• the one about my surgery

    On November 18, 2020, within a couple hours of laying our sweet Annie Kate down to sleep on the night of her 1st birthday, I felt an intense rush of pain that could not be ignored. 

     

    It was as if acid was being poured into my abdomen, and in my heart I knew what had happened. My ectopic pregnancy must have ruptured.

     

    Luke wondered if I should try taking some pain medicine and seeing if that helped at all. But I knew this was not normal or like any pain I had ever experienced before. 

     

    Very quickly we were moving out to the car and waiting for his mom to come and stay with our sleeping children. I was filled with fear as I wondered if I was bleeding internally and if I was going to be OK. Every bump in the road intensified the pain, and it felt like our 12 minute drive was 5 times longer. 

     

    I was immediately given a bed in the ER and they got the good pain medicine going right away. Can I just say thank God for pain medicine? My blood pressure was in the 180s and the pain was excruciating. 

     

    I was informed that I would need an ultrasound to determine what was really going on, though I couldn’t imagine what else it could possibly be. I don’t have an appendix — not sure what else could explode inside of me. During the ultrasound it was clear that there was “free fluid” in my abdomen, meaning the fallopian tube had ruptured and I was bleeding internally. 

     

    The rest of the evening is somewhat blurry. I am not clear on the timeline. I know that the operating doctor came in to explain what was going to happen and that she would try to save the fallopian tube if she could. She also explained that my previous 3 cm mass had grown to 9 cm, even through two injections of methotrexate. 

     

    Shortly after, I was wheeled to surgery, giving Luke a goodbye kiss, and taken to the OR. Cold and sterile – operating rooms are definitely not comforting. However, I had wonderful care by all of my doctors and nurses that evening. They definitely helped to comfort and reassure me. Anesthesia is so interesting to me. It’s insane that I can literally be awake and coherent one minute and then completely passed out the next. But again – can I get an amen for modern medicine?

     

    I think we got to my room between 2:00-3:00 a.m. Again, the timelines are fuzzy (and irrelevant). I just know it was the middle of the night. We squeezed in a few hours of sleep before the morning rounds. The doctor came in to tell me that she had to remove my entire fallopian tube as it could not be salvaged. We have some photos, too, if anyone is interested in seeing those (sarcasm). 

     

    Within a few hours after that, I was home. Ending up in emergency surgery was certainly not in the plan. Doing the methotrexate injections was supposed to keep me from surgery, but… #2020. 

    I have had a solid month to think about this whole situation, and a couple take-aways jump out at me. 

     

    First and foremost – you know your body best. Yes, you.

     

    You will know if there is a pain that is different than before. If you are in excruciating pain to where you can’t stand up and can barely walk…then something is wrong and you need to get help. This sounds so silly, I know, but I have noticed a pattern with me and a lot of other women I know. We don’t want to be burdens. We don’t want to be wrong. We don’t want people to think we are annoying. We don’t want to call doctors in the middle of the night because what if they are sleeping. We don’t want to make people come over and watch our kids. We don’t want to look like wimps. But dammit, women die (yes, die) because they don’t tend to their own needs. They put off going to the doctor. They suck it up and rub dirt on it and keep moving because most of the time, they have to. There many times seems to be no other choice than to just keep playing through the pain.

     

    But after I was home and in recovery, I looked up what happens when an ectopic pregnancy ruptures, and women can die from this because the abdominal cavity can hold almost the entire body’s worth of blood in it. If you ignore the pain and don’t seek help quickly, you can literally bleed to death internally. 

     

    I am not trying to be dramatic. But I am trying to make a point. Take care of yourself. Listen to your body. You know when something is wrong. This goes for anything – a broken bone, stomach pain, terrible headaches, whatever it is. Don’t be afraid to speak up for yourself and get checked out. It could be nothing, and that’s fine. Or it could be something that needs attention. I cringe when I think about if I would have just tried to go to sleep that night for fear of inconveniencing the doctors or my family.

     

    Grief is a bitch. 

     

    I’m sorry to be so frank, but it is. Over the past month since my surgery and about 7 weeks since I learned I was not having a normal pregnancy, I have had days where I have managed to smile, laugh, be happy, and otherwise go on with my life. 

