Friday, November 28, 2008

WAHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!

Wow! So we are pregnant again. The four month anniversary of our boys' birth and death is this Sunday, and here I am harboring new life. I am excited, and feeling blessed, and at the same time feeling guilty and feeling very very suspicious. I feel guilty because I am afraid it is disrespectful to Pedro and Archer to be excited about this new life. I had a dream about being in a hotel room after I'd checked out, and the new inhabitant of the room was there and trying to unpack her bags, and I wouldn't leave and kept telling her that all the bags in the room were my bags not hers. I'm assuming the room is a metaphor for my womb, and I am refusing to let go of what already "checked out" in order to let the new inhabitant in. It's also possible that the room is the hospital room in Portland. I've often thought about someone new being in that room, our doctors and nurses working on new cases, and I hated the idea, mostly because I wanted to still be there, still be going strong, protecting Pedro and Archer and making everyone laugh. Gotta love pregnancy dreams.

I feel guilty because I worry it is too soon to be having another child. Guilty because I am afraid people will want to forgot Pedro and Archer, will want to stop saying their names, stop mourning their loss, will want to hurry us past all that as if they were a bad dream instead of our first children. That they will find it distasteful for us to continue to talk about them, to continue to count them as members of our family. That they will see it as morbid or obsessed. I know I need to not worry about anyone else, but it never quite works out that way, does it. Life doesn't compartmentalize like that.

I feel suspicious because I no longer believe that I can count on anything. When Bruno got his job offer, we didn't tell anyone until he stepped into the office for the first day of work; we were so afraid the opportunity might get taken away at the last second. And now, I am afraid to get excited, afraid to let myself talk about the future. I can't believe the waves of fear I've felt in only this first week of knowing. From the very beginning, I have been afraid I will miscarry. I have viewed every single thing as proof that this gift will be taken away from us. I read into every communication I have with the doctor, I spend way too much time on the internet googling symptoms. I am shocked at how my normally optimistic outlook has been taken over by this obsessive fear monger.

I will fight this OFM. I will not let it ruin this experience. If I have learned nothing else from losing my sons, it is that knowing it might happen, preparing for it to happen did nothing to mitigate the pain of their loss. So why waste time anticipating the worst. I will fight for the freedom of hope.

Thanksgiving

And again, the holiday itself was not nearly as worrisome as the anticipation of it. And even the anticipation wasn't too bad this time. More, it sort of felt surprising that Thanksgiving was here at all. Being in California, the weather isn't exactly giving us clues as to the season. And my internal clock stopped in July, so while the calender keeps marching on, I continue to remain bewildered as each new landmark arrives. High Holidays, birthdays, our due date and now Thanksgiving: none of them make sense internally. I wonder when I'll catch up.

So when Mom started querying about purchasing pre-brined turkeys and designing menus, I just nodded and let myself get pulled along. I offered to host, but I guess that is about all the preparation I did, because Mom and Dad showed up at our place yesterday with bags and bags of groceries, including the pre-brined turkey. It was pretty funny: they are real troupers.

And then, one step at a time, we created Thanksgiving. Mom and I pulled out the Cuisinart and made my grandmother's stuffing, while Bruno and Dad geeked out in the living room looking at potential new cars. We cleaned and trussed and stuffed the bird, and soon my olfactory senses were telling me it was Thanksgiving. We made two cranberry sauces: one plain for Dad and one with jalapeƱo for the rest of us. We left the aromas and the warmth of the kitchen to walk through the neighborhood, saying hello to the new friends and strangers along the way. We came back and played cards, stopping every half-hour to baste the bird. Then everyone got in on the action, as we simultaneously set the table, made the brussel sprouts and the sweet potatoes, took the bird out of the oven, made the gravy, carved the bird, discovered (as we do EVERY SINGLE YEAR) that we pulled it out too early and the meat, while juicy, was still pink, energetically debated the best way to handle the situation, and decided (as we do EVERY SINGLE YEAR) to carve it and then put the pieces back in the oven for ten minutes (under a tinfoil hood, to protect the moisture).

Eventually, everything made it to the table and was eaten. And surprisingly, I did find my way to being thankful.

Monday, November 24, 2008

The Burbs

I wonder why it is that I'm not more pissed off about living in The Burbs. When I mention to people, strangers at the gym, checkout folk at the Trader Joe's, that I've just moved here from NYC, they gasp, and exclaim, "Wow, that's culture shock." And with their mouths practically salivating, they ask, "How do you like...San Mateo??!?" And then they seem to lean back and wait for me to go on some diatribe about how dull this all is, or how much I miss Manhattan. I just can't get it up to satisfy them. I usually respond, "I'm not sure I know where I am yet". If they know my situation, they nod, knowingly and empathetically. If not, they look eager to hear the back-story. Sorry, friend, not today.

