Friday, January 27, 2023

January Reflection- February Goals

 This month has been a whirlwind of chaos. I knew that things would get harder after Enrique returned to work, but it became evident almost immediately that I would be drowning. I have been trying to wake up early to make sure I get an hour of peace before my day starts- but sometimes Naomi will have a rough night and I will sleep until someone wakes me up.

Then my day is never ending chores and food making until I have had absolutely enough and ignore everyone to read through the substantial book list I have made for myself. I am absolutely struggling with overwhelm and resentment. I have found myself wondering if I will ever just be happy and enjoy my life or if it will be a never ending string of chores, responsibilities and should’ve would’ves. Please hear me, I love my family. I am absolutely grateful. I just feel completely wrecked as a person and now I am taking the full force of being responsible for my family. I have considered trying counseling, especially after a recent conversation with my friend Keri. My question though is, WHEN?? And HOW?? And WHO WILL WATCH MY KIDS? 

I am trying to make the decision of whether to continue homeschooling, or to try a homeschooling group, or to send the kids to public school. I do not feel like I am being the best mom I can be at the moment. The honest truth is I just need some help or some time to be able to “do it all.” I need prayer in this area.

This month and homecoming has not been the spiritual renaissance I was hoping for. I had a goal of reading through Acts as well as the book With by Skye Jethani- and I lasted 5 days until my fiction reading bled into my quiet time. I know that one of the reasons I read so much this month was a form of escapism. I am not leaving the house very often with Naomi on oxygen. Moving forward into February, I am trying to decide if I should just suck it up and continue with my original plan, which I do not hate and is not a bad one, or if I should try something different to shake it up. I have The Sacred Romance by John Eldredge  and it’s study companion as well as The Broken Way by Ann Voskamp. Her 1,000 Gifts book completely changed my life so, when I saw this book for free I picked it up. If you have any suggestions let me know. I am just feeling bored about it all to be honest.

Another area of my life I was hoping to clean up was nutrition and lose some weight, and I go back and forth from feeling like I could do it to utter hopelessness. There is no in between. I have the Weight Watchers App but I disagree with it- lol. I do not think it would be sustainable for me. I am looking for something I can do for the rest of my life, and weight watchers is not it. 

What has gone WELL is that we have the kids back in their sports and I am so happy for them. Lucas is very near to getting his Grey Belt in Jim Jitsu and Gracie does not have much longer before she moves up in Gymnastics. I also just really enjoy watching them have fun.

I have also been implementing that they read to themselves for 15-30 minutes before bed. I told them if they were consistent that I would let them go to Dollar Tree with me and they could pick something out. Gracie is a natural reader and had no problem with it. Lucas had a rough start but I feel like he is reading much more fluently and retaining information better. I bought him a dinosaur book he was interested in and he finished it on his own.

Naomi has really settled in and I enjoy seeing bits of her personality start to come out. She is also in the beginning stages of weaning from oxygen so please keep her in your prayers for that. I would also ask for prayer in that she puts on more weight and gives us less of a hard time while eating. She is a lazy eater and requires a lot of breaks which is very hard on a busy family.

I know I said it was my form of escapism-but at least I really love it? I have loved reading so much this month. I plan on continuing but with a few boundaries to keep it from becoming something unhealthy. I have also enjoyed discussing books with all of you on facebook and finding out that a lot of my friends are a little nerdy- which is amazing and freeing. 

I began doing some beginner pilates which felt amazing- I would like to continue doing that. I think I could commit to 2x a week at the very least. I was also starting to try and run on the weekends-which I enjoy but I am not sure how I would do it on the weekends I work. 

So- for February goals:

-Create a flexible schedule for myself/kids that would include things that NEED to be done as well as daily rest/ activities I enjoy.

- Find a way to enjoy spending time with God every day.

-Pilates 2-3x/ week.

- Produce at every meal, drink half my body weight in oz of water a day. 



Saturday, December 31, 2022

2022 Reflections

 


What I continually thought about:

Boundaries- I feel like this is a popular topic. The reason being is that people are feeling over exposed and overreached by modern technology. In other instances there are actual cases of people being taken advantage of. I think there can be healthy boundaries. I think there are difficult boundaries but that doesn’t mean they are bad or unnecessary. 


There are two boundaries I drew this year. One was due to family strife. I didn’t communicate the boundary verbally, but it was understood. I did not want to be hurt by what was going on and decided to remove myself from a situation. I stopped all contact. One of the people I removed contact with was my Aunt. Unfortunately, she passed away very recently and I missed out on her last year. I never got to tell her how much I appreciated our relationship before the boundary was drawn. I wish I had toughed this out- accepted that relationships can be messy and made more room for forgiveness and grace. 


