Thursday, June 27, 2013

Say a prayer for me... please?

 I love Christmas.

(thats right I purposely made that green and red...) 

Seriously I love everything about it. What’s not to love? I can’t wait for the lights, putting my Christmas tree up 2 weeks before Thanksgiving, (ha. Josh hates this…) watching my cats play in boxes while I put things out, Christmas music, and Christmas food. Plus I love watching the Santa Claus with my family on Christmas Eve with hot chocolate, spending time with family, shopping for the perfect gift, and more importantly that it is the holiday we celebrate Jesus’ birth, ALL OF IT!  

When I was little I use to pray on Christmas Eve that God would bring me all of the things I asked for. (I know, what a brat) But I couldn’t wait to go downstairs and see all of the Christmas presents! Even if they weren’t mine, I was excited! One year, I said my usual Christmas “prayer” for all the gifts I wanted and the next morning I ran downstairs, opened presents and oh my goodness they were ALL there! I sat there with everything I wanted and I remember thinking to myself, “I must have really meant that prayer this year more than the other years, because it came true!”

Yes, I was young. But I think sometimes we think that still as adults. I have a prayer life. I pray to God on a daily basis, multiple times a day. Sometimes when things that I prayed for happen, I remember that is exactly why I pray! But when they don’t happen, I tend to think maybe I needed to pray harder or pray for often about this. (Yes, I realize we could go on for years about the theology about prayer, but I’m not doing that here, I am just describing basic human feelings) When I experienced our first miscarriage I thought to myself that maybe I needed to pray more or ask more people to be in prayer.

I am in several groups online that have women who have experienced miscarriages looking for a place to get support and PRAYER. It is incredible. I know several people that did not believe in the power of prayer until they experienced a miscarriage. Seriously. They found themselves saying prayers for other women who thought they were having symptoms of a miscarriage, just because they didn’t want someone else to experience the pain they went through. One woman told me that she actually got down on her knees for the first time in her life, praying for a woman she had never meet and her unborn child. How incredible.

It truly speaks for the real human life, not just a fetus, which is growing inside of you. You want people to pray your BABY to be healthy and grow. You want people to pray that this pregnancy will go well or that you will be able to get pregnant this month. You want people to pray that your heart will heal after you experienced the miscarriage. You need the support and when push comes to shove, prayer is what you want.

When you have a miscarriage or lose someone close to you even, you realize that a life has been loss. Someone that meant something to someone is no longer there. You realize that everything is out of your control and you look for someone to fix it. I see over and over again women experiencing what I did, who have never been through such a loss and realize they can’t do anything about the outcome, asking that people pray for them.

One of my favorite things about the groups that I am apart of is being able to tell women in need, that I am sincerely praying for them. I would have never known about that woman’s journey, be excited to see how her ultrasound went, or be able to know how to pray for her if it wasn’t for these groups. However, yesterday I had a bit of an epiphany. We look to those groups because they are woman experiencing the same things and they know how we feel. Not that there is anything bad about this. But a lot of people head there because they have no one to talk to in real life, not internet life. (ha.) I have been super fortunate that as soon as I posted about what josh and I were going through after our 2nd miscarriage, I had that support. I had people to talk to that I knew were going through the same things. But I only had that because I spoke up and (surprise surprise) asked for prayer.

Today this came to my heart because I had a friend last night text me just to ask how I was doing, to ask about my ultrasound tomorrow and tell me that she is praying for me. Just the small thought she had to do that meant the world to me. She remembered that I had a ultrasound tomorrow and that I was (am) super nervous after not seeing the heartbeat yet at the last ultrasound. So I decided to write this blog asking for something.

I am asking you, if you have a relationship with Jesus, to find someone that you know that has experienced a miscarriage or are having a hard time getting pregnant and pray for them today. Not just say that you are going to, but really do it. Then send them a message, text them or call them and tell them that you said a prayer for them today. I am not asking that this person be me, even though I do welcome any prayers for my anxiety about this ultrasound tomorrow, but find someone. It will mean the world to them. I promise you.

Who are you praying for today? 

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Saying Congratulations and meaning it!

Jealousy.

It starts earlier than we can actually remember. I am sure all parents could tell their kids countless stories about crying over toys when you were two or pulling toys away from other kids because you wanted it, even if you don’t recall any of it. 

My first actual moment of jealous was when my best friend got a toy for Christmas that I wanted and didn’t get. (Ignore everything else that I got that I wanted…) But I actually remember it. I was probably about six and I hated going to her house for a few weeks because that toy… wasn’t mine.

Then you are a teen and some chick that always has the most in style clothes walks the halls. You secretly want all of the clothes and shoes she has. It is irritating when you hear her complain about her clothes or treat them like they are garbage OR act like she doesn’t really like the clothes she has.

