It Doesn’t Get Any Easier (Amanda's)
But it truly isn’t any easier than it was in those first
weeks. Which is really hard to fathom if you think about it- How can our world
still be as rocked and shaken as it was then, how can this still be as painful
and sad and traumatic as then?- Yet it still is. The sadness seems only to grow
deeper and the fullness of missing all of who Audrey is continues to grow in
our lives.
Our family wasn’t complete before she came into our lives,
and now we are incomplete again and will always be. Too small for our liking,
and feeling somewhat isolated as just Jeff, Hannah, and I.
That’s not to say that we don’t have a good community of
support- because we do. We have an incredible community that has sustained us in
ways during the past year that I don’t think we would’ve survived without, but
time does begin to alter naturally. I generally still can’t answer “good” or
“fine” in response to “How are you?”, and that gets tiresome after a while (not
to others, but to us). I feel as if I don’t know how to re-balance my relationships
at times, despite also knowing that so many people are going through their own things
that are also really hard and sad. We have friends and family facing cancer,
infertility, loss, divorce, unemployment- it just all seems like a lot of grief
all around. For our part, I think we mostly hide it well. Not that we’re trying
to hide it, just that we’re used to keeping on keeping on with whatever the
next responsible thing is that stands before us, so we just do.
But we’re truly not the same at all. Hannah has grown up so
much in the past year- and while her blossoming maturity and dare I say,
responsibility, is wonderful to discover, there’s also a sadness because she’s
lost much of her childlike innocence and light-heartedness. She’s rarely silly
anymore, and with only Jeff and I around, much too serious for her age.
Jeff and I have apparently entered the stage of grief where
our physical health takes a dive, and we’ve had a few too many scares and
visits to the ER in recent months. Hypertensive crises, early stage heart
disease, panic attacks, vertigo, adverse reactions to medications to treat the
symptoms, and continuing to try and tease out what is physical (aging,
perimenopause) and what is grief-related. (Pretty much all symptoms get
attributed to grief at this point, which feels rather dismissive).
There are secondary losses- I miss coordinating the girls’ outfits; I miss Disney being a daily part of our lives that doesn't feel sad; and the other day a co-worker was sharing about her many grandchildren and I felt sad knowing we’re always going to be a small family. I even miss things that were difficult and frustrating when Audrey was alive- how hard it was to get her in and out of her car seat, and adapting our home and activities to meet her needs.
And even though 15 months have passed, we still struggle
with the narrative- how to talk about what happened and how to process it. Did
Audrey die suddenly? Yes. Was Audrey sick for a long time? Yes. Did Audrey die
from epilepsy-related complications? Yes. Did Audrey die because of a medical
emergency/ accident? Yes. Did Audrey die because we had to make decisions about
continuing interventions after brain death at the hospital? Yes…. Those parts
of the story are rarely discussed, and still after all the hours of therapy,
bereaved parent conferences, support groups, and trauma work, it feels like
we’re only at the very beginning. I do know it’s getting more difficult to talk
about as the shock subsides. Previously, I could share information with a level
of detachment as if the events happened to someone else. Now, the detachment
isn’t as profound, so the fear and guilt and avoidance make it more difficult
to venture into those areas.
The holidays, as one would expect, add an extra layer to the
grief. The loss takes what was once celebratory and layers sadness over it in a
way that changes how we experience this time of year. Jeff, Hannah, and I were
able to see the Magnificent Mile Festival of Lights Parade yesterday, but we spent
most of the time thinking of and talking about Audrey.
It’s also been a really stressful and busy time in general.
Work has been tough, and we’ve also invested a lot of time and concern with the
Superhero Center recently. The center is such a special place to our family,
but in the midst of transitions and challenges, we’ve felt worried about the
longevity of this special place.
This blog is long, but I’ve been wanting to write for a
while and it always takes me many starts, and usually several weeks and months
before I can put the words together.
I miss so much about her. As time passes, the memories feel
further away, and in turn, she feels further away. I hate that. It happens without
any volition or choice on our part, and we’re left with an ever-present feeling
of longing and incompleteness, but less of the sense of who she would be in
these moments and in our life now. We never got to know her as a six-year-old,
so we can only guess at what she’d look like, be like.
When I look at these pictures now, I realize that when Audrey was here, I never noticed that she looked at me like that. When you’re a mom and you’re always busy doing all the things, you maybe don’t notice. I’m thankful now that I can look back and see how much she loved me in addition to how much I loved her.
...
Finally, for anyone’s consideration who is interested, I think
the Grief Stages modeling probably should include some adaptations for the
experience of child loss, so here are some meandering thoughts on that:
1. Acceptance never occurs and is never an option. Child loss is unfathomable; it is an unacceptable reality. It is against the natural order. The best that a bereaved parent can experience is integration. Over time, the loss begins to be integrated in to your life, though one is not able to ever accept it or to deem it as acceptable. It is by definition not acceptable. Integration looks like continuing to engage with life while continuously carrying the loss of your child with you, reimagining family traditions and milestones to integrate the lost family member, and developing ways of cognitively coping or making meaning of the loss.
2.
Shock is the first stage, not denial. Denial
implies more of a cognitive process, shock is physical. Your body does things
without intention on your part, there may be no cognition or emotional attachment
to what occurs. Shock has many implications that are outside of cognitive or
emotional reactions, including sickness, mental fog, dramatic changes in
energy, concentration, inappropriate or strange emotional expressions, thoughts
that may be irrational, and rapid onset psychological illness despite having no
prior course or history. Regardless of the circumstances, the loss is at once
traumatic, horrific, and terrifying, yielding ultimately a dramatic change in
the parent’s daily reality, sense of identity, worldview, and social
constellation.
3.
In child loss, unfortunately, there is a stage
of social reorganization. This is often not selected by the bereaved parent,
but by those around them who struggle to remain present in the face of
tremendous horror and despair. In some cases, it may be initiated by the
bereaved parent, as some settings and relationships are too painful to continue
and one experiences a certain and immovable shrinking of social capacity and
willingness to accept those who have not loved your child (in their life and in
their death) as you do. In some cases, this social reorganization occurs
because of the practical and circumstantial changes of child loss- you may not
be involved in parent’s groups, sports clubs, or activities that were a part of
your child’s life following the loss. This stage is often accompanied by
secondary pain and grief for the bereaved, and the loss of relationship and support
is hurtful. The task of this stage is to navigate resentment and bitterness and
to arrive at a new social reconfiguration with an ability to experience and
offer grace where others provoke hurt.
4.
A critical and overlooked component of anger is
guilt. Guilt is anger at self. Many bereaved parents experience anger at others
and God in relation to the loss of their child, but also for many of us, anger
at self is paramount. Guilt in child loss is different than guilt that is common
to other losses. Where one may feel guilt that they didn’t have a last visit
with a dying relative or said words in anger at one time, as a bereaved parent,
there is a certainty that the responsibility for your child’s death rests with
you. What is a parent’s job if not to protect your child and care for them and
keep them safe?
5.
The stages of grief make much of depression, but
say little about anxiety, which I think is a significant oversight. PTSD, panic
disorders, anxiety about losing other children, and so many other areas of fear
and trauma accompany child loss that may manifest in physical ways, as much as
cognitive or emotional. Anxiety is a significant correlate of grief and is especially
so for bereaved parents who navigate a world of minefields and have experienced
the unimaginable and yet are faced to continue life with that fear realized.
I needed to hear this. My son has really been my rock- he still will do holiday stuff will me, but yes I miss having my little girl and all the magic and wonder that happens during Christmas. Know I'm right there with you guys
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