The other has a backstory. When I was 11 or 12 I had a conversation with my Dad. In it he told me about how a friend of mine was now facing a teen pregnancy. I was shocked. In my youth I exclaimed how I would NEVER do something like that. My dad stopped me and explained that as soon as we think we are above a behavior is when we are most vulnerable to it. I was and am very capable of sin. This lesson has stayed with me my whole life- and sometimes I successfully drew boundaries to prevent sin and other times I was unsuccessful. All of that to say, I drew a boundary with an old friend that I care deeply for. It sucked, I wish it wasn’t the way it was. I have to be okay with whatever this person might think of me now and continue protecting myself (and family) that I am capable of.


So now I have been evaluating what are healthy boundaries? What are selfish boundaries? When are boundaries necessary and when should we work hard for the relationship? 


Mortality- Having lost my two babies before and being in the situation we were in with Naomi, I have had to face the fear of losing those I love. When we were driving back and forth from Nashville on I24 I worried that I would lose Enrique. I would come home and it felt like my kids were hellbent on harming themselves. Gracie was “cave jumping” with the blind cord. (Promptly thrown in the trash.) Lucas tried to shut himself in the refrigerator. I consistently pray for their safety and that the Lord will not take them from me. I have not worked through this fear- I’m not sure how I would continue life if something happened to one or all of them.


On the flip side, I have worried about how my family will react if I leave them behind. I have told Enrique that if I die to choose a super awesome and godly replacement wife and I am praying that she would love my kids like they were her own. (I will be up in Heaven in the Lord’s EAR.) A new year’s resolution of mine is to get a term life insurance policy so that they wouldn’t be subject to any surprise cost due to my untimely demise. I’ve also thought about how I am treating people, relationships to mend or develop. Is my integrity intact? Will I be remembered as someone who loved her family and worked hard? 



Intentionality- I am a very impulsive person. How this came about is through finances. I found myself frustrated that I wasn’t able to spend whatever money I wanted when I wanted. I knew that Enrique and I made good money- so where was it all going? I spent a few months combing through our bank statements to determine what our money was being spent on and also taking a hard look at what debt we had. Before this year, I would have told you, “I’m not good with money, Enrique does the budget.” I have even heard this heralded as marriage advice. Let the person who is better with money do the budget. (I can agree to an extent). BUT MY FRIENDS- if you are not an active participant in your family’s budget, I implore you to give it a try. Since I became involved we have made serious headway. Going back to the mortality section- I am not as fearful that I could not handle the finances if something happened to Enrique. I am aware of what is going on. We now have financial goals we are working on together, and it has empowered us as a couple.


This impulsiveness has bled into a lot of things- I feel therefore I do. My habits reflect this in my spending, my diet, my coffee drinking, the shows and music I listen to and my reactions to those around me. I feel that there are certain habits- things I do over and over- continue to justify- that do not line up with my Christian values. The shows I watch, the podcasts I listen to, and some of my music would make a nun’s ears bleed. Instead of spending time with my children, I mindlessly scroll through internet waste on my phone to try and escape from what I deem hardship. I want to take a hard look to determine whether these are things that are bringing me closer to Christ or ostracizing me from Him. I want to spend more time making decisions and allowing passion and heat of the moment to pass by- to be a tad more analytical in the way I live my life. 


I am desiring to be more intentional in my relationships because this year has shown me that I am not as kind and caring as I thought I was. Enrique and I were discussing that we don’t think we are very good friends. We aren’t thinking of others after our conversation with them ends. We want to be able to practically love people more- to think of others more in our daily life. I have a few projects that I am hoping will help with this, but I am also just trying to be better at texting back or responding on facebook. Meeting in real life will come later in the year as Naomi grows stronger.


Books I read: 

Lovely War by Julie Berry 

This book was given to me by a friend and I finished it last night. It is a historical fiction which I don’t typically read but this book was sweet. She also writes about real places that are fun to google, Dinant, Belgium looks glorious. A far cry from my normal thriller/true crime/ murder stories.


M is for Mama by Abbie Halberstadt 

Okay, okay, I have two chapters left. This is a light read. She has some very good points, but for some reason I can’t fall in love with it. After discussing it with Mandi today, I think it is because she writes from a very idealistic perspective- a crisp and clean Christian life that is devoid of sin and suffering. Sadly, this is not the reality for most of us, and I think when we preach the gospel this way it can seem “unrealistic” or “non inclusive”.


The Ink Black Heart by Robert Galbraith 

This is the latest installment in the Cormoran Strike series that is written by JK Rowling under a pen name. I LOVE this series. It is not for the faint of heart. I love the way she develops characters and captures humanity so well. My second favorite thing is if you look up ANY place or ANY event written in this book, it is real. I traveled around London and the UK without ever leaving Vanderbilt.


The Butcher and the Wren by Alaina Urqhart 

She hosts a podcast I enjoy, I’m proud of her for writing this book! While I don’t think we would get along in real life and her values are very different from mine, I enjoy her.