I have this extreme desire to travel. I have dreams of traveling all across Europe. My Great Grandpa came over from England and we never really knew much about him. So my mom and I did research on ancestry.com to find out the town he was from and we found relatives! England is on my must visit places, along with Italy, France and Germany. (WWII history buff) I want to travel… everywhere.

 Josh and I went on a cruise for our honeymoon. We LOVED traveling to 3 different locations. Our plan was to take a cruise this summer together as our “last trip before we have a baby”. We had the money saved up and were just looking for the prices to come down enough to book. Right in the middle of price watching, we found out our 1 year old American Bulldog/Pit mix needed knee surgery. Now I am not one for spending stupid amounts of money on a dog, but we did have the money set aside AND she is only one. Plus, you shouldn’t have a pet if you aren’t going to take care of it the way it needs to be. She was literally hobbling along on 3 legs. :( So our little getaway was cancelled. No more than 2 weeks later, a friend and her husband made an impromptu decision to take a 12 day cruise… in Europe and I got to scan through all their wonderful pictures on Facebook. It actually hurt my heart. Not because I was mad at them for taking it, but because I didn’t get to take it too.


(this is Tobin and her knee is now healing wonderfully!)

There are so many moments in life to look at what someone else has and to be mad, hurt and angry that you don’t have the same thing. For every woman reading this these moments tend to creep up on us as other women are getting engaged, married or having kids. It never seems to end. If you are engaged, you are irritated with pictures of people getting married. If you married, the countless pictures of people’s kids can easily get under your skin. Or if you’re single, all of those things could make you want to delete friends off Facebook.

It’s a common feeling that everyone deals with at some point. But for me, the hardest I have ever dealt with was having a miscarriage and seeing someone post pictures of their newborn baby. It was a pain that I felt deep in my heart that I have never experienced before and pray that you never have to experience.  Mad that someone had a baby and posted pictures? No.  Mad that someone was a proud parent of a tiny little baby? No. I was mad that I didn’t have my own tiny baby to post pictures of proudly.

 I was mourning the loss of the baby that I never held or got to kiss its fat cheeks at the same time someone was celebrating the life of their new child. That’s a hard pill for anyone to swallow. (Speaking of pills, why do they make prenatal vitamins like horse pills…? I have such a hard time swallowing them!) It took me a few weeks to be able to look at pictures of newborn babies without feeling that pit in my stomach. I know for some women it is a lot longer than that or you are still going through this process.

Even if I don’t want to admit it, this is jealousy. There is really no way around it. I am frustrated that someone has something that I want. But this isn’t just a car, house or money. This is a living breathing child, someone that will call me mommy. THAT is what I want. I have had to dedicate a lot of time to prayer to ask God to take the jealously that sits in my heart away. It doesn’t matter what I am jealous over, allowing jealously to call my heart home is going to cause more harm than good. I say this as genuine as I can, this isn’t easy and is still something that I struggle with sometimes.

We have all been told that you don’t understand the value of something until it’s gone. My first pregnancy I had heartburn for the first 7 weeks. It was terrible. I have never had heartburn in my life until I was pregnant. (And it’s still that way; as soon as I’m pregnant I experience it again) I complained for those few weeks because I think Tums are the equivalent to chewing on chalk and I hated (hate) taking them. As soon as I knew the baby had stopped growing my symptoms started going away and I actually said a prayer that the heartburn would come back. I WANTED HEARTBURN!

If you have experienced a miscarriage, to go through a grieving process and have a hard time looking at other peoples newborns is ok. But allowing it to sink in and fester in your heart to a point of jealously (and I have seen some people to the point of rage) is not ok. It is not their fault they had a baby around the same time you had a miscarriage. If the roles were reversed… wouldn’t you be posting an obscene amount of photos of your new baby as well? I know I would! We need to grieve, but we need to allow others to fully enjoy the experience they were blessed with. The same experience we so badly want to go through. You never know, maybe they SILENTLY went through multiple miscarriages and are now having the baby they prayed for! I would never want to develop jealously and anger towards that person, how excited I would be for them!

If you haven’t experienced a miscarriage or are going through a pregnancy after you have experienced one (or 3!), remember that there are people who are hurting and praying for those pregnancy symptoms. Embrace them! You will probably only go through this experience a few times in life, we shouldn’t complain the whole way through it. There are women out there who would kill to be in the spot you are now. If you truly believe each child is a blessing, than each craving, moment of heartburn, moment where you can’t keep your eyes open from exhaustion, and moment where raw chicken makes you want to vomit  (ok that last one may just be me…) is also a blessing!

The fact is, we don’t know everyone’s past. I have two good friends who both experienced two back to back miscarriages. They got married to their husbands within a month of when josh and I did. We are all very much at the same part of life. When I was pregnant for the 2nd time, they were both pregnant for the 3rd time. I miscarried and they both went on to have BEAUTIFUL baby boys within a month of each other. I looked through pictures and more pictures of their precious babies. I realized that my heart was not sad. It was not angry or JEALOUS! I had hope in my heart. Hope that I was going to experience what my friends were my third time around. They both in the midst of their celebrations sent me messages asking how I was feeling and to let me know that they were praying for me. (Yes, I am crying as I type this…) My heart would hurt more if I was jealous of them. They have equally been through so much! Praise the Lord for those chubby baby boys! Aunt Cortney loves them so much!

