This month is my son’s birthday month. He would be 13 years old this year if he was still on earth with us. I was looking back at my old blog, No More Afflictions (it’s still up today) that I started back in 2013, right after our second child was born, our rainbow baby Miss B. It was interesting to see how far I have come as a blogger, but I started that blog for healing, before I even knew blogging was a way to make an extra income. I enjoyed (that is not exactly the right word, because it was still pretty painful) reading through the raw emotion and realness of these posts. Are they perfect? No. Do they have the right headlines, are they optimized for SEO, or do they reach a target audience? No. They are posts that I wrote only for me. Since I haven’t been on that blog in probably ten years, I decided to transfer those words, those raw and real words that I wrote after the death of our son, over to this blog. These are just here so they close to me, and also to share with those who truly want to get a glimpse into my journey as a grieving mother. Maybe you have been there too, maybe my words can resonate with you. Regardless, I will be posting these 11-year-old blog posts on the Peaceful Nest, words that take me back to that open rawness of painful grief. I am not touching them, editing them, or doing any type of SEO, they will stay exactly how they came out of me during those moments as I navigated my grief.
A Letter to the Friend Who Left Me When My Friend Died
“No matter what life brings, no matter where we go, I promise I will always be by your side.”
That is what the folded letter read – the one you passed to me in between 2nd and 3rd period. It was folded into a perfect triangle with hearts and “I love you” scribbled on the front. When I got home I stuck it in a box buried deep in my closet.
The one that held all your notes.
I cherished them.
Relied on them really.
Knowing you would always be there. It was comforting in an unknown world believing I had someone who would walk alongside me no matter what.
What you wrote was true at the time.
We had always been there for one another. Through school, graduation, college. weddings. I considered you my best friend.
Then my son died.
I stood next to my son’s tiny casket 5 years after you passed me that note in the hall.
When I looked out among the crowd there was a sea of familiar faces. Beautiful and amazing people gathered with us to celebrate our son’s life and grieve with us.
Your face, though, was nowhere to be found.
Your absence did not go unnoticed. I put it out of my mind. Pretended I didn’t see, but you not being there was painful.
You texted me a few days later to let me know you were thinking of me.
Sorry I couldn’t be there, you said, I had plans that day.
Then silence.
As the weeks and months pulled me further from my son, your absence in my life became bigger.
A gaping chasm staring me in the face.
You stopped by a few times. But I became to uncomfortable for you to be around.
I wanted to talk about my son.
You didn’t.
You wanted to talk about breakups and jobs.
Small talk.
I had difficulty conjuring up the will to live. Everything seemed to frivolous to me. Especially small talk.
I cried and you didn’t know what to do with those tears.
So you stopped coming around.
Then you stopped texting and calling altogether. It seemed we were no longer friends.
And maybe we weren’t.
Maybe my grief was to painful for you.
Maybe you didn’t know what to say. Or it is possible you felt every move and word you said would be critiqued by me, in my raw heartache.
Eventually, you dropped out of my life all together.
It was easier for you to not be around my sadness. My pain. My grief.
Did you think about if it was easier for me?
I know my heartache was hard.
I know it was difficult because I had to live through it.
And I still do it.
Death is hard.
The death of a baby?
The death of a baby is downright impossible to bear.
Why bear it if you don’t have to?
Why open up your eyes and heart to this pain voluntarily?
When my son died, I was catapulted into a life that I did not know existed.
This is a world where I feel like an outsider. A world where a simple question like “how many children do you have?” or “all girls, huh?” causes my heart to race and my palms to sweat.
A world where I have to answer the hard questions about death and sickness and life from a child who cannot tie her own shoes yet.
This is a world where I have to consume the heartache and grief of my living children over a sibling they never even met, carrying their pain alongside them, as they try to navigate an alternative life.
It is a life in which I have to be mindful of my own triggers, putting my needs above others, when I hide yet another pregnancy announcement from my Facebook or stay home from the third baby shower in a month.
A world I cannot expect you to understand.
It is a world I had wanted you in any way.
My son’s death forced me into an open door.
I didn’t have a choice.
My family and husband did not have a choice.
Everyone else had a choice.
Many friends and family members chose to follow us in without hesitation. They chose the muck and pain they didn’t understand because they chose us, without hesitation.
I watched as you stood at the doorway.
You lingered. What was inside scared you. It was painful. The decor was ugly to look at. The reality too much for you to bear.
You turned around slowly, hoping I wouldn’t notice and then you were gone.
But I did notice.
I don’t write this to make you feel guilty. I don’t write this to hurt you.
The reason I write this, is because I want you to know I understand.
I pray you never have to experience the agony of losing a child. I pray those close to you never walk through the doorway of child loss.
But if one day someone close to you is shoved through the child loss door, please do not be scared this time to get down in the muck and pain. Do not be afraid to experience the heartache with your friend.
They do not need your perfect words.
And they do not need you to fix them.
They need you to be there.
To walk alongside them as they navigate the unknown.
They need you to choose them.
They need you not to be scared to enter this world with them.
Because as scared as you may feel staring into the doorway of child death…
Your friend is a thousand times more petrified than you.