 A Look at the Logos by Michael Wood 

Written by my Dad, I read this next to Naomi’s incubator. My main take away was when Jesus was celebrating the Feast of the Tabernacles which is a feast to celebrate how the Lord provided for the people. It is a time of reconciliation with God- Jesus was imploring those around Him to come and drink, to be provided for like the Israelites were in the wilderness. This really struck a chord with me, because we relied so much on God’s “rain” or provision this past year- and He really showed off.



The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis (AUDIBLE)

 With kids, we would listen to this in the car then watch the 1980’s BBC version, then we watched the newer movie as a family. Lucas loved, Gracie was indifferent.


The Total Money Makeover by Dave Ramsey (AUDIBLE) 

He is a motivating speaker but I think I prefer his YouTube channel. Still the concepts are great and the debt snowball works!


The Guest List by Lucy Foley (AUDIBLE)

 I loved the spooky setting of this book, it was very reminiscent of Big Little Lies by Liane Moriarty


The Golden Couple by Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen (AUDIBLE)


It was alright.


Apples Never Fall by Liane Moriarty (AUDIBLE)

Great characters, disappointing story.


Peter and the Starcatchers by Dave Barry and Ridley Pearson(AUDIBLE)

Started with Kids on the way home from Miami, finished myself.


The Adventures of Alfie  Onion by Vivian French

(With Kids, my 5 and 6 year old loved it. Lucas was legitimately sad when we finished a few nights ago. He keeps asking me to re-read it.


Homeschooling Bravely by Jamie Erickson 

A nice motivator when homeschool feels overwhelming.


Modern Etiquette Made Easy by Myka Meier 

I will never be fancy enough to need any of these tips but I stumbled upon her YouTube channel and it was fun, and so was this book. Read it if you feel like you need some refinement.


TV Shows I Watched: The House of the Dragon and The White Lotus, both were excellent, both made me think I need to reel in what I watch on TV.


The Alpinist- hands down favorite thing I watched this year.

Music I loved: 

Irresponsible by JUDAH & J. Monty (Probably my personal song of the year.)

Creepin’ up the Backstairs by The Fratellis (Almost all of their album, Costello Music)

Midnight Rain by Taylor Swift

Maroon by Taylor Swift

Bejeweled by Taylor Swift

Levitating by Dua Lipa ft. Da Baby

Getty Kids Hymnal, Hymns from Home

Homeward by Celtic Worship

Bette Davis Eyes by Kim Carnes

The Offspring Greatest Hits


Favorite things:

Tozo Bluetooth Headphones

Magnetic Book Marks

The Peaceful Press Homeschool Planner

SunBeam Heating Pad 

BeautyCounter Mascara



Thursday, December 29, 2022

Naomi’s Birth Story

Naomi’s Birth Story



2022 started with two positive tests. One for Covid, the other for pregnancy. We had just arrived back from a Christmas trip to Miami, my health had deteriorated pretty rapidly on the drive home and so did the weather. Tornados and storms were rolling through Middle Tennessee before a large cold front moved in. So, we spent New Year’s Eve at a hotel in Valdosta, GA. I laid in bed with a fever, chills and body ache. I didn’t have any clue that I was newly pregnant until that night in Valdosta. I had been planning on receiving an abdominal cerclage before we began trying. Something happened in that hotel room that made me send Enrique out into the bitter cold for a pregnancy test as soon as we made it home.


The pink lines popped up immediately and Enrique shouted excitedly, “The Lord provides!” I remember thinking, “You don’t know that. He also takes away.” I wanted to be joyful over the new life but I was in agony over my anxiety for the baby. Positive pregnancy tests are death sentences for my sweet babies. 


My doctor was optimistic, she said this was good news. I was scheduled for a McDonald Cerclage at 12 weeks. Our kind friend Amy woke up extra early to watch my big kids while I had the procedure done. The procedure itself was uneventful but I struggled with a spinal headache that kept me in bed for 3 days after. Even with “the stitch”, as they are known to those who are familiar to them, I was anxious. I worked nights and sometimes it was busy. I would be on my feet for the entire shift. More than once I walked over to L&D to have them test for infection/ amniotic fluid. I also went to the ER to have things checked out at least twice. I was a wreck- I prayed over the baby, I willed my body to hold the baby. I recited the statistics of the success rate for the cerclage over and over to myself. 


