Tuesday, December 1, 2015

One Year - Matthew's Story

One year ago today marks what I can safely say was the worst day of my life up to this point. The day we found out our first baby had no heartbeat.

The day our lives changed forever.

I have been meaning to write this post for some time, but have been reluctant because it’s so painful to relive it. But it just seems fitting to share such a post today, one year later. I have written a little about it since it happened and I know Josh has shared a lot of his experience, but I wanted to share my whole story. I am going to be as open and honest about the experience as possible, so bear with me. I just think Matthew’s story is important to share. If not for anyone else, it is important for me.



Let me start with the weeks before.



The week before Thanksgiving week, I finally announced outside of family that I was pregnant. We took pictures with my friend Jessica, and I was so excited to put them on Facebook and finally share that we were so excited to be expecting.



The next week we went to Idaho to visit my grandparents for Thanksgiving and got to spend time with lots of family there. My belly wasn’t really showing yet, but it was getting there. I was also looking forward to feeling my baby’s movements any day. While at my grandparents’ house, I was given a surprise baby shower. It was so fun to celebrate my baby with everyone! And the gifts that I received made me even more excited for the baby’s arrival! I even received a car seat and stroller; I could just picture taking my new baby for walks in the springtime. I got really emotional over all of it because of how happy and excited I was. Everything was right in that moment.



The following week, on December 1st, I had a routine doctor’s appointment. I had been looking forward to this appointment as I did every appointment so that I could hear the baby’s heartbeat and know that it was healthy and growing.

As usual, the doctor went to check the heartbeat with his fetal Doppler. It was taking a while, but this wasn’t that unusual. The baby wasn’t always the most cooperative and sometimes took a minute to find. It always made me a little nervous, but was never a cause for great concern because it was always fine.

When he had tried for a while, he scheduled us for an “emergency ultrasound” to see the baby since he was having trouble finding the heartbeat with his Doppler. I was a little nervous but didn’t think much of it because the doctor seemed so calm about it and didn’t give any indication that there was a problem. So we went back out into the waiting room to wait our turn for an ultrasound. As we sat there, I excitedly talked to Josh about “what if we can find out the gender today??” We weren’t expecting to have that ultrasound for a couple weeks, so the thought of finding out a little early made me really excited. Everything still seemed right for a moment.

As I wrote in my journal of the ultrasound experience:

“Our turn came and I got situated for the ultrasound. Just moments later, the ultrasound tech softly said, ‘Oh, no…’ My heart dropped but I held on to a desperate hope that everything would turn out to be fine. As she continued her checking, I watched her type on the screen that there was no heartbeat. And I tried with my last effort to stay composed, but my resolve quickly broke. And I cried. And cried. Josh came over to me to quietly comfort me as I felt myself crumbling in disbelief. I had sometimes imagined if something should go wrong, but never expected it to happen. Everything had been going so well. How could this be real?”


The ultrasound tech softly told us “I’m so sorry” over and over as she finished her scan. The doctor came in to get the news, and as we finished up we went back to a room to discuss our options with the doctor. He informed us that I could either be induced and deliver, or I could have a D&C where I am put out and they pull and scrape everything out themselves. The second option was riskier for me, but I was in such foggy disbelief I didn’t really know what to think. So he said we could go home and talk about it and call him back to schedule whatever we chose to do.

Going home, the rest of the day was a blur. I called in to work and they took care of things so I wouldn’t have to worry about finding people to cover my shifts. Then I called my mom. When she picked up I could barely choke out the words through my tears, “Mom, I went to the doctor this morning… and I lost the baby.” We let our Bishop and Relief Society President know what was going on. The rest of the day passed in a haze. We sat on the couch and watched TV for most of the day because for me it was a distraction of the nightmare I was now living in. Just taking a moment to get up and go to the bathroom was unbearable because the reality of what was happening would set in again, and I would break down and sob.



People started reaching out to me right away. I received flowers, food, and words of love and comfort from friends and family. People started sharing with me their experiences with loss, and I found myself leaning on those who could relate to what I was going through. Yet most of my time was spent either crying or trying to numb the pain.



We went back to the doctor the next day to let him know we wanted me to be induced, and to talk about details and schedule the induction. I would go in on Wednesday night, December 3rd. I wanted to know what to refer to this loss as, so I asked him if it was considered a second trimester miscarriage. He said no, and that the death of the baby was called “fetal demise”. And that the birth would be a stillbirth. (This was confirmed by the nurses at the hospital. I found out later that in Utah, it is considered a stillbirth when a baby is born dead any time after 16 weeks, rather than what most everywhere else considers a stillbirth – 20 or more weeks.) It became important for me to know what this loss was called for reasons I can’t explain, not to compare my loss with anyone else’s.



