Showing posts with label Miscarriage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miscarriage. Show all posts

Friday, April 22, 2016

April 7th

I had the loveliest dream that morning before I woke up for work. I was carrying an adorable little baby, maybe a couple months old. I didn't get a clear facial view, but oh, my baby was the cutest little mushy thing ever.

I think it was the most wonderful gift from God. A dream. The only closest reality I can have with the one who got away. This was not something I imagined or consciously created, but given to me in the form of a dream.

I told two close friends, and one of them suggested I light a candle for him. And so I did.


I didn't say anything to the husband. I don't know why, but I get the feeling that he will just brush it off and say things like "Aww, it happened so long ago, don't think about it anymore ok?"

That's the thing with loss and grief. People around you tells you to cheer up and 'don't think about it anymore' because it makes one sad. I know they mean well. They want you to be happy and not mull over sad things. Those who has not lost an unborn baby will never ever know how it really feels. How it feels after one month. How it feels after one year. How it feels after 5 years. Let me tell you. 

It feels the same. That empty space that was created for him, will never be filled. It is like his room.  Once in a while you open the door to that room, it looks exactly as it was left.

Anyway, the husband went out for mahjong. I was disappointed but I couldn't say anything. What a torture. Well, it is not a date I expect him to set a reminder on his phone calendar anyway. I just didn't want to make it like it's a big deal, though it feels big to me. Oh shut up Ally.

Peace.



Friday, September 18, 2015

Remembering him...

The other day, out of the blue, Daniel said I would've had another son if 'he didn't die hor'.

I am always prepared for jolting comments like that, so, composed, I let the conversation go on. I asked him if he remembered ( he was 6 when it happened), he said yes.

I asked him if he was scared ( or sad ), he said yes.

Our little pensive conversation felt like he was imagining what it would've been like if he was around today.

What a sensitive boy... and that made me happy.

Thursday, January 02, 2014

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

I Dreamt A Little Dream

This is the thing about dreams. You can't control it and you don't know if you will or when you will. Sounds a lot like conception eh.

Once in a while, we have dreams we don't want to wake up from. Three weeks ago, I had that dream for the first time. It was familiar, a little sad but with a surprising joyous ending.

I was in a hospital, having pre-term labour, or miscarrying, somewhere in between, but I was calm and I knew what to do and what to expect. The nurses were all busy and no one attended to me, but I was okay with it. It was almost like a self-service. I was waiting in a labour room or something, and then the familiar urge to push happened and I sort of went along. I reached down and felt the baby's head, and I pushed some more. And then a baby was out. It was so smooth and easy peasy. I closed my eyes and turned away expecting the baby to be NOT alive. I cleaned myself up. Then, I turned back and I saw him.

He was a tiny little joy. Like a newborn but smaller in size. He was red/pink and sleeping. My eyes widened and I felt a spark in my heart. HE IS ALIVE!!! I will always remember this illusion.

And the funniest thing, he was wearing pants!!! He was born wearing a pair of the *mesh pants which looked oversized for him.

Then the dream ended. F.

Thank you God for giving me this dream. It is the closest I have been with him since 2 years ago. This is the best gift.

OK, I am now obsessed with wrinkly pinky newborns...




I want to bury my face into these little cuties...



*mesh pants/top are commonly found here. Particularly good for keeping babies cool on hot days.


Thursday, November 01, 2012

Emotional Closure After Miscarriage

I googgled exactly this. I thought it would probably return with 1 match linking to You Are Crazy Just Move On Bitch. But nooo... I was surprised that this is such a validated topic that seeks recognition by sufferers AND therapists, mostly Westerners. I have never heard of 'emotional closure' in Chinese, have you? Maybe to Chinese, the month-long confinement is part of the emotional closure. Get drunk and happy on wine chicken everyday speeds up the emotional healing, yes?

Anyway, this emotional closure is something I needed. I'm not sure if I had it, from the time it happened in April 2011 to recent days, I may have had it in some form but I may not be aware. I did all I could to have closure, you know. I named him, I even got obsessed with bunnies and bought a bunny soft toy and a figurine to represent him, I turned to my blog for expression, I cried for cathartic release, I kept doing what I enjoyed and what made me happy. But somehow, something's not complete.
The reason I'm searching for this now is my recent observation of my moodiness.
A friend pointed out that I may have post-natal depression, perhaps a mild and delayed one, I thought. But it's been more than a year, am I a 'slow developer'? Hee. Nevertheless, a depression is a depression and it could strain my relationship with the husband, which I felt has already happened. I am not as emotionally engaged as before. I keep a lot of things to myself. I don't even chat about mundane everyday stuff anymore. And these are actually the little things that keep a couple engaged and happy. I am withdrawing into my own world, and get upset occasionally if he does not 'seek' me. Maybe I want to be rescued.

