We never met you, but you rocked our world. You taught us so much without ever setting foot in our lives. We worried about you, we built a life for you, we loved you. We changed our lives for you, stopped eating cheese and drinking alcohol for you. Our minds wandered with you.
Pippa held
her hand over the little window that would reveal your presence. I was sure she
already knew because when she pulled her hand away you were there, two little
lines, changing our lives. We hugged and kissed, sat down, and had lemonade.
Nothing
changed immediately, I thought about COVID and work and whether Winston was ok.
But little by little I thought of you, calling you Corona for fun, working from
home with you sleeping behind me and Winston licking your face. I didn’t try,
it just happened.
You made us
so happy, so relaxed and content. Happy to do nothing, just change our
behaviors and wait for you to arrive. I thought of badly teaching you
languages, of showing you worms in our garden and cheering on Klopp.
You’d cry
and make noise, but I’d never complain. We’d live in some kind of harmony,
where I still played football twice a week and Pippa would swim and do yoga
whenever she wanted. We’d head off in the car on little trips with young
Winston beside you keeping you safe. You’d fall and get dirty, roll around in
the mud. I’d laugh and play relaxed even though I’d worry inside.
We needn’t
have worried because you never arrived.
With
bleeding and scans the awful news was confirmed. Outside the hospital I waited
for Pippa to come out. We hugged, and we cried, surrounded by mothers smoking
outside. Back home on the couch, with no one around, we cried, and we cried,
Winston hopped up to give us all the comfort he had.
We told our
family and I told some friends. The more people we told the more sadness
unfolded, as one in four said they’d been through exactly the same. So many
people, I never knew had suffered the pain.
You’re a
part of us now, woven into our lives. The lessons you’ve taught will stay with
me for life.
Life can be
cruel, unpredictable and sad. Lidl’s Big Baby Sale was the week we got the
news. Not their fault, not ours, just an unfortunate reality. We sought
distraction in Netflix, The Fall had us gripped, then Sally Ann had a
miscarriage. Life can be cruel.
You taught
me to cherish what we have, to not get caught up in the future and what hasn’t
happened. I was waiting for a friend the other day and instead of losing myself
in my phone I spent the time watching the trees and listening to the birds. I
won’t pretend it was amazing but I wasn’t wishing away that time.
There was
so much about pregnancy and miscarriages that I didn’t know because I never
asked. How fragile you are, how luck plays its part, how there’s nobody to
blame, sometimes chromosomes don’t blend. You taught me to ask questions
because knowledge will help, to ask friends if they’re ok because sometimes
they’re not.
You taught
me to dream and look to the future, because in spite of the above there’s
plenty of good. Remember the worms, the football to watch, the laughs to be
shared and a life to be lived.
We spent
last weekend planting bulbs to flower in the spring. There’s a special
collection in a pot dedicated to you. I’ll sit and watch the flowers grow, the
bees coming and going and the world going by knowing that you’ve played your
part making our world a better place.
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