I called my mom to let her know when it was so she could fly out to Utah to be with me for it. I also received a Priesthood blessing, in which I was told that this baby I was carrying was a little boy. We didn’t know the gender before then and I was thinking all along that it was a girl, so this was surprising to hear. We decided we wanted to name our baby before going to the hospital, so we looked up some baby names. We had one or two boy’s names in mind, but I didn’t feel like using them here. I wanted to find something with special meaning. So Josh found the name Matthew, meaning “Gift of God.” And with that we used Lawrence for the middle name, which is Josh’s middle name and his dad’s middle name. So Matthew Lawrence it was. We also made a trip to Target to find a blanket, a stuffed animal, a box for his keepsakes, and a special ornament because it was Christmas time. In that trip, elephants became Matthew’s animal – we first found a blue elephant ornament that I fell in love with, then Josh found a blanket with a blue elephant on it, to match the ornament.

On Wednesday night, we went to the hospital. I got checked in and they took me to a room apart from the regular labor and delivery area so that I wouldn’t have to hear baby cries. Then we got started with the induction. The pain started out very mild, and through the night gradually built up more and more. It wasn’t like typical labor though; instead of having painful contractions that would come and go, it was a constant, gradual buildup of pain, without contractions. I received some pain medicine, but in the morning when it was getting really bad, my water broke just before I was going to get an epidural. The doctor came, and I thought I was going to have to push. But Matthew was so tiny that the doctor just reached in and pulled him out very easily and delicately.



And there I saw him. Our boy. Born on December 4th, 2014 at 8:30 am. He weighed a tiny 1.6 ounces and measured just 5.5 inches long.

I later wrote in my journal:

“I started crying instantly. It’s hard to describe the emotions I felt. Sorrow at losing my baby. At seeing his tiny, lifeless body that would never grow into an energetic little boy. At never getting to be his mother. At holding him, and yet it wasn’t him. I would be left empty. And yet, I felt joy at knowing he would be mine forever. Wonder at seeing how every little part of his tiny body was already so formed. At seeing how perfect he already was, and knowing that’s all he needed. All I could do was cry for both grief and joy, and marvel over my little boy…

As the day went on I found myself feeling very surprisingly peaceful. I expected to be completely beside myself. I don’t know if it was the prayers of others, or Matthew being there for me, or what, but I’m certain there was divine help. For the moment, even in the midst of this tragedy, everything seemed okay. I was amazed by that.”



A bereavement specialist in the hospital came and took pictures, did hand prints and footprints, and made tiny molds of Matthew’s hands and feet. She also wrapped Matthew in a tiny blanket and gave us a couple of other keepsakes. I will forever and ever be grateful to her. She gave us treasures that are worth more to me than any other possession.



I also received other gifts and trinkets in honor of Matthew. Stuffed elephants. Jewelry. Pictures. I was so touched every time someone gave me something in honor of him. It was a recognition that he existed, and that he mattered. That he is my little boy.

We decided not to have a funeral, but to let the hospital take care of his body. I don’t know exactly what they did with it, and I don’t want to. I only want to be left with the memories of him that I have. We do want to get a memorial stone at a cemetery some time, but we don’t know when that will happen because of the cost. For now, we just have his pictures and mementos to hold on to.



The days and weeks that followed are marked by a progression of confusing emotions as I lived with my new reality. In the early days, I felt numb. Numb to my emotions and to my experience. Then came the stronger emotions. Anger. Feeling so frustrated with people who said that they understood exactly how I felt because of this or that experience that they had, when it was so different than what I was going through. Despair. I remember getting on Facebook and seeing all my friends who were pregnant and having babies, posting about feeling their baby’s movement or sharing some new picture or milestone. And I was filled was grief and bitterness. I was looking forward to feeling my baby moving any day. That should be me. I should be looking forward to finding out the gender. I should be experiencing these wonderful, joy-filled moments. But my baby… my baby was dead. It was all taken away. It just wasn’t fair. And it was tearing my heart apart. Loneliness. Feeling like so many people were avoiding talking to me because they didn’t know what to say. Or that they didn’t care. I know people cared, but I honestly felt so abandoned at times. I felt such a range of emotions that navigating my grief was a very confusing experience, even for me.



We have come a long way in the year since Matthew has passed. I have gone to counseling and attended a support group, especially in the early months. It has gotten better, but the grief never really goes away. Most days I am doing okay. Even great. Some days are intensely difficult and painful. These days come both expected – like anniversaries and milestones – and unexpected – cropping up from nowhere, but the grief just hits you.



