend away.
Well, before that, I had a trip to the hospital – again. I got an opportunity to talk over things with a fresh pair of eyes, from long before Freddie to the here and now. What might have gone wrong, what might be wrong now. Could we have changed anything.
It’s difficult, because I’m afraid to ask the questions. And difficult because I suspect they all know that perhaps I don’t want to hear the answers. But a fresh pair of eyes is always good – someone who can’t be to blame and who can’t feel too sorry for me because they weren’t there and they don’t know me and however sympathetic and kind they are, they only know the dead baby mum and not the expectant mum or the person who needed that baby more than anything else. They don’t even know the mother who shed tears for 11 days over a cot, knowing all the time what was going to happen and wondering why it was taking so long to filter through to other people.
I had to go back to the same corridor, that was the only room available. And perhaps that wasn’t a good thing to do, but I’m glad it happened. It’s just a corridor, one I walked up and down for 11 days, now bizarrely painted purple. A postnatal ward I lived on, a delivery ward I went to and gave birth in, a SCBU unit he lived in. A room at the end, which was bizarrely invisible to me even though in full view, for 10 days – where I held him as he died. I think that room was like the room of requirement, I knew it was there but I swear I didn’t see it till we needed it.
The rooms where a child was born, lived and died should not be so close together. There should be more to life than that.
But anyway, the meeting was meaningful enough. More than previous people, this one seemed to feel that there was nothing missed, no courses of action that could have been taken that might have altered things. More than before, my impression was that they all felt that something was amiss before his birth and, well, who knows?
I know.
When I said to Max that I was worried that lying on my left caused his distress, I think I was right. I’ve gone over and over it. Was it when I fell on the bus? Was it that flu that made me feel so poorly? Was it the antibiotics I took at New Year? When I had a sudden compulsion to book a section a couple of weeks before, was it because I knew he was in his last chance? I don’t know. But I do know that I feared for him and when I think back to those movements that worried me so much, enough to voice anxiety to Max, I know I must have been right. Those movements must have been fitting. I think they were always followed by violent hiccups, which reassured me, but perhaps shouldn’t have.
That ought to reassure me. It hasn’t happened to the others. But dear God, I have nearly lost and probably lost, two children to cord accidents before they were even close to birth. If I can’t even protect them then, what can I do?
There were only two really bad moments; one was the picture of a pregnant woman on the wall of the room we were in and another was seeing the doctor walk out of SCBU who persuaded me to give Freddie the set of drugs that knocked him out and, I fear, meant he moved so little that the chest infection set in. Luckily she didn’t come near me, because if she had, I think I might have started screaming at her in a way that would have had me physically removed from the premises.
Having no answers is even harder than being without him. There is no natural resolution to no answers. It takes a sheer effort of will to move past it. And it is bloody exhausting.
So anyway – we had a weekend away.
The girls were looked after for us at the house, which was great as it meant they didn’t have to uproot, something they still struggle with a bit. Slightly less great was that i noticed (while at the hospital again!) that Josie appeared to suddenly have a pox on her the edge of her iris. I was slightly surprised as I hadn’t seen it there before, but she’s been very busy playing all week. I showed it to my mum, who kept an eye on it (!), got worried it was a viral ulcer and spent bits of time at a & e over the weekend getting it looked out. Turned out to be an immune reaction called limbitis (?) which is white blood cells collecting on the rim of the iris to protect the eye, perhaps because of the very big pox below her eye.
It is improving now, but it did worry us a lot – we weren’t far away so were poised to come home if needed.
We had a lovely time but i think in lots of ways, it just completely undid me. It brought home to me that there is no escape from dead baby. I have to take the absence of him everywhere with me. I made it through the first evening okay until a couple walked into the bar with a baby and then I realised that if Freddie was alive, we wouldn’t be there. And there were babies in the hotel and I was going to have to see them.
The bigger shock was realising that once away from home, my subconscious just went into over-drive. I dreamt, madly and frantically, all night – about Freddie, about babies, about labour and birth, about caring for other women with dead babies. I dreamt I was standing somewhere knowing the baby inside me was dead and knowing that it was pointless to even bother telling any one. I woke up every night in a panic about work, the children, Freddie.
Once away from the people I’m putting a front on for, once out of my comfort zone, I realised I am not even started on the path of healing. That nothing is better.
I excelled myself the next day by running out of the lobby in tears when someone walked in with a sleeping boy baby. I scattered tea, phones and newspapers as I ran, leaving a very startled Max behind me. And then it was all over really. We went out and the place was being visited by a group of low learning ability children, there were babies and little boys everywhere and I just went into some form of flat panic.
