Once we knew Eliza's heart had stopped beating, my cerclage needed to come out immediately and I had the option of getting induced right away following that. I was sent to the labor & delivery ward of the hospital right then and there. I walked to elevator of methodist and pressed the button to the third floor. I walked through the halls, hearing the beautiful sound of newborn babes crying. I can see people with flowers, gifts, balloons, to celebrate new life. I've been there myself, I know how amazing it is. I know what a joyous time it is. Walking through the halls, that I walked through with my own two newborn's.
The smell of the hospital soap brings memories to me, of the 2 best days of my entire life. The days that my children came into this world.
The maternity ward is all being remodeled, so I found myself wandering the halls, feeling as lost on the outside as I was on the inside.
I made it to the main nurses station, they looked at me questioningly. I chocked back tears and barely let out my name, they knew right where to bring me. I was brought to triage and into a room obviously designed for laboring mothers. There was calming music playing and the 2 standard monitors, 1 for contractions and 1 for babies heartbeat.
This is where things get a little hectic. I have one nurse checking me in and taking vitals and such, and another nurse comes in and starts talking about bereavement grief, my other children, what I want to happen during birth, etc. I am on the phone with Travis making sure that he can find me, gets the stuff that we need, gets the minivan that I drove to the hospital home, and gets Amara picked up from preschool. Shortly after, Travis arrives and then the anesthesiologist comes in to chat with me also about what I've had to eat. They needed to place an epidural for the cerclage removal. I held everything together to get checked in.
Come 12:40pm, it was time for me to get walked into the operating room for the cerclage removal. I walk in and it is freezing, absolutely frigid. I was shaking, partly from not eating, my nerves. I sit down and they expose my backside, dousing it with cold iodine. I have to lean into the nurses, curled over my belly so the anesthesiologist has a good view of my spine. The nurse takes my hand, i'm not sure if its the warmth of her hand or the way that she held me so tight, but the tears flowed down my face onto the OR floor. I then lay down and wait for my legs to tingle. There is a giant bright light in the OR that the physician carefully places. I stared into this big bright light which has a reflection thinking about how for so many women, they are able to see their babies brought into this world this way, via the reflection in the surgical light. While maybe not the way they initially wanted, their baby is brought into this world here, in the space that I was currently occupying. I tried to focus on something else while the procedure took place.
Somewhere around 1:30, I was brought into my labor room where Travis was waiting. Our nurse, Adriene started to go through our paperwork and start the induction. They started with one dose of Cyotec at 2:30. I felt a few cramps but nothing much, the plan was to wait 4 hours, check progress and place another dose of Cyotec again. From 2:30-6:30, we had lots of paperwork to fill out, a certificate of stillbirth, choose a funeral home for cremation, and lots of other signatures. To be honest, when we were left alone, Travis and I would look at each other and say "now what?" we didn't know what to do, and doing anything like watching tv just seemed so mundane in light of what was happening. The minutes dragged on, and at one point, I just watched the secondhand move on the clock around in a circle hoping to zone out into somewhere else, trying to focus on something. I counted seconds.
Somehow time moved and it was 6:30, time for a progress check. I was 1cm dilated, but the cervix had been softened which was good. I was given dose 2 of the Cyotec at about 6:45, I had some minor cramping immediately and 15 minutes later, I felt a gush below as my water broke.
From 7-8 the cramping intensified, and I was miserable. Contractions were coming on full force and I asked for the epidural. Having no experience with the epidural before, I wasn't sure how much it would help. 10 minutes passed once it started and the contractions were still painful. I'm pretty sure I had zero relief in my entire right side and only somewhat so on the left so I was supposed to lay on my right side. I laid there for an hour, wincing, moaning and just not sure how to keep going. I was in so much pain. I gripped onto the bed handle bar, hoping for some strength to get through.
Right after 9, I could barely breathe through the contractions anymore. I started shaking, uncontrollably from my bottom half down. I felt pressure and paged the nurse, 2 nurses came in and I started to feel pressure. One nurse asked the other about my shaking, the other one assured her it was a normal response to intense pain. They were paged the Doctor, but the pressure just took off and I had to push right away. Right there on the bed, at 9:19 in one big push, out came Eliza, the umbilical cord and placenta and the sac.
I felt immediate physical relief. A big sigh of relief came over my body. I laid back, looked up and relished the feeling of release of the pain. I could take a few breaths of air.
But then I looked down. There between my legs, right on my bed was our baby, and her sac and everything. They had wrapped everything up in a blanket and handed her to me.
Albeit her tiny size, she was perfect. I mean perfect. They encouraged me to touch her, feel her, and take it all in. Travis was the first to touch her, we started with just barely, barely grazing her skin, afraid of what would happen. I was holding her, and once I was able to touch and feel her skin, I lost it. This was not real, this couldn't actually be happening. I had, somewhat, held it together until this point. But this was uncomprehendable, that probably isn't even a word. But then again, there are no words in the dictionary that can adequately explain my feeling then and there. I got over my fear of touching her, and raised her to my face to feel her skin against mine. She was warm, and her skin was shiny, a purplish reddish color. I looked at her, and every single part of her. She has 10 fingers, and 10 toes and on each one a itty bitty finger/toenail. She had every bone that she was supposed to have and you could easily feel each and every single one of them. The strong femur bones and leg bones. The bones in the arms. When I placed her on her stomach, curled over, you could feel the vertebre of her spine all the way down to her tailbone. I lightly ran by finger across them from top to bottom. When I felt her head, I could feel the bones surrounding the jaw. The bone in her nose. Looking down on her head, I thought about the brain inside that was all formed, a functioning working brain. The bones surrounding which were much softer but still easily distinguished.