At 18 weeks pregnant, right around Easter, I started think that we might actually make it. I had lost Titus at 18 weeks and so far I had no ill signs. I took my first baby bump picture. I continued working with no events. At 20 weeks we were scheduled for the anatomy scan. It confirmed what I already knew, the baby was a girl. It also showed that I had no internal cervix left. My anxiety seated deeper into my stomach. My doctor said not to worry, sometimes you funnel down to the stitch. Enrique was a little frustrated with my anxiety. He didn’t like how much I was laying down, he thought I was overdoing it. We were supposed to take a trip to Cincinatti, something he was really looking forward to and I was having a hard time getting on board. Here is where I can begin to see the Lord’s hand directly. Another doctor, the head doctor of the clinic I went to, had noticed my ultrasound results. He ordered more imaging 2 days later. By this time I was 21 weeks pregnant and we announced the pregnancy. Things were going fast and I wanted to announce before we had her. After the next appointment we discovered that not only was my internal cervix gone, but I had dilated 1 cm. It was Lucas’s 6th birthday and I missed his party because I spent the night in the hospital. The doctor’s determined that I was not going to go into labor that night. I spoke with a Neonatologist during that hospital stay and she gave me all the statistics for a 22 weeker. She said they only began intervening about 5 years ago and they might save 1 out of 5 babies. Today they might save 2-3 out of 5 babies. That the babies would have severe handicaps. Then she said something that stuck onto my soul. She shrugged and said, “but we sent one home on oxygen yesterday.” 


Needless to say, Cincinnati was canceled. My mother in law was asked to come help. I placed myself on bed rest, with the exception of sitting out in the sun for 30 minutes to an hour a day. I would sit with my feet up and watch my kids play. I also asked to receive steroids to help develop the baby’s lungs this week. I was grateful that my OB gave me no pushback and they gave me the shots willingly.


A week after my last hospital stay, I was trying to get comfortable and go to sleep. The kids were in their beds, Abuelita had layed down, and Enrique was getting settled. I kept getting up and going to the bathroom. I felt like I was having more discharge than usual and felt a slight burning. Enrique asked me what was up. I didn’t want to alarm him so, I said I was fine. About an hour later, I couldn’t shake the nagging feeling that something was up. I had a set of PH strips and decided to use them. They read very alkaline and I was afraid my water had broken. 


So we were off. We debated whether to go to our local hospital which is 5 minutes away or make the hour long drive to Nashville. I felt like we needed to head to Vanderbilt just in case, because they have a level 4 NICU. If I had delivered at Tennova, our local hospital, I’m not sure any effort would have been made to save the baby. 


We arrived at Vanderbilt and our visit began with another ultrasound to see which way the baby was facing. She was breech, which means butt down. The doctor then asked to examine me. This is always terrifying with my condition, but I said, “Something is up, it’s why we are here.” He began to examine me and collect some swabs. I asked, “How is it looking down there?” He said, “We’ll talk about that in a minute.” So, I knew it wasn’t looking good. After he had finished, he said, “I’m really sorry, but you are dilated 4cm.” And I just started crying. My water had not broken and he was suggesting a c-section. Enrique and I were so shocked. You mean right now? We talked to so many doctors who patiently answered a lot of questions. 


The NICU said they didn’t think that a week would make all that much difference and the L&D doctor said, “It sounds like you want your baby to be born alive, with a scheduled c-section we would be prepared. We wouldn’t be scrambling around, and it is the best chance for your baby to be born alive.” We still needed time to think. 22 weeks was so early. There was a possibility that my water would break and she would make the decision for us. I could be put to sleep and a c-section would be performed with me unaware. I told Enrique if this happened that somebody needed to hold her, to not let her die alone. A magnesium drip was started and we tried to rest and think. Enrique and I decided to try and wait for a while. He asked me, “Do you feel sure about it?” And I said, “No.” He didn’t either. We were not at peace. If you have ever had a magnesium drip you will understand that it isn’t comfortable. I think I attribute my next actions to this drip, and also maybe the the Holy Spirit. A few hours into the Mag drip I started feeling panicky, I couldn’t rest. I asked to be checked again, no more dilation, still a solid 4cm. However, after I questioned the doctor for another round, I agreed to head to the OR. 


We were swarmed with doctors at this point. Two neonatologists spoke with us and asked what we would like to be done for the baby. They were not optimistic. They said that she would probably not survive delivery and if she did she would have hefty medical needs. I responded that, “I want her to have a shot.” I asked them to try and get an airway but if she did not respond that no CPR would be performed and to put her on my chest to die in my arms. 


The labor and delivery doctors also did not encourage me to try and save her. A kind doctor sat next to me and said, “If you wanted to have a vaginal delivery it would not be a selfish decision. You don’t have to go through with the surgery.” I said no. She told me it was my last selfless act for the baby. I also repeatedly confirmed that I wanted my tubes tied during the surgery. We were sure, no matter the outcome, that we were done having babies.


They wheeled me to the OR where they began to prep me for surgery. I was sitting up at the edge of the table waiting for the epidural to be placed. Everyone was very kind to me. The nurse asked me, “Does baby have a name?” And I told her “Naomi.” That is when the tears started and did not stop after that. The anesthesiologist wiped my tears with gauze for the entirety of the surgery.


