16 days old 4 Months old
(when I came home from hospital)
(when I came home from hospital)
My Early Birth
This is from Dexter's mother's blog, written in May 2011, when Dexter was nine days old:
When I went to bed on the Wednesday night, something trickled between my legs. At first, I put it down to an overload of pregnancy hormones; everything seemed to be on overdrive lately, so I figured that must have been it. But when it didn’t stop, I started thinking more clearly – this had the potential to be something serious.
I read the books I had and hesitantly called the midwives at the hospital. I didn’t want to admit it, but I was pretty certain my waters had broken, 9 weeks early. I described what had happened and was told to come in for a check up. I was petrified and burst into tears as soon as I hung up – a sign of many, many more to come.
I messaged my husband, telling him that I was sure it was nothing and that I would be sent home. I gathered some things together and placed them in a bag – thinking that I really should be getting a bag together for when I eventually did have to go into hospital. And then I drove myself in, all the time thinking I would be sent home for being so silly.
I wasn’t sent home. I was kept in hospital and told I wouldn’t be leaving until my baby arrived. I was petrified. I called my husband but couldn’t speak. The fear that gripped me was too overwhelming. I had offered to look after my sister’s youngest two while she took her eldest to the specialist that afternoon, so I called her to say I wouldn’t be able to make it and to ask that she pass on what was happening to our older sister as I didn’t want to disturb her at work. I laughed about what was happening, hoping to hide the fear. I was hesitant to call my parents, I knew they would worry, but knew they would want to know. I placed the call and managed to hold myself together.
Doctors and nurses came and went; heart rates were monitored; injections were given; canulars put in place. Words like ruptured membrane, infection, breech, caesarean, emergency, were thrown around, and all the while I was gripping on to the hope that my baby would stay put for just a few more weeks.
I was transferred to Sydney via ambulance and tried to keep the situation light, I felt I needed to be strong for everyone else, in particular my husband, who was just as petrified as me. I was placed in a room and more people came and poked, prodded and stabbed at me. More samples were taken and people came and spoke of things I didn’t understand and didn’t want to comprehend – none of this was meant to be happening. I was alone, scared, anxious, exhausted and just plain petrified – and I had a whole night of this.
Less than 24 hours later, my beautiful baby boy was delivered via emergency caesarean section. He weighed 1.59 kilograms (approximately 3.5 pound) and measured roughly 44 centimetres. I didn’t get to hold him and I only heard one tiny cry as he was lifted out. He was wrapped in plastic. I saw the back of his tiny head as he was wheeled to the intensive care unit, where my husband got to follow and I waited.
8 long days later, still covered in tubes, I got to hold my son for the first time, for half an hour. It was the most precious 30 minutes I have ever experienced.
I found some beautiful poetry and when I read it, it was like reading my own thoughts, like someone had looked inside my head and written down what I was experiencing. So I am borrowing the words of others until I am strong enough emotionally to share my own words, something that will hopefully take place soon.
Lost and Found By Maren Peterson-DeGroff
She gazes down through the plastic box,
unable to comprehend his tiny body.
The monitor wires, IV lines and feeding tubes tangled over the gently rising chest
expanding and contracting in mechanical rhythm,
his mouth taped open--a gaping, silent cry
that freezes cold her heart.
She is lost.
Sinking into the madness of her grief, her guilt,
an apology forever on her lips.
She lifts, so slowly, the door
to his high-tech womb,
her own aching,
for its emptiness.
His hands flutter and feet twitch, she cannot interpret his fetal dance,
a foreign language spoken
too soon.
She longs to touch him,
to erase this space between them- her hand trembling,
settling down on this other-worldly angel child,
her palm enveloping his entire torso.
She feels fragile skin like soft tissue paper,
his back arches up, he squirms at her touch,
and at the sound of her whispered voice
his eyelids slowly draw up,
dark eyes drawing her into
this mystery.
She is lost now in love,
and is forever found.
Too much ecstasy,
too much desire to sweep him
up into her arms
and she chokes on
the grief and the love,
surrendering to the joy that he lives, he lives,
her sunflower, her son!
© Maren Peterson DeGroff 1999
My son is still sick and has a long way to come, but he has shown he is a fighter and so I have to be too.
