My Journal of Heartache...and Hope

Our son Max was born on May 4, 2011. Life was busy, happy, and perfect for 37 days. Then, it wasn't.
A look back at our life before Max, with Max, and what comes after...

Friday, July 13, 2012

Welcome, Quinn!

As you probably know (or have at least assumed), Quinn is here! Scott and I checked in to the hospital on Tuesday, July 3 around 6:30 am. I started my first dose of the medicine used to "induce" labor around 9:00 that morning. I won't go into details about the medicine or how it works, but I will say that it doesn't actually begin labor for you (like Pitocin sometimes does); it simply prepares your body for labor and then allows your body to do the rest. Under the recommendation of a friend who also happens to be a midwife, I decided that I wouldn't opt for this method of induction unless I was already beginning to dilate. Anyway...I entered what is considered "active labor" around 4:00 that afternoon, and Quinn was born at 6:29 pm. Obviously, my labor progressed pretty quickly. So quickly, in fact, that I almost couldn't get an epidural. Luckily, I had a fabulous nurse who made sure that I did get my epidural. The physical part was easy after that; it was the mental/emotional part that was a little difficult.

I was convinced that something was wrong with Quinn when she was finally born. I didn't hear her crying, and I misread the concentrated look on my doctor's face for something much more ominous. Aside from two lungs full of amniotic fluid that Quinn swallowed on the way out, she was fine. She was better than fine--she was perfect. I don't know if it was intentional, but the nurses left Quinn on my chest for much longer than Ethan or Max had been allowed. She spent most of that time coughing up hideous looking materials (no details needed here) and crying, but what an amazing feeling to finally hold my little girl! I will admit that I felt a little frantic and wondered if someone should be doing something to help Quinn get the amniotic fluid out of her lungs, but I trusted my doctor and my nurse to step in if intervention was necessary. My doctor took the time to go over my history with my nurse, and she took the time to talk with me about it. I can't tell you what a relief it was to have everything out in the open. A frequent topic of conversation among us mothers who have lost children is how, when, or even if to bring up our dead children to new people we meet. It can be stressful to meet new people because of this, so it was a relief to have this out of the way. It's not that I dread talking about Max; anyone who knows me can tell you that's not true. It's that I dread the reaction of other people. I know it is uncomfortable for people, and most don't know what to say or do. I felt like my nurse just got it, though. She seemed to understand that Max's death impacted my pregnancy in a big way. I may not have had many physical complications, but my pregnancy was far from complication-free in the mental realm. My nurse, Emily, seemed to understand this. I am so grateful that she was on duty and assigned to me that day. Sometimes things in the universe just have a way of working out in exactly the way they should. On a related note, I was also very grateful to be in the care of one of my postpartum nurses, Sarah. During one of our conversations, we actually discovered that she and her husband are close friends with a couple that Scott knows through work. The wife had actually just left a congratulatory message for Scott on Facebook. I knew immediately that Sarah's nature was gentle and kind, and we talked quite a bit before I left the hospital. She took the time to read my chart and learned about Max that way. She approached the topic of Max with care and offered her condolences. We talked quite a bit about my anxieties and fears regarding Quinn, and she seemed to know that leaving the hospital and 24-hour-a-day care would be a little bit difficult for me. I am so glad that she was the one to walk us out of the hospital and send us on our way. It was an emotional moment for me, so it was nice to be with someone who understood why it was emotional.

When the nurses finally took Quinn from my arms after she was born to weigh and measure her and administer her Apgar test, I will admit that I felt very overwhelmed. A rush of emotions came over me--happiness, relief, excitement, but also fear, sadness, and an all-consuming sense of loss. I cried for a while, totally unable to capture with words exactly why I was crying. I think now that the reason behind the overwhelming rush of emotion has a lot to do with the dissonance of my feelings at that moment. How could I be anything but overjoyed at the birth of beautiful little girl, a baby that truly came just when we needed something to look forward to? But then, how could I not be heartbroken and scared considering all that happened after Max's joyous birth just a little over a year ago? I guess I know now what it is like to combine tears of joy with tears of despair. I don't suppose that childbirth will ever be the same after Max, and that's okay with me. It's yet another way in which he has made my life richer and more meaningful.

