I just heard this statistic when Jeannete Sevard, from Taos, New Mexico sent me this story she received to pass on to her niece who just recently lost a young child of only 5 yrs.… Jeannete said when she was recently searching the internet for more information she might be able to use to help her niece who is still almost inconsolable when she came across our blog. Jeannete hoped we might be able to share this with our moms in time for mother’s day, and yes I am able to do that – so thank you Jeannete and our thoughts and prayers are with your niece and your families, but with an aunt like you for support, I’m confident she will find her way on this journey to joy again.. Cherie Houston
“Moving Forward”
After the Death of a Child ~ by
I’ve
often wondered what the recipe included when mothers were created. Part
superhero, part superhuman, “moms” surely have many ingredients: one wrist that
can test the temperature of baby formula, three measures of skinned knee
fixability, two cups of tear catching, zero sick days, little nightly sleep, a
dash of fever-gauging with a kiss on the forehead, many heaping tablespoons of
patience, endless pickups, drop-offs, and grocery lists, and several thousand
sack lunches and dinners. Topped with the wave of one giant problem-solving
wand sprinkled with magic glitter from up above, a mom is born. Mothers have
strength beyond muscle, wisdom beyond intellect, magic beyond wands.
Until
a mother loses a child.
I
wasn’t superhuman or a superhero on April 19, 2003, when my 11-year-old son
Steven Brian Malin, Jr., was struck and killed by a cross train down the block
from our home in Lake Forest, Illinois. Our only son, wedged between two
dancing, soccer-playing sisters, was simply walking back from a quick chicken
nugget Happy Meal at our local McDonald’s when I never saw him alive again. I
couldn’t fix the biggest tragedy of our lives with a band-aid and a kiss. I
didn’t have an ounce of magic to change the fate of our child and our family
that ominously windy spring afternoon. I was a mother who lived by the
tried-and-true recipe for what a mother should be, and completely crumbled in a
matter of moments. A million pieces of confused, furious, crumbled nothingness.
Superhero?
Super zero.
There
are absolutely no words to describe the black abyss you fall into when your
child dies. The hole has no bottom; the descent has no final destination. Life
goes from busy and noisy with the demands of a full family to the silence of a
world entrenched in death. You want to rise back up to the light, past the
whispered condolences, the endless “I’m sorry’s”—back to “normal.” The only
problem is that life has no “normal” after you lose a child.
The
four of us initially moved like zombies, no longer “living life” but “living
death.” We found it impossible to inexplicably have Steven “erased” from our
lives, somehow deal with the permanence, and move on. Grief books told me that
our family would get over these horrendous, anxiety-ridden
feelings. I didn’t want to get over death. I wanted death to go away. I
prayed about it. I journaled about it. I just didn’t believe that following the
rules of death would bring us back to “life” again.
When
we finally got through the shock stage and ventured back out in our everyday
world, we’d run into little reminders of Steven’s life. His favorite number at
the deli counter. His favorite commercial on TV. A favorite story shared by a
classmate. What might be painful encounters for many actually felt like little
“hellos” to us. For our daughters, it was a refocus on the funny, active
brother with whom they wanted to stay connected, and further away from the details
of the accident, which physically stripped him from our lives.
The
more we looked for signs and symbols of Steven’s life, the more that came our
way. Instead of spending our days in bed under the covers, we found ourselves
out looking for hope and a continued connection to our little boy. It would’ve
been easier to say good-bye and let go of his place in our lives. Instead, we
worked hard to find healthy, well-adjusted ways to keep him close.
Some
of the “signs” we’ve received over the past seven years have been quite
impressive, and we acknowledge them as confirmation that Steven, our little
guardian angel, is watching over us. Rainbows at the most unlikely of times. A
double heart in the snow with no footprints around it. Getting on a flight
last-minute and being assigned row 13, Steven’s favorite number.
We
started to call our steps toward hope and healing, “moving forward but hanging
on.” Going on without
our little boy cheated us all. Moving forward with him still spiritually and
symbolically close was the true answer for our family. Following this path led
us in a new direction on the road of grief, one in which our daughters are
thriving, and we are “living life” again ourselves, not “living death.”
Four
years ago, I began writing the story of our journey back to light and life
after the darkest days we ever knew. It is not a tale of magic wands that can
bring back our loved ones or how moms can turn tragedy into triumph with a kiss
on the forehead. It is, however, the truth of what good can happen when you
decide that you love someone so much, you just can’t say good-bye. I feel that
it’s especially true when the “someone” you’ve lost is your child.
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