Luke,
as most growing children do have an innocent curiosity about them. He
thinks absolutely nothing about blurting out "tell me about Noah's first
Christmas" at the dinner table - nor should he. A question that
shouldn't be a big deal for most, feels like being hit with a giant
unexpected boulder out of nowhere. Those questions - those unexpected
questions that you just either aren't prepared to answer or don't want
to answer, or even a mixture of both. Chris
took the lead, much to my relief. I didn't know where to start. The
pain inside me says let's skip to the easy parts, the hard parts need
not be mentioned for the sake of all involved.
"We
celebrated Christmas late," Chris explained. He went on to address
Luke's puzzled expression, with a follow up that Noah was still in the
hospital at Christmastime, so we celebrated in January when we got to
bring him home. Luke seemed confused on how one could celebrate
Christmas in January when it should have been over.
In
my mind I'm pushing down memories, terrible ones as the two of them
converse. The kind like where it all flashes before you again, the
priest, the rosary, that call saying he's not going to make it through
the night, the demands for a blood transfusion to try to keep his organs
alive because every part of him had been so deprived of oxygen - the
parade on television, being alone at the hospital without anyone,
wondering if my husband and son were fighting hard at another hospital,
wondering if I would even make it through any of it. None of that could
ever be explained to a sweet eight year old child at the dinner table.
I
appreciated Chris skipping all of that to just explain we delayed
Christmas for Noah. Chris no more wanted to dive into the complexities
of pain than I did. Some traits are probably specific to how parents
like us process continual and ongoing pain - because that's really what
it is, ongoing. And some of it could be that we've learned this way of
suppressing past pain so we can get through each new day.
It
bothered Chris in the same way it did me. I could tell. He made an
off the cuff comment not even an hour later saying at least Christmas
would be over in one more week. Luke asking him to build a gingerbread
house and Chris saying lightly and softly with a retreating voice, "not
tonight." I know... perhaps in the same way Chris knows the month of December is just hard.
It's
really almost hard to even put into words sometimes, that tug of war
with being so incredibly joyful about Noah and his life, and the fact
that he's turning eleven in three days. A milestone in which neither of
us thought we'd ever see. Eleven. How beyond blessed we are for
eleven amazing years with this beautiful little boy. But it's that tiny
tug that creeps up when you least expect it, the tug that says it could
have been different, that tug of guilt that plays "what if" with my
soul. The regret that I didn't know my own baby was in distress, that I
couldn't save him from this forever fate.
December
pain exists for so many families, Christmas for us is very
complicated. We are in a season that is naturally supposed to be
sprinkled with joy and magic, and we're pushing through what sometimes
feels like a perpetual emotional blizzard. We are neither between
Grinch or Fa La La La - but in this sense of feeling like you can't
catch your breath. Christmas cards go unopened, bills stack on the
counter, gifts that need to be wrapped feel like they are screaming your
name and you just want to see it through.
December
can feel like onion layers at times, SSI battles, Medicaid appeals,
durable medical equipment appointments, credit card disputes, therapies,
private battles, and you're navigating circumstantial things with this
pain. And then there's the parts that are still overwhelming but in a
good way, the boys having breakfast with Santa, seeing the excitement
that exists in both of their eyes, North Metro Fire Department coming to
celebrate Noah's eleventh birthday --
January
is right around the corner I tell myself. Hold on until January and
some of this pain might get packed away just like the Christmas
decorations for another year. Stored and packed away in a little box
that is in my heart.
Love,
Noah's Miracle by Stacy Warden is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.