So, back to the Google search, my little cyber support group. I pulled out some excerpts that resonated with me.

"..After my first miscarraige I was devisated. I drove for hours alone & in the darkness. I have only blurrs of memories of that evening. I was parked in a closed park. Then I was on the shoulder of the highway. Then I found myself back in my doctor's parking lot. Her office had been closed for hours & not even one light was on. But, somehow I felt like I had left my baby there. I needed it back! I kept my feelings inside because everyone in my family kept saying, "At least it happened early & you couldn't get attached.". It went unacknowledged except for the, "I'm sorrys". Is that what you say to a still born's parents? We had no closure. No funeral. No mass. Nothing. Not even a face to remember.

8 years have gone by and I'm still devistated. Not once does a day go by that I don't feel someone missing at the dinner table. " -taken from here. The writer also listed 5 ways to get closure.

"...I blogged every thought I had. Once I had it figured out enough to commit the thought to paper, it stopped swimming in my head and gave each topic a sense of closure. My grief counselor even confirmed that there are synaptic changes in the brain when you get a thought organized and finalized by writing it down so I wasn't just imagining that closure.
Write letters to the baby, write a diary, or blog, whichever best suits your personality and privacy preferences. It doesn't completely wipe the thought away, but I'd say it takes 95% of it out of your head, and if you can get rid of 95% of each of the thoughts and horribleness, that's quite a lot. The remaining 5% becomes much more manageable." -taken from here.

And this is probably the Mother of all hits. I have a couple of excerpts from this article written by a lady gynae:

"...When I tell a woman that she is not crazy for having feelings about her miscarriage and that her loss is real no matter if she miscarried in the 6th week of pregnancy or in the 6th month, she always looks relieved. I have validated her feelings."

"...comforting words might serve to disavow a woman's experience of loss rather than allowing room for it. Commonly heard expressions like, "It was early in your pregnancy," "Miscarriage is not uncommon," or "You'll have other chances" might be interpreted by a woman to mean "This happens all the time. It's no big deal. You don't have to get so upset." On the receiving end of such tarnished comfort a woman might be left feeling guilty for feeling grief stricken, after all, miscarriage, she is told, is not "uncommon". Or she might feel angry and think to herself, "No one understands what I'm going through!! I don't care if miscarriages happen all the time. It's a big deal to me and I feel wrecked!" Then she might find herself feeling isolated and alone in her experience"

This is how I felt. Alone.

And then it struck me yesterday. I have been alone, and rejected. The hubz said my body was weak and that I should rebuild my health back (IF we were to try for another one). He meant it as a matter of fact, harmless indeed, but to a woman who has miscarried, I interpreted is as "It is my fault, my body is weak" because there is a phase when you ask a lot of questions on why it happened, what caused it, what did I do wrong etc (see article above). And what he said affirmed it more. "It was my fault, and your fault alone"... that's what my head says. That was why I got upset and moody almost every week, every time he goes out for drinks. I felt alone and rejected.

I guess I'm unravelling the emotional closure I need. An apology and assurance from my husband. Assurance that he still loves and cares for me. An assurance that it wasn't my fault. An assurance that he will be my side side through it all.



Update: Isn't it funny, after having these thoughts 'keyed' down, I felt a huge sense of relief. I didn't ask or that apology. The fact that I recognize the cause was enough for now. Knowledge is indeed empowering.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Peekaboo


I really hate to post this again but yaaaaa... it's another dead baby post. Bear with me.

Last night, I started revamping and reorganizing my craft room. The husband was out for network drinks. Yay! Free time for me!
I found a slip of paper and it took me 5 seconds to realize what it was and then I just broke down. My entire body stopped to allow the tear duct to launch big-time. What's strange was that it was TOTALLY OUT OF CONTROL. Like I was looking at myself as another person and going "WHOA,WHOA, WHOA SLOW DOWN SISTER, WHAT'S GOIN' ON!"