The actual surgery took some time. They performed a low transverse incision on my abdomen but a classical incision on my uterus. They told me I had a lot of scar tissue. The OR was very quiet. Then they said, “She’s out.” We heard the tiniest cry. Enrique kept standing up to see them working on her and they repeatedly asked him to sit down. I could hear the monitor she was attached to. It beeps for every heartbeat and I could hear it slowing down. Painfully slow. I just held Enrique’s hand and I was praying, “Please, Jesus.” Quietly, but out loud. Then, it revved up. I don’t remember how I was told they got an airway and that she responded, but I know that after they told us Enrique broke down. He cried into my shoulder. After sometime they wheeled her out in an incubator next to me. The neonatologist stopped to tell me that her numbers looked great, better than expected. I was moved to recovery.


The 3 or 4 days I stayed at the hospital I would walk down to the NICU to see her. I always forgot how far it was until I was walking it. I was still in a bit of pain. I couldn’t bear to be next to her long. She was so tiny and fragile and we were far from out of the woods. But I would go in, every few hours, to take a peek at her. To make sure she was okay. I prayed Isaiah 40:29 over her, over and over. “He gives power to the weak and strength to the powerless.” I had never seen anything so weak and powerless in my life.


That was the beginning of our 202 day long NICU journey…until we were sent home on oxygen. I can say with confidence that the Lord DID provide through-out. We were given so much grace and service through meals and gifts and prayer and time and even monetary gifts. I appreciate our family, both physical and spiritual who dug in deep with us.


I don’t know why Naomi was spared and made into a miracle while my other two babies died. I know that my faith was deeply shaken by the whole experience, but that this past year, staying by my sick baby’s side has brought a lot of reconciliation between the Lord and I. I felt seen by Him for the first time in a long time. I was the one he left the 99 for- the same way I left my two healthy kids at home to be near the one who needed me most. 


Friday, June 7, 2019

Titus

It was nearing Christmas, but you never would have guessed it as we drove through
sunny Florida on our way to Miami. As we crawled south on I75 I shifted in my seat.
I was at the end of my second trimester with our firstborn son. We were cut off for the
fifteenth time in the unevenly cadenced traffic. We began to slowly pass through
Titusville, Florida. “What do you think about the name Titus?” I asked my husband.
His reaction was one I never got from any other name suggestion. He loved it.
We had already chosen the name Lucas for our son but he asked me,
“Do you want to change it?” I didn’t, I was already attached to my Lucas.
That day the idea of Titus was born in me. I continued to hope for him over the
upcoming years. Always knowing that if we had a boy that would be his name.


We moved to Germany last September with no plans of becoming pregnant during
our three year tour here. In January I lost a baby very early in pregnancy. It was sad,
but it was over before it even began. I only knew I was pregnant for 4 days before it was
gone. We had a busy February but made time to be romantic and spend time together for
Valentine’s day. Then one day in March as I was finally moving the high chair from our dining
room and telling Lucas that we were leaving the baby stage, I realized that I was five days late.


Three positive pregnancy tests later and confirmed by ultrasound with reassurances of a
perfect situation, we prepared to be parents again. The news was taken much better by
Enrique this time. We both became excited to snuggle a newborn. The first trimester I was
cautiously optimistic, I kept waiting for the doctor to tell me it wasn’t going to work out.
Every ultrasound and appointment went as smooth as butter. He congratulated every time
on my perfect situation, culminating into our 15 week appointment that confirmed that we
were having a boy. I named him Titus Samuel, Tito for short. I was so excited to learn it was
him that I walked out of the doctor’s office without making my follow up appointment.
A few weeks went by with no apparent changes. The weather started to slowly become
beautiful and the forecast for weeks was sunny with high in the 80’s. I began going on
long walks. On Sunday, June 2, I remember feeling more tired than usual.
Not uncommon as Sundays are heavy extroverted ministry days. I lasted through the day,
even took my hour long walk, a normal day. That night I told Enrique, I am having so much
discharge this pregnancy. I am having to change my underwear several times a day.
I had considered it being amniotic fluid but pushed the thought away, not wanting to feed
anxiety.


Early Monday morning I woke up feeling very “wet”. I even checked the sheets to see how wet
they were. I went down the stairs to go to the bathroom and didn’t feel that anything too unusual
was going on. Then, I felt something “give” and start sliding. “What is that?” I thought, and a
dark red sac fell into my hand. I quickly, “put it back” and closed my legs. I knew then.
I knew that was really really bad. I tried to call up the stairs for Enrique, praying my kids
stayed asleep but I had heard Lucas cry out. I think God soothed him back to sleep for me.
I carefully went up the stairs and turned on the lights, saying Enrique’s name. He jumped out
of the bed in a panic. I told him, “I need to go to the hospital, I am losing the baby.”
His face fell and he said, “No!” and we began trying to quickly gather our things and make a
plan for the kids. As we were going through this, he took my face and looked in my eyes and
said, “We will get through this together.” It means so much to me now, but at the time I
remember feeling like, I need you to hurry up.