Since Quinn's birth, I feel a little less anxious, but cautiously so. At first, I couldn't stop looking at her in the hospital and thinking that she looked like she was dead. I know that's morbid, but I'm being honest. I checked on her quite a bit, often in ways that I think masked my true intentions--adjusting her blanket to see if she would move, touching her face to see if her skin was still warm, leaning in to kiss her to try to feel her breath against my skin. Now that I'm home with her, I can be a bit more obvious. I also don't look at her any more and think that she looks dead, but I have had a few moments when I have thought that she could be dead. Once, when I picked up her arm and it flopped down on the changing table; a few times when she appeared to not be moving or breathing. It's sad to say, but in those moments, I think to myself, "Enjoy this moment...this moment before you realize that she's really dead." I want to soak up that moment when everything is still okay because I'm so scared to go through what comes afterward. I know, I mean I really know that this is all very morbid, but it is my reality for now. I hope it will go away, and it does seem to be tapering off, but it is how I think for now. I know that Quinn could be gone at any moment, so I take her in every second. I take way too many pictures of her, I probably hold her too often, and yes, I change her outfits way too often. I don't care though. I'm allowed these things. In truth, every parent is allowed these things, but I wonder how many parents truly take advantage of these "mundane" moments with their children. More than I think, I hope.

I mailed Quinn's birth certificate application yesterday. As I filled out the paperwork and wrote the check, I couldn't help but think that we never got around to ordering Max's birth certificate. How awful to have received his death certificate before his birth certificate. "It's time," I thought to myself. So, I got out the paperwork from Max's birth and completed the application for his birth certificate. It was hard to write "N/A" in the space provided for "Present Age," and even harder to fill in the blank for "Date of Death (if applicable)." I wish that it wasn't applicable. I wish that more than anything. When I got to "Reason for Request (Be specific)," I was baffled. How do I answer that? Because it has been too painful to request it up until this point...because I was lazy and didn't do it soon enough, and then he died...because I can't stand to only have a death certificate for my baby. I'm not sure what I wrote in the end. "Personal Records" or something like that. I know it's probably not specific enough, but I hope that they'll cut me some slack. It feels good and bad to have that done. It feels good because it has been looming over my head. Yet another thing that still needs to be done, and one that could be very emotional at that. It feels bad because it's another loose end that is tied up now. Every time something is complete--packing up Max's room, storing his things away, getting the death certificate--it feels like another part of him is gone. Every completed task feels like the end of some aspect of his life. I get bogged down sometimes with the paperwork and silly administrative tasks associated with Max's death, and I want it all to just end. If I'm totally honest with myself though, I don't really want it to end. I guess I need those things sometimes as proof that Max was here and that his existence wasn't just erased when he died.

You will have to forgive me for sneaking this next part in without explanation. Honestly, I'm just too tired and distracted to try to make all of the connections, but you're smart; you can do it! I've been reading A Prayer for Owen Meany by John Irving, and I read a part today that just resonated with me. I think it helps to explain why I look at Quinn sometimes and think that she is dead, or why I think morbid things like, "Enjoy this time with her before she dies." Here it is: "Your memory is a monster; you forget--it doesn't. It simply files things away. It keeps things for you, or hides things from you--and summons them to your recall with a will of its own. You think you have a memory; but it has you."

Here are some pictures of beautiful Quinn Jordan McFall. 7 lbs 3 oz; 19.75 in (she is currently 7 lbs 6 oz; 20.8 in) She has brought us hope, love, laughter, amazement, and even greater purpose in life.





4 comments:

  1. Quinn is absolutely beautiful! We have been saying prayers of thanksgiving since her safe arrival!! Soak up every moment - change her clothes every hour, take a bazillion photos (of Ethan, too!). Every moment is a gift - that's why it's called the present, after all. My grandpa used to say "Never think past supper." I always remember that when I find myself thinking too far ahead, and bring it back to the moment I'm in, thanking the Lord for it. Love and hugs to you all.

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  2. Thank you for this honest post. It was amazing. I have often wondered, as we are trying for our rainbow baby after losing Charlie, how I will react to a new baby. I anticipate I will have the same morbid feelings and fears and tears as you do. We have entered a very bittersweet world, now haven't we? One where we have to embrace our fears in order to also hope and continue living! Our losses of our sweet babies will permeate every experience we will have, especially new babies! You are a strong woman! She is beautiful and I am so happy for you and your baby girl!

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  3. Oh my! You are pressed on every side with emotions...all different, and at any time. You have Quinn now and she has you and Scott. What a blessed little girl she is!

    Your new title of "Missing Max" is so very true and will always be...you are so wise to be so honest. Thank you!!

    I am so excited to come meet Quinn soon

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  4. Thank you so much for continuing to share your journies with us! I am so grateful that you had an amazing Doctor who shared your most devastating experience with his Nurse so that she could treat you with the utmost care and respect. Being a Nurse myself, it is great to hear things like that! I'm glad that things are slowly evening out for you and pray that they continue to do so. I love the concept of Rainbow Baby. You have a beautiful new baby and Max will never be far from you!

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