There I was, kneeling on the floor, clutching the slip of paper, as two souls, one wailing out of control and another wide-eyed jaw-dropped flabbergasted. If there was a conversation, it would go like this:

A1: WWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!
A2: YO, wassup.
A1: MMMMMM MMMMMMMM (trying to suppress cry)
A2: STOP
A1: I *gasp gasp* CAN'T *gasp gasp*
A2: Come on, it's over.
A1: FUCK YOU IT'S NEVER OVER! *sob sob sob*
A2: Okaaaaaaayyy... Let's talk about it then
A1: *sob sob* *sniff sniff* No. MMMMMM MMMMMMMMM
A2: *whistling Katy Perry's Last Friday Night tune*
A1: WAAAAAAAA WAAAAAAAAAAAAA
A2: *finished whistling the entire song*
A1: *sniff sniff*
A2: You okay now?
A1: Shut up.
A2: Let's continue putting stuff in the boxes, okay?
A1: Ok *sniff*

It was a Permit Menguburkan b/o Lau Lei Yin.


"for me it isn't over" by beth retro

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

A Void

When I was pregnant for the third time, I created a space in my heart for another child to love. I think this happens with EVERY pregnant woman.

And then, he was gone. The space is still there and I can't seem to fill it up, not even with my two existing amazing boys. Nothing can fill it up. Weird isn't it.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep

You know one of those moment where you're in public, sitting at a cafe by yourself perhaps, or at the office on your computer, and then something compels you to cry, and you try very hard to resist, but you can't. Your vision becomes blurry with tears and you feel your nose tingling and your ears heating up and you can't stop it. You take deeeeeeep looooong breaths and try to psycho yourself with happy thoughts. You play this mental war game with yourself called "STOP CRYING NOW". But somehow that something that makes you cry just takes over your mind and then you break down.

This one just did that to me.

Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep. This is their mission statement:
To introduce remembrance photography to parents suffering loss of a baby with the free gift of professional portraiture. We believe these images serve as an important step in the family's healing process by honoring their child's legacy.

I typed 'legacy' wrong 15 times because of blurred vision. I couldn't even get pass their mission statement, I don't think I'm strong enough today to read through their stories, I know I'll be breaking down at the end of every sentence.

It's not just breaking down in tears. You have to 'climax'. You know that right? The point-of-no-return where you just decided to let it ALL out. Go vocal if you like. Then after that, you feel better while gasping for breath.

I had to watch Robert Pattinson say funny things to distract me.I will be making several attempts to browse that website again.

Thursday, June 09, 2011

Bad Funny Dream

Last night, in my dream, I saw my miscarried baby. But it was a tiny tiny blob of something. I was looking at it, then IT MOVED!!!!!

IT FUCKING MOVED!!!

AND I FUCKING CRIED!

And then it slowly grew into a baby dinosaur! It was slimy and was trying to walk like a newborn calf.

Maybe it's being reborn somewhere in this world today. As a child of a nice normal sane rich and famous Hollywood celebrity, or producer, or director... of Jurassic Park.

Yes, it must be.

Monday, May 30, 2011

It Wasn't Meant To Be

It is called an inevitable miscarriage. By definition, an inevitable miscarriage (or spontaneous miscarriage) is one where the miscarriage is imminent or is in the process of happening.

To me, it was a death sentence for my perfectly healthy unborn 18 weeks baby boy with impeccable heartbeat.

18 weeks. After how hard my body worked to make this little miracle, my body still failed him. From two cells to fingernails, his time came before he could even live.

Miscarriages usually happen in the earlier weeks, way before fingers are even formed. And most miscarriages happen without the mother knowing. They say it’s like a heavy period with clots and cramping. My miscarriage felt like it was an actual childbirth, with an outcome we had to accept. An inevitable outcome.

It started with an urge to poo. At 4am. In Genting Highlands. In our hotel room on the 9th floor. Surrounded by tourists and gamblers. I just wanted to poo. The sensation became stronger and little different. No contractions, no pain, no water breaks, no blood. I sat on the toilet, reminding myself to have a banana later. And then I felt it. Something was somewhere it shouldn’t be. I reached down and felt something membranous filling up my woowoo. That was the membrane bulge from the waterbag, the sentence of the inevitable. Have you ever panicked? This was 100X.

By then, it was already 6am. The boys were still asleep. The husband called for an ambulance as I tried to relax and to resist any bearing down urge. We waited. A minute felt like an eternity. Daniel had woken up and was lounging around, oblivious to the crisis we were in. My mind was in a crisis. A shitload of emotional crisis.

The stretcher team finally arrived. One woman two men team garbed in uniform that looked like police. Daniel felt the crisis. You see, Hollywood taught him that when there is ambulance there is big trouble. He didn’t cry, he was just stunned as everything happened so sudden and fast. As I was lying on the stretcher, I told him calmly, “Daniel, ambulance take Mummy to hospital ok? Because mummy is sick. My stomach hurts. Don’t be scared ok? I’m ok, I will see you later”. With that, he nodded. I wasn’t in pain actually.

