Monday 23 December 2019

That Unsettling Feeling

Children, Siblings, Brother, Sister, Love, Child

I love my sister. She may not be here physically, but she is always will me spiritually and I pray for her and I think about her everyday. I have been wanting a sister for a long time. My prayers are being answered, just not in the way that I expected or even wanted to expect. I know that my sister isn't going to have a perfect physical body but I know that she is going to have a flawless and whole body in heaven and that she will be waiting there for us. And I know that her spiritual body is and will be very beautiful. Here is my version of the story:

Today I was very excited. I was going to BYU with my family! We were going to eat chocolate-covered cinnamon bears and visit the bookstore. I hopped into the car with my family and we drove to the campus. After that, we were going to get an ultrasound for mom. Me and my siblings were really hoping for a little sister. 

Mom had some classes she had to go to. We waved to her goodbye and she went on her way. You can't forget the walk all the way to the building. Dad, my brothers, and I did all kinds of things like rolling down the huge slope and getting some snacks (remember the chocolate-covered cinnamon bears?). We went to the bookstore and to the art gallery.

It took a while but we finally got together with mom again. We drove to the place where we would get the ultrasound. When we got word that we were having a sister I was very excited. Though, I didn't feel the same excitement that I did for the last baby.

Something didn't feel right.

Sure enough, there was something that the ultrasound guy didn't recognise. He told my parents to get another ultrasound from someone with more experience. I looked at one of Abby's pics and saw that there was something probably blocking her face. Or was that just my imagination? 




I tried not to be too worried and told myself that it was going to be okay. I just hoped that my mom and the baby was going to be okay. 

Later, I got news that Abby had a syndrome. My mom said that it was anencephaly. Anencephaly. Anecepyhaly. That sounded familiar. It was in my mom's Neurobiology book! I was not expecting this! My sister had a syndrome that my mom was studying in Neurobiology! 

Brain, Anatomy, Human, Science, Health, Medical, Organ

I was sad as I tried to hammer the reality into my head. I was finally getting a sister and she was going to be deformed! I knew that I was going to find peace eventually. I knew that God was willing to help me in my sorrows. And most importantly, I knew that Abigail and I would be together for all eternity.

Sunday 22 December 2019

Abigail's Stocking


This blog is called Abigail's Stocking, even though we'll be sharing our journey throughout the seasons. During my long commute to campus at BYU, I had a lot of time to think. I grieved for the life I thought Abigail should have, and I grieved for my own lost moments with her, from talking to her about boys to teaching her to dance, to sending her off on a mission and crying at her wedding. My grief was intense, and I prayed in between the tears. I felt like this idea was given to me as a prompting from the Holy Spirit, and as a partial answer to my grief.

Abigail's Stocking.

Yes, we would make her a stocking. She was part of the family, after all. But what would we put inside it? We would have to make gifts in her honor, or we could make promises about how we would honor her life with ours.

Yes! This would be a way to help the whole family heal, and a way for us to remember her and our family goal of meeting up at that big reunion in heaven someday. It felt so right. The more I thought about it, the more I loved the idea. I shared it with my husband and he agreed it would be a good thing.

Tonight is the last Sunday before Christmas, and we chose tonight to write in the Christmas journal that lives in Abigail's stocking. We started our entries with, "Dear Abigail," and ended with our signature with love. Each person thought of something unique to give to Abigail. Some thought of doing service in her name, or mentioning her in their prayers every day. Some chose to promise to visit her grave every month this year. I promised her the gift of life, for as long as she keeps it, and I told her I am writing a song for her. Our youngest, who is three, told her that this year he would read her the book, The Diggingest Dog. Every gift came from the purity of our hearts, and each one was signed with love.

Already I have seen the blessing of this new tradition. We talked about how even though we can't see Abigail, or Heavenly Father or Mother, or Jesus, we know they are real. We can picture them as we pray and as we live our lives in honor of them. Abigail has a real physical body. We believe God the Father and Jesus Christ do, as well. And while Abigail will be separated from this broken body in the next few months, she will be resurrected with the rest of us, following in Christ's footsteps. Her body will be perfect and we will see her face at last. That will be my new favorite day.