     

    I will be doing alright, and then something will knock me down so hard and fast, and I am in despair for days at a time. It’s like one, huge punch to the gut that leaves you brutally winded.

     

    In the past, my grief in other situations has looked like a lot of crying. But this grief has been different. I have been angry. I have been jealous. I have been somewhat manic. I have been numb. I will go on compulsive cleaning binges to get my mind on something else. Or I will stay awake until 4:00 a.m. with racing thoughts. 



    Grief can be a very isolating process because it is so individual for everyone. For example, Luke’s grief really looks nothing like mine. We are not feeling the same things in the same ways, and because of that, we are on two different paths to healing. I think we will both get there eventually, but we aren’t following the same road map. 

     

    Christmas was difficult for me. For one, it is really exhausting to pretend like nothing is wrong when something is wrong. I think we all understand that. And if there’s ever a time for a mom to slap on her happy face and keep going, it’s Christmas. 

     

    But also, Christmas was the time we were planning to announce the pregnancy. We would have been around that 12-13 week mark, and so we were going to share the news with our family and friends. It’s wild how your mind just runs with ideas so quickly. Within days of learning about the baby, I was already planning how we would spill the beans. So when this Christmas came and went, I naturally felt empty. No baby in my belly. No pregnancy to announce. A heart full of ache and a soul full of painfully unique grief. 

     

    I wrote this post to tie together what happened since my last post on November 16. I hope that this time next year, I can reread it and be in a more peaceful place. But it might still hurt like Hell, and I might still be grieving. Life is messy, nothing is perfect, and absolutely nothing is guaranteed.  







  • the one about loss, life, and 2020

    Oh, 2020. 

    I didn’t know any other way to start this than with that. It just seemed so fitting.

    The year began with such promise, didn’t it? I remember the excitement behind a new year and a new decade. There was a palpable buzz on January 1st. Everyone was ready for that “2020 vision.”

    But, and I say this with absolute seriousness, Kobe Bryant and his daughter were killed in the helicopter crash at the end of January, and the world hasn’t been the same since. 

    Short of some cancellations and disappointments, my family has been pretty fortunate throughout the past 8 months since Covid became a household name. We have stayed healthy and mostly happy. We salvaged our summer with daily trips to the pool and lots of ice cream. The kids have been able to go to school in-person (although I have a feeling we are on borrowed time). My husband has avoided too many Covid exposures at work, and we really have just been trucking along, headed toward 2021. 

    We could almost see the finish line, and then it happened. 2020 came for us, and now we have our own battle wounds. 

    I found out I was pregnant with our 6th baby in mid-October. It was a surprise, not that I need to provide that justification, but there it is. In full disclosure, I was terrified to tell Luke. He’s the logistics guy. He thinks about finances, college savings accounts, and practical things like how many bedrooms we have and how many empty seats there are in the van. I am not that person. 

    But, he reacted well to the news and we both were just so overwhelmed with the feeling of, “Wow. This was a total act of God.” Of course, all children are God’s creation, but the timing, the surprise of it all – this was God’s way of saying, “Yes, this is right. Trust me.”

    We kept the news mostly to ourselves. No big family announcements and certainly no public ones. It was early, we were busy, and we weren’t yet ready to share the news. 

    At about the 6 week mark, I had some concerns, so my doctor ordered blood work and an ultrasound. Thanks to Covid, I went to the ultrasound alone, and it was the most excruciating 5 minutes of my life. I could tell by the way the technician didn’t turn the screen to me and didn’t say a single word that things were not good. I understand that they can’t really say much about what they see (or don’t see), but there’s got to be a better way than stone-cold silence. 

    I walked out of the radiology department and had tears in my mask by the time I reached the hospital exit. I knew. If there was a heartbeat, I would have heard it. If there was a gestational sac, I would have seen it. There was nothing. 

    There I was, nearly hyperventilating in the parking lot, mourning the loss of a baby that I was uncertain I was ready for to begin with. Did I subconsciously wish this on myself? Was God playing a cruel game? Those questions would torture me for days.

    All the feelings of my very first miscarriage came flooding back. The feeling of betrayal by my own body. The feeling of complete abandonment and even shame. And an emptiness I can’t attempt to describe. 