I was wheeled to the hotel clinic at ground floor for a quick examination by a very nice young lady doctor who was the first one to utter this word to me. ‘Abortion’. Doctors use this term which is the same as miscarriage. There, medical lesson 101. I asked her what it meant though deep inside I already knew what it was. She said the baby was already coming out and there’s nothing we can do. I lied there, trying to process my thoughts as they tried to process the paperwork fast to get me to the nearest hospital. I tried to dissect and ‘decipher’ that phrase ‘there is nothing we can do’, as if it was a code that actually meant ‘there is hope that your baby will switch to reverse gear and move back inside like a car, and continue growing to become a full term pink mushy little bundle of joy’. I enjoy bullshitting myself like that.

Deciphering the ‘code’ helped me in enduring 40minutes of journey to the hospital. Was it 40 minutes? Who cares. I was in an ambulance, going down the winding Genting road. All ambulances should be GTIs, you know what I mean.The clinic nurse was beside me, observing me throughout the ride, holding the familiar big yellow biohazard waste bag. I resisted any bearing down urge. No way my baby is going into a biohazard bag.

I arrived at Hospital Selayang at about 9am. It is an ‘upper-standard’ government hospital right smack in the middle of nowhere. I didn’t care where I was as long as there were doctors and a bed. At the ER ward, I was checked again. By now I was already bleeding a bit. Bad news. And more bad news. Cervix has dilated. And came the worst news. As I watch my baby’s heart beating away on the ultrasound monitor, it hit me. Has anything hit you so hard that you feel that your spirit is leaving your body? The MOs, oh I love them MOs, earnestly explained to me.

“OK madam, your OS is dilated and you’re going through an inevitable miscarriage now. Since your baby is only 18 weeks, it will not be able to survive when it’s born…” I went deaf after that.

These guys are trained well. They never use the word ‘die’. They say ‘will not survive’. All throughout my stay, all the different MOs had never said the ‘d’ word. Only the cleaner. She said the ‘m’ word.

I was wheeled to the gynaecology ward. Another internal examination. Another scan. That was the last time I saw him. The grainy black and white blurry image of him cozy and snug in my uterus. The lady gynae was also pregnant, far more along than I was. She was nonchalant as she performed her job like any other job. She examined me, read out the diagnosis and treatment to another MO and left. Now I was under the MO’s care. He was nice. He looked like Mark Ruffalo (Just Like Heaven with Reese Witherspoon). Back on my bed, he asked me a series of standard medical history questions and wrote it in a folded A4 paper. Did I mention he was nice? I’d give him A+ for bedside manners. He was sensitive, kind and polite. I was put on ‘conservative management’, meaning I lie in bed and rot naturally. No drugs, no surgery, only painkillers if I needed. They would do nothing to speed up the ‘abortion’ because ethically, my baby was still alive. Doctor Mark Ruffalo told me to just rest and wait. That was the last time I saw Doctor Mark Ruffalo.

And wait I did. A whole lot of waiting. A whole lot of crying in between. 36 hours felt like a week had gone by. Three other MOs came by to repeat the series of medical history questioning. All of them writing in a folded A4 paper. One was a first year MO, and she nervously memorized all my information in front of me, like she was preparing for a slide presentation. And then I understood why she was nervous. The ‘teacher’ doctor and her entourage of MOs were doing rounds at the ward. There were first years, like herself, second years and maybe third years. All crowding around bed by bed.
My turn. I felt like a specimen for show and tell. I was sitting on my bed, actually lounging around in my pink top and sarong. My nervous MO recited my diagnosis and prognosis and all the hoolabaloo while looking at her folded A4 paper intermittently. The first years were paying attention. The rest were lounging around like me. I must be a boring case because at midway, the ‘teacher’ doctor and the final years started talking about distochia (where baby’s shoulder get lodged in the mother’s pelvis thus prolonging childbirth)

Final year MO: Sorry, I’m late. Just now got distochia case.
Gynae guru: * jumping animatedly * REAALLLYY?!!! OH MY GOD! I SHOULD’VE SEEN IT LA!
Final year MO: Big… There was another one.
Gynae guru: SERIOUUUUSSS?!!!
Final year MO: Haaa… took some time to get the baby out. 4kg. Both mother GB.

