I remember her sobbing under blood-soaked sheets, moaning and gasping and stifling screams. She would not go to a hospital. Not to save herself, not even to save her unborn baby. Only when she had lost too much blood to protest was an ambulance called. It snuck down the street in the middle of the night, lights muted and siren off, to carry her to whatever help she would accept. The next morning, her living children woke to babysitters who told them “Your mom is away seeing a friend, now who wants pancakes?” Of course, who would tell young children that their own mother had been willing to abandon them to a darkly looming life and a pile of bloody sheets, all for a misplaced fear of doctors?
***
I find myself immersed in gargoyle daydreams so often these days that the filmy wisps of imagination are becoming stone. I’ve always been good at picturing catastrophe, but these dreams are darker than anything I’ve experienced before.
In every single one, Sophie dies.
I spoon applesauce into her grinning, teething, lovely mess of a mouth and try to talk my heart out of breaking. It’s not real, it’s not real, it’s not real. I snuggle her against my chest the way we slept in my hospital bed, all cozy curlicues and softness, and nuzzle her perfect dollop of a nose, all the while trying not to panic. This isn’t a goodbye.
I didn’t figure the reason out until tonight, while I browsed sites like Glow in the Woods, other women’s haunting and exquisitely beautiful stories of their lostbabies. One mama in particular wrote about the day her thirteen-month-old died, how she had known he was sick even when everyone else blew off her worries, and I suddenly understood.
It was exactly like that, seven weeks ago. We were at church when it dawned on me that Sophie was not okay. “Of course she is!” argued the other women, the relatives, all the grandmotherly types. “She’s just teething. See, her forehead’s not even warm!” And even though I sensed deep down that something was wrong, I let myself be cowed by the other womens’ years of experience.
After lunch, I couldn’t ignore the heart-tug, so I did all I knew—Tylenol, Pedialyte, kisses. I rocked her back and forth while her temperature climbed from 103º to 104º to 105º (“The thermometer must be broken,” offered a helpful relative) and consciously decided against taking her to a doctor. No American health insurance, and we’d be back in Italy soon anyway. So we went shoe shopping instead, Sophie limp and expressionless in her carseat.
She had the seizure in the parking lot of Famous Footwear while I was inside merrily trying on high heels. I ran straight out and was nearly bowled over by her lumpy lavender skin, her rolled-back eyes, her forced breaths. I couldn’t look at her again, not once on the eternal ride to the hospital. I just held her head and willed us both to keep breathing.
When we first arrived at the ER, the medical staff seemed duly alarmed. They slapped a “Red Alert” bracelet on her tiny ankle, and a team of nurses bustled with needles and machines and pint-sized magic potions. “Just hold her hand, Mom. Just keep talking to her.” It wasn’t until hours later, when the adrenaline had worn off and sheer willpower was holding me upright, that the on-call doctor coolly mentioned, “Oh yeah, this is no big deal; happens all the time. She looks perfectly fine to me.”
At that moment, I felt as stupid as I had that morning in church when the grandmothers pooh-poohed my instincts. It’s no big deal… What kind of idiot must I have been on the trip to the hospital, imploding from the silent pressure of holding back sobs? I felt very distinctly that I had been robbed of my experience and, more importantly, the right to intuitively care for my baby. But the doctors knew best. I stuffed the whole episode into some scraggly Room of Requirement in my memory and locked the door.
Tonight, it finally dawned on me that it was a big deal. Oh, was it ever a big deal. Because when I look at bereaved mamas’ photos, I see my own little girl. When I read their heartbreaking stories, I read mine. My story has a different ending to be sure, and I could never presume to understand the pain these other women are going through, but it didn’t have to end differently. If I had just… or she had just… or we hadn’t been able to… The truth is that a happy ending doesn’t erase guilt. It doesn’t settle this urgency to turn back time and do things differently as some kind of cosmic insurance against my dreams.
It was a big deal, and maybe it’s time I faced that.
***
I tend to flaunt my faith in doctors around people who are afraid or skeptical of them. It makes me feel wise, I suppose, and independent and so very mainstream. But there is more to healing than textbook medical knowledge, nodes of intuition and loving concern that matter. I know that, now.
Wow. I’m so glad, so glad…(And curses on that doctor telling a parent that a seizure was “no big deal.” Jerk.)
My mother-in-law saved my husband’s life as a child. She knew something was wrong, just knew it, and took him to the ER where the doctors kept blowing her off and she stubbornly kept staying. Finally, to cow her into submission, a doctor told her “There’s nothing wrong with him but if you insist we’ll just cut him open to be sure.” Imagine his shock when my mother-n-law said Yes, yes, please, that’s what I’ve been trying to tell you. They started to think that maybe they should take her a tiny bit seriously and admitted them. My husband’s appendix – he was six – had already burst and a low-grade infection was already in play. Had my mother-in-law gone home, he probably would have died.
Maternal instinct. It bowls me over every time.
It was certainly a big deal. I couldn’t understand why my Dad didn’t have a siren on the car…or why he wasn’t running all the lights. Thank God Sophie is ok, and the doctors and nurses did take good care of her, and got her (and us) sane again. Even if febrile seizures do happen all the time…it doesn’t make it less of a big deal, or less concerning, or less alarming. I’m glad you did take such good care of Sophie…and I never doubted you knew better than all the other women about your own daughter.
I’m looking forward to coming home in a few minutes to see her 5 tooth grin…it’s priceless and great to still be able to see!
omg– it was beyond huge–
i cannot even imagine. I was once babysitting my niece (who waw 15 monhts at the time) and she got croup on my watch and to this DAY I can’t think about that night or holding her little body in my arms as she struggled for each breath without utter fear and panic– and that was croup . .
and? that photo of Sophie is delicious . . pure poetry
~bluepoppy
You wrote that so vividly that I had my heart in my mouth the entire time I was reading it. And that photo!! *melts*
Jennifer – Stories like that make me panic momentarily — what if I were to miss something like that? But then again, we moms really do know some things you can’t be taught…
Daniel – Maybe we should start carrying a portable siren around with us, just in case. What do you think? 🙂
BP – While babysitting? I would have melted into a blubbering puddle in front of the phone!
Liz – I think my own heart made a dash for it long before we reached the hospital… but I think I’ve got it back now.