I have found a peace in this area of my life. Sometimes the jealousy will try and creep up, and I attempt to smack it back down. But I can see someone celebrating the birth of their child and say “congratulations!” and mean it.

It isn’t easy. Sometimes I have to force it out. But healing after a miscarriage is a process.

Start taking some steps and go slow! And if you don’t understand this, support the people going through it. We aren’t trying to hurt you, we are just hurting.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Instant Friends

When I first meet my husband, I couldn’t stand him. Ha. Seriously.

Well let’s back up, before I had even meet him I kept hearing about this “Josh Filler” character, like months before I had ever seen him. All of my current friends in college were really good friends with him and I heard about him all the time. All of the stories I heard were about them doing stupid stuff with this josh guy. Drove me nuts. Not only did I not know him, but seriously guys I figure we could talk about someone else. Then I meet him and ok maybe he was funny and super fun to be around…. But I still refused to like him.  After spending a whole summer around him, I would have considered us somewhat friends, but I had no intent of anything past that. Fast forward 1 year, we are back near each other for a summer and so begins our relationship.

Most of the relationships that mean something to me in life pretty much started this way. Where it takes a while to really get to know them before you are great friends with them. I feel like most of us could say that. I have a lot of friends, but I have a handful of really great friends, most of which took awhile to get that way.

But then you have a few of those “instant friends”. These are the friends that you don’t know how all of a sudden you clicked with them, but you could talk for hours… and hours… and it seems like you have known them your whole life.

 The first time this ever happened to me, I was at a going away party, Trisha and I sat down… 8 hours later we were kicked out of this house because we were still there, talking. We spent 2 weeks together before she moved and we have been friends since then. We are so much alike it’s actually scary and how crazy is it to talk to someone you just meet for 8 hours. Talk about instant.

The second time this happened, well I don’t actually know how this happened. No seriously. I am trying to wrap my mind around it, and I can’t. But my friend Caitlin and I… just became friends. Ha. I meet her right before josh and I got engaged. We talked about EVERYTHING… all the time. We worked together, lived near each other, and when someone bailed on being in my wedding… she stepped in. Another person that we are so much alike it’s scary.  She fits right into my family seamlessly and they all love her. THAT is the definition of an instant friend, someone you don’t even know how you became friends because it just happened.

The most recent friend that with, is Crystal. She works with my husband and I saw her frequently at the school. All of a sudden we get dinner, talk every time we see each other, and text. I don’t even see her that often and our friendship just developed. Crystal has been around for all three of my pregnancies. Each time I miscarried, she knew about it. I have talked through each pregnancy and miscarriage with her. This current pregnancy, I told her and she started to tear up. I could tell by the look in her eyes that she cared so much about me, that she just wants this pregnancy to be successful. (No joke she’s reading this and is probably tearing up right now..)

If you make the decision to speak out about the loss you have experienced or even if you are having problems conceiving, I promise you will make a lot of instant internet friends. There are people that I have never met that we know the inner working of each other’s lives, pregnancies and losses. There are people that I wasn’t close with in high school or college, but since have become great friends because of this shared journey. There are people that I recognize on websites like babycenter, that have been encouraging to me and that I have prayed for during their pregnancies. It is such a wonderful gift to be able to have the outlets that we do now.

Growing up I knew that my grandma had 3 miscarriages. One of them was when she was nearly 6 months.  I have had to ask questions since I have had my miscarriages because it isn’t something that she has ever really talked about. She is 73 and told me that back in the day nothing like this was talked about. She explained that if you had a miscarriage your doctors didn’t offer solutions or things to try next time. She also said that if you were having miscarriages, people assumed something was wrong with you personally. (of course the guy wouldnt have problems just the woman carrying the baby...)

My heart hurts that my grandma truly believed that there was something wrong with her and that she had no one to talk to about it. I couldn’t imagine 10 years of trying and 3 miscarriages later, the defeat I would feel. She sat by and watched her sisters all have children, loved on each of their children, not knowing if she would ever have her own. When I listened to her tell me her story she said she has realized over the years that it wasn’t her fault that she miscarried. But in the moment she thought that it was her fault and feared getting pregnant again.

Having no communication with other people about such a loss is terrible to think of. My papa isn’t a talker, at all, so I know she wasn’t talking with him. My wonderful grandma suffered silently through all three losses and panicked through 2 more pregnancies while she carried my mom and aunt. My heart is heavy to think that we have still carried that into the world today. Having a miscarriage is not something we talk about. You don’t even know people who have experienced it until you have one and they all come out of the wood work, and that is only if you choose to be open about it.