    I received word shortly after from my doctor that my HCG levels were simply not high enough, and that this pregnancy was not viable. I wasn’t just confused on dates or “too early.” It wasn’t going to make it.

    Luke and I met in a parking lot and cried. And then he had to go back to work, and I had a meeting about the school PTO budget to get to. I dried my tears, drove with my head out the window, and pretended I wasn’t dying inside. 

    The days passed slowly and painfully. We had so many more questions than answers. Our faith was not only challenged, it was shaken… almost shattered. How could something that felt so right, so Heaven-sent, now feel like such a huge slap in the face?

    Thankfully, I had a distraction. I was secretly planning to take Noelle to Universal Studios to see all the Harry Potter attractions, and the trip was approaching. I threw myself into the packing, planning, and prepping, which meant that I didn’t have to think about what was really going on. 

    My doctor was asking me to get repeat blood work done, but I didn’t have time before my trip. I also was avoiding it because I knew it would just prove that the miscarriage had happened. However, when I returned home, I decided I would get the labs drawn. 

    Within a few hours of having the lab work done, I was back at the hospital getting another ultrasound because there was a concern with my HCG levels. They had only dropped by about 100 points. Given that it had been two weeks since the initial miscarriage diagnosis, my levels should have been much lower. 

    This ultrasound was slightly less silent. The technician was a little more conversational. When she asked me if I had a history of ectopic pregnancy, I knew what she was seeing on the screen. Within a couple hours, it was confirmed by my doctor — I did have an ectopic pregnancy. The first ultrasound was not able to detect it. 

    The only thing I’ve ever heard about ectopic pregnancies is that you would need to have surgery to remove it because of the chance of it rupturing and internal bleeding. I know that they can be fatal if they aren’t managed well. 

    I was relieved to know that due to the size of my ectopic pregnancy, I could start with a non-surgical option – a methotrexate injection. Methotrexate is actually a chemo medication and is also used to treat rheumatoid arthritis. Methotrexate stops cell division, which is what needed to happen so that the ectopic pregnancy could stop growing. It also makes you feel like you have been hit by a truck and has given me a lot of stomach sickness. I had my first injection on Tuesday, and on Friday, I had lab work done. My HCG levels were not where they needed to be — they actually slightly increased, so I went for another injection today. I will have another round of labs drawn on Thursday of this week, and hopefully it will show that my HCG is steadily decreasing. If it isn’t, we will probably have to talk about surgery. 

    I got an email today with the subject line: You are 9 weeks, 4 days pregnant! I activated an old baby website account when I first learned of the pregnancy. I excitedly plugged in the due date (June 17) and began relearning all the things I had forgotten about the early baby development. You’d think after 5 children, I would either know everything already or I wouldn’t be that amazed by all those early mysteries, but that’s not true on both accounts. For me, pregnancy will never not be a miracle, and it will never not be a mystery, and it will never not be exciting. 

    I’m 36 years old and have had 5 children, 2 miscarriages, and 1 ectopic pregnancy. My most recent 3 pregnancies were high risk, and Annie was born 5 weeks early, almost a year ago to the day. I have been asked, “Are you done yet?” I have been asked, “Haven’t your doctors told you to stop?” My doctors have never said anything to me about “stopping,” and (insert unpopular opinion) I am remaining open to life and to the life God has planned for me. If this is our last pregnancy, then I will eventually accept this reality. If there is another child for us, I will embrace that reality, too.

    This heartbreak caused me to question everything, including my faith in God. I was angry with Him, but I had to remind myself that the same God who I was thanking and praising for this unexpected gift of life, the same God who was so good to us a few weeks ago, is still the same God now. And He is still good, even when I’m hurting. 

    Especially when I’m hurting. 

    “The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.” Psalm 34:18

    God uses our suffering to pull us closer and deepen our faith, as backwards as that sounds. It is only God who can give us the grace to push through the pain, to find reasons to smile, and to keep putting one foot in front of the other. It is not our own strength or volition.

    I also believe that when you share your suffering with others, you are opening your heart to seeing God in them as well. God is in their words of support, in their kind gestures, in their meals they prepare, and in their nearness to you (even if it is virtual for now). 

    I believe the soul is created at the moment of conception, regardless of if there was ever a heartbeat or a physical body. And I will feel the loss of this sweet soul until I die. This is my cross to bear, and while it is heavy, I know I am not carrying it alone. 