Sharing and Healing

In our first post, just after we found out about Abigail's prognosis, I mentioned that we weren't telling everybody yet. I wanted to share the news in person with my pregnant sister, and at first we thought we weren't going to see her until after Christmas. We did share the news with local family on my husband's side, and with our ward, or church congregation, via our bishop. We told him he could tell anybody he felt inspired to tell, so I got a wonderful visit from the Relief Society presidency. Those four ladies just listened and shared with me, and that buoyed me up. I received a special gift from my Aunt Karen that I will always cherish. Two poems, one she wrote, and one that was written on her own baby's funeral program. And a figurine of a baby wrapped in angel's wings. I cried when I held it. And then I made this picture of it:


Our amazing neighbors, who are familiar with this type of loss, brought us the Christmas gift of a book, Tear Soup. This was a wonderful way to share with our kids about grief and loss. Like the parables of Jesus, it can be read at many different levels, with children understanding just what they need to and adults understanding a little more.
Goodreads

Mostly, we coped with our fears and sorrows in the temple. Our goal was to go once a week, and we've done that with the exception of finals week. The last day of class for me was December 12, 2019.

December 13th was my appointment with Maternal Fetal Medicine, where we found out about Abigail's ABS.

December 14th: Today we had just the family adventure I'd been craving! Thanks to friends and neighbors for the tree tag and helping us scout out good spots for trees. We only got stuck in the snow once and teamwork got us out of that fix. We passed someone on the road with a tree up top and asked him where he'd gotten it. That led us to the right area, but it still took a lot of walking to find the right tree. Ben is feeling under the weather and Corbin doesn't tolerate the cold very well yet, so I took those two back to the car to warm up and then we waited for our returning champions and prayed. Prayer works!! They came back with a beautiful tree!







Then we watched Frozen in the living room by a nice fire and sipped hot cocoa as we recovered from our adventure.

December 16th, I took my Neurobiology final early in the morning. I got an A- for the semester. I took a long nap and then finished sewing the stockings I had been making all month for the family:



December 17th, I made myself study for my Chemistry 105 final, but it was not nearly enough and I knew that.

December 18th, I took the final in six hours and passed Chemistry 105 with a C. Under the circumstances, I don't think I could have done better.

The plan was to tell my pregnant sister about Abigail on December 20th, in person. It didn't happen exactly that way. We weren't sure she was going to be able to make it for her planned trip to SLC Temple, so we ended up asking for a video call and telling her that way. There were lots of tears. I may have cried more telling her than I did telling anyone else. She asked the same thing I had asked when I first learned. "So is there no hope?" I think it's human nature when we receive bad news to hold onto any possible silver linings. It's very hard when those silver linings get thinner and thinner on the edges of the storm clouds, and yet the thinnest silver linings are also the brightest and sharpest in contrast.

Once she knew, I told the rest of my siblings and my grandma. Each conversation was both difficult and relieving, just to have the secret out. We told them we had bought a cemetery plot for Abigail that afternoon and that they were welcome to come to a graveside service for her, though we understood if they couldn't since it would have to be a last-minute invitation. We have no idea when she will arrive, so that makes planning a funeral difficult, but we wanted everyone in the family to know they were invited to this spot. It's right by a tree and the nearest grave is another baby who left too soon. Eventually, this area will fill up, but for now it is Abigail's little spot.




One of the beautiful things I've been able to do is to buy Abigail a dress. It may be the only thing she ever wears, but at least it's something. Gift giving is definitely one of my love languages, and it's hard for me to be having my first girl and not buying a hundred dresses for her. But if she could only wear one dress, this is the one I would choose for her.



When five-year-old Daniel saw it, he said it was for ballet and asked if Abigail would be going to ballet with me. I told him she probably wouldn't stay very long and that she had to get back to heaven. He said that he hoped she would stay a little while and go to ballet with me. I cried after he left the room. The ballet slipper necklace will be our mother-daughter matching thing. One necklace for her and one for me. I've already started wearing mine, and it makes me feel even more bonded to her. My daughter is real, she is alive, and she matters. Long after other people forget she ever existed, she will still be in my heart, as alive as ever.