Making the decision to talk to people is a personal one. Some of us do better talking; some of us like to keep to ourselves. God has made each of us wonderfully unique. I choose to speak out for those of us that want to be able to talk about it. But that doesn’t make me any better than you. You have to be comfortable with where you are. I have to deal with several people removing me as a friend on FB because of my blog and telling me that they are blocking me. But I have also had so many instant internet friends (more than I can count) because I have chosen to speak up and ask for support. For me the friends and support out weight all the bad things that may happen.

I think it’s important to have some instant friends that support you through everyday life, whether it is in real life or internet life (haha)! You need those people that you don’t know how you became friends with them, but it was an instant bond or something that brought you together. I have the real life instant friends and more than I could list instant internet friends, that will all support me. What a wonderful friend to have. You arent friends because you have to be. (like when you are a kid and no one else is around so why not be friends) You are friends because you have something in common that has drawn you to one another. You are friends because you know they will support you through whatever you are going through even if they haven't been through it themselves. Find this kind of friend, online, at church, at school, whatever. Get 1 of them or 10 of them. They will help in the moments you need them the most.

Get the support you desire, whatever it is!  You deserve it!

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Strong is in the eye of the beholder

Josh and I meet on Word of Life Island. It's a Christian teen camp that is on an island in the middle of a lake, surrounded by mountains in upstate New York. I can't even explain how beautiful it is. Josh served 5 consecutive summers and I have done 3. It was one of the biggest blessings that I have ever experienced. I have friends that I would never have had without those summers and people that I look up to so very much just from watching them serve so many years on the Island.

Part of the experience for kids and the counselors are the CRAZY activities that you get to take part in. My second summer I was a counselor (literally I lived with teenage girls for 8 weeks straight), one of my campers (cough cough, taylor mastin....) talked me into participating in a push up contest with her. "SURE! We will do it together!" Little did I know she was pulling me up there to have ME do push ups with HER in my back. I did not sign up for this. But I did it. All 5'4, 135lbs of me did what seemed like 100 pushups with her on my back. (I think it was like 10.. haha) I felt so strong. Seriously. I stood up after beating a girl that I thought was going to smoke me in this, super proud of myself.

THEN I woke up the next morning, regretting not stretching before hand and allowing her to talk me into doing that. I couldn't even lift my arms above my head. (FYI, this camper laughed at me when I begged her for help changing because I couldn't pull my teeshirt over my head) I FELT STRONG and a little stupid. Then I woke up and the reality of what I had just done, really sunk in and I was in physical pain.

Both previous pregnancies we have had we found out by ultrasound that our precious babies had stopped growing and no longer had a beating heart. Every time we are scheduled for an ultrasound (even just writing this) puts a pit in my stomach and I get physically ill. The biggest we have ever seen any of our babies was at 7 weeks 1 day. We don't know what it is like to go in and see a baby moving, kicking, waving, or sucking on its thumb. I go in every ultrasound praying we see growth and a heartbeat.

This past Friday was our first ultrasound. I woke up, went to work, and had to keep busy to prevent myself from thinking about it. When I got home, we ate, (I'm pregnant if I don't eat every 2 hours I hate life)  and then got in the car to drive to the hospital for my ultrasound. I kept asking Josh if he was nervous or felt sick. He kept saying he was ok, which made me feel a little better. Once we got there they took up to the ultrasound area. (also just a fun story, we both had on teal shirts and white shorts/pants and the old lady escorting us made fun of us for matching and asked if we planned it, cool, old lady...)

Finally once in with the ultrasound tech, she informed us that she saw the gestational sac and yolk sac but did not see a fetal pole, which means no baby yet. Obviously I panicked inside and I felt sick again. She told us that it was common not to see it before 6 weeks so not to worry. But I should be right at 6 weeks I kept thinking, something is wrong. We got out to the car after a long walk down those hallways, nearly in tears of worry, and I realized something. Both previous pregnancies I was always measuring like 5 days behind what my last monthly period said I should be. PLUS I know I ovulate late and I am pretty sure I implant late. So I probably am only like 5 weeks 3 or 4 days-ish.

There is something about a miscarriage that brings on panic. For me, I have known since I was young that I wanted to be a mom. I always babysat, I was a nanny at one point, and I LOVE holding babies. Finding out I was pregnant the first time was a dream come true. Two miscarriages later, I have a lot of panic to go around. What if I will never be a mom? If I cant carry a pregnancy to term? What if adoption is our only option and we can't afford it? Its a lot to sink in if you let it.

I know a few women that have children and then have miscarried who share some of the same panic. They had always planned on having a big family, what if they can only have 2? Their worry is just as valid as mine. So is the woman who has miscarriages run in their family and is terrified to walk down that road as well. These are legitimate concerns.

I have been told that I am so strong and courageous for writing this blog. I am not strong. A strong woman wouldn't worry and panic when anything looks like it isn't going perfect. I would be able to stand up and say that I was ok with whatever the outcome. I would be able to enjoy walking into a room with an ultrasound machine. My heart wouldn't hurt every time there is a parents only event at church or with friends and I realize that I still can't attend. So no, I am not strong.

