A birthday wish

Baby journal

Tucked away in a barely-used baby journal is a small, white card that reads

…. There are lots of blossoms yet to bloom….

Today marks our miscarried baby’s first birthday. I can’t believe that I still haven’t forgotten the date, but it’s true. When I woke up this morning, my mind raced through the day’s tasks and stopped suddenly when I realized that it was September 24th. My due date, one year later. I will never forget to remember this day. I looked forward to it for two whole months. It is a day of joy marked down in a baby journal. Today, I think about my sweet baby. The baby who sacrificed his way for Poppy. She is the blossom that bloomed because her big brother made the way for her. Or however those things work. Who can know?

Happy Birthday, Sweet. I hope heaven’s birthday parties are filled with ice cream and balloons and fun dance parties with all your friends. We love you and miss you so much.

Love, Mama and Papa and Poppy.

Birthday balloons
[Photo Credit]

Of motherhood and demolition

I’ve kept pretty mum lately about personal things since Poppy’s birth [a period that is in fact still HERE and NOW]. I’ve shared a lot of photos, snippets of new motherhood, and the happy tale of the birth. As things appear around here, motherhood rocks. It seems full of adorable moments, quiet reflections, fun baby giggles, and refreshing walks in the park. And trust me, sometimes it is. Every day is a real, tangible blessing that I wouldn’t trade. So don’t hate. I know what miracle I’m living.

I have, however, been ruminating over the idea of sharing another side of the last three and a half months. I kind of feel like I give the wrong impression of what this whole thing is like sometimes. It’s one thing to say things are “crazy” or “out of hand” on any given day, but it is an entirely different thing to open up and say that sometimes, no matter how blessed or miraculous, motherhood is cataclysmic.

[cataclysmic ˌ\ka-tə-ˈkliz-məl\adj. a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition]

When Jacob and I got pregnant the first time, a baby now lost, it was an accident. An overzealous anniversary celebration, if you will. We were surprised, speechless, and a little bit whatthefuck? We had been married just one year. I had a great job, he had the luxury of a freelance career, we had two kitty cats and no money. We were living the life! Our marriage was really strong. Prior to getting hitched, we always fought. Somehow when we got married everyone relaxed and we really liked being room/soul mates.

For the sake of brevity, I’ll skip ahead and say that two months after getting pregnant, our baby died. We were really, really crushed. The day of my D&C, we looked at each other and said that we still wanted a family. We were not really ready, but we WANTED it and it felt right. I still think that’s the best decision we ever made. I’m not kidding, there was no preparation, no real reason – just little Poppy-to-be knocking at the door.

Fast forward a year later and I give birth to Poppy Anne. The first four weeks of her life are a whirlwind. I can’t even remember them – seriously. I have only the photos to prove they even happened. Oh, and a bloody bra from the first days of nursing to remind me NEVER TO HAVE A BABY AGAIN. Kidding.

I can’t even begin to tell you the changes in my life, my marriage, my body since Poppy has come.

My body. My poor, poor body. My stomach is covered in stretch marks from navel to Neverland. My boobs pretty much decided to warp into giantly uneven, awkward torpedos of death. And let’s not even talk about the baldness or the fact that, because of permanent hip-widening, I will never again wear single digit jean sizes. Does that grieve anyone else?

The changes in my marriage? My life? Jacob and I were shoved into new roles immediately after Poppy was born. Mother and Father. Say what? I stayed home from work, he got a full-time job. I suddenly found myself folding laundry, making food, cleaning. Readers, I DO NOT CLEAN. I DO NOT COOK. I am notorious for being a bad housewife. Jacob married me because I tell good jokes, not because I know what pasta primavera is [I don't]. Since Poppy, I have felt very trapped by these four walls. Some days I wake up deeply depressed. I have cried several times late at night and rolled over to tell Jacob “This is not what I want – it’s boring. It’s hard.”

Jacob, in the same way, has struggled to try to fit into a new thing called fatherhood. I can’t speak for him, but I can say that similar feelings of futility and what-the-hell-are-we-done-with-another-stupid-pointless-day-already? creep up frequently. You might know the same sense, definitely not linked only to new fatherhood, that is the rat race, the rhythm of Western life. It can suck the spark right out of you.