So why aren't I more pissed off? Could it be I am actually a closet burbie girl? That's Bruno's theory. As a gal who grew up living in the suburbs while attending high school in a big city, I'm familiar with all the jokes: What's the difference between a burbie girl and the trash? The trash gets taken out once a week. What's the difference between a burbie girl and a calendar? A calendar has dates. Could it be that I've finally come full circle and reached a moment in my life when I don't mind having a few fewer options, a little less calling to me. That right now I appreciate a place that doesn't demand that I have six careers and be part of two bookclubs at a minimum.

Let me tell you my big activity for the day: trying to fool my GPS. I am perpetually lost (metaphorically and physically, but right now let's stick to the physical), and so my Mom and Dad chipped in to get me a GPS. So I figure now I've got to leave the house a little. Today, I decide to take the thing out for a spin to the Walgreens and the bank (free-lancer: I have to deposit checks!). I've successfully made it to the Walgreens and now I'm asking it to take me to the nearest bank. And I decide, while I'm still safely within the realm of streets I kinda know, to see how lost this thing will let me get. It tells me to get in the right lane and prepare to turn right (how does one really prepare to turn right? Get one's moral compass in order?) And I, in a fit of brazenness, decide to turn left instead. It repeats it's previous command, and mid-sentence interrupts itself to condescend: recalculating. It sounds like it's annoyed with me, but I don't care. I take another wrong turn and then another. My mechanical friend looks down her computerized nose at me and sniffs: recalculating, recalculating, please proceed to highlighted route. I will not. I have been rudely thrust from my highlighted route, and I won't let some dashboard hussy pressure me into getting back on it now. Not until I'm good and ready, you hear me.

In the meanwhile, I'm driving up and down hills, past trees heavy with persimmons, through falling leaves, on streets with S L O W written across them in large letters. It's a nice difference, a nice reminder.

And after a bit, I decide I am in fact ready to rejoin the highlighted route. I still, after all, want to get to my destination. I let my mechanized friend guide me back onto the path (she sounds much more relaxed now that I'm following her lead), and moments later, I arrive.

Friday, November 21, 2008

A Normal Evening

Sitting around the bridge table I inherited from Nana, playing cards: Mom, Dad, me and Bruno. We're cracking jokes and being silly, high on the adrenaline of competition, not to mention sugar from the ice-cream. Mom and I dip our spoons directly into the chocolate sauce. Mom has it all over her teeth and we all poke fun at her sloppy mouth.

I have a whisper of guilt, but just a whisper: we haven't mentioned the boys tonight. And I decide it's alright. Looking at my father's smiling face (he's losing, and he's not even being grouchy about it), looking at my husband's relaxed brow, my Mom's chocolatey smile, I decide it's alright to be normal for once. To have an evening where our grief isn't center stage, the main event. Where eggshells are abandoned, crunched on, even. My father tells a story and I start to laugh, really laugh, and I could almost cry with how nice it feels to catch a glimpse of our New Normal.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Free Floating Anxiety

Walking around this afternoon with the sensation of waiting for the other shoe to drop. A shakiness inside, as if I'm cold. Deep sighs that don't end in relief. My stomach is full with not much in it, but my mouth, my tongue want something they can't identify. Chocolate milk, usually a fail-safe, doesn't do the trick.

Waiting for the mail to arrive, the in-box to fill, the cell to buzz with messages. Dreading the phone to ring: direct contact, yikes! Picking up the phone to call: no answers anywhere. I don't leave messages.

Nervous like I've forgotten something. Nervous like there is something I was supposed to have done, supposed to be doing right now. Another sigh.

I'm supposed to be raising my boys. That's what I'm supposed to be doing right now.

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Bawling all over the Neighbor