Perhaps the most astounding thing though, was her mouth. She had deep colored lips, and when tilted a certain way, you could see her tongue inside, lifted up to the roof of her mouth. The tongue that was supposed to aide in feeding and nourishing her once she was outside of the womb.
Her ears were symmetrical, and perfectly shaped, soft cartilage that was easily bendable. Her eyes were fused shut, perhaps one of the more difficult things, not ever being able to see what her eyes looked like. I touched every single part of her, and constantly brought her to to my face to feel against my cheek just like I had snuggled with both Amara & Callen. I wanted to feel it all and ingrain it all into my memory. Her complete and perfect body. Eliza. Eliza. Eliza. I wanted to breathe it all in.
Travis said we should call to let everybody know. So he did that. We had her 3 grandparents and Amara come to the hospital. It was late at night, nearly 10:15. Thankfully uncle Jordan was able to come stay with Callen while he slept. Close to 10:30, everyone was there and a photographer from Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep, a non profit organization that takes professional photos for those that have lost a baby.
I laid in the bed, still attached to tons of wires and monitors as they all came in. Amara came over right away and curiously looked at her baby sister who she had so much love for. You could tell that it was a lot, a LOT to take in. She had, and still has so many questions that I will answer to the best of my knowledge. She was trying to understand how she had a sister, that was born in the hospital, that was also in heaven, that wasn't going to come home to live with us, that everyone was sad and was crying yet she could actually see her. Her tiny 10 ounce body, that you could see. The photographer, who was amazingly sensitive and able to be in the room with us, capturing these special moments we had with her, was also wonderful with Amara making her feel comfortable and helpful in her big sister role.
This was a lot for anyone to take in, seriously. But for only being 4 1/2, Amara was great, she took Eliza's belongings and assured her that she would take good care of them. My nurses came in and brought Amara a blanket to take home that was made for siblings who have lost their baby sister or brother.
Amara kept looking at Eliza and saying she is so beautiful, and so tiny. She wasn't able to touch her, you could tell that she was a little scared of that, that it was just too much, but she was able to get real close and look at her and tell her that she loved her. She also mentioned something about being a fairy up in heaven with God.
I was so proud of Amara for all that she was able to do in that room, I am really grateful that she was able to come and begin to process of trying to understand this all. She still has tons of questions, and we continue to do our best to answer them.
I watched as Eliza was held by each of her grandparents, who have a huge amount of love for her, and I know will continue to love her just as we do. We spent an hour together, all loving Eliza before they left to go home.
Then the nurse came in to take Eliza away so they could get a sample tissue, this took some time.
Before long it was 1:00 or so maybe later, Travis, myself and Eliza were in the hospital room alone. The nurse came in and we gave Eliza a bath, very gently. Right away wrapped her into a towel.
We crawled into bed about 1:30, Travis on a cot. Myself in my hospital bed. Eliza laid with me in bed, by now her skin was ice cold. I wanted her to be warm, I had her pressed against my body hoping my body heat could warm hers up. I fell asleep feeling her tiny 10 oz as close to me as I possibly could get.
Being in the hospital, just as I had fallen asleep, it was time for the nurse to come in and take vitals.
Soon it was 6am tuesday morning and I was wide awake. Well wide awake yet completely exhausted. I was hungry, but everything that I ate, I couldn't finish. I had no coffee. I couldn't do. anything. It all just seemed to mundane, and I couldn't get my mind focused long enough to do anything anyways. So I paced around the room. Near 8:30 the hospital chaplain came in. At about 9:00, Travis, me, her and Eliza stood in a circle and she prayed for Eliza. She had a giant sea shell and we blessed Eliza. Her words were so beautiful and meant so much to me. I wish I had a way of pausing time and remembering everything that happened in those 5 minutes.
The nurse came in and we started the process of being discharged, waiting for lab to come take more blood from me. Final papers. Calling the funeral home to arrange for the cremation We started gathering our things and packing up. For the first time, I felt like I had something to do. I wanted everything that Eliza had touched. I packed it all up. Once we had everything done and ready to go, we just sat there. Waiting for the last step which was to be okayed to leave by a Doctor. So we sat on a bench. Travis and I with Eliza between us. She was in a wicker basket. I touched her. I hummed lullabies. I told her I loved her more times then I can count. I held her hand in mine and wished it to be big enough and be able to walk and hold her hand like I hold her brother and sisters. I just wanted to hold her hand, I wanted to keep her safe.
The absolute last step in the discharge process came, the doctor came in, apologized to us and left. The nurse came in and said she would take Eliza into another room while we gathered our things and left the hospital. Obviously I knew she wasn't going home with us, obviously I knew it would be immensely difficult to hand her over. But this still felt like getting smacked in the face, and hard. It felt impossible.
So we sat with her for our final moments with our sweet girl. We poured out our love to her. Literally. Our tears drenched her body.
I don't know how we handed her over to the nurse, I really don't. I do know that once the nurse had left with her, I grabbed my things and bolted for the door to get out of there. I couldn't look at the bed where she came into the world, and the chair where we had held her and loved her. All that we did, everything that we did, was because of our great love for her.
Our Child. Eliza. An Angel.