    2020, you have bent us, but you will not break us. I love you, Friends.

     

  • The one about Lent

    “What are you giving up for Lent, Mom? I am giving up milk.”

    Today is Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent.

    My oldest child is giving up pouring milk on her cereal. I wonder what she plans to eat for breakfast now, since we are pretty much a cereal-7-days-a-week family. There, I said it. I’d like everyone to believe I feed my kids a protein-packed, hearty breakfast before I send them off to face the day, but that is not the case. At least their cereal is fortified with vitamins and minerals — that has to count for something, right?

    Charlotte, the middle sister, says she is giving up chocolate. Shiloh, who is 4, says she isn’t giving up anything…and if you know her, you wouldn’t expect anything else.

    The girls aren’t the only ones talking about what they are going to sacrifice for the next 40 days. Luke and I have talked about it. Groups of friends have been talking about it. Before long, I will see posts on Instagram and Facebook memorializing many vices, from coffee to sweets to French fries to social media in general. #SeeYouin40Days

    Last night, as I was snuggling with Charlotte before bed, we were talking about Lent, church, and all the things. I told her how I planned to attend the Ash Wednesday mass with her school the next day, and she was excited.

    “Mom, you will get to hear my favorite part of church! Father Dudzinski always says, ‘Now where are my Kindergartners? Ok, what color is my vestment today?’ And I always know the answer!” All this from the same child who feigns mysterious illness each and every Sunday in an attempt to skip church.

    As we were making our way out the door this morning for school and the morning Ash Wednesday mass, Leo got ahold of some brown eyeliner and drew all over a piece of furniture in our bedroom in addition to his hands. Frazzled and rushed and running late (like always), I was snappy with the girls and unhappy to be wrestling an almost 2 year old into his car seat.

    Pulling out of the garage, I managed to swipe the front corner of the van on the side of the garage door. As Noelle is trying to tell me a synopsis of chapter 29 in the 5th Harry Potter book, I lose my grip and start to cry. Well, really… I threw a fit.

    “WHY DOES EVERYTHING HAVE TO BE SO HARD?”

    I cried out. I picked up the phone and called Luke who was already at work due to an early meeting. He was going to be meeting us at mass 45 minutes later, and I called to tell him that I was not going to be joining because I just couldn’t do it.

    I couldn’t wrangle Leo. I couldn’t pretend that I was happy. I couldn’t pretend that I felt prayerful on this first day of Lent. I couldn’t pretend that I wasn’t distracted by the 4 piles of clean laundry that need folded and the dishes from yesterday that need cleaned.

    I couldn’t, and I wasn’t gonna.

    Luke’s response was, “That’s fine. I want you to do what you think you should do.”

    He’s learning. He didn’t try to talk me out of my feelings. He didn’t provide me with guilt or a lecture. He knew I was suffering from my own guilt and sadness, and I didn’t need him to add to it.

    The rest of the drive was pretty quiet. After I dropped my girls off at school, I followed the parking lot around to the church, passing it by.

    But I pulled in and parked. Maybe I would just sit in the parking lot and pray while Leo was secured in his car seat.

    I recalled an article a friend sent me the day before — talking about how God doesn’t really need our sacrifices of Starbucks or chocolate or wine or Facebook. Sure, He is happy with your effort to prayerfully go without “that thing” you just love so much, but what He really wants and really needs “for Lent” is you.

    He wants me, in that moment when I was ready to turn my van around, head home, and drown my sorrows in Diet Coke and trash TV.

    He wants me, with tear stains in my makeup and mascara smudges under my eyes.

    He wants me, after I yelled at my kids for the silliest offenses and cursed at the garage door.

    He wants me, even when I can’t look myself in the mirror after how I have lost my temper with my kids or have been a resentful wife or an unsympathetic friend.

    So I went in. I sat near the back so I could plan an escape if needed.

    Moments later, Luke walked in and assumed the role of Leo Wrangler.

    The gospel reading reminded me that the Lenten practices of prayer, fasting, and almsgiving are personal and private.

    Matthew 6:1 “[But] take care not to perform righteous deeds in order that people may see them…”

    Matthew 6:5 “When you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, who love to stand and pray in the synagogues and on street corners so that others may see them.”