Jacob and I have had huge, major fights in the last three months. Fights that end with “I’m not happy. I want something else. Are we even on the same page?” These are scary questions to ask your spouse. S-C-A-R-Y. Without further disclosure of our personal crap, I will just say that our marriage took a hit. Divorce is not an option. Neither is living forever unhappy. What we have concluded is that we need LIFE in our lives. We’ve got to do things we like doing, even if they don’t fit into “motherhood” and “fatherhood.” For example, I like music. So instead of folding the laundry this morning, I cranked up The Doors and rocked out with Poppy in front of the sub woofer. The laundry still sits in the dryer I think. [I'm kinda afraid to go in the laundry room ever again].

My point, since this is getting too long, is that having a new family member who requires every ounce of who you are to survive and thrive, is hard work. Motherhood is nothing like I imagined. No one could have even prepared me for it if they tried. Not the sleepless nights and constant feedings and all that shit. That’s easy and like, whatever. The hard part of all this is figuring out who I am. This little girl defines me. I am her MOM now. Our family has THREE – father, mother, daughter. But, our family also is unique and we are unique as individuals [alright, BORG reference over]. We dance to our own beat. We suck at some things [like working and cleaning and living beautifully], but we excel at others [like quoting movies, playing outside and talking shit about the government].

My entrance into motherhood, and Jacob’s into fatherhood, has been nothing short of cataclysmic. It has been a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition. Just about everything has fallen apart since Poppy has been born.

And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Reflecting on the day

On the eve of my first Mother’s Day, I am filled with many, many feelings.

I am remembering back to last year’s Mother’s Day – Jacob and I were still mourning the loss of our first pregnancy. I think that was also the weekend we moved into our new house. I remember feeling sad that I didn’t have a baby to celebrate that day, but also feeling hopeful that we had a fresh start in our lives and new enthusiasm for making a baby. (Insert gagging brother who reads CrunchyCursive.com) Actually, Poppy was conceived sometime during that week after Mother’s Day. I have little blue stars on my calendar to prove it.

Today, I am also thinking about my own mom and the journey we have shared. I am thinking about how our relationship is changed, and refined, by the birth of a third generation. I’m thinking about all the things I have learned from my mom and all the things she did for me that I was completely ungrateful for and unaware of growing up. And how I want to do these same things for Poppy.

Tomorrow is a very bittersweet day for me. As I rocked Poppy Anne to sleep tonight, I held her close and cried warm tears on her cheeks. Those yummy, yummy cheeks. And I thought about the friends in my life who don’t have babies of their own to hold tomorrow. The day before Poppy was born, another little baby girl, Stephanie, was supposed to be delivered into this world. Instead, she went to heaven. She would have been three months and three days old today, but she is not here and I cannot imagine how her mother is torn apart with grief and anger. I cannot imagine. And I cannot understand. As I squeezed Poppy tight tonight, I thought of our dear friends who have 22 months of reasons to cry out in pain. I thought of the utter despair of a mother and father who cannot conceive a child.

I thought about Poppy’s destiny and the circumstances of her birth. What does her life mean in the wake of  the sorrow and pain of our friends? Poppy flowers represent eternity and the remembrance of death. The name Anne is in remembrance of my aunt’s baby daughter who never got a chance at life to the fullest. Perhaps Poppy has a destiny on her tiny life that is more than I can imagine.

Tonight, I thought about being a mother. I though about the change in my life over the last year. I thought about Poppy’s little heartbeat, now beating outside my body and growing stronger everyday. I thought about my future children – the ones waiting for me. I thought about the mothers who are going to carry our adopted children. I am already grieved by their pain and rejoicing in their strength.

It is a strange feeling being between complete joy and complete sorrow. Something I wrote about a long time ago, but still feels very true today. I feel like I am on a wall between two gardens. Tomorrow I will be celebrating the wonderful and beautiful life of my new daughter and my journey into motherhood – an experience I could have never imagined and can never explain in words. But also tomorrow, I will be thinking of lost babies, broken mothers, shattered hearts. Utter grief finds its match only in utter beauty. Life and death are so far apart that they actually become close again. The same with joy and pain.

So Happy Mother’s Day? Well, I can at least toast to the celebration of grace and mercy and beauty in the midst of pain. I can celebrate my bright Poppy flower for her smile and laughter and trusting spirit. She is a light for the world – bright and beautiful.

Were those naked people bothering you?

I figured I should write a new post because 1) even I can get tired of a naked Kiera Knightly and 2) Jacob can’t pay $95 a year for web hosting so the Internet can look at pictures of Vanity Fair covers and my fishies.

It’s been almost a year since Crunchy Cursive started. I’ve been thinking back a lot lately to that time.

