The Unassisted
Miscarriage of Kesi
In Loving
Memory
Of
Kesi
Chaikin Weiss
Born at 13
weeks gestation Dec 30th 2002
Little
Footprints
by Dorothy Ferguson
How very
softly
You tiptoed into my world
Almost silently
Only a moment you stayed
But what an imprint
Your footsteps have left
Upon my heart
Two days ago I took Micah
to see The Two Towers. While there I started bleeding again. I didn't
think a lot of it because it was light. Then it got to be a bit heavier.
When we came home we asked Dad to come over and watch the kids for us
so we could go to the hospital. He said no, but he was going to let
us borrow the car, then we were going to take the kids to Laura's house
and go. But when Jonathan got back with the car it wouldn't start, so
we called dad back again and he came over and we took the van to the
hospital. The doctor looked at my cervix and it was still closed, but
I was bleeding. They did an ultrasound, Jonathan was there, the technician
wouldn't let me se the screen but Jonathan saw it. She measured what
looked like a mall sack but there was nothing inside it. The doctor
said it looked like I was only 3 weeks pregnant, but I knew I was 13
weeks. I don't know what they thought they saw on the ultra sound but
it wasn't my sac, which was much larger. I have lost all faith in ultrasounds;
I will never have another one. Jonathan said there was just masses of
stuff and small sacs of fluid. The doctor sent me home and told me I
would have a heavy period and then it would be over. He encouraged me
to go see my OB. He said that it was part of Life, and nature did things
sometimes. He told me there was no reason to believe I was the problem.
They still sent me home with information on pregnancy, in case I was
only three weeks. He said it might still be an ectopic, but I knew better.
The nurse who discharged me didn’t understand why I said I was
losing the baby.
When we got to the car Jonathan
was holding his chest, his Reflux was bothering him. He said it was
proof that it was emotionally induced. We went by my mothers house on
the way home and asked her for medicine for Jonathan’s GERD. We
told her we were losing the baby, she asked me if I wanted to stay there,
but I wanted to get home to my babies.
The next day we told the
kids there wasn't going to be a baby, that our baby went home to live
with Jesus. They seemed a little sad but I don't think it was real to
them yet. They are all so young. Micah is nine, Judith is three, and
Itzhak is one.
On Dec 29th I stared having
contractions, they were little hard to relax through but I did OK. We
put up the air mattress and slept in the living room, the contractions
kept us up till about three-AM. Then I slept until about 2 p.m. the
next day.
On the 30th, the contractions
started again as I woke up. They woke me up actually. Around 5 p.m.
the contractions started getting harder and I thought they were probably
going to get worse so Jonathan took the kids to Lori's house. She was
crying when he got there. She had a miscarriage a few years ago, she
was so sad for us. When he was gone I talked to Trish and she helped
me relax through my contractions over the phone, she was very loving
and kind to me. She told me she loved me and would pray for me, I know
she did.
By the time Jonathan got
back it was harder to relax so we went down onto the mattress on the
floor and watched the third Indiana Jones movie. We had to pause and
stop it so much it wasn't really worth trying to watch. After awhile
I was crying "No" every-time I had a contraction. I know I
was swearing too. I just didn't want to let go of my baby. I know I
was fighting the contractions and that's why they hurt so badly. Jonathan
was so wonderful, he kept getting me water and rubbing my back and pushing
on my lower back. I kept thinking it would all stop and that the baby
would be OK, even though I knew it was impossible, I kept picturing
a tiny live baby coming from my womb and then dying in my hands, I couldn't
bear the thought. What if the baby is deformed ? I had the worst thoughts.
The enemy was having a field day in my head, and I couldn't voice any
of it. I just didn’t want it all to be happening.
Then he began to kiss me.
He kissed me deep enough to arouse me; it made the pain so much less.
It was wonderful. It helped center me. Now I know why some couples choose
to make love during labor. If I hadn't been bleeding I would've liked
to. We lied on the floor and kissed for awhile. He was caressing me
and loving me, I’ll never forget that. I thought maybe he wouldn’t
want to touch me any more because I was losing his baby, but he did,
does.
I called Alice my midwife;
she was so encouraging and loving to me. She encouraged me by telling
me that my body could do this and I didn't need any doctor to clean
me out. She said she had seen my body working and she knew it knew what
to do. She told me she would be praying for me and sending her prayers
and thoughts and told me to stay in the light.
We went into the bathroom
and I sat on the toilet for a while contracting and crying, it was getting
extremely difficult by this point. I was so terribly sad I couldn't
bear the thought of not having a live baby. I told Jonathan I didn't
want to look at anything because I could feel huge clots and things
coming out of my body. Every contraction I screamed "No" and
said “I cant do it.” Jonathan kissed me and told me he loved
me and I could do it. He said he was there for me and offered to put
me in the bath tub. I didn't want to lose the baby in the tub so I took
a shower instead.
The hot water felt so good
on me but I couldn't stand during the contractions anymore, so I lay
down in the tub and let the water beat on my belly. Jonathan came and
put a hot towel behind my back for me. He kept grabbing at his chest
when I cried. He was so in tune to my pain that his reflux was hurting
him, but he never complained one time. He cried with me. I was just
lying there crying about my baby. I just couldn't imagine not holding
her ever in my hands.
Jonathan asked me if I wanted
him to sing to me. I said yes, but I couldn't decide what to have him
sing. He started singing "Lu Lu Lu" a Danny Kaye song from
"The court Jester". He sings this to the kids when he tucks
them in. I felt like he was singing to the baby, and I was able to quietly
say goodbye to the baby, and then I was ready to let her go.
