Unexpected Loss: Part 1
The living room is so quiet this morning. It’s early. The dogs are lounging on the couch snoozing, and I just heard my husband turn on the shower upstairs. I’ve been up for a few hours. The anticipation of seeing you today has me overwhelmed with excitement and joy. I sit here with this breast-pump- not a pleasant feeling I might add- but so grateful that even through all of my complications this week, my milk finally came in.
I finish up, label the milk and pack the small cooler to bring to the NICU this morning, just for you. My phone rings. And from that moment I knew my world was crashing down.
We are met at the entrance of the hospital and escorted down the hallways. We are told very little, but that you have stopped breathing. The walk to where you are seems like a year journey to find you. As we turn the corner, I hear myself screaming. There is an entire team around you. My knees give way. You are gone. Why have you left me?
Loss isn’t a part of life that anyone can escape. But depending on the type of loss- really determines the path and journey of grieving through it. Unexpected loss is by definition- unexpected. It comes like a thief in the night and steals a version of your future, every memory and moment you would have had.
The details of Declan’s death are a part of a story I cannot yet share. Nor do I know if it’s a part of a story I ever intend to share. But my son died unexpectedly. Every moment of our future is forever changed. While my son, has no future.
The best gift during an unexpected loss- is shock. I know this may sound strange, but I can assure you, as my body and my mind went into a state of shock- I was protected from completely losing myself. Shock varies in degrees. The day of Declan’s death, it provided an indescribable strength. While in the moment I felt everything but strong, I see now just how much strength that day required. There were many things I had to do during the hours after my son’s death that I’m truly not sure I could have handled without being in a state of shock:
- My husband and I were allowed to hold our son, after he had left this world. We only had the gift to hold him twice. The night before he died, and then in the hours after he had gone.
- Every bit of paperwork had to be completed before the Coroner could take him. It is the hardest thing to sign “Mother” as relationship to the deceased, when you’ve only had your son for a brief time.
- We received a bag of keepsakes. Footprints, handprints, a lock of hair. While I cherish these now, in the moment all I wanted was my son- not the evidence of his life.
- I received a Teddy Bear- a part of the “Empty Arms” initiative.
- We had to drive back home- without our boy, knowing he would never sit in the car seat ready for him in the back.
The harsh truth is- in the midst of your worse nightmare, life goes on. There are things you must do, paperwork you must sign. I view shock as a gift. A way to departmentalize during the hardest most trying moments of your life. And just as shock begins to wear off over time, your mind and soul are then at a place to begin processing the heartache that as taken place.