We miss Matthew terribly. It’s so hard wondering what he would be like. Thinking of how things “should have been”. Picturing raising that little boy. All the “what ifs”. It’s a unique type of grief, grieving the loss of something that would never be.



But I do want to end on a positive note. I am so grateful to know that Matthew is mine forever. That I will see him again. And I am so grateful for my new twin babies. As overwhelming and exhausting as they can be, I love them so much. I have always wanted to be a mom, and Matthew was the first to give me that. And I am especially grateful for my husband Josh. I could never navigate life’s trials without him. He is my comfort when I am falling apart, my encouragement when I need a little boost, and my best friend.

My family is my everything, and I am so grateful they are mine.


Sunday, October 4, 2015

10 Month Birthday and Things to Look Forward To

Today marks 10 months since I delivered my sleeping angel. Matthew would be a precious 10-month-old infant, about to gain a new baby brother and sister. Now I know that if he were here today, I probably wouldn't be pregnant again yet, but this is the reality of how it is for me now.

We are so excited for the twins to arrive, and I am so grateful to be expecting them, but as I near delivery I can't help but think of sweet Matthew. When I'm holding my new babies for the first time, I feel that it will be bittersweet as I think back to the first and only time I held Matthew. How it should have been a bonding time for mother and newborn, it should have been nothing but joyful, he should have been mine to snuggle and to keep. The experience I'll have holding my new babies should have been the experience I had with Matthew. Instead all I have to hold on to is the memory of his tiny - yet perfect - body that was no longer full of life.

Don't get me wrong though. I will be so happy to be holding my two new babies. To feel their warm little bodies on my skin. To hear their newborn cries. To know that they are mine to keep and protect. There is nothing I want more. I have been so in love with them since our first ultrasound when I saw that there were two of them and when I saw their tiny heartbeats.

On a related note, something I've been interested in doing since we lost Matthew is becoming certified as a birth and bereavement doula. For those who are unfamiliar with what a doula does, it is someone who is trained to assist women primarily during childbirth and sometimes after. Someone whose only job is to be there to support the new mother. Sort of like a professional mom. :) A birth and bereavement doula provides support to mothers in any outcome and in any trimester, putting a special emphasis on bereavement training and dealing with loss or time in the NICU. Things of that nature.


There is a certification program through "Stillbirthday University" at stillbirthday.com provides that training and certification that I have been interested in, and starting this week I have the opportunity to start that training. It is an 8-week online course that we are given 12 weeks to finish, so I'll do as much as I can before the twins arrive and pace myself accordingly once they are here.

I still want to eventually become a certified lactation consultant, but this is one more thing that I've hoped to be able to do. I am very excited for this opportunity and hope that in the future I will be able to use my experience along with this training and certification to help other women.

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Finding My Path


Finding my Path - Part 1


Sometimes with journal entries and blog posts, I don't really know where to start other than right now:

These past few months have been interesting at the least.





^It has been a long recovery since the loss of Matthew





I was without work for a bit, but I'm now working 2 jobs.



We found out we're pregnant with twins!

Ashley's brother, Cody, recently got married <3



We also got to visit Indiana:

my brother Nick, standing face-to-face with a tiger

I just finished up with a job teaching summer school (Physical Science) at the same school where I was hired earlier in the year to be an after-school film teacher. Teaching at Independence High School here in Provo has helped me realize again that I really want to be able to teach and help others achieve the dreams they have. There is nothing more rewarding to me than seeing someone become who they've always dreamed about becoming.

Teaching outline for after-school film class at Independence High
I've changed majors yet again to essentially become a high school industrial tech teacher. I am still going into film, but this is just another route to doing that and gaining a teaching degree. There are thoughts that maybe I'm just trying to take the easier route to getting out of college the quickest, but I also found out that a Journalism major with a Broadcasting emphasis, was not for me. I'd be writing journalism articles for the next 3 years, all just to get practical experience in a television studio for a semester or two. That was not for me.

Inside the BYUtv Truck during a football game


With the Technology and Engineering Education degree, I'll learn CAD, a 3D Imaging program, wood and metal working, which will give me lots of prop-making and set-building experience to pull from in my years as a producer. Plus, like I said, I'll get a teaching degree as well, when I retire from the film/television industry and teach. Having made that decision, I still feel like I doubt myself and the paths I'm choosing for education.