    Matthew 6:16 “When you fast, do not look gloomy like the hypocrites. They neglect their appearance, so that they may appear to others to be fasting.”

    Lent can sometimes, secularly, look like a way to lose 10 pounds before Easter or get a Spring Break body by restricting sugar or fried foods, rather than a way to help us grow closer to Jesus. Afterall, fasting without prayer is simply a diet.

    I, myself, have been guilty of proclaiming my Lenten sacrifice for everyone to know, sharing how hard it has been or how I can’t wait until Easter so that I can go right back to my vice of choice.

    But I know now that this is not what God wants from me.

    He just wants me. And whatever I need to sacrifice, pray for, or give that will allow me to show up for Him these next 40 days — that’s what I am “doing” for Lent.

    After the gospel reading, Father Dudzinski walked down the steps and began to talk to the school children in front.

    “Now, where are my Kindergartners? What color of vestment am I wearing today?”

    As the group of sweet babies said in chorus, “Purple!”…I knew my Charlotte was one of them.

    I smiled. Her favorite part of church.

  • The one about pain

    I woke up last Monday, and Luke said to me, “Write something this week.”

    It has been several weeks since I last transformed a thought into written word. The last time I wrote a post, it was to explain that we had been trying to have another child for nearly a year without success.

    We have now crossed that one year mark, and there has been no change. While the both of us are at a loss of what to do or say, life must somehow go on.

    Unfortunately, for most of January and February, I have been experiencing neck and left arm pain that sometimes turns into complete numbness down to my fingertips. Along with that has been crippling headaches. I have always been somewhat of a headache sufferer, sensitive to weather changes, smells, etc, but my first experience with a headache that kept me from getting out of bed came this summer, on my 34th birthday.

    I woke up happy and thankful to be another year older, and then I was quickly hit with the headache from Hell. I spent nearly the entire day in bed while my kids just took turns coming in and out of my room and seeing if I was OK. They made their own meals, watched TV, and even took care of Leo, who was just over a year old at that point. My oldest, who is 8 years old, came to me and said, “Mom, Leo has been crying so I got him out of his crib, changed his diaper, and gave him a bottle since you didn’t wake up.” What a wake up call — literally.

    The arm pain and numbness came shortly after, and by the end of that week, I decided I needed to see my doctor. I was convinced I was dying.

    We started a treatment plan that included physical therapy for my arm and neck because my muscles seemed extremely tight. But when I had to reschedule my physical therapy four different times (without ever actually going) due to lack of childcare or scheduling conflicts, I decided that I would just deal with it and moved on with life. Why can’t these facilities have built-in childcare options? If IKEA can do it, can’t medical offices do it, too?

    Somehow, my symptoms subsided and I made it through the next several months. But after the holidays, my arm pain flared back up, my neck turned stiff, my fingers went tingly, and I have had a severe headache or migraine everyday for almost two weeks. I have been in my bed nearly every waking hour, and I have just been taking advantage of Leo napping twice daily and my other kids being in school most of the time.

    I have cried myself to sleep many nights. The pain has been unbearable. No medicine has helped. During the day, I do my best to pull myself together. I splash water on my face, load up on the best OTC pain relievers I can, and get through it 15 minutes at a time.

    I went back to my doctor a couple of weeks ago because I knew I couldn’t continue to live like this, and I was referred to a neck and spine specialist. I saw him this week, and we have a plan of action steps to see what will help me (including actually going to physical therapy this time), some different medicine, and working our way toward an MRI if it is necessary.

    Every night, I ask Luke to tell me how he knows I don’t have a brain tumor. He goes over everything he knows on the subject and does a few tests on me to help reassure me that he is 99.9% sure I don’t have a brain tumor and brighter days are ahead.

    You may be wondering why I am writing about this. You may be thinking I am looking for sympathy or making excuses for not exercising or being in a bad mood all of the time. I am not. Sympathy actually makes me feel really weird. I like to be thought of strong. Unbreakable. Revealing my weaknesses is not easy for me.

    The reason why I am writing this is that I have learned a lot through my pain— both the acute pain I have been experiencing for the past several weeks, and also the aching, nagging, emotional pain of this year of trying for a pregnancy to no avail.

