Sometimes
in our lives, there are moments that shape and define us. Other times, it is a
specific person who just changes our perspective on everything we ever thought
we knew.
For many of us, this whole new world is opened
before our eyes, when we become a Mother for the first time. I was no different…well
to begin with anyway.
I was born to be a mother. It was all I ever
dreamed to be. I babysat every little cherub I could.
I pursued a degree in Early Childhood Education
and began teaching at a young age. I knew one day it would be my turn to have
my own and while I waited for that time to come, I enjoyed everyone else’s kiddos!
I just
assumed that I would be able to get pregnant with no issues and that was my
first curve ball. Two years after fertility treatments, I was still childless
and felt so worthless that I couldn’t bring a baby into the world. It was the
only thing I wanted my whole life and I couldn’t make it happen. We were trying
in between my husband’s deployments and at the 2 and half year point, finally-we
were expecting!! I couldn’t stop crying when I found out and in that moment, my
whole life shifted and became about her.
However,
rather than being able to enjoy the experience I had so long waited for; I
developed Hyperemesis gravidarum. I spent 2/3 of the pregnancy violently ill
and lost 30 lbs. One complication after another kept arising, all while my
active duty Army husband was away training. I had preterm labor issues and was
placed on bed rest. I remember lying there and in all my suffering, just
telling myself over and over how worth it this would be when it was over and
that everything would be fine. It was a challenging time, but little did I know
it was just the beginning of the challenges I would face!
One freezing
January afternoon, my amazing daughter came into this world! I was just so
ready to meet her and have the hard part be over and let things finally be
normal and experience what I had built up motherhood to be my whole life.
I was
handed this tiny little person and couldn’t stop crying at how small she was.
They took her away to clean her up, but it quickly became apparent that
something was wrong. The nurse wouldn’t stop suctioning her out and I wondered
if she was choking. No one was telling me what was going on. I kept asking the
midwife “Where’s my baby? What’s wrong with my baby?”
It was not supposed to take this long. I saw a
doctor come in and immediately go over to my child. I was now panicked.
After
what seemed like an eternity, the doctor came over to me and explained that she
was born with a cleft palate and would need surgery. I had never heard of this,
but when they brought her over; I saw a big hole in the roof of her mouth and
going down towards the back of her throat. I saw no end to it. They started
bringing me special needs bottles and pamphlets and telling me how to care for
her, as I sat there in shock.
I
remember the first night, laying there thinking of all the mother’s all over
that hospital, nursing and cuddling with their babies. Meanwhile I was sitting
there, suctioning her out as she choked on every 1/10th of an
ounce I gave her and being terrified. I cried harder than I had in a long time
those first weeks.
There was
no time to think or breathe or process anything, because less than a week after
she was born; we were sent to The Children’s Hospital in Denver for a full day
of evaluations, by every specialist you can imagine. I walked in the lobby and thought,
“This can’t be happening. Not to my child.” Granted I am sure that is how all
parents feel, when their child develops a life altering illness or gets a scary
diagnosis and I’m sure it didn’t help that I was less than a week postpartum
with especially raging hormones! As I got into the elevator to a floor of the
hospital that would become very familiar to me, I started sobbing and
hyperventilating, as my husband tried to calm me down. The day was a blur. All
I knew was she was 6 days old and I was trying to pick her plastic surgeon.
I tried to adjust to this massive, unexpected new life in the weeks that followed. I felt like I was at capacity of what I could handle, but there were still bigger hills to climb.
A fever when she was a baby led to a hospital
stay, where it was discovered that she had severe sleep apnea and would stop
breathing up to 10 seconds at a time and she was permanently put on oxygen at
that point. For many of those first months of her life, I never slept. They
told me if she ever even dosed off without oxygen, she could end up with
serious brain damage or die. I lived in fear of that happening and was always
shaking her awake. I felt like I was being robbed of every experience I had
dreamed of. Rather than staring at my little angel sleeping peacefully, a
feeling of panic would rise as she would fall asleep and I would run to get her
oxygen or try to wake her up.
Through
all this, she also had severe feeding issues and had to be on a liquid diet, failure
to thrive, pneumonia, chronic lung disease, severe sleep issues, developmental delays,
hearing loss, multiple ear tube surgery, severe reflux resulting in aspiration,
just to name a few of her health challenges. You name it and it seemed to
happen to us. It was some of the darkest times of my life, watching her
struggle what seemed like every day.