I find myself unable to stop mothering the boy who might have been. I see children with disabilities and I wonder if he might have been like them, I find myself thinking “we can do that today because we don’t have Freddie but if we did have, what would I need to do/take/prepare for/avoid?” I’m fighting all the time against a shadow of a disability that is only a might have been. And I can’t yet stop. It is a fight, a bloody, grinding fight, not to be haunted by him. A fight that comes with the grief of wanting to be haunted by him and knowing that is the wrong thing to do.
Which makes it sound like it wasn’t a nice time. It was, we did some good things; a lovely castle, a trip to the beach, a lovely meal, a long tree filled walk. I’ll blog the photos separately; this doesn’t seem the place now somehow. But it as a bloody, fighting, grim effort to be happy and it takes up so much sodding energy. The poem below, such as it is, I woke up with in my head in the early hours of the 13th, the first time in all these months I’ve been overwhelmed with the reality that there is also an anniversary of his death.
I just want my happy ending. We worked so hard and now we have a birth and a death, something not even worth celebrating, that colours every flicker of our eyeballs. Every happy has a sad, every laugh has the knowledge that I AM LAUGHING. That I WILL laugh, godammit.
Conversations when we got home, one that really broke me. I’m just not who I was. I have no patience or ability to forgive the people who hurt me when I was most vulnerable. I’ve been freed of the obligation and I can’t find my way back to having it. I’m not made more noble by this realisation. I’m simply shattered and the pieces I put back together are not the sum of what was there. And I don’t really care who knows it.
I said that I was setting my teeth and my will to being fixed, to not going down, to not wallowing and feeling sorry for myself. I will not grieve emptily and wastefully again. I cannot do it. I owe it to whatever is left of me, for Freddie, for Max, in order to be an example and an inspiration to my children. Mostly not to be a drain on them. But it leaves nothing else. I cannot make myself acknowledge pain which can be recovered from. I can’t. All I can bring myself to do is say “Yep. It’s bad. Whatever. Move on.” Because that is all I can do.
I’m so bloody tired. I’m just exhausted. I can’t escape from anything – I can’t escape from little boys, or babies or children, or the photos I can’t bear out or bear to put away, the cupboard full of things for a maybe that probably won’t happen and a might have been that wasn’t. I can’t stop seeing his face in my children’s faces, I can’t stop hearing crying or babbling. I can’t fail to wake up and know he isn’t there. I can’t keep crying and I can’t stop. I can’t stop the year or the seasons marching on. I can’t remember and I can’t forget.
I’m just bloody exhausted, trying to keep going so I don’t bring everyone else I love down too. And held in parallel with not giving a fuck either, that’s a bit of a tightrope to walk.
Horror
A bright spring day.
A handful of the kindest people.
Smart clothes.
Red brick, neatly tended.
Flowers.
A shiny black car.
Silver trimmings.
A tiny white coffin.
A father’s arms to carry it.
Flowers.
Letters filled with love.
Love was not enough.
Music.
Poetry.
Flowers.
A kiss on a box to say good-bye.
A touch from a finger tip.
Run away. Don’t look back.
Later, another box.
A Baby Boy. Aged 11 days.
The world is inside out.
This is horror.
Birth and Death.
Friends.
Flowers.
Creative every day
We’ve had a really tough week, more disappointment for us and other people I care about, difficult stuff at work and a week of the younger three girls playing SCBU and Labour Ward games with PlayMobil. They’ve been clearly testing me, checking to see how well I cope with their subject matter and it has been very hard. But we’ve also had emails, lovely emails, from friends old and new and much support from people who love us (I’ve not replied to them all but I will, sorry). But it has felt teeth grittingly difficult and my anxiety levels have gone through the ceiling. I’m trying very, very hard not to drain the people around me, but it is very hard not to.
And I had to clean my own house
I thought I would try to take up the Creative Every Day challenge, though whether I will do much of it, I have no idea. But I want to, even if it is just editing a picture or weeding a flower bed. Sometimes it might even be tidying up a section of a website I guess.
I imagine a lot of it will be the knitting of squares, real squares this time, not rectangles and bigger than on Freddie’s blanket. I’ve got a book and there is lots of inspiration on Flickr and I’ve even hunted around ravelry and I think I am going to enjoy myself.
This is me learning to knit vertical colour changes, not something I’ve done before. After a comment from Michelle below about incorporating Freddie’s blanket into our one, I thought that although I wasn’t sure I could do that, I might take the remains of wool from his blanket out of his memory box and knit it into our one in small places, spread across the whole thing. I feel comfortable with that idea and I think it will make me happy in the end. After all, they can’t do anything but be a fossil in his box really.
I’m not entirely sure the rest of the week has been worth blogging to any great extent; I was a basket case but the girls worked hard (Fran & Maddy) and played hard (Josie and Amelie). We made it to the end.
More than a pair of socks