The first week of March 2008 was one of the most horrible of my life – my miscarriage was fresh and painful. I was so overcome with devastation and sorrow at the loss of our tiny new baby. Early in the week, we came home from a doctor’s appointment where we found out our baby had died two weeks prior. I was carrying a dead baby in my belly. It was a horrific and empty feeling. I needed anything for distraction. Jacob and I ended up wandering around different stores for a solid two hours that afternoon. Just because we didn’t know what else to do.

Jacob, in his good-husbandness, tried to buy my cheer with a new MacBook. We got home from the Apple store and it had worked – I was temporarily distracted. I had a brand new computer and an awesome web-designer husband who could make me the cutiest, patutiest blog template imaginable. I had wanted to get into the blogging game for quite some time because, you know, everyone was a blogger. Or a at least a closet blog-stalker.

One year later, I can’t believe how much life has changed. Our first baby has been gone for a whole year. We moved into a great house. We got pregnant again by pretty much just winking at each other. I spent the whole summer puking. We watched my belly grow and grow and grow. Then Poppy Anne happened and we about died of happiness. It’s been a super year. I am really grateful that it’s all documented on this site. I hope you haven’t minded riding along.

Can someone bug Jacob for an new “Happy Anniversary to Leanne’s Blog” re-design?

Big and Little

A list of big and little things I am thankful for this year…

1. A record non-fighting, more-time-spent-being-best-friends year with Jacob
2. Burt’s Bees honey chapstick
3. Healing after losing our tiny baby bean in March
4. Having a BIG family with lots of brothers and a pretty cool sister
5. Pre-packaged applesauce
6. A beautiful apartment and thoughtful landlord
7. A job for Jacob
8. Friends who care about my happiness and comfort
9. 3 camping trips
10. A whole year to better myself with teaching, writing, reading and graduating
11. Food in the fridge
12. The continuing development of understanding and empathy in my heart
13. The miracle of a baby daughter

Happy Thanksgiving!

Losses and gains.

It comes as no surprise to hear that a pregnant women is a more particular emotional mess than your average menstruating and/or PMSing and/or any other day of the month woman. Hormones coupled with heartburn create an environment inside a pregnant woman’s body that is somewhat like the battle of Gettysburg in a spicy salsa hell.

I have been emotional lately. Crying at random commercials. Smiling and offering to adopt cute babies I see in public. Slamming the door in my husband’s face – to name a few examples. I was having a particularly hard time this week keeping myself in check. Overwhelming sadness seemed my constant companion, and I couldn’t really pinpoint why.

Yesterday I remembered that this week would have been our first pregnancy’s final week. The baby we had, and lost to miscarriage, was due September 23rd and would have made his or her appearance during this gorgeous week of early fall weather. When I realized this, I knew suddenly what the painful sadness was that I had been feeling all week – the pain of loss and the void of a child we will not know in this life.

So today, I find myself telling our daughter all about the super hero brother she won’t get to meet. How he probably is already better than her at just about everything. He was probably smarter, faster, taller and had X-ray vision like Superman. But she needn’t worry because if she tries hard enough, one of us might like her better than her genius brother.

Is it still there? Or was it the chili I ate yesterday?

Today, I would have been 17 weeks pregnant – not monumental, I know  – but still, it seems so improbable. I wonder when I will stop wondering what might have been. I am ready to look forward, goodness knows I am not one to sit around, swallowed up in the what ifs, but preganancy seems as far from me as it does close to me. Like I am stuck in the middle. I seem so far from being 17 weeks pregnant, and yet there are days, like today, when I swear that baby is still there.

I haven’t really had too much time to think about this miscarriage with my head. I’ve been rather busy getting our new apartment, working, schooling, working, packing, and working, but I know that the pieces of my heart that shattered on February 29th are slowly patching themselves back together.

Oh, and next month begins the Jacob and Leanne Wadenpfuhl Baby-Making-Fest ‘08, so watch out. I will not be blogging much. You know – to save my energy.

Recovering.

Since my miscarriage last month, I have tried not to read too much online about pregnancy loss, miscarriage stats, conception, and all that. The last words my midwife gave to me before leaving her office went something like this – Trust your body. It will know when to get pregnant again. Be careful what you read on the internet.

The INTERNET – how did she know?!?

I think I was a little too shaken up to realize the genuine advice she was trying to give me. I must have had COMPULSIVE INTERNET SURFER written on my forehead as I sat there naked on her exam table. Could she have known that I was Google-ing miscarriage for the two straight weeks leading up to my D&C? My midwife, in her kindness, saw the pregnancy-forum craze in my eyes and told me to stop.