I have always been a person of deep faith and
this was the time in my life that I wrestled with it pretty intensely. There
wasn’t a day that went by in her first year of life, that wasn’t filled with
pain, sickness or terror. Yet there also wasn’t a day that I wasn’t reborn and
refueled by this intense love and bond with her. There wasn’t a moment that I
would stop fighting for her. I knew that if we could just get through this, she
would grow to be one of the most extraordinary people the world had ever known.
When she
was 10 months old, she finally got her cleft palate repair. Her Dad was in
Afghanistan and I knew I had to be strong to do this without him. I remember
going out into the waiting room after they took her back and trying to call my
husband on a calling card and not getting through and just sitting alone with
tears rolling down my face. It was the longest 4 hours of my life.
I finally got called into the recovery room. I
heard mother’s everywhere crying and being escorted out, because they couldn’t bear
to see their children be in such pain.
I knew I
didn’t have anyone else to come in besides me, so I had to be tough. She needed
me.
I walked in and saw her little face coated
with blood and my heart shattered. Every time she’d whimper, they’d put more
medication in her IV. I can only say that my faith gave me a peace I couldn’t
understand. I gently picked her up and sat in a rocking chair with her and with
all the chaos surrounding me, started softly singing “Jesus Loves Me” and I
knew I wasn’t alone.
It was an
uphill climb after that, but this was the finish line I told myself. If we
could just recover from this, I could finally breathe and enjoy my life with
her.
I wish I
could tell you that she recovered just fine, but we continued to face so many
obstacles and she was in a constant rotation of therapies to try to help her
catch up on all her developmental delays, that we assumed were because of so
much time being sick and in hospitals. There wasn’t any part of me that thought
she wouldn’t get on track with her peers, once she got physically healthy.
However,
as time passed, she didn’t “catch up.”
I read an article about early intervention and
autism and immediately became concerned that my daughter had some of the
warning signs. When I initially spoke to her developmental interventionist, she
thought her positive qualities outweighed the warning signs, but it would be a
wait and see game. But as months went on, we knew something was wrong. We could
call her name 20 times and she wouldn’t turn at all. She wouldn’t talk. She wasn’t
learning sign language, despite my constant efforts. She wouldn’t point and still
wouldn’t eat solid food.
At this
time, her therapist approached me and I said I would do an autism checklist
online that day. Everything within me dreaded sitting down to that computer,
but I knew I had to know if I was to help her.
As I
checked off one thing after another, the tears started falling.
“No God, this can’t be real. Not this. It isn’t
fair! Hasn’t she been through more than enough?” But it was real. On March 23rd 2012,
I heard the words no parent wants to hear.
“Your
daughter is autistic and has global developmental delay, an eating disorder and
sleeping disturbance.”
How did I
ever think motherhood would be easy, magical, and all around dreamy?
My mind
started racing with questions. What would her future be like? Will she ever
talk?
Will she
ever call me Mama? Will her life always be this hard?
I let
myself wallow in self-pity for about 24 hours and then I decided I would not
give in.
I would fight for the best future she could
possibly have. I would do everything I could to help her. I had to give all I
was, to help her be all she could be.
That
defining moment of my life was almost 6 years ago. Today, my daughter is almost
9. She is quite literally the best person I know. She went from no speech, to
talking my head off all day long. She has the most beautiful smile you’ve ever
seen and every time I see it, I know I would choose her and do this all again.
Thanks to early intervention, amazing
therapists and a spirit that refused to be broken; she is completely
developmentally on track with her peers and amazed everyone who ever worked
with her. She never gave up. She never took no for an answer. She never stopped
believing that she could change the world and I truly believe that she will!
She already changed my life and many others in her short, but amazing time
here.
If you
asked me now if motherhood is every thing I thought it would be, I would say.
“Absolutely not!” It has been nothing I anticipated, nothing I was prepared
for; but it has been the love I always dreamed of. I know nothing else, like
this love I have for her. Being her mom, has taught me more about the world I
want to create and the beauty and resilience in life; than every experience I
have had till now, put together!
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