Yesterday, I was pulling out of the driveway to head to a yoga class, in a pretty foul mood. It seems that from around 4-6 each day, if I am not actively involved in something, my mood takes a pretty nasty dive. I was attempting to pull myself out by going to yoga, but as I am backing the car out of the driveway, my neighbor and her two kids on their Razor scooters appear and flag me down. Oy. I'm in such a bad mood, and she seems so nice. This isn't going to end well, I'm thinking. I roll down the window, and then decide that is downright rude, so I turn off the car and hop out. She tells me she has been meaning to stop by, she's sorry she's been so remiss. I mumble something about how we've been busy setting up the place. She comes closer and tells me if there is anything I need I should definitely come by, she'd be happy to help with whatever. Oft. Here it comes. I can feel it. She's being too nice to me. You can't be this nice to me when I only have a fingernail grip on propriety. And...I'm bawling. Bawling all over the neighbor. Bawling in front of her two kids. I manage to squeak out that we just lost our twin sons at six months into the pregnancy, and that I'm sorry for being such a public mess. And G-d bless her, without missing a beat, she steps toward me, gives me a hug and starts crying too. Wow. She says I must be so strong, and she's sorry this happened, and simultaneous to the move too. She invites me to come on a walk with her and her kids in the park. I tell her that apparently I really need this yoga class, but I'd love to take a raincheck. Then she invites me to come over later that evening: she and another neighbor always drink wine and watch Dancing with the Stars on Mondays. And I hear myself saying yes.

And I do go over. I leave Bruno enjoying the house to himself. I walk out our front door clutching a Trader Joe's Really Cool Wine Find, and, one door down, I approach a new front door. I meet the other neighbor. I ask questions about the show. I drink wine. I make jokes. I tell stories, and some of them make us laugh, and some of them make us somber. I ask questions and listen to their stories. I hear neighborhood gossip. Juicy gossip. I am relaxed. I am having fun. I am invited back for next week. I am walking through a new door.

-L

Monday, November 17, 2008

Mondays

Arrggh. Monday's are hard. My buddy goes back to work, and I'm left with all my feelings and only mundane "we've moved" tasks to occupy myself, like setting up new health insurance, new doctors, figuring out where the grocery stores are and how to DRIVE to them (I'm having a serious battle with this whole car culture thing. I am incredibly challenged in the "sense of direction" department. Like brain damaged challenged.) Bleah.

OK, feeling sorry for myself. Today I successfully set up Bruno's direct deposit, our new health insurance and FSA and all that jazz, arranged for old Dr's offices to fax things to new Dr's offices, got in a tax estimate to our accountant (we dropped out of the whole estimated taxes thing for a bit there: this could hurt now), planned meals for the week, went to Costco and TJ's (and only got lost once and didn't even cry and rant and rave in the car; instead I sent Bruno a whithering text about our AWOL GPS while stopped at a red light). It is all domestic garbage, but someone's got to do it, and atleast I'm getting some stuff done instead of sitting with my face in a tub of ice-cream like I'd like to (OK, I did take an ice-cream pig-out break, but I ate it with a spoon, and someone said full-fat milk products are good for fertility.)

Ok, this is better. I've made myself smile, and hopefully made anyone else reading this smile too. I'm off to a yoga class.

Peace,
Lisa

Saturday, November 15, 2008

DD-Day: A Day of Miracles

What an amazing surprise. Today was a day full of miracles.

Last night was not a night full of miracles. Last night was a night of me behaving badly and Bruno being very patient, and then less patient, and then, thankfully, there was sleep.

But today.

We woke, and decided, yes, we would drive to Mendocino but, no, we weren't yet sure whether we would scatter the boys' ashes. We brought the beautiful green urn that currently holds them and our pictures of them, and headed up the coastal route.

We were met with a stunningly beautiful day, and that awe-inspiring California Pacific Coast scenery. We talked together, and were quiet together (and bickered together: whaddaya gonna do?) while the mountains and the redwoods and the cliffs and the waves and the blue sky rolled by. We talked about what the ashes meant to us, and where and how we currently experience the boys. I no longer think of them as infants; they feel like wise old souls to me. I don't think I believe in an after-life or reincarnation, and yet I see Pedro and Archer everywhere, including in the two squirrels who frolic daily in our backyard . It's a paradox I'm willing to live with. (The black squirrel is Pedro Squirrel and the gray one is Archer Squirrel: don't ask me why, but it just feels right)

We arrived at the botanical garden in Mendocino four and a half hours later having made no decisions. As we started down the garden path, Bruno turned to me and asked: are you scared? Yes. We walked straight through to the part we were aiming for: the place where the gardens become cliffs that end in the Pacific Ocean. It is a truly gorgeous vista: forest and garden behind you, cliffs, waves, rocks, spray and sun ahead. The noise of nature muffles everything else. We sat for a bit and thought some more, and then arrived at this decision: no, we weren't ready to part with everything we had physically left of our first children. And we also wanted to start to let go, not of them, but of this pain, this grief. To start to give them back to the Universe. So we scattered some of the ashes on this lovely spot and watched the wind return our boys to the air and the earth and the sea. And we will scatter some ashes in a different lovely spot each year to commemorate their brief existence in this world. And it felt right. It felt like an opening up, a loosening of grip, a sharing with the Universe.