I sat there, enjoying the medical jargon tennis game. I was chopped liver. But I didn’t care. I was numbed by all the waiting. I just wanted everything to be over. I just wanted to go home. Then they turned to me like I was a boring case. I was told to ‘just rest’.

The body is amazing. It really does work in its own pace and process. My body was doing what it had to do. I felt like it gave me time to say goodbye to my bunnyboy. They say there are 5 stages of grief, and my body was giving me time to go through them. As I lay on the bed, finally accepting reality, I decided to speed things up. I wasn’t scared anymore. I got out of bed and started pacing up and down the aisle. Sir Isaac Newton is a genius. Gravity had somehow ‘pulled’ my membranous bag further down. I could feel it. I alerted the nurse and went back to bed. I was told to push when there’s the urge. But I didn’t feel any urge. This was the hardest part. How can you push when there’s no pushing urge. A final year MO was nice, she stayed by my side and gave me support. She would make a good coach because she kept saying “Very good, very good” and boy that really helped! So I just pushed. A number of MOs came in and out to take a peek. Some were seeing it for the first time, some were just curious. I didn’t care, I was so focused like it was some competitive sport. For one looooong hour, I was so focused. I just pushed. I didn’t care what came out anymore, pee or poo. There was no room for embarrassment. I was tired and delirious. Surprisingly, I felt no contraction, no pain, nothing. Not even the bearing down urge anymore. I just lied there, knees bent, holding my ankles like a yoga pose, and I kept pushing whenever I had the strength and lung power.

On the 7th of April 2011, at 4.25pm, our third son was born. He was still inside the membranous 'pouch'. I think the MO made a slit to 'release' him. My coach asked, “Do you want to see your baby?” At this point, overwhelmed with so much emotions, I panicked. I spent all those hours waiting for this moment and I didn’t plan on whether I would look at him or hold him, or what I would do at this moment. Shit shit shit shit shit. I chickened out. Part of me wanted to hold him so much, but part of me was scared shitless. I felt I won’t be able to handle it. I thought what if the image haunts me for the rest of my life and I get chronic depression and become a nutcase. Seriously, I was afraid that I wasn’t as strong as I believe I am. People say certain visions will psychologically affect you for life. This was a traumatic dilemma. To see my dead baby or not. I wasn’t prepared for this.

“No”, I sobbed harder. My memory of him will remain as the happy little fetus with his heart beating away and his tiny little limbs waving at me. At the same time, I felt so ashamed and guilty. Why can’t I just look at him? He’s my baby! By then, it was too late. He was taken away for a tissue sample test and was wrapped to be ‘collected’ later. Did I mention I was overwhelmed with intense emotions of all sorts and delirious? Did that cause me to make such poor judgement and decision? This would be the biggest regret of my life.

Nature won’t let you off so easily. I still had the placenta to expel. I was given a shot of something to make me contract. Great, back to pushing. Push push push, sob sob sob. A shot of vodka would be nice. Are we there yet? No. Push push push, sob sob sob. Everything went vague after that. I was cleaned up and the privacy curtains were drawn away. Oh hey, I forgot I had 5 other roommates! Who probably heard me sobbing and pushing away like I was in my own private 5 star labour ward. Ah, who cares. Where’s my Doctor Mark Ruffalo? By the way, has anyone seen Shania Twain, I thought I saw her earlier.

That was my drug talking. Way way earlier I had a shot of painkiller when my contractions kicked in. Oh ya, I did feel pain after all. Now, I was woozy. And dreamy. And VERY sleepy. So I slept. I had the knowledge that the hubby came by but all I wanted to do was close my puffy eyes to sleep. I had the best sleep. No emotions, no dilemma, no goodbyes, no guilt. It was like a calm sea after a tumultuous storm. Calm sea indeed because I woke up soaked in my own pee. My muscles were probably still ‘relaxed’ or numb from all that pushing. Oh great, I’ll just go back to sleep in my pee-soaked hospital clothes. I didn’t care anymore. I was glad that it was over. Pee-soaked clothes? Blah, that’s peanuts.

I woke up at 10pm, in time for my dinner that turned cold. I didn’t care. I ate a few spoonfuls of rice and went back to sleep.

I woke up again, at sunrise. The world looked different. I felt different. I stroked my flat belly and tears streamed down my sticky cheeks. I don’t think my eyes have ever been dry since the last scan. I felt the aftermath-calmness. Yes, it was sad and traumatic, but now it felt peaceful. Like I have forgiven myself. The morning was like a usual day at the ward. The nurses did their usual rounds, the cleaner mopped the floor and cleared the toilet bins, my neighbour brushed her teeth, the other patients woke up too and was lounging around, waiting for breakfast. It felt like I just had a bad dream. So surreal. So real, yet it felt unreal.