I stayed in the shower like
that until the water went cold and then I got out. Jonathan helped me
squat down in the hallway outside the bathroom. I started pushing and
I could feel pieces of my placenta coming out. I was crying and so sad
and felt so alone and like this was the most tragic thing that ever
happened to us. Then I felt this wave of calm come over me and I knew
in my heart that my friend Denise and her baby were OK. I knew that
she had been in labor a few days earlier but I hadn't heard anything
yet. I said to Jonathan "I hope Denise is having an easier time
than I am”, and we began to pray. We thanked Jesus for our baby
who brought us so much joy in the short time we had her. We thanked
Jesus that a new life was coming into the world, and for Denise and
David’s miracle baby. We asked Jesus to allow us to use this experience
to minister to someone else We want Him to use us that way. I spoke
to her husband the day after all this and found out that the doctors
were taking her baby via C-section at this exact time. I have a peace
about the loss of Kesi, by knowing Dominic came at the same time, I
was losing her.
We ended up back on the toilet,
Pieces would come out and plop in the water and then Jonathan would
flush. I was terrified we were flushing the baby, but I know it was
for the best, it hurt so bad to sit there, so much pressure on my perineum,
that we went back into the living room on the air mattress. The TV was
still on and I got really mad at Jonathan for not turning it off and
snapped at him. The sound wasn't even on and I was so mad. I wasn't
really mad at him, but I didn't know that at the time. He didn't mind
me yelling at him, he just turned it off and told me I was important
to him.
All of a sudden it was so
much easier to deal with. The pain had lessoned. I got in the shower
and pushed more pieces of the placenta out, then the pain come back,
I kept trying to clean myself, but there was blood all over me, I could
see it running down my legs into the water and down the drain. I was
afraid I would hemorrhage, but then it slowed down to a manageable level.
I cried and cried.
I went back into the living
room and was surprised there was more to push out. The pieces of my
placenta were all so big; each one was 3 or 4 inches. The 27 mm estimate
from the hospital was way off! I passed a large piece of placenta and
Jonathan and I looked at it really close. We could see all the veins
that pick up the blood and give it to the baby. We saw where the cord
connected. That made me feel better, but I had never seen a "baby"
and was afraid there never was one, but I know there was after seeing
that. I feel so strongly it was a girl.
We called Alice later and
told her it was all over, she said "Don't you feel so strong, what
a strong woman you are to do this on your own" I didn't feel that
at the time but I do now. It was the hardest thing I have ever done.
I never once considered going to the hospital. I knew they would turn
my baby's death into a "medical" event. It didn't have to
be that. I didn’t want anyone to take my baby Even though it was
so much more painful then any of my live births, I am glad I did it
at home with only my husband. It was peaceful and I was allowed to go
through everything myself. I was able to come to acceptance on my own
and let my baby go when I was ready. The Lord worked in us both that
day, I feel closer to my husband because of this experience. I think
the Lord was able to work in me more because I was home and open to
Him. We prayed through a lot of the labor and delivery.
A few days after Jonathan
took me out to Chinese food, and while were in the car he suddenly said
"The next one we are going to do alone" He told me he could
already feel the baby in his hands. That meant so much to me to hear
because the one feeling I can't shake since my loss, is my hands feel
empty.
The after birth pains are
severe, it's hard to function. I wish I could just curl up in bed, but
when I am there I cannot sleep. I had dreams about the baby the night
after the miscarriage. Her eyes were bleeding tears. I woke up and prayed
to the Lord to comfort me and He did. I was glad for my husbands warm
body to curl up with. He lay with me and kissed me and caressed me the
night after our loss and it was the most comforting thing of all. I
love him so dearly. I keep apologizing to him about the baby. I feel
like I promised him and the family something I couldn't give.
I won’t take for granted
that will be another pregnancy, but I pray there will be. I pray we
have an unassisted home-birth and my husband can feel the baby in his
hands for real. I wish I were still pregnant now. I can't believe I
am not pregnant any more. I can't believe the baby will never come.
I will never hold her, or nurse her, she will never tell me she loves
me, she will never be hungry or full, or have a birthday, or know her
siblings love. When people ask me how many children I have what will
I say? I have four children, four, but one is missing. I want to hold
my baby, but my hands are empty.
A little after 9 p.m. Jonathan
had to go get the kids. I tried to clean off in the shower, but when
I got out there was more blood before I could clean off, I gave up after
awhile.
I think the Lord whispered
in Izzy's ear the next day, because he nursed all day long and he never
does that. I was glad for it. It helped me to heal, physically and emotionally.
I am surprised that I have all the physical symptoms of just having
a baby, but there is no baby.
A few days later Micah made
me a baby out of K'nex. I put it into a box with Kesi's things. Judith
told me she would put on wings and go through the roof into heaven and
bring the baby back. It made us all cry. I love my children so much!
What a blessing to me. I could not get through this without them.
My Mom is going to buy a
miniature orange tree that we will plant in a large pot over a piece
of the placenta I kept. Then when we move I can take it with me. I would
hate to leave it behind. I am also going to make a necklace with the
baby's name her birthstones in it. I want a funeral for my daughter.
I want everyone to know she was alive and loved. I want to say I have
four children. I know she is in heaven with my Lord Jesus, and He loves
her. I look forward to meeting her in the Kingdom one day.
Lolo