Here’s a nice picture of Freddie’s blanket. I made it big enough for him to sleep under as he grew – but he never did. But it has been such a comfort blanket – for me.
I read the other day that an average pair of knitted socks has 34,000 stitches. I think this had around 50,000. Seems amazing at all I could ever do for him amounted to not much more than 3 socks.

Josie asked for a similar blanket while I was pregnant, for her doll. I made it afterwards, as she was still determined to have it, using cast off squares that I knitted for Freddie before I changed wool types. Then added pinks and greens to match her favourite dolly. I knitted most of it in Devon and it was surprisingly healing. That holiday seems a million years away now.
And now it’s time to move on – try as I might, I can’t quite make it past blankets. So here’s the stash for one for our bed, in the style of Freddie’s one but hopefully with a few twists.

I reckon it will take me two years.
A lot may go right or wrong in two years.
Pleased so far :)
First, the obligatory pox pic

Not too bad, not ill at all and tonight is night 3, so hopefully over the worst. It’s nearly at her ankles and wrists now, so hopefully the worst is over. Amazing the way it spreads like that!
I’ve done my piece of art to submit (it’s on flickr, I’ll blog it another time) and my square is nearly knitted. I’ve even relaxed and sorted out wellies into sensible categories on PlayMerrily. We have a lot of wellies
Fran has finished her scarf.

The knitting the ends in thing was a bit too much for her, so we’ll tassel it the whole way round to hide the tension wiggles and traily ends. I’m very impressed though – not often she finishes things. She wants to do a blanket next.
The house is in disarray and I’m about to shout – but no matter, we’ve been creative.
Love
This is a photo of my first cuddle with Freddie. I can pretty much count the cuddles I had with him on two hands
It was one of the most amazing moments of my life, as you can probably see from my face.
The photos we have of him are mostly not terribly good, it wasn’t much of a priority at the time. You don’t know you are only going to have 11 days during the 11 days. Every so often, I fiddle around with one. It’s kind of like doing something with him. Or for him.
This came at the end of a long day of photo-therapy. A nurse (my very favourite nurse) asked me if I wanted a cuddle and I remember saying “Can I?” and my heart leaping. He was trying to open his eyes, I know that Max and I really knew he was responding to our voices all day but during that cuddle he was responding to touch and making a real effort. I do wonder, an awful lot, if my instinct that the extra drugs that night would be a bad thing, was right. He was trying so hard in this picture. I remember saying “are you peeping at me?” over and over again. I still thought he might be okay.
This photo is very precious.

















