Saturday, 8 February 2014

Mumblings

"You make me sad Mummy," he wails. "Sadder and sadder and sadder. That is how you make me."

"You sad Mummy? You sad? Wanna hug?"

"Your fault. My fault. Our faults."

Because this child is not silly. He has identified my weak spots and is honing his aim. My attempts at discipline falter and fail amongst sadness and fault and blame and 'positive parenting' and 'aha! parenting' and all the other things I read. In the interests of damage limitation. Trying to do the right thing and ending up paralysed. Frozen with indecision.

***

'You can't see me,' she boldly claims. Lurking around the corner with a stolen slice of birthday cake. At breakfast time. Heavily coloured icing stains the edges of her mouth.

'Oh yes, I can. I can see you," I reply. "You know that cake isn't a breakfast food."

***

It is the best I can hope for. Because your big sister died and I . . . . . well, I lost my confidence. And, really, that is what you want from me. Confidence. To show you the way.

Because mothers aren't supposed to stand empty handed. Bemused. Amused. Confused.
Mothers aren't supposed to get lost.
Mothers aren't supposed to be sad.

They are supposed to say that cake is a fantastic food to eat at breakfast time.
Or that it isn't.

But truly. I'm indifferent. Eat cake. Don't eat cake. There are larger things at stake here.

Just breathe. Please do continue to breathe.

I don't see my way clearly on the smaller issues.

***

But this be the verse. This be the way. Sigh.

Some things are easy, like, 'don't bite your sister, don't poke me in the eye, don't squash the baby.'

Others like cake for breakfast, requests for DVDs and help with putting on tights.
Well they are a bit more tricky.
Take it or leave it.

I'm probably not a very good parent. Despite all my avowals and wishes to be so.

And if I'm not a very good parent then I have let you all down horribly. Including the one who is dead.

***

I lie awake at night. When everyone else is asleep.
The pressure on my chest. Makes my lung crackle a little.

The pressure of a baby. Not a tiny baby. A baby that weighs 13 lbs. At least. A 3 month old. Fourth in my arms.

My mind slips. Back to five years ago. The click, hiss, click of the oxygen concentrator. The feel of plastic tubing against my skin. In the dark, time shifts and layers of memory pass over one another, transparencies containing feelings and smells. Acetates overlaid.

Time flexes. In my mind. I nurse you. I hold you. It seems unbelievable that I didn't. First.

The sweet curved head. The short blonde hairs. Tiny, dear girl.
I bury my nose into the tender neck, slightly sour with unwashed milk.

Because I can repeat and repeat. I can pretend. That she is you. Just for a moment.
But it is a lie. I never nursed you and I never held you. Well, just that one time but you were dying and it was so very far from this that it almost feels like a different action. Because surely that was something other than simple holding. Regret, regret, regret.

Terrible, terrible regret. Still stalks me. When the house is dark.

Alice will be my final baby. I don't have enough money, or enough house, or enough heart. or enough brain for another. Yet already I yearn. Because what will I do? When there are no more babies? I've always had a baby. To stave off the pain of the one that I will never hold.

The touch of tiny, tiny limbs. The clicking of hospital equipment.
Overlaid with broader limbs. Lighter breathing.
But always a baby. The one age that I seem to be confident in my abilities to care for.

And soon there will be no more.

***

"Five years ago," he says. "It is all so very long ago. How can you still think about it? So often? Surely that isn't right?"

I can't explain why. And so I say nothing.

•••

So come the storms of winter and the birds in spring again
I have no fear of time
For who knows how my love grows?
And who knows where the time goes?




12 comments:

  1. M is my last baby, and I yearn already, too. He is nine months old and close to not really being a baby anymore and I yearn so badly.

    Who knows what a good mother is? I don't anymore. There is so much bloody information out there and most of it not really very helpful, I suspect. Though I do resent mothers who can just read all this stuff and think whatever they think but not think about dead babies because those dead babies - well, they really do complicate things, don't they? Sending a hug - an understanding one.

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  2. Sending you lots of hugs. <3

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  3. Dear Catherine,
    first of all I am so very sorry for your loss. No amount of time can ever fully heal the loss of a child. What are 5 years in comparism with bearing the unbearable? I had so many conversations like the one you mention. I am tired of them. We have every right to grieve, to be sad. It is so so sad...Sending a hug, too.

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  4. I read your post before going to sleep last night.

    "Because I can repeat and repeat. I can pretend. That she is you. Just for a moment.
    But it is a lie. I never nursed you and I never held you."

    My thoughts. My feelings. Too.

    My boys were never here at the same time. It was Alexander. And now it is Theodore. To imagine I have Alexander for a split second, it doesn't cancel out Theo, as he was never here when Alexander was here. It is all make belief. Theo will have lots of time to be real and here. He has been for 9 and half full months. Alexander wasn't here for a second. I didn't have him ever in my arms. Warm and well. I try not to guilt myself if I for a second imagine my second baby is my first. I have done everything with Theo. Nursed and changed and breathed him in. I didn't do a single thing with Alexander. To picture my living son's weight to represent my dead son for a second... well... I don't feel I'm cheating him. I feel like I'm catering to the holes in my heart.

    I too cant explain why I still think about it every day. Why it weighs to heavily on my mind. But it does. And it will continue to...

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  5. Oh dear beautiful Catherine, thank you for this.I understand so much, yes the indifference, just keep breathing, feeling I am a terrible mother, I must be. Then those nights, with the sounds and the smells of that day, overwhelming still, and I can't stop them. I'm just better now at not letting anyone know how fragile I still am, or maybe I'm ok afterall, maybe this is normal. Who knows. Love you Catherine x

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  6. "Eat Cake. Don't eat cake. There are larger things at stake." Ah, yes, Catherine. Was just thinking of you today. And all 4 of your beautiful children. Sending you love. You are a capable, deserving, unique mother. No one could do it better. And it IS NORMAL for you to still feel this way. I don't even know what to say today, but I feel you, and I miss my girl, too. Tiny Dancer. XOXOXO Christine

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  7. Five years and feel like how could I forget? For what it is worth, I still think of him often, probably too much I suppose, but I can't help myself.

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  8. I'm probably not a very good parent. Despite all my avowals and wishes to be so.
    This I don't believe. Put away the parenting books. Love the ones who are here and the one who isn't. Be sad and show it when you need to. I've made parenting decisions, some good, some bad, some who knows based on the one who isn't here. Thinking about her 5 years later, 50, will not be wrong.

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  9. Ahhh... I think we are reading the same parenting websites! :). Love some camraderie on my journey. And I wondering, what kind of mother would I be if acacia hadn't lived and died? Surely different, yet surely I'll never really know. So I raise a glass to however we keep keeping on...parenting after a loss. Xo.

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  10. "Just breathe. Please do continue to breathe."

    How could you be expected to let go of this in just five years?


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  11. As always, so much of what you say makes sense. The indifference about the small things but perhaps most of all, the way that our missing children dominate our thoughts and hearts so much. Five years is no time when it is your child that you are missing. Grief has no cut off point, it can be forever. We know that forever is an extraordinarily long time.

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  12. Just for a second sometimes I pretend that she is her sister, too. And then I feel so guilty. But how could we help ourselves?

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