I am weak. But I am able to get through and push through because I have decided to give my desires and moments of panic or anxiousness to God. I understand that you may feel like that is just a line. But I am being sincere. It isn't just something I am saying to help me get through the day. I believe that, like the bible says, God knew each of us before we were even in the womb. (Jeremiah 1:5) God is in control. That is such a relief to be because in this whole journey I have realized more than ever that I am NOT in control. If I was, we would have 2 children already. Our father's day would look a little different than it did today. Truthfully, I do not want to be in control, I mess things up and God knows exactly what He is doing and doesn't mess up.

Sometimes doing the easy thing, like perhaps stopping at the first miscarriage, would sound simple. But sometimes the hard things, the things that seem impossible bring upon the biggest blessings. Every woman who has experienced a miscarriage has to decide if it is worth it to try again. What is the stopping point?

It is different for each person. So if you don't understand the decisions that need to be made that is ok. But please don't judge the woman who has decided to continue trying after 2 miscarriages or 6. It isn't your place to judge where that couple is in life or the road they are taking to being parents. It hurts. Your pregnancies may have been successful the first time around and what a blessing, but no 2 roads are the same.

The girl that I mentioned earlier that manipulated (that's the perfect word for it too) into doing the push ups, is now serving on Word of Life Island this coming summer. She is going to have a chance to impact kids lives. She told me this past winter when she came to visit me that she wanted to love on girls the way I loved on her. It was 2 weeks that I lived with and loved on her. Was it easy to love on high school girls 24/7 for 16 weeks? Oh goodness no. But the determination, the hard work, the moments where I felt strong, the moments where I cried, the moments where I felt stupid, the moment I cried out to God,  were all worth it.

I am not expecting this road to be easy, just worth it.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Parents know best

I have grown up playing sports. Both my parents love sports and watch sports. I lived and breathed soccer throughout my entire youth. Actually that is a lie, I still do. I am currently a Varsity boy’s soccer coach at a Christian school. Any sport takes a toll on your body and if you play competitively, you are bound to end up with an aliment or two. My aliment is my right knee. I can pop it in and out of place. Seriously. It’s gross. My varsity coach use to look away and call me disgusting all the time. I would play, it would pop out, I would pop it back in and get back up. So needless to say I made the decision to have surgery done after the last game of my senior year.

While at the hospital I went into surgery and woke up with a woman’s hand down my shirt. I can’t even begin to tell you the confusion I had. Ha. She was taking off those little heart monitor things, and said “well that was an awkward time for you to wake up…” um, yes mam it was. They went and got my parents to come back. When my mom got back she was all agitated. I asked her what was wrong and she went on a rant. Apparently they said the surgery would take 1.5 to 2 hours. After about 2.5 hours my dad went up to ask if I was out, they were starting to worry. The receptionist informed them that it still stated I was in surgery and they would page them when I was out. At 3.5 hours my parents were ticked. They went back up to ask what in the world was going on, super worried at this point, and she said “oh she is just waking up, you can go back”. My parents were so mad.

When I was 17, I didn’t understand why in the world they were so upset. It wasn’t a huge deal, I was ok. Given I was incredibly creeped out by the lady with her hand down my shirt when I was waking up, but it didn’t ruin my experience. But for my parents, they still talk about it. My dad will still say how mad he was and that people don’t mess with someone’s family when there is a kid on the operating table.  

I took me 8 years to understand what he actually meant by that. When I experienced my first miscarriage, I decided to let everything happen naturally. I was already bleeding pretty heavily so I thought it would happen any day. My doctor was so against this. He told me that it was a terrible decision and he was giving me a few days to do it on my own, otherwise he was scheduling a D&C. It ended up being about a week, I’m not sure if he forgot that threat he had made, but I was able to do everything on my own. In a fear of possibly bleeding too much, Josh took me to the hospital. Throughout the whole trip to the ER, I had 3 different nurses, 2 doctors, 1 ultrasound tech and someone that wheeled me to the ultrasound. (I think there was a shift change somewhere in there, that’s why so many nurses and doctors) I got checked out and they informed me everything was under control and that I had passed everything that I needed to. When my actual OBGYN called them back, he went on a rant stating that I didn’t listen to him and that he wanted me to have a D&C and demanded that I have one now as a precaution.

Let me just stop there. I did ALL THE WORK. Passing a small baby still causes your body to contract. I still had to do some kind of pushing. I sat on the couch and in the bathroom in a lot of pain, all so that this heartbreaking process was over. There is NO WAY I am now going to put myself through a surgery after they have confirmed that everything that needed to be was out and I just put myself through that for what nothing? Um, no.