We were walking back toward the garden exit, when into our sight swooped two dragonflies. They hovered for a second together, then flew off into a side section of the garden. I immediately burst into tears: we carry two dragonfly charms on our car keys to symbolize P+A. Bruno held me (and whispered gently into my ear that I should try to stop making a scene!) We followed the dragonflies, and ended up in a corner filled with hydrangeas, blue hydrangeas: our wedding flower. Miracles.

As we left the garden, we were seeing twos everywhere: two doves took off from in front of our feet, two birds separated from a pack winging overhead. We drove to the town center of Mendocino to have dinner, walked down to the waterfront and arrived at the exact moment the sun was slipping down behind the mighty Pacific. And we walked back up the street, a single hummingbird stopped and hovered right in front of our noses before heading on her way. A whisper of the future? Miracles.

After a lovely dinner and a cozy nap all the way home (thanks, B!) I am left with a surprising sense of gratitude, something I NEVER expected to feel on this day. I am grateful I got to carry Pedro and Archer and know them for the time that I did. I am grateful for my beloved husband, who is so full of integrity and honesty and compassion. I am grateful for every one of our fantastic family and friends who have helped us face this tragedy and give us daily the courage to keep walking through it. And I am grateful to the Universe for giving us a day of miracles today.

More soon, and love always,
Lisa

Friday, November 14, 2008

The Night Before DD-Day

DD-Day: due date day.

Tomorrow, Nov 15th, was our due date for Pedro and Archer. We've been out of the hospital for three months now. In addition to all our apprehension and grief about tomorrow, we are also blown away by how long pregnancy is. We feel like it was forever ago that we held Pedro and Archer in our hands, and yet only now are we reaching the date at which they would have been full term. Wow.

Our thought for how to spend tomorrow was to scatter the boys' ashes: to send them out into the world on the day they were due to enter it. In reality, I'm not sure we're ready. We've been trying to land on the right location; we both like the idea of a botanical garden in Mendocino that looks out over the Pacific Ocean. But it is a 3 hour drive, and it feels really far away if we want to "visit" the boys. And the finality of it: once those ashes are out there, there is no getting them back. We're not sure we're ready to commit to a place, ready to say another kind of goodbye. So we may spend the day in nature but keep they boys' ashes with us for a while longer. Forgive me if this is too much information. If it is, feel free to skip to the next paragraph. Actually, maybe I will too.

I think the last time I wrote, Bruno and I were about the launch out of the family nest into a nest of our own. So much has happened since then. We camped out in our empty new house for about a week, and then our stuff arrived, tattered and torn and minus the legs to our dining room table, but let's call that water under the bridge at this point. (We received so many creative ideas about what to use in place of the missing legs that we were almost disappointed when they finally arrived) We are now unpacked and rattling around this big California house with our small NYC furniture, calling to each other from different wings of the house and smiling at each faint echoing. The tiki room is shaping up spectacularly, and was recently the host to a fire-lit, sweet and savoury pancake breakfast put on in honor of our friend Michelle's visit. Maybe some time I'll post the recipe!

Bruno and I both started working again: I have my first tutoring student, a lovely guy preparing to take the GMAT. Bruno did a phenomenal job with his job search and ultimately chose to work as the vice president for a start-up. He is really excited about the company and the people he'll be working with. I'm so proud of him: in addition to everything we are going through, this was a really scary time to be out of work, but he hung in there and found the next right thing for him. So far, we are both finding that being back at work now (three months later) feels right: it is helpful to have concrete things to focus on and prepare for.

We still attend HAND meetings, and they are still incredibly helpful. Since we started with the group, new couples have started attending, so we are now able both to learn from and take comfort from those further along the path than we, and give comfort and hope to couples just starting. It is amazing how sharing one's thoughts and feelings and hearing those of other people going through the same thing is so helpful. I guess that's why I get so much out of writing these updates. Thanks again for reading and, when you feel moved, for responding.

This is probably enough for a first post. We are beginning to find our "new normal". I still cry pretty much daily, but the feelings are much less violent. The near-constant rage, self-loathing, disgust, grief and despair of the early days has mellowed into individual moments of sadness, of profound loss, of missing my sweet boys, and of fear. Fear about whether I'll be able to achieve and hold on to another pregnancy, fear of infection in general, fear of infection specifically from the California menace: the ants that traipse across my kitchen counter and make me dream of toxoplasmosis (the previous owners had a cat that I'm sure pooped in the yard which the ants walk through...). I think one of the long lasting remnants of this tragedy for me will be an obsession with infection. Ah well. I'll find a way to make it funny and put it on the stage.

All love and more soon,
Lisa