There was a young man apart of our ministry who had come to stay with us that day, but we
were unable to wake him up easily and we barely knew him. We called friends who started
towards our house as we started towards the emergency room. I felt so bad leaving my kids
without any supervision until they got there, but I thought, If he isn’t awake, he won’t be
hurting my kids.


When we arrived at the German hospital we had to be buzzed into the building and walk up
stairs to get to the ER. I explained my situation to the nurse and Enrique was assigned to
some paperwork and I just stood there. She then walked us to an elevator and gave us
instructions on how to get back to the OB/GYN ward. I walked the whole way, silently panicking.
A doctor was waiting for me and I told her what was going on. She asked me to lay down on a
table and performed an ultrasound. The baby was alive. Everything looked great. She told me
how much fluid he had around him and I sobbed. I was so relieved and I confused. I remember
saying, “So maybe it’s just vaginal prolapse?” I moved over to the classic chair with “stirrups”
and from the outside nothing was apparently wrong. I started to doubt myself completely.
Did I just have a nightmare and terrify everyone for no reason?


As soon as she began the examination her face changed. She stopped pretty abruptly because
she did not want to manipulate or rupture anything. She re-looked at the ultrasound photos
and upon second inspection able to tell that my amniotic membrane was “hour glassing.”
She took a few swabs and then told me to lay down, and said that this was not a good situation
and the baby would probably not live. Of course, I was sobbing again. I said, “I want to see
the baby when he is born, and I do not want to feel any pain.” She then sat down and started
documenting when she turned and said, I forgot to check to see if you are leaking fluid.
I wanted to strangle her. I just told you everything that happened and told me it wasn’t true,
now you are turning around and telling me, “Oops, guess you were right.” She ran the test
and it was positive for amniotic fluid. My membranes had ruptured or more commonly,
my water had broken.


Things became more frustrating. I was admitted, placed in a bed, and told to wait. I had to use
a bedside commode. “In case anything happened.” We were having to wait for the perinatal
specialist and some other doctors to come in. Neither of us slept the rest of that night.
We waited in agony, wanting something, anything to be done to save our baby boy. I began
reaching out for prayer and trying to gather information on our situation.


When morning came, at about 8am a chief doctor and team of doctors and nurses in training
came into my room. I honestly don’t think he even said anything of importance. Enrique ended
up chasing him out of the room. We had read about a surgery called a “rescue cerclage” where
they could manipulate the membrane back inside my uterus and stitch it all back up. The doctor
said they don’t perform those here and kind of shooed us away. We were frustrated. Should we
leave? Go to Amberg? To Regensburg? Landstuhl? I started asking nurse friends back home
about the situation and it slowly became revealed that, no. My water had broken. Due to
severe risk to me, the surgery could not be performed. Finally, the perinatal specialist came into
see me. She was so kind and patient and explained things to us. She told us she had to do
something, but she would be back in about an hour to examine me.


During her examination, Titus was alive. She was examining my cervix and the second doctor
in the room standing behind her had this look of pure horror on her face. The perinatalist asked,
“So that you understand the gravity of the situation, maybe Dad should see?” Enrique did not
want to see and I don’t blame him. I had lost about 70 percent of my fluid at this point and
most of my amniotic membrane was now in the vaginal canal. We were advised by every
doctor to induce labor. That even if the baby continued living, he would have no amniotic fluid,
therefore his lungs would not develop and he would be severely handicapped. They told us,
that would be so hard on us. One doctor said, I think it might be easier to have a miscarriage
at 18 weeks then to have a handicap baby at 24 weeks. All the while, they repeated the risks
to myself of severe and life threatening infection.


When we were back in our private hospital room I told Enrique, we need to very prayerfully
make these next decisions. Who are we to say that Titus’s life was not worth living because he
would be handicapped? Are we just being told to wait because doing nothing was easier than
facing the risks? I was not prepared to be the person who pulled the switch on my son’s life
because that would be easier on me. I loved him with all of my being, I could still see his
heart beat, I could still feel him kicking. We would wait.


We did wait, about a day. When we asked to have an ultrasound to check on the baby the next
day we received a lot of opposition. I think they were trying to protect me mentally, but it was
frustrating. These were the last moments with my living child. They finally agreed after I started
to have some bleeding. They checked on him, silently and quickly. I had to strain to see the
monitor because the girl was in the way. They showed me the heart beat and I asked if I could
hear it. One girl said no, the other behind her said, yes. I think the machine was having trouble
or they could not get him in the right position, because I couldn’t hear it, only see the waves on
the monitor.