After a lot of finger pointing and very vivid conversation with the doctor who came back to tell me what this OBGYN recommended, they made me sign a “leaving without listening to medical personal” paper. I did gladly and was finally able to go home after 6 hours.
Being in the hospital that night was a nightmare. On top of the argument I had to have with the doctors, I also had to say out loud “I am here because I am worried I am bleeding too much from the miscarriage I just had”, 9 total times. 9 stinking times. They were incredibly lucky that I am not a super emotional person because I would have been worse than I was. It is hard enough to go through such a life altering experience, but to feel alone and like you are just being looked at like a person there to help pay the bills is too hard. No woman should ever have to sit, cry and tell you what has happened and why she knows she passed everything, 9 times. What are those clipboards for anyways? Do you not keep any information on them?

My experience at 24 with my first pregnancy was terrible. Now, not all of my experiences were bad. Once I found the right OBGYN, seriously she is the BEST, it has been fantastic. She pushed my insurance to allow my testing after the 2nd miscarriage to be covered, she put me on medication (prenatal, folic acid, progesterone and baby aspirin) 3 months ahead of when we were going to start trying again, and ALWAYS has time to talk to josh and I if we need to. Seriously I couldn’t be happier. She gets it. She knows what I am experiencing is real.

My alert to everyone in the medical profession is this, we are real. What we are experiencing is real. I am sure that sometimes it is hard to not get caught up in it being your job and you have to get through the shift. I am sure there are moments that you are just going through the motions. (I watch grey’s anatomy, I know how it is! Ha!) All of that is ok. I am not blaming you for it; I do it with my job sometimes too. But please, from the bottom of my heart, when a woman experiencing a miscarriage comes in; don’t look at her like it is not serious. No matter how many you have seen. For that woman, in that moment, she is scared, sad, and worried; otherwise she wouldn’t be in there.

(Please know this: I know not all doctors, nurses, aids and techs are like the people I interacted with that night. Some are just as compassionate at my current OBGYN is. For that I thank you personally.)

I said before that I am on progesterone. I found out when I went to pick up the prescription that my insurance doesn’t cover it. I just got a letter in the mail yesterday giving me their reasoning. It stated that I was unable to receive progesterone if I have a history of “spontaneous abortions”. Abortions. Really? We couldn’t have come up with a better word for this. Thanks a lot insurance company for the reminder.

I appreciate it.  

Monday, June 10, 2013

"would you rather...."



Opinions. Everyone has them. Everyone deserves to have them.

Have you ever played the “would you rather…” games? It is a book of super random and weird questions and in a group of people you have to make a decision for yourself of which thing you would choose. It is tons of fun and full of laughs to listen to people’s opinions or reasoning behind their decisions. You tend to learn a lot about people or the way that they think. (WARNING: some people may legit freak out you after playing this game with them) It encourages you to have an opinion and speak it out.

Playing games like “would you rather…” is very fitting for growing up in American culture. You are taught from a young age to stick up for yourself and say what you think. When you get older you are encouraged to vote and voice your opinion. (I did for the first time this year and I felt like I truly mattered when placing my vote!) It is hard to decide where we went from being the kid that sticks up for themselves to the adult bashing people for the way they choose to live their lives.  But we have all been there.

I personally experienced the heart ache of someone choosing to be the adult that beats someone down for their life decisions in the last few years of my life. I am sure that I experienced it before in some manner, but before this, I was in high school and college where no one actually says what they think to your face. So I never really experienced it before in this capacity.

Josh and I found out we were pregnant for the first time after only a year and 3 months of marriage. It was a crazy time in life for us. We weren’t trying for a baby, we were smack dab in the middle of buying our first home, and josh had just switched jobs. How intimidating of a life change! I had some people excited, I had some nervous for us, and I actually had someone say “wow, what a stupid decision”. Hmm. Hurts a little just to read that doesn’t it.

Then we experienced the miscarriage. We kept it to ourselves and mourned. But part of my reason for going through it like we did was because I was so scared of hearing someone say, “well hey I guess it worked out for the best.” Seriously, there are people out there that say that to a woman who has just lost her baby.

The same went for our 2nd miscarriage. At first we went through this process not talking about it. But after some time in prayer, about 3 days after my D&C, I realized I was done being afraid. Satan was winning. I thought this was all my fault. Maybe I shouldn’t have had a single cup of coffee (you can have 1 cup a day) or made sure I slept on my left side more or maybe... and so on and so on. I had taken something that was not my fault at all and allowed Satan to truly make me believe I had killed my child.

So I spoke out. I choose Facebook as my outlet. I told family and friends what was going on. I asked for prayers as our hearts were healing from our 2nd miscarriage in one year. Now here is where the hurt comes. While I received an almost overwhelming amount of support, I had a few people that judged me for putting something like that on Facebook. After a few weeks of beating myself up for saying something I realized, each of the people who had opinions for my life decisions, were couples or women who had never experienced this kind of loss. They had children and had openly told me that they had never had a miscarriage but “this is really something too personal and weird for everyone to hear you talk about”.

