I’ve joined a few facebook Mom’s groups. They were
especially helpful when I was too tired to think for myself. There were
questions I had in the moment that needed to be answered right now. I would
have called and asked my mom but it seems I remember more about my mom’s
pregnancies than she does these days. After the seizure episodes, diagnosis and
medication, she’s forgotten a lot of things.
Since there’s always new Moms on the group a repeat question
comes up, whenever a Mom is about to be left alone with her twins for the first
time. That moment leaves most with anxiety and many with outright panic. I too
remember too well the “go home” date on my hospital board being repeatedly
changed to the following date. I was admitted for a C-section on a Tuesday and
released the following Monday. I was coached through the hospital birth by a
good friend, Maureen, who had been my prayer partner and companion on a
spiritual journey for a couple years prior to my marriage. She kept tabs on the
babies along with my sister Kim, while I spent time in surgery and the recovery
room.
I spent a week in the hospital while my babies stayed in the
special care nursery. We stayed at the hospital so long because of me not
because of their pre-maturity. First, there was the C-section, then the huge
blood loss. Then there was the HELLP syndrome (skyrocketing high blood pressure) to deal with. I was on Mg
for about a week. Then there was complete constipation induced by the pain meds
which left me in horrendous pain for 3 days. I hadn’t eaten for 2 days and was
trying to function, while on Mg and while in horrendous pain. I didn’t succeed
in feeding my babies every 3 hours and a few nurses were cross with me for not
keeping up. I was easily confused by the bad charting of the feedings and mostly felt lost and neglected by the staff.
Sunday night or Monday night I knew I was being discharged
the next day. I was quite frightened inside but too sick to make much of a fuss
about it. A few friends and relatives were lined up to come over and help
arrange the house and bring food. One friend spent the night with me, for the
first night. After that, things went silent at my house. I slept in the couch
and put the twins in the crib my friend donated to me. I got up to breast feed,
then laid back down to rest. Everything was quite a blur. I didn’t even care
that the crib still had the unwashed sheet that came with it from my friend’s
storage unit. I had two preemie outfits on the babies and they wore them
constantly. I didn’t give them baths. I had tunnel vision toward fulfilling
absolute needs. Baths were unnecessary because unbathed babies don’t die. Unfed
babies die.
After the first day of stop-ins and moving home from the
hospital, things fell silent till the first weekend. The 4 hour feeding rotation
stretched on and on broken only by the heavy truck movement outside in the
morning and the hour or two in the evening when people stopped by here and
there, after work. There was a lot of alone time. The house seemed to go
completely silent. My computer didn’t work, so there was no distraction from
the large silence. But with the silence came a song of comfort. It was an old
hymn we used to sing at church, “God will take care of you. Through every day, ‘or
all the way. He will take care of you. God will take care of you.” If it were
not a song that came from the Spirit and spoke to the depths of my soul, it would
have been the words of a trite excuse, from some stingy soul, for withholding a
gift that would have ministered to a desperate need.