All posts by keith

Endings and Beginnings

The second chance came about just as soon as would normally be expected. Taking a few extra precautions this time, we were encouraged to have some early blood work and ultrasounds done. Normal and normal. So far, so good.

It’s an exciting beginning just as closure settles in on the baby that did not grow. The disappointment of losing the first pregnancy is balanced a bit by its early ending; I can’t imagine how worse the pain would be after a whole trimester or two. Or three. To further alleviate our fear, statistics betray a much higher rate of miscarriage than is typically spoken about. They’re certainly not uncommon. Yet with each appointment comes the same fear: will it happen again? Statistically, the odds are still in our favor, but it’s hard to look beyond the statistic that 100% of our previous pregnancies failed.

Talking about miscarriage more would be good. The trauma that accompanies it would be better shared among close family and friends. I imagine it’s typically shared among a mom, maybe a dad, and a few folks in white coats. I’d like to share it outside that circle, too, but it falls into this in-between-time in which we haven’t shared with anyone that we’re planning to grow a baby at all.

There should also exist the possibility of public grieving and closure. The Christian church has not been particularly sensitive to the needs of parents experiencing miscarriage and stillbirths. Pastor Janet Peterman’s writing is well worth attention if you’re interested in how the church could improve this.

For some couples the tragedy is their first serious life crisis, their first grief experience, or the first time they have felt isolated from each other.

It may not be the first, but it is certainly distinct from any other type of tragedy I’ve personally experienced.

Nope.

It’s hard to interpret my own reactions to a failed pregnancy because I have nothing with which to compare the experience. I’m not sure what I’m grieving most. A life? My own hopes? My partner’s pain?

Obviously, the experience has been physically and emotionally painful for her. Feelings of inadequacy and failure and guilt and sorrow are surely normal and expected – even if they are irrational.

Statistically, there is nothing to be worried about.

Not yet. In her words, though, “it still sucks.”

My own shadowy pain is harder to pinpoint, equally irrational, but certainly less acute than hers.

How will the experience affect our fears and attitudes next time? It can’t help, right? It was comforting to hear the doctor say the cause was a typical chromosomal failure. It was nothing we did or didn’t do. The thing just couldn’t happen. Second-guessing is innevitable in the process but it doesn’t have to be sanctioned by your doctor, and ours has ridden enough rodeos to know.

This, on the other hand, is my first, and I’m thankful for all the help I can get.

Making Assumptions and Killing Rabbits

No rabbits were harmed in the making of this pregnancy. No, seriously, read about it.

It is a common misconception that the injected rabbit would die only if the woman was pregnant.

False. All the rabbits died. Today’s pregnancy tests are much more reliable, and they don’t involve murdering bunnies, so that’s a bonus. I assume the bunnies feel the same way.

You have to make a lot of assumptions when it comes to growing children. It’s the miracle of life; there is just more going on in the belly of a lady than any one person could ever comprehend. Unlike a well-played chess match, this process cannot be planned and controlled with any real certainty. There are more possible variables than time to dream them up. So there is only one thing a hopeful parent like me can do: give up.

There is no shortage of controversial and passionately-argued assumptions when it comes to growing babies. Do you trust certain traditional and cultural beliefs, or do you trust their opposing beliefs in Western medicine? In case you’re keeping score, the practitioners of Western medicine are the folks who’ve brought us both dramatically lower infant fatality rates and dramatically higher bunny fatality rates.

In any of these issues, a nervous parent will understandably do some research — but let’s be honest: you’re not going to understand. Even the doctors (and midwives, and shamans, etc.) argue about these issues among themselves. Eventually you have to put your faith into something and take some assumptions for granted.

So, here’s to nine months of researching, fretting, assuming, giving up, trusting, and ultimately being out of control of the most important thing I’ll probably ever do.