She also said some things about my area down under, which I don’t wish to repeat here, but let’s just say that I’m good to go. I have my mother’s connatural gift of resilient baby making equipment.

I haven’t been reading too much online since I left the midwife’s office, but I’ll admit that I’ve peeked at a blog or two. A forum or two. Actually, I READ EVERY SINGLE POST ABOUT MISCARRIAGE ON PARENTS.COM.

Midwife, you were right. That was so not helpful. I should have listened to you. There are just too many crazies out there, and I don’t need to add myself to the growing list of overly-anxious, overly-informed women of childbearing age. Sure, I want to know exactly what percent of women miscarry. Sure, I want to know exactly what percent of women miscarry twice, but in the end, my body will have its own journey and my family will be what it was always supposed to be – perfect for us.

I have to put blinders on when it comes to reading other women’s stories about pregnancy and miscarriage. For some women, it may be very comforting to know that roxiemama881 got pregnant two weeks after her D&C. Then again, five4jesus said it took her a year to get pregnant again, just to suffer a second miscarriage.

I have decided to be unwavering with myself on this issue. No more pregnancy forums. Period. In fact, when we do get pregnant again, I am not touching a single Parents.com, TheCradle.com, or Mothering.com. I will spend my time doing better things, like picking out baby Mick Jagger t-shirts.

Don’t be hating me now. I still love you, Internet. I will still spend silly amounts of time exploring you. It will just be limited to vintage furniture I can’t afford and bloggers who’s lives I wish I had.

Gushing.

v. gushed, gush·ing, gush·es

v. intr.

  1. To flow forth suddenly in great volume: water gushing from a hydrant.
  2. To emit a sudden and abundant flow, as of tears.
  3. To make an excessive display of sentiment or enthusiasm

This gushing has come suddenly, so if I’m rambling it is because I am writing faster than I am thinking. If I have poor subject/verb agreement or if I lack consistency in my tense, I apologize. Gushing requires breaking the rules.

First, my husband. I love him and today I think he needs to know it. When I was single, lonely and poor I dreamed of the day when I would be with him forever. I remember our wedding day as – not just because EVERYONE says this – but as the happiest day of my life so far. I could see happiness, smell happiness and feel it all around me that day. It was like pure joy finally had physical form. That’s how my husband makes me feel. Sometimes we are at each others throats. In fact, we probably fight more so and with more passion than any other couple. You can ask anyone of our family members or friends. Fighting all the time. But we are a good match. We can stand up and fight, and then sit down and laugh our hammocks off. He makes me so happy. He is my best friend. Today, I gush over you. In tears and words.

Second, my baby. I miss you so much. Pregnancy is scary, and even though I worried about you every day of those 10 weeks, I knew you would be in my heart forever. Letting you go was very sad and it broke my heart. I’m sure you would have been a superhero kid. I will tell all your future siblings that you were the smartest and prettiest of them all. And you will get first dibs on our pad in heaven.

I cannot say how grateful I am for my life. Mercy is astounding. Everything, I mean EVERYTHING, I have is a result of goodness and kindness. I am not one to say, Why me? Why now? But I admit, I have asked these questions in recent months. I could not be more grateful for all the good things I do have in my life. I could not be more grateful for the beauty and the strength that I have because of the rough things, the ugly things. Life is so real, and I guess that’s what makes it beautiful. Sadness, joy, love – these things make life tangible, real. I am grateful for all of it.

Gushing terminated.

A quote and a confession.

Sadness is but a wall between two gardens.

~ Kahlil Gibran

Today, I’m trying to figure out just what sadness is. I think Gibran said it just right. It is a wall between two gardens. Sadness is the veil that divides life from life. Beauty from beauty. Hope from hope. Sadness is the tear between the moments in life when we can see the light, the joy.

Today, I’m at the wall. I can see over – I can see behind. Today, I am sad, but I am resting in the fact that on each side of me lies a beautiful, faithful, blossoming life.

Definitions

What the past 7 days have been like -

On Monday the doctor said “expectant management.” Definition: Shock.

On Wednesday morning at 2:30am, I lost one of the most wonderful things that has ever happened to me. I cried for the baby I lost at 6 weeks, 3 days old. Definition: Grief.

On Thursday I cried tears and more tears. Definition: Emptiness.

On Saturday I snuggled with my husband and let him squeeze all the pain out of me. Definition: Love.

On Sunday I took one rose home for you, Baby. Definition: Hope.

Tonight I remember how much life changes. Last Sunday night, I had no idea what this week would hold. This Sunday night I am defined by the past 7 days, but also by the hope and the future that is promised to me.