Ethan being goofy

Having Ethan, my brother, here in Utah while pursuing an acting career, has really helped me to see that it really is okay to set aside all the things you think people want you to be in order to do whatever it is you've dreamed about doing, regardless if it makes sense or not. Part of that this summer for me has involved me really delving into the video game community as a content creator. I've been busy using my YouTube channel to upload podcasts, tutorials, or factual videos about video games.



Ashley and I realized that I needed to do something to keep my creative juices flowing. It's great for me to consistently have a creative outlet, so that I don't get bored or drained from the mundane of everyday life. I remembered my roommate pointing out to me a while back that I would want to start all these really cool film or creative projects and actually never pursue or follow-through with any of them and that's what got me going. So that motivated me to actually set out and do something.




I've been super busy and passionate about the streams, podcasts, events, and videos I put out. I've had to become super active on Twitter, which is something I was trying to avoid until I got into production on something bigger than my personal stuff, but it has brought a lot of success with it, although I hate having to feel like I have to check it to stay up-to-date on what's going on with collaborators, colleagues, and news thats happening in the areas where I'm creating and promoting content. Summary: Twitter is a necessary evil of being in the entertainment biz.

I recently did a gaming event online, where gamers got together and did activities that promoted the positive environments, experiences, and opportunities that video games can give people in their lives. I got a lot of response from several big names, some of whom I didn't think to ever hear from. It wasn't by accident that all this was happening to me as I was making sure that I had my spiritual priorities in order. I'd always known that if I put the Lord first in all that I did, especially in how I start my days (meaningful prayer, scripture study, meditation, etc.) I would be blessed in my other efforts, especially my aspirations in life. I knew that this success was a direct blessing from those improvements I was trying to make in my life. These people wouldn't have responded to some no-name content creator had it not been for some heavenly assistance, to which I am utterly grateful for.

Let me lead you now into the next part of my thoughts on where I'm going in life and these blog posts:

I'm starting to grasp the flow of my day-to-day life, how it should be and what I should be doing. I'm learning what takes priority and what amount of time I can and should dedicate to each good, better, or best aspect of my life that I'm currently focusing on. I see improvement, yet doubt, worry, depression and anxiety start to creep in and I doubt again where I am headed in life and if I've just wasted months and looking back years of my life.

TO BE CONTINUED...

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Hard Days and Gratitude

Today has been a really hard day for me. My grief over losing Matthew has been getting harder before is gets better, and it's been one of those days where everything that life demands from you just feels completely overwhelming. The thought of doing any little thing today has caused me so much stress and anxiety that I end up feeling like everything is just too much to face. And when I try to face it anyway, my body's response is to panic. To freak out or just start crying. Honestly, sometimes it feels like I'm going to go crazy. Not every day is like this, but today was one of those days.

At times like these, in particular, I just want to scream at the world to stop for a moment. Give me a day, two days, any kind of break. I just want to hit the pause button and try again tomorrow. But life demands that things keep moving at a constant, unstoppable pace.

I was talking about this today to one of my friends, who lost her baby boy just a few hours after he was born, and she sent me this picture in her texts:


It is such a great description of how it feels at times. Sometimes all I can think about is the aching in my heart and the longing to hold my baby, yet the world demands that I work to keep up with rent and that I complete homework and tests that seem like they will never end. The world keeps moving and life goes on, whether I want it to or not.

Today I did not accomplish nearly as much as I initially envisioned. Everything felt impossible to even consider getting done. But tonight, in a moment of motivation (probably from Heavenly Father, which I'm thankful for), I went for a run. I ran from our apartment to the Provo City Center Temple and back. (Okay, it was a walk/run combination. I'm not THAT good.) When I got to the temple, I just stood there for a minute and looked at it. And I was filled with gratitude.

As I looked at the temple, I was reminded of the incredible blessing in my life that is the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Because Josh and I have been sealed in the temple, Matthew is sealed to us. Because of Jesus Christ and His Atonement, we will be with our precious little boy again. I can't begin to say how grateful I am to know that. As painful as it is to not have him with me and to go through my life without knowing my baby, I know that will not be the case forever.

Recently I found this quote, and it resonated deeply with me:


It makes me want to both smile and cry. It is both painful and very precious. I want to be the one looking into my baby's eyes. But if it wasn't me he saw when he opened his eyes, I am glad to know that it was the face of Jesus.

I know that I will continue to have hard days and days in which keeping up with life feels impossible. But I also know that my Heavenly Father and His Son, Jesus Christ, know me and hurt when I'm hurting. I know that because of Christ's sacrifice I can find comfort in my darkest days, and that all will be made right when someday I am reunited with my Matthew. And I know that there is still so much joy to come in my life, even if it doesn't always feel like it now.

And I am grateful.


~ Ashley