Showing posts with label grief. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grief. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2011

it won't ever be real

That morning .... Was it morning?  ... I couldn't see through the haze. Could I just pretend it was the cloudiness that comes when waking from a long night's sleep? Everything was fuzzy, it looked like a dream sequence in a really bad movie. The voices, movement; it sounded like slow motion speech ... an echoing sound that was beyond comprehension.  Could this echoing noise, these voices, be speaking to me? No. I could only be dreaming. Then, I realized ... my unwilling body was carrying what was left of me, because my soul was absent from my physical being. Did I walk through the doorway ... probably not. I must have floated. I was not whole. I wasn't a person at all. I no longer existed as who I had been less than 24 hours earlier.
I don't remember anything about the ride home from the hospital. Perhaps, I had died with her. That makes sense. Nothing was real, except that I was not real. I could not live on without my baby girl.
Somehow, I was in bed. How was I suddenly here? Did I walk in, turn the corner and see our bed? Story's co-sleeper snuggled into our bed as if nothing had changed. I wasn't a ghost. I wasn't having a nightmare, because I was suddenly curled up in the fetal position in our bed and the bed was real. My hand caressing the co-sleeper was real. The people talking to me were real, though the echoing voices were so very far removed. No, I wasn't a ghost. I was still alive.
I jolted out of bed ... I felt like I was there for hours, but I had only fallen into bed in a curled-up-ball long enough to jump out of bed and fly to Kale's room.My son. The first baby I was able to bring home with me. My baby boy. I scooped him up and cried so hard I think I shook his bed, but the sobs were silent, inward cries. They were silent sobs that overcame my body and forced my motherly soul to clutch him harder and longer.
I was just lucid enough to realize I could not let go, because "what if" ... could he be next? My safe world had been shattered. I had done everything to make sure my children were protected, safe, happy and loved.
this.could.not.happen.e-v-e-r! 
I sobbed and held him. Then, another mind-blowing realization; I had to tell my children that their sister was dead. I reverted back to the fetal position, with Kale in arms. I closed my eyes tight and just prayed that I would wake up soon. I could not tell my children they would never see their baby sister again. I could not take away their innocent childhood world so soon. I would not do it. I would hold my son and close my eyes and it would all go away.