    We spend a lot of energy avoiding pain, don’t we? If we have an ache, we want medicine to make it go away. We will do everything in our power to keep our children from experiencing pain, both physical and emotional.

    We like to be comfortable. We buy comfortable shoes and beds. We like cozy chairs and soft blankets. We learn this at a young age, as my children are asleep down the hallway with the most delightful pillows and blankets.

    Avoid pain. Be comfortable.

    But pain gives us an incredible opportunity to seek and receive help — from friends, from family, from God. To express that you are in pain and in need allows people to show up for you. It allows them to pray for you. It allows them to understand you. I set aside my discomfort in asking for prayer from the women in my bible study, and I now receive random, yet well-timed, messages of love and support. Sometimes that’s all we need to get over the next hurdle.

    To be in pain and in need of comfort gives you a chance to grow closer to God. I have cried out in sadness, anger, frustration, and pure exasperation over the past 12 months, wanting to know why we haven’t had another baby yet. And each and every time, I have been met with the nearness of God.

    On Valentine’s Day last week, I was driving my girls to school. I don’t usually do this as my husband’s office is right next to their school so he typically does drop-off, but he had a meeting so it was my job that day. As we were driving, we noticed the most incredible sunrise.

    I love sunrises and sunsets. My girls know this about me. I have pulled over on the side of the road and gotten out of my car on many occasions so that I could get a photo, or I have chased a sunset until it fell below the horizon.

    Well, that day, the sky lit up in purple and pink. My daughters thought it was amazing since those are “Valentine’s Day colors.” I kept stopping along our drive to get a photo, but then I would turn onto a new road and realize that the view just kept getting better and better. I literally snapped 5-6 photos along the way, until the final photo took my breath away.

    God is never finished — not with you, not with me. Pain can be healed. Broken hearts can be put back together.

    With every turn, expect something good to happen.

  • the one about staying in the struggle

    “Hey, everyone! I am going to write in my blog everyday for 30 days!”

    …10 days of silence.

    A couple of things.

    This is a lesson on grace. And the power of evil. And the joy of struggling.

    The older I get, and the deeper I dive into my faith, the more I am able to recognize patterns in the way the devil will try to get to me.

    Immediately after I made a public vow to write everyday for 30 days, I immediately felt the need to quit. Negative thoughts flooded my mind.

    “No one cares about what you write.”

    “What you say isn’t important.”

    I posted about how weekly date nights have really strengthened our marriage, and then Luke and I have argued and bickered more since that post than we have in months.

    At first glance, I called it a funk. At second look, I called it a phase. Upon deeper introspection, I know exactly what it is. It is the force of evil, planting thoughts of doubt and insecurity into my mind, allowing me to believe that I am not worthy of love or success or praise. The same force has rejoiced over the past week as I allowed myself to make excuses and find endless reasons why I am not good enough.

    I know this can sound like a bunch of fluff — but I really believe it. And now that I am aware and can identify the source of all of my insecurity, I know that it isn’t really an issue that I need to take weeks or months to fix. I know that with some prayer and, really, some power, I can muscle through these feelings.

    I can overcome the power of evil and all my negative thoughts by resting in the truth, which I have written about before. Knowing exactly who I am, and whose I am, gives me the strength to say, “Not today, Satan.”

    But it took me 10 whole days to snap out of it. And that’s where grace comes into play. I should have done that from the start — the second those negative thoughts washed over me and subsequently washed me out. I should have, but I didn’t. I wallowed in it. I felt the feelings. And then I figured it out. I am not going to punish myself for not snapping out of it sooner. I am going to give myself the gift of grace and know that there actually is joy to be found in the struggle.

    No one likes to struggle. In general, it isn’t an enjoyable process. Turmoil. Fear. Anxiety. We don’t typically wake up and say, “Yes! I am going to struggle today and it is going to be AWESOME!”

    But…

    I have come to learn that the struggle is where God finds us, pulls us closer, gives us our “chin up” pep talk, and then helps us back on our way (which might be a completely different direction than what we originally planned).

    The struggle is where, in the midst of pain, uncertainty, and doubt, you can find nearness, comfort, and unconditional love.

    We’d never recognize the light if we never endured darkness.

    Stay in the struggle.