The Road to Bryton - Day 6
Saturday, May 16, 2015
Today is now Saturday!
I can finally focus on getting the baby’s room ready. We cleaned and went to Wal-Mart where I felt
like I ran into everyone I had known since I was a kid. My husband hung up the baby’s curtains,
assembled the stroller and car seat while I ironed her bedding that had just
arrived. I made sure my bag and camera were
packed and ready to go. It was time to
get real about having this baby, I am now 37 weeks and 3 days. With my track
record this baby would arrive shortly, and it did not seem real.
All day I kept trying to focus on feeling the baby move, but
the fog around my mind was too thick, I would get busy with getting ready for
the baby and planning my church lesson. I
completed making the artwork that would hang above the baby’s crib. I had three frames and the middle one I made
a B for her name Bryton. At one point I was sitting in the baby’s room and
Boston sang Twinkle Twinkle Little Star to my belly.
As the day went on, I told myself at 7 pm I would eat and
really focus on this baby’s movements.
After all every website said a baby moves the most between 7 to
10 pm. As 7 pm came around I ate, and then
laid with my feet up and waited, nothing.
8 pm came and I now was starting to worry but still telling myself I am
just crazy. I started to once again look up ways to make your baby move and
found a new one. To lay on your stomach for
a very short time and that it would force your baby to push back. So I went into my room and and laid on my stomach with some pillows and felt nothing.
I started to cry.
My husband came into our room and looked worried, he asked
if I felt like we needed to go into the hospital. I looked at him and said, “I don’t know. I feel like I don’t want to go. I just want to go to bed and deal with this in
the morning. I feel so alone.” This sent
him into the mode of quickly getting things arranged with the kids so we could
leave. I text my dad and step mom asking if we could stop by and have my dad
and Chris give me a priesthood blessing on our way to the hospital.
I started to feel really cold and my teeth were chattering
uncontrollably. I knew from others losing babies this was not a good sign. We grabbed our things and started to head
out. Our oldest saw us and looked a little worried but none of our 4 kids knew
what was going on. We just told them we needed to go
check on the baby and that we will probably be back.
As we drove to my dad’s I kept telling myself, “my dad can
fix this, my dad can fix this,” I am now a little girl just wanting daddy to make
all her problems go away. As my dad
began to give me the priesthood blessing he suddenly stopped, it sounded like
he could not speak. This scared me. He then said in the blessing that my Heavenly Father loves me
and that everything will be OK. After the blessing my dad shared that when he went to give me the blessing that it was strange. He suddenly
didn’t know if he should be blessing me or the baby. He then said it was as if he
was carried away and allowed to feel a glimpse of the overwhelming love
my Heavenly Father has for me and that he knew everything would be OK, but he
did not know what that meant. This gave my husband Chris peace. For myself
I was even more worried.
As we pulled into the hospital parking lot I could not stop
shaking and I felt like I just wanted to turn around and go home. It took all my strength to walk
in the door. I remember a lady sitting inside the waiting room as we entered,
that Chris doesn’t remember being there. As we buzzed to be let in I felt dumb
for being there as on Monday when I came everything ended up being fine, I
should just go home. But I didn’t.
I laugh when I get nervous, I am pretty sure I laughed as we
explained what was going on and that everything was probably fine but I can’t
get the baby to move at all, and that I can’t remember the last time I actually felt a
real strong movement. This time they had me get
changed and checked me in.
Then the nurse went to hook up the monitors.
While the nurse looked for the heartbeat I did not initially
panic, but then as she kept looking I saw her facial expression go from happy
to hyper focused. Then she grabbed my
hand. This is when I knew. She kept looking for a heartbeat for what
felt like an hour, but I am sure was only minutes. I looked over at my husband who
was sitting with his head in his hands.
I then started to say I was sorry.