The love and support we have received has been so overwhelming, but everyday it makes it that little bit easier.
When I went to bed on the Wednesday night, something trickled between my legs. At first, I put it down to an overload of pregnancy hormones; everything seemed to be on overdrive lately, so I figured that must have been it. But when it didn’t stop, I started thinking more clearly – this had the potential to be something serious.
I read the books I had and hesitantly called the midwives at the hospital. I didn’t want to admit it, but I was pretty certain my waters had broken, 9 weeks early. I described what had happened and was told to come in for a check up. I was petrified and burst into tears as soon as I hung up – a sign of many, many more to come.
I messaged my husband, telling him that I was sure it was nothing and that I would be sent home. I gathered some things together and placed them in a bag – thinking that I really should be getting a bag together for when I eventually did have to go into hospital. And then I drove myself in, all the time thinking I would be sent home for being so silly.
I wasn’t sent home. I was kept in hospital and told I wouldn’t be leaving until my baby arrived. I was petrified. I called my husband but couldn’t speak. The fear that gripped me was too overwhelming. I had offered to look after my sister’s youngest two while she took her eldest to the specialist that afternoon, so I called her to say I wouldn’t be able to make it and to ask that she pass on what was happening to our older sister as I didn’t want to disturb her at work. I laughed about what was happening, hoping to hide the fear. I was hesitant to call my parents, I knew they would worry, but knew they would want to know. I placed the call and managed to hold myself together.
Doctors and nurses came and went; heart rates were monitored; injections were given; canulars put in place. Words like ruptured membrane, infection, breech, caesarean, emergency, were thrown around, and all the while I was gripping on to the hope that my baby would stay put for just a few more weeks.
I was transferred to Sydney via ambulance and tried to keep the situation light, I felt I needed to be strong for everyone else, in particular my husband, who was just as petrified as me. I was placed in a room and more people came and poked, prodded and stabbed at me. More samples were taken and people came and spoke of things I didn’t understand and didn’t want to comprehend – none of this was meant to be happening. I was alone, scared, anxious, exhausted and just plain petrified – and I had a whole night of this.
Less than 24 hours later, my beautiful baby boy was delivered via emergency caesarean section. He weighed 1.59 kilograms (approximately 3.5 pound) and measured roughly 44 centimetres. I didn’t get to hold him and I only heard one tiny cry as he was lifted out. He was wrapped in plastic. I saw the back of his tiny head as he was wheeled to the intensive care unit, where my husband got to follow and I waited.
8 long days later, still covered in tubes, I got to hold my son for the first time, for half an hour. It was the most precious 30 minutes I have ever experienced.
I found some beautiful poetry and when I read it, it was like reading my own thoughts, like someone had looked inside my head and written down what I was experiencing. So I am borrowing the words of others until I am strong enough emotionally to share my own words, something that will hopefully take place soon.
Lost and Found By Maren Peterson-DeGroff
She gazes down through the plastic box,
unable to comprehend his tiny body.
The monitor wires, IV lines and feeding tubes tangled over the gently rising chest
expanding and contracting in mechanical rhythm,
his mouth taped open--a gaping, silent cry
that freezes cold her heart.
She is lost.
Sinking into the madness of her grief, her guilt,
an apology forever on her lips.
She lifts, so slowly, the door
to his high-tech womb,
her own aching,
for its emptiness.
His hands flutter and feet twitch, she cannot interpret his fetal dance,
a foreign language spoken
too soon.
She longs to touch him,
to erase this space between them- her hand trembling,
settling down on this other-worldly angel child,
her palm enveloping his entire torso.
She feels fragile skin like soft tissue paper,
his back arches up, he squirms at her touch,
and at the sound of her whispered voice
his eyelids slowly draw up,
dark eyes drawing her into
this mystery.
She is lost now in love,
and is forever found.
Too much ecstasy,
too much desire to sweep him
up into her arms
and she chokes on
the grief and the love,
surrendering to the joy that he lives, he lives,
her sunflower, her son!
© Maren Peterson DeGroff 1999
My son is still sick and has a long way to come, but he has shown he is a fighter and so I have to be too.
The love and support we have received has been so overwhelming, but everyday it makes it that little bit easier.
Read more - My First Month