On the brighter side of things, I got a lot of ‘sympathetic’ treatment from the staff. I’m probably one of the hundreds of miscarriage cases there, but they were still compassionate. Even the cleaner who was grumpy and whiny smiled at me when she passed by my bed. As she was clearing my bin, she said “Baby sudah besar ya”. I smiled back and said “Ya… sayang”. She must’ve seen him. Even the cleaner seen my baby, what kind of mother am I. I closed my eyes and said a soft “Sorry baby”.
By now the husband had arrived and was preparing for my discharge, and arranging for the baby’s ‘departure’ ritual. Apparently, this is a common practice for miscarried fetuses, maybe older ones. There was a special room somewhere for religious servicemen to carry out rites and prayers, after which the body would be cremated and the ashes would be tossed into the sea. All this was done with a small fee. The husband stayed to witness the rituals while I waited at the ward.

I said a prayer of my own. A little prayer to the little one who came into our lives, just like that, and then left, just like that. I earnestly prayed that he is at peace and is in heaven with angels. I prayed for forgiveness and that he won’t be mad at me. I prayed he will have lots of mummies and daddies, brothers and sisters, friends and pets to play with him all day. I prayed he will have all the collections of Transformers, Ben 10, Spongebob Squarepants and Ultraman paraphernalia(just like his brother). I prayed he will be kept warm and snug in bed when he sleeps, I prayed he will wake up smiling everyday to a beautiful crispy morning with yellow birds and blue birds chirping by his window. I prayed he will find joy, warmth and love in the arms of God.

Then the husband came back, bearing frustrating news. Because it was a Friday (Muslim noon prayer), all patients can only be discharged at 3pm, after the pharmacy opens. This applied to me too although I didn’t need any prescription. The nurses knew we were from Johor and was hoping to get back fast, and mainly because the husband was infuriated at the system, I was off the hook. I could finally go home. As I was preparing to leave, my due-to-discharge ward mate softly asked the cleaner why I could go home first and she couldn’t, to which the cleaner replied, “Baby mati”.

Life is funny isn’t it. Who would’ve known that I would be in this exact spot, looking at a hospital ward and listening to those two words uttered about me. It happened. It’s over. We have to mourn and move on. On the way home, I thought about the moment we were surprised by his creation, I thought about the moment we first saw his little mass which grew into a recognizable baby, I thought about his heartbeat, his head, his body, his first kick, then I thought about the unfortunate events which led me here. We didn’t have a name for him yet. Maybe I’ll do it now.

Goodbye Damien, my little bunnyboy. We love you. So so so much.

Here's a little poem I found called The Cord.

We are connected,
My child and I, by
An invisible cord
Not seen by the eye.

It's not like the cord
That connects us 'til birth
This cord can't been seen
By any on Earth.

This cord does it's work
Right from the start.
It binds us together
Attached to my heart.

I know that it's there
Though no one can see
The invisible cord
From my child to me.

The strength of this cord
Is hard to describe.
It can't be destroyed
It can't be denied.

It's stronger than any cord
Man could create
It withstands the test
Can hold any weight.

And though you are gone,
Though you're not here with me,
The cord is still there
But no one can see.

It pulls at my heart
I am bruised...I am sore,
But this cord is my lifeline
As never before.

I am thankful that God
Connects us this way
A mother and child
Death can't take it away!

Author Unknown



Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Post-miscarriage confinement

This is harder than I thought, writing about my miscarriage. Too lengthy. What's harder is the post-miscarriage confinement.

If you're Chinese and there was a life growing inside of you, confinement is mandatory.

Confinement is fiiiine. Usually, you just eat special nutritious drunken food, rest and gaze at your newborn sleeping most of the time. But if it's after a miscarriage, it's just special nutritious drunken food, rest and a daily reminder about the unfortunate event. How so?

Everytime I want to drink something, it's not water, it's the red date longan wolfberry herbal drink and it's a reminder of the unfortunate event.

Everytime at dinner, I have to eat the drunken chicken with kilos of ginger, and it's a reminder of the unfortunate event.

Everytime after I shower, I have to dry my hair fast and keep myself warm with leggings and socks, and it's a reminder of the unfortunate event.

Everyday for a month, I get reminded of the unfortunate event.

I'll write my story when I get the mojo.