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Life story
December 1, 1989
 
Innocent 

It's been 27 years since I lost my little angel, and until now, I have never thought about sharing her story. It was the only thing I had left of her, and I couldn't bear to share it with anyone. Well, I am currently in college going to be a social worker, and in my Human Service class, we have to go through the process of self-awareness. That's when I realized it was time for me to share Sunshine's story. I have to release the pain and sadness that I have kept locked up for all these years. Please bear with me, as in writing this, I know the tears shall fall like a river...

I got pregnant around the end of August 1989. Everything was going good in my pregnancy. I had already given birth to two boys who were both born healthy, so I didn't think I would have any serious problems with this pregnancy. I was wrong! In the beginning of November, I was watching a movie with my husband at the time, and I felt a sharp pain in my stomach. And then the unthinkable...my water bag started leaking. I was rushed to the hospital in my home town, and then rushed to South Bend because they had a NICU unit. They were able to stop my labor with medication, and I was sent home a couple days later. Once home, I was put on bed rest for the remainder of my pregnancy...little did we know our little angel would soon be coming. About 2 weeks after I was released from the hospital, I was again started having contractions, and again, my water bag started leaking again. I was devastated. Once again I was rushed to South Bend. Once there, they put me on monitors, and told me they couldn't stop the contractions, so if I became fully dilated, then I would have to deliver. On the early morning of Friday, December 1, 1989, I was rushed into delivery and gave birth to a 1 lb. 5 oz. baby girl. I was devastated. I wanted my baby to be healthy, and she wasn't. She was fighting to stay alive. I felt helpless...I wanted to hold my baby in my arms and help her find the strength to hold on and fight, but I couldn't. She was rushed to the NICU and stayed there for another 111 days. That was the day my world crashed. It was a very snowy day, and I had called the hospital numerous times throughout the day to check on my daughter. The nurses assured me she was doing well. Her oxygen levels were steady, and she was having a good day. We had planned on going up there that evening when my husband got off work. Before we left for the hospital, I called the hospital one last time, and talked with Sunshine's doctor. He said her vitals were good, and that with the weather conditions, maybe we should just come up in the morning when the roads were clear. I hung up the phone, and we debated on going, and then I just felt this tugging in my chest, and insisted that we drive to South Bend that night. And so we did.

This is the hardest part.....Me, my husband, my cousin Sue and her husband at the time, drove to South Bend, and when we arrived at the NICU, the doctor meet us at the door, and I just knew something was wrong. He told us that he was glad we didn’t take his advice, because my daughter would not live throughout the night. I was speechless, and I took off running. I didn't know where I was going, I just wanted to get as far away from those words as I could. My cousin found me, and took me back to the NICU. They asked us if we wanted to hold her one last time (our first time was our last time). I still remember sitting in that hard wooden rocking chair, holding my precious little girl, and then she took in her last breath, and went to sleep forever. The doctor pronounced her dead in my arms. I didn’t believe it....she couldn’t be gone, I had just felt her breathing, I felt the warmness of her body in my arms still. My world came to a standstill....what was I supposed to do? Why did this happen to me? What did I do wrong in my pregnancy? All those questions and more came rushing through my mind.

How could God be so mean? I hated God. I didn't know why he took my baby girl from me. The next couple of days were a blur for me, and then came the day that I would have to bury my child. I still remember standing by her gravesite, and as they lowered the casket, I just lost it. I dropped to my knees and cried. I didn’t want to leave my daughter in a hole in the ground. What if it got real cold at night? Who was going to keep her warm? I sank into a deep depression that lasted until after the birth of my last son in 1991. Today, I still have so much pain and emptiness in my heart. I feel cheated! I never got to do the things that a mother and daughter do together. I never got to see her take her first step, her first smile, her first word....I never get to talk to her about her first crush, her first kiss, her first date...we didn’t get to share the memories of prom, and I never get to see her walk down the aisle and get married. All the firsts are now gone. It's been 23 years, and there are some days that I just can't stop thinking about her, and even wonder what she would look like today if she would still be with us. I'm taking it day by day, and I talk about her more now, but I still find myself fighting back the tears when I mention her name. I’m learning new ways to deal with the grieving process, and in time, I would like to be able to help others that have lost children. I hope my daughter’s story helps someone get through at least one day. We have to remember, that we are here for each other, and it's ok to still cry for our babies. I love and miss you every single minute of every single day my sweet ray of Sunshine

November 27, 2014
 

 

My letter of gratitude to my daughter Sunshine

Where do I begin?  It has been almost 25 years since you left this world and my how life has changed.  As a kid I loved to play the board game called “Life”.  You’d get this little car to travel along the twisting roads of life, there were choices to make and unexpected setbacks at each turn; do you go to college or do you start a family?  Medical school or become a teacher?  I think about that now and how if I had been given a choice 25 years ago of two different lives, one where all the difficulties and heartache would be on open display ahead of time and the other a fantasy of the “perfect” no-problem life, I would have wanted the fantasy.  The easy life, no job issues, no fertility problems, no prematurity and, of course, no losing you.

But, with all the choices we make in life we don’t have options with guaranteed outcomes and on the surface I would have never wished to go through what we’ve been through.  But as I look deeper and begin to uncover the gift of circumstances out of my control, I am thankful.  I am thankful that you graced my life for 112 days.

I am thankful that I got to see your gorgeous face, feel your heartbeat with mine, and look into those gorgeous eyes.  So many parents never got that chance with their babies.

I’m thankful that because of you I know what true love is, this love envelopes me with an awe-inspiring sense of completeness.  I’m thankful that I pushed through the fear of losing you when you were first born, a mere 1 pound 5 ounces, and allowed myself to fall in love with you.

I feel immense gratitude for God allowing me to see your life through His lenses, to see that you were much more than a baby with special needs.  You were meant as a gift to so many people.  You brought people together and showered joy upon them.  Most of the world never got to know you, but for those doctors and nurses in the NICU, you will never be forgotten.

You alone taught me that gestures don’t have to be sweeping and grandiose to make a difference.  Your smile, that twinkle in your eyes is all it took to turn someone’s day around.  I know, because I’ve loved you, that simply saying a baby’s name and lighting a candle in their memory is all it takes to make a difference in a grieving parent’s day.  Spending an hour of my time making graphics for parents whose baby have joined you in Heaven, means more than their words can express to me, but the gratitude in their misty eyes says it all.

I’ve learned to be courageous, to trust in God, have faith that no matter what happens or which way life goes, what obstacles we may face, He will provide.  Not in monetary ways, but in ways to survive spiritually.  Because I’ve loved you, I love God.  His love has covered me and sustained me these many years.  I don’t have to like the fact that you died, but I can be thankful because I have loved you I know God’s love, I’ve felt it and I’ve lived it.

Because of you people from around the country find happiness in seeing a ladybug.  Thank you for sending those sweet little round bugs at just the right time on just the right days.

I am beyond blessed to be your mommy.  Each day I will promise to shed another ounce of guilt.  You soldiered ahead with grace and purpose and that is the example I want to set for your brothers.  I want to show them that awful, terrible, heartbreaking things happen in life, but life does not have to be ruined because of it.  Life can truly be beautiful again and can have meaning deeper than you imagined.  I am thankful I have felt the deepest emotions known to mankind…love, grief, and joy.

Sunshine, I will always miss you.  I will always wish life had gone differently and that I was holding your hand in the morning as we walk into school.  But this is the life that was given to us and living in the past, full of regret is no way to live.  Thank you for showing me how to live, how to love, and how to find happiness no matter what challenges we face.

Love,

 Mommy

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