We waited another night. I was comforted by Psalm 33: 18-22. That God’s eyes were on me
while I waited and hoped. I continued to bleed and in the early morning on Wednesday have
some cramping. Both Enrique and I had been praying that the agony of the wait would not be
long. Both of us were a little shamed at this prayer. We started making decisions about how
we would handle it if he had died. We wanted to see him. I wanted pictures. How long would
we keep him with us? We also had to start talking about, would we bury him here? Could we
cremate him? Take him back home to the states? I signed surgery and anesthesia consent
forms in case I went into labor with him naturally. These conversations were hard, but what was
harder were multiple mothers reaching out to me. They had been in a situation like mine. Their
doctors had told them they had no chance. They went on to have miracle babies after weeks of
bed rest. I heard it multiple times, “Where there is a heart beat there is hope.”

I was laying in the Trendelenburg position and trying to drink tons of water to keep fluid for baby
Titus. I felt so guilty every time I got up to pee. I even sneezed once and wanted to throttle
myself.I was having blood drawn every eight hours and receiving multiple injections. They put
me on contact precautions and antibiotics because I had MRSA of the nares. (I rolled my eyes
so hard. Almost everyone has some MRSA somewhere, didn’t we have bigger problems?)
When I began bleeding and cramping more, I told Enrique, “I think things are going to happen
sooner rather than later.” Later that morning the flock of doctors entered my room and the head
hancho said we would check on baby.


They wheeled in the ultrasound machine and another doctor began to look. The monitor was
empty. She couldn’t find the baby. She made a call and they moved me to another room with
another doctor and another ultrasound machine. The only part of Titus left inside my uterus was
his head. Titus was dead.


We agreed to induce labor. She gave me two small pills. She said that if I did not have
contractions in the next four hours that she would give me another dose. She asked me if I
wanted a midwife. I asked, “Do I need one?” At that point I was hoping for less people around
me. The doctor said it was just for me if I wanted it. I ended up saying yes because I wasn’t
sure and I wanted that doctor to leave. Enrique went downstairs to the car to look for a hair
tie for me, telling me to call him if anything started happening. I was alone for a little bit.
The janitor knocked on my door and I really wanted to tell her not to come in, but she barely
spoke English and she was just trying to do her job. She began cleaning the room, it felt like
as slowly as possible. I started hurting. I texted Enrique to come back. I rang the nurse for pain
medicine and she hung tylenol to go into my IV. The pain picked up quickly. I was holding onto
the bed rails, texting Enrique and ringing the nurse. I tried calling Enrique but for whatever
reason the call would not go through. The nurse came back in, and I tried to communicate to
her with her bad English and my terrible German that I needed heavier pain medicine. I was angry.
I asked for two things. No pain. See my baby. The janitor stopped and asked me in a heavy
accent, “Pain?” I said yes and thought, "I am about to push out this dead baby and scar her for
life."


By the grace of God Enrique came back in the room. He was holding flowers and chocolates
because that day was our four year anniversary. I was hurting pretty badly. He tried to rub on
me and I said, I’m sorry and just brushed him off of me. I was bleeding heavily, Enrique was
afraid and called the nurse. A doctor and a midwife rushed in and finally a different pain
medicine was hung. The midwife told me to push when I had a contraction, but what I was
feeling didn’t feel like the contractions I had with my previous babies. So, I just started pushing.
I asked Enrique to count so I knew how long. After two pushes, he came out.


This was my first experience with a vaginal birth. What some call a “normal” birth. I would have
a thousand c-sections over it. It was so not normal. He was lifeless. Enrique cut the umbilical
cord. They put him on a cloth in a small green basket and gave him to me. Enrique said,
“He is so peaceful.” He was. He was so beautiful with his hands crossed on his chest. He had
little fingernails. He had Enrique’s nose. He had the sweetest tiny little feet. He had the
beginning of ears. His skin was almost see through. His belly was big, the umbilical cord
taking up most of the space. I sobbed. I told him that I was so sorry. I told him I loved him.
I mainly just looked at him and cried. He was born at 10:31am. He was 18 cm long and
weighed 125 grams. He was just a little bigger than the palm of my hand.


After a short period they needed to prep me for surgery. The midwife took Titus and assured me
I could have him back whenever I wanted. She told me he was so cute. She was so gentle
when she handled him and she promised me she would take pictures.


They gave me medication, I don’t know what it was, but the nurse said it would make me calm.
She didn’t actually say that because she didn’t know the word, but she gestured it. I was
wheeled back to the OR and they were so kind to me. We did spinal anesthesia because I
had eaten breakfast that morning. I began to pass out while they gave it to me but they were
able to get it in quickly and lay me down. The spinal began working but I could feel them
prepping me. I begged the sweet anesthesiologist to put me to sleep. She promised she would,
she told me don’t worry.