I don’t know if I said it out loud or in my head, but I just felt
sorry. Sorry I had not come in sooner
and that our daughter was in danger. But
I had not given up completely. The nurse
then told me, “I normally can find a heartbeat by now. Nothing is confirmed yet. Your doctor was
just here, we will have her come back and order an ultrasound.” There was no
need for me to fight to have my doctor, a small relief as I try to keep from
completely falling apart.
At this moment, I feel helpless and out of control. The only
thing I could think to do was to have Chris text everyone we could think of to
pray, pray for a heartbeat, this is just a mistake. Oddly we have experienced a broken monitor
before, so I was secretly hoping this was just a big mistake.
As I sat there waiting, shivering and teeth chattering I felt completely alone. I felt so empty. I felt like I just wanted to get up and run away. This was not going as planned. I was ready for bed, not ready to deal with this. Then my doctor came in pulling what I am sure was the first ultrasound machine she could quickly find. I told her I could not look as I covered my face and she turned the screen away from me. Then she and the nurse began the ultrasound. I heard them say the placenta looked good, the umbilical cord looked good and other things to themselves. I kept my arm draped over my face and hoped any second they would turn on the sound and I would hear a heartbeat.
Then the ultrasound tech came in with another machine and my doctor looked at me and said she was going to let the tech do
the ultrasound now, but that my doctor did not see any movement. She was telling me my baby was dead without
telling me. I believe I cried as the tech too did an ultrasound with her machine
and again I heard bits and pieces that everything looked fine, but there was no
movement; my baby had passed away and from the ultrasound they could not see a
cause. My baby looked perfect.
As I am absorbing everything I looked right at my doctor and
said, “I cannot do this, I am NEVER doing this again.” I can only imagine how I
was looking at her; I know I felt like she should be able to fix this. She has saved my babies before. She looked at
me calmly and said, “Well we are not making any major decisions tonight.” I asked if this means I need to deliver and
she said yes. At some point I looked at
Chris and said, “Our Heavenly Father has confused us with someone else, I am
not strong enough to do this.”
As our parents started to arrive we were trying to figure
out how to tell our kids and getting them to the hospital. My doctor then told me if I wanted she would
let me go home, sleep and deliver in the morning. But I said no, as there was no way I could
make myself walk back into the hospital. Plus our son’s birthday is May 18th and if I wait until the
next day I ran a greater risk of delivering on the 18th; I felt if I
could prevent that I should.
We decide to wait until after we got some time with our kids
to start my induction. When our kids arrived they were at first fine, not knowing that anything was going on except that we were going to have a baby. I
can’t even remember which one of us said what to the kids. But we were honest
with them. I felt like sheltering them
from what was going on what not right. We told them that the baby had died and that we needed to deliver her. A
few of the kids crawled up onto the bed with me and cried.
We answered any questions they had, many of which we did not
have answers to but we were honest with them about that too. We left it up to them
if they wanted to stay at the hospital or not. We also told them once she was born we were not going to make them see
her or hold her if they did not want to, everything was up to them and we as
their parents were not going to be upset with how they decided to handle this.
However, we did make it clear this would probably be the only chance they would
get to hold the baby.
We had family going to get the baby’s blanket that we had
for her and I was asked if I had anything I wanted Bryton to wear once she
arrived. At this point we had gone from referring to the baby as her or she to using her name Bryton. I realized all I had was a sleeper but nothing newborn
sized at home yet as the clothes I had finally ordered were not going to arrive
for a few days. My nurses brought in dresses for us to choose from and
bracelets. Everything we picked had purple on it. The dress was white with
purple ribbon, white booties with purple ribbon and a set of matching purple
bracelets for Bryton and I. After each
of the kids figured out what they wanted to do I told my nurse I was ready (or
as ready as I could be).
Labels: angel baby, Bryton, child loss, death, fetal heartbeat, grief, grieving, infant loss, journey, no heartbeat, no movement, PAIL, prayer, reduced fetal movement, silent birth, stillbirth, stillborn, stillborn baby
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