Let me say this. I am a Christian. I am a firm believer in Jesus Christ and him dying for my sins on the cross. I am not ashamed of it. I also believe that every baby, no matter how small, in the womb or not, is a living person. I never really thought about it in depth until I had a miscarriage. That child was real. God KNOWS that child. So while I am pregnant this time, we are going to celebrate with everyone the living child growing inside of me. No matter if the baby stops growing at 10 weeks again or 24 weeks or lives a full long life, this baby’s life will be celebrated. If the baby passes away before the age of 90, I will mourn its loss. I am a mom. My husband is a dad. We already love this child and the 2 we have loss, very much.

I say all of that to say this. If I woman is 9 months pregnant, and her child is still born. Would you say “well maybe it is for the best?” or tell them not to ask for prayers while they go through a difficult time in life mourning the loss of their child? No. No person with a heart would say that to a grieving mother or father. So why say it to someone who is experiencing a loss at 10 weeks? That is 60 days (after finding out your pregnant) of waking up making sure you get breakfast in you to provide nutrients for your baby, 60 days of taking prenatal vitamins, an ultrasound seeing your baby’s beating heart, and 60 days of dreaming of what life will be like. It is real. The raw emotions of losing a child and the heartbreak that comes alongside of it are real. Even if you have never gone through it yourself, you can tap into the emotions of losing your own child.  What an awful feeling. For me, I have 2 children that I will not see until I am in heaven. I am comfortable talking about them, why aren’t you?

Be careful. Your opinions matter. But your opinions can hurt.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Hi, my name is (insert name here) and I Facebook stalk you.

Women.

We know we have our own language. We don’t need to be reminded of it.

If you have ever sat in a group of women talking, conversation seems to jump from one topic to the other, flawlessly, and then somehow end right back where it started, like it all tied in together. My husband purposely leaves the room (or turns the TV up) when my mom, sister and I start talking. Beyond his issues that we all sound exactly alike, talk alike, move our hands alike and the volume increases exponentially, he feels like we just talk in circles. We do. That is exactly what makes it wonderful in our eyes.

Along with our own special language, that only women seem to understand, we are oddly curious of each other’s lives (remember the crazy circles we talk). Now, some of this can get out of control and becomes gossipy. (Note: gossiping is bad.) But sometimes, we are just curious of your life events because MAYBE we have experienced it too and we want to share or lean on you for understanding.

We often stalk (yes sadly this is the correct word) Facebook, hoping that you have wrote about whether you got an epidural, how long you were in labor, OR if you experienced a (here’s that word again) miscarriage how you are doing.

So I am going to help you. You don’t have to stalk any farther. I am giving you the information, which I know you want to know… because I would want to know about yours!

Josh and I have been married nearly 3 years. It often seems like we have been married for 30 and yet at the same time feels like we flew through the last 3 years. Like most couples, 2 years was our magic number. A good time frame to get acquainted to being married and having some fun on our own, but still soon enough that we had something so exciting to look forward to. For me, I couldn’t wait to be a mom so the 2 years couldn’t come soon enough.

Most things that we put a time frame on, we quickly learn that God’s timing always triumphs our own. Therefore a year, 4 months and learning to pee on a stick later, we found out that we were expecting our first child. We were in the process of buying our first home and living in an apartment.

When I was approaching my 10th week of pregnancy, I had some light spotting. I called the doctor right away. (Give me a break it was my first pregnancy) He told me right away that everything was normal and to come to my normal appointment the following week. In the next few days spotting turned to bleeding. My doctor told me to go to the ER. We received an ultrasound on this portable machine that looks old enough to have been used when I was born. The very nervous tech said, “Yep I see a heartbeat.” Then that was it. We were told some bleeding is normal for women and not to worry because the tech saw a heartbeat. Three days later, I woke up severely bleeding and they moved my appointment to that morning. There, everything was confirmed. No hearbeat. The precious baby had stopped growing at 7 weeks 6 days.

We chose to have this miscarriage naturally; I assumed my body was probably almost halfway there anyways. To my surprise it took an additional week to have the miscarriage.  Since this isn’t something that I knew anything about, we thought there may be a possibility that I was bleeding too much. So in the middle of the night Josh took me to the hospital. Everything thing had been confirmed that the miscarriage was complete and praise the Lord the bleeding was under control. Only my family and close friends knew of this pregnancy. So quietly, at home, with my amazing husband, we grieved.

Speed forward to that special “2 year” time frame. We decided after almost 9 months since the last miscarriage and just passing our 2 year anniversary, it was time to start trying. Now in the first few years of marriage, you try not to get pregnant. (yes I realize we were not successful at this) But when it came time to actually start trying actively, we had no idea where to begin. It took about 3 months to get pregnant. The day after thanksgiving, exactly 1 year to the day since we had found out about the 1st pregnancy, we found out we were expecting again! What a blessing that getting pregnant is not an issue we suffer from!  (Or so we say right now)

Around my 7th week of this pregnancy, our doctor (who we switched to and is AMAZING!) we were able to get an early ultrasound, and saw a beautiful little heartbeat and found out a due date! All of my blood work and HCG level came back normal. We were sure we were out of the woods. Then at our 11 week appointment, again there was no heartbeat. This precious baby had stopped growing at 8 weeks 6 days. There were NO warning signs for this. No spotting or bleeding. Only family and close friends knew about this pregnancy as well.