I remember fighting against waking up. I could hear them talking and see the OR lights and I
was afraid I was waking up during the surgery. They asked me my name and birthday. I asked,
“Are we done or are we waiting to start?” We were done. It had gone well. They took me back
to the room. Enrique wasn’t there which was fine. I was very groggy. Enrique came back and
a nurse came into check on me. I guess I was losing a lot of blood which I couldn’t feel because
of the spinal block. I tried to stand with Enrique helping me to let her clean me and the bed up,
but had to get back down very quickly because I started to pass out. She gave me oxytocin to
contract my uterus and I told Enrique not to leave because I was afraid I would bleed out.
The bleeding slowed and I started feeling better.


My mom who had arrived from the states came in. We called and asked to see Titus again and they
brought him to us. My mom told me he was perfect and we looked over him, and had him near
to us for a while. Enrique and my mom left to go be with my children at home and feed them
dinner and get them into bed. Titus went back with the midwife and she told me I could have
him anytime I wanted him.


I don’t remember what I did next. I know I asked for a sleeping pill. I know I woke up very early
and the nurse brought me peppermint tea. I don’t remember what I was thinking or feeling.
Other than I wanted Titus back, but I wasn’t sure if I should be spending so much time with his
body. I know I put on worship music, and my worship was feeble. All I hung onto was one lyric,
“I’m going to sing in the middle of the storm, louder and louder you’re going to hear my praises
roar.” I did not sing.

The next day we prepared to go home. We had to go see the midwife on the labor and delivery
ward to make decisions about his burial. We waited on a couch in a birthing room. There was a
station where they would have brought a newborn baby to be checked out across from me.
We were unable to bring his body back to the states because the cost was enormous and the
Army wouldn’t pay for that service because Enrique is civilian. We could not have him cremated
because he did not meet the weight requirement. (½ pound). We decided to have the hospital
bury him in a shared grave. We will be able to attend the funeral. The midwife asked me if I
wanted to see him again and I did. I held him. I again told him how sorry I was, how much I
loved him. The perinatal specialist came in and sat with me and she cried with me. I asked her,
“Do you know why this happened?” She said normally it was from infection but that I did not
have one. I had none of precursors for having an incompetent cervix. It just happened. I said my
last goodbye to Titus. I told him I would see him in heaven. I left my baby boy behind and went
home.

The support of the community around me has been enormous. It has been such a blessing to
not have to worry about anything going on at home. I came home to two happy healthy and
living children. I am so grateful for my mother being here, because functioning without her
would be very hard.


I am grieving hard. I have trouble sleeping. I walk around feeling like I am looking for something
or missing something. I want to talk about Titus but I can’t without crying. That can make people
uncomfortable. I have wanted to show our very few visitors his picture, but it doesn’t seem
appropriate. People will ask me how I am feeling, the honest answer is very sad. I hold a stuffed
lion we bought for him at night, because it just feels good to hold something. This makes me
feel kind of like a crazy old lady, and I will put it away someday soon. I folded and boxed up the
few clothes I bought for him. I have the basket and tiny blanket that he laid in after he was
born. His ultrasound pictures are still on my fridge. I don’t know what to with them. I don’t want
for everything to be put away and to forget. I want Titus.


After all the praying and begging God for his life, it is hard not to be angry. While I was in the
hospital the babysitter and Gracie found a nest of baby birds in a bush in our backyard. Enrique
showed them to me yesterday and I thought of the verse Matthew 10:29 and I wanted to
scream. YOU LET HIM FALL. YOU SAID YOU WOULD MOVE MOUNTAINS FOR ME AND
YOU DID NOTHING. But you kept the fucking birds.


Titus’s name means honor. So, while I am raging at God, I am also seeking some purpose to all
of it. There is sadness, there is rage, but there is also peace. How can I bring honor to God and
give Titus a meaningful legacy? If you had asked me before all of this happen to let Titus go to
save any number of people I would have told you no. I wasn’t even willing to let him go to save
myself. The doctors told me that there were no treatments that made sense. That seeing him
on the ultrasound didn’t make sense. That keeping him inside of me for as long as possible didn’t
make sense. It doesn’t. None of it did, but my crazy mama love could not let that baby go. But
God did. He gave up a pure and blameless son so that might be saved. To have eternal life.
A concept to me that at the moment seems so abstract and is not bringing a lot of comfort.
But I have to tell you. I promised that I would never quit on God. Never stop on all the Jesus stuff
no matter what I did and no matter what happened. I promised to honor God, and to honor Titus
whether he lived or died. Even now, I am not beyond redemption and God can handle my anger.
I am trusting that He is taking good care of my baby. I am praying that his story will bring you
closer to God, that you will experience crazy mama love through Him. That you will experience
love and peace that doesn’t make sense.