Happy birthday to my beautiful angel
Annabelle Faith who is celebrating her 2nd birthday in Heaven.
These two years have flown by and even
though it seems like forever since I held my little angel in my arms, I still
remember it as though it was yesterday. The physical contact feels like a
lifetime ago but all of the emotions - the hurt, pain, grief, shock and despair,
feel as if it only happened yesterday.
The only emotion that seems to have disappeared in the two years is the
anger, which I think is a good thing because it’s the last thing I want to have
associated with my little girl.
Last year was all about coming to terms and
coping with the up and down rollercoaster that came along with losing our
precious little girl – the daily challenges of controlling tears and managing
the never ending barrage of tormenting thoughts that churn through your mind
continuously, hour after hour, day after day.
It was also about learning how to walk down the baby aisle of the
supermarket without crying, dealing with the awkward encounters with people who
didn’t know what to say to you, being able to look at newborn babies without
physically and emotionally unravelling.
Mostly is was about getting through each day the best that you could,
taking it one day at a time. It was
about being able to survive with knowing a part of you was missing.
Throughout this second year without
Annabelle there’s been a lot less tears and emotional and mental breakdowns,
and I’ve become quite skilled at answering innocent questions such as ‘how many
children do you have?’ and ‘how old is your youngest?’. It’s amazing how simple questions like these
would so easily reduce me to tears and make me a blubbering mess within
seconds. I know feel I have more control
over this. Probably the biggest hurdle I
overcame this year was holding a baby, admittedly the little girl was three
months old, but it was a huge moment in moving forward and closing another
chapter in my book of grief.
I’ve thought about the milestones Annabelle’s
missed out on – walking and talking, playing with her big sisters, sharing
Christmas, Easter and birthdays with us.
So many moments that should have been shared, but sadly will never
happen. We’ve missed out on a countless
number of kisses and cuddles, giggles, smiles and tears. We’ve missed out on being able to watch her
grow and learn and do all of those little insignificant things that as parents
we usually take for granted. All of
those annoying little habits that our children have that are so repetitive and
consistent that we barely notice, they’re the things I know that we’re missing
out on and would do anything to have.
This year was also about moving forward. It
was about learning that it was okay to be happy again and not feel guilty about
it. It was about being able to pack away
the change table, the cot, the pram, car seat and all of the clothes and toys
that had been bought for our little girl while I was pregnant. I’m not sure I could ever part with the
things I still have for her, at the moment it would feel like trying to erase
her as if she didn’t exist. I know
that’s probably pretty silly, but when you don’t have anything other than those
material possessions and a handful of memories you hold on to whatever you can.
Every little thing, memory, thought and
feeling is precious and you don’t want to lose it. Giving birth to Annabelle left my arms
covered in bruises from all of the needles I was given (and all the ones they
tried to give me, but failed)– I remember looking at them as they faded and prayed
that wouldn’t go away, because it reminded me it was all real. It was a physical reminder and I didn’t have
many of them.
After a couple of months I did manage to
give away some of the things I had bought for Annabelle, which was another big
step in being able to move forward.
Midway through last year, only a few months after losing her I
discovered a pair of co-workers were pregnant with their first child. I’d never really had too much to do with the
couple, we didn’t seem to have too much in common and a part from a few casual
conversations we’d never really spoken. But I bundled up some of the new
clothes and baby supplies that I’d purchased and filled a gift bag with a
variety of baby things and left it for the happy couple with a card to congratulate
them. They don’t know how much just the
casual little conversations about their impending baby meant to me. Sure the jealously of it all broke my heart,
but the conversations were all about the excitement and nerves of having their
first baby or the horrible morning sickness that the mum to be was experiencing
– all of them were feelings that I could relate to. They were the first ‘normal’ baby conversations
that anyone had had with me and it was exactly what I needed. They didn’t talk to me and look at me as
though they were waiting for me to fall apart. Funnily enough it also showed me
a whole new side to the couple, one I hadn’t expected. This co-worker who I had thought of as a
tough, ‘nothing ever phases me’ woman had me in tears with a beautiful message
she sent to me after I wrote Annabelle’s 1st birthday blog. They were probably my first tears happy tears
for the entire year. Her words made me
feel like I was tough, that I had inner strength, plus they came from someone
who I least expected it.
Surprisingly I found comfort and support in some
of the most unexpected places and people. My mother-in-law has helped me in more ways
than I could possibly explain, I honestly don’t know what I would have done
without her. My sister-in-law (from my previous
marriage - who had sadly felt the same pain seventeen years earlier) and I
suddenly had a connection that hadn’t been there before. I was also overwhelmed and surprised by the
number of people who read Annabelle’s 1st birthday blog. Miracles Babies published it on their website
and within days hundreds of thousands of people had read it. The feedback was unbelievable and perfect
strangers sent me messages of heartfelt sympathy, inspiration, tales of their
own personal loss and experience and others even gave the gift of making
premmie clothes to donate to hospitals in Annabelle’s memory. It seemed that by sharing my feelings on a
blog which I didn’t expect anyone other than maybe close friends or family to
read had reached people across the world. My gorgeous little angel, who had
never even taken a breath had touched the hearts of people everywhere, she had
made a difference in the lives of others.
The entire process made me feel incredibly humble and so grateful. It has been that understanding, kindness and
the flood of support that has helped me to be able to move forward and it
played a huge part in helping me to restore my faith in the world and in God.
The amount of kindness in people can be truly amazing.
The journey of having to live without a
child is one you would never ever wish on another person. It torturous and unbelievably painful. I actually don’t think there is anyway a
mother can explain or convey the agony and the pain that you feel to someone
who hasn’t experienced it. Before losing
Annabelle I didn’t think it was possible to feel physical pain from heartache,
but you can. Your heart literally hurts
from the emotional pain that you are feeling.
I lost a part of me, a part of my heart,
that will be forever missing – there is no way for me to fully put my heart
back together again, it was broken beyond repair. Even though I may not ever be
able to repair my broken heart, but I can rebuild my life and my fractured
spirit, one day I might even be able to fully regain my faith. I know I have come a long way in these past
two years and I know I still have a lifetime ahead to navigate. Thankfully I have a wonderful husband and
three beautiful children by my side and a little angel on my shoulder.
I’ve heard people say ‘it gets better’ or
‘it gets easier’ with time more times than I can count, but personally I don’t
think that’s the case. When I think
about losing Annabelle the pain is just as intense and real now as it was on
that gut-wrenching day two years ago, I’ve simply gotten better at managing
that pain. You don’t ‘get over it’ – you
get through it. It doesn’t get ‘easier’
– you get stronger and you adapt and change. You don’t ‘move on’ – you move forward.
To
my dearest, sweet Annabelle Faith,
The
sun has not risen on a day where I have not missed you,
nor has it set on a day where I have not thought about you,
and not a day has passed that I have not loved you.
nor has it set on a day where I have not thought about you,
and not a day has passed that I have not loved you.
I
hope you’re soaring through the clouds with magical angel wings
and I hope you hear my daily prayers to you
and I hope you hear my daily prayers to you
Though
I will never again hold you in my arms,
cuddle you tight or cover your tiny face with kisses
I will always carry you in my heart and cherish the precious moments I had with you.
cuddle you tight or cover your tiny face with kisses
I will always carry you in my heart and cherish the precious moments I had with you.
I
love you to the moon and back
and more than all of the stars in the sky
and more than all of the stars in the sky
Happy
2nd Heavenly Birthday