We were given the option to have some testing done on the baby and chose to go forward with that. One D&C and some testing later, we found out that our precious little GIRL had turner syndrome. It’s a syndrome where the baby is missing a chromosome needed to have a sustainable life. Turner syndrome is considered to be the cause of about 10% of all miscarriages, most likely the leading cause. Cool. Another stupid statistic we fall into. We also were told that my body is literally holding on to these babies even their heart is no longer beating, causing me to have MISSED miscarriages. Also another stupid small stat we fall into.

Speed forward nearly 6 months, and the first month trying, the Filler’s are expecting again! This time around I am on a prenatal vitamin, 4MG of folic acid, a baby aspirin and progesterone. I feel like a walking pharmacy. But I don’t care at all. This time we announced our pregnancy and openly ask for prayers. If we experience this again, we NEED the support system. If it doesn’t, I pray this gives hope to women who are so worried about ever having children

SO there is our long, and trust me I cut out a lot of details, story of where we are today. I am obviously sharing this because we don’t hear these kinds of stories. Where are all the grieving people also have stories that they WANT to share?

In the U.S. alone, over 700,000 babies don’t survive to be born each year. Millions of people must be mourning these losses.
 So, where are they?

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

say hello to awkward

I can’t think of moment in my life that I have been asked to talk more because I was being too quite. I’m a talker. This has happened to get me in trouble many times in my life. Including all of the moments where my husband and I are laying in bed and I refuse to quit talking. The poor guy is done listening and talking about 2 hours into his work day with junior highers. Man, do they know how to talk, it’s almost inspiring. But naturally when you are a talker and everyone that knows you knows this, the moment you start to get a little quiet, people know there is something really wrong.

For me it was experiencing something you never thought you would have to deal with to get me super quiet, a miscarriage. That word probably made you a little uncomfortable. It could be maybe because you have had one or because you know nothing about it OR because you grew up in a generation that things like this weren’t talked about. I know that word made me a little uneasy when I was single and dreaming about what my life was going to be like. I mean people say all the time, “I didn’t think that was going to happen to me”. But for me, I was REALLY positive it was never going to happen to me and my future husband. I heard, very rarely, of women who were experiencing a miscarriage and I immediately wanted to change the subject if it was brought up.  It is awkward to talk about a woman experiencing a loss of a child. No one is comfortable with that kind of a loss. So naturally, when you receive the news that you are now among the 30% of all pregnancies end in miscarriage statistic, you are in a state of shock and awkwardness. The shock is pretty self explanatory if you look up at the “I didn’t think it was going to happen to me” statement. The awkwardness is hard to put words to, until you have been there.

My grandparents have this club house that we use to play in ALL the time as a kid. My sister, best friend and I had a “no boys allowed” club. Seriously, that was the name. Thank several hours of reading the babysitters club books for the creativity. We use to hold “meetings” which really consisted of coloring on the walls or planning for attacks that the neighborhood boys may make against us. But it was a club. I knew the members and I was co- president. Having a miscarriage is like being in a super top secret club that you go to meetings with a blindfold on and earplugs in. It’s not a club that you want to be a part of. In fact you run out to your car after the meeting in hopes that no one sees you. So for a talker, in a club like this, bring on the awkwardness.

I have been tossing the idea around for a little while about starting a blog. (By the way the last sentence is probably the number one most over used statements on all opening blog pages.) At first I thought maybe to start one to look back on years from now at our first years of marriage. But I have facebook for that. Then we got pregnant and I thought “ok now I will start one to show our kids later in life”. Then I experienced our first miscarriage and I searched for days to find blogs of other women who were experiencing the same thing. Just an outlet to help me through the place in life I was currently experiencing. I came across several of them. Some were women who had experienced upwards of 6 miscarriages, some not being able to conceive at all, and some were of women who had given up hope of ever having children. I kept feeling like nothing applied to where I was exactly. Then when we experienced our 2nd miscarriage, I posted something on facebook about what we were experiencing. I received mixed reviews on whether or not I should even have said anything. At first I felt guilty for making people feel uncomfortable, and then I just keep getting this feeling that this SHOULDN’T be something that makes us uncomfortable or awkward.

Thus begins my blog. It is not meant in any way to make you uncomfortable or awkward but maybe to help educate you. Hopefully it helps women who have or will experience a miscarriage in their life. So yes, there will be baby things and miscarriage things and things josh and I experience in life from here on out. Hopefully, it helps some of the healing hearts.