My sister ended up talking with her husband and making the trip work! She and my mom came together for a visit. It was so nice that we had already shared the news about Abigail with both of them, so our visit didn't have to be entirely about that. The plan was to go to the Salt Lake City Temple, where my sister was sealed 13 years ago, before it closes next week for years of renovations. So on December 21, 2019, we went to the Salt Lake Temple, our two pregnant bellies making everybody nervous. We spent about 9 hours in the temple, doing multiple ordinances for the same few family names they had brought.

It was my first time in the Salt Lake Temple for anything since Shayna's wedding. And it was the first time I had done every ordinance from baptism to sealings in one day. The crowds were inspiring, but it meant long waits at times and we didn't finish sealings until nearly 8pm. I'm grateful for the chance to see a live endowment session and to spend so much time in the Lord's holy house when I need all the holiness I can get in my heart.




I'm also very thankful for my family.

My mother gave me a beautiful Christmas gift from her heart. She painted Abigail from a picture of me when I was a little girl. We won't know what her spirit's face looks like until heaven, but it's fun to imagine which features she might have...



My sister brought an important and practical gift, a breast pump. This will be the first time I won't be able to nurse my baby. The day I realized that, I cried so much. I will have all this love, and all this milk--just a representation of that love--with nowhere to go. I'm so grateful for this gift, which will make it possible for me to, possibly, share what I have with others. Maybe it won't all have to be lost.

Thanks to those who responded to Bill's facebook post today about Abigail. We still have a long road ahead of us in being Abigail's parents, but sharing it makes the road less lonely.

The Journey to the Fire - Discovering Abigail's Diagnosis

I think the hardest thing is seeing online yard sale posts for baby swings, carseats, and cribs, things that just a month ago I was in the market for. At my appointment today (December 13, 2019), I learned that Abigail's specific condition means she will likely be stillborn, though it's not possible to predict for certain. Any dreams I had of laying her in her bassinet are fading. We probably won't get to meet her in this life. The only good news today was that her heart is still going strong and steady. Her heartbeat is perfect. I'm not ready to walk through this fire, so I'm glad she's not ready either. We will just stay like this for a while, connected and in love. 💔

When I came home, this note was tucked inside my door. Not everyone knows about Abigail yet, so I'm not sure if the writer of this note knows of our sorrows or not, but since we've moved to this small town in Utah, we have been visited by so much genuine Christian charity. It has definitely made a big difference in how supported we have felt through this journey so far.


The Maternal Fetal Medicine specialist I saw spent nearly two hours with me under ultrasound. We took one break in the middle so I could get up and walk around for a bit. For the doctor it was an intellectual challenge to decipher the ultrasound images to find exactly what we were dealing with. For me, it was an emotional challenge to lie there and process what I was understanding from our conversation. The doctor was pleasantly surprised when I asked about Abigail's meninges, the covering membranes between the brain and skull in a normal healthy person, and when she found out I had been taking Neurobiology, she was kind enough to talk to me as if I were capable of understanding what she was seeing. This was nice. Even though a fair bit of the vocabulary she used was still over my head, I feel I was able to get a much clearer picture of what is going on in my womb with my precious sweetheart baby.

Remember how I had said that Abigail's body was utterly perfect except for her head? Today we found out that it's not the case. Abigail doesn't have classic anencephaly, which is a neural tube defect where the tube doesn't close all the way at the top and the skull and brain don't form correctly. Instead, something went wrong quite randomly in the earliest days of pregnancy. The condition is called ABS, or amniotic band syndrome. The amniotic membranes around the baby rupture for some unknown cause, and the resulting bands of amnion can wrap around the baby's body, fusing with her skin, and, most importantly, interrupting development. This is what caused her anencephaly/acrania.

We have received much emotional support from an anencephaly support group on facebook for parents and grandparents dealing with the grief and joy of carrying a child to term after this diagnosis. We have so much in common with them because of Abigail's facial and cranial deformities and the reality we face of her impending death. But it didn't take me long at all to realize that most of the other parents on the anencephaly page were giving birth to babies with nearly normal faces, the only disruption being the back and top of the skull which were usually covered quickly by a baby cap after delivery. These babies look so sweet and, as I said, nearly normal. I already knew Abigail didn't have the same situation, and every time I saw the beautiful faces of the anencephaly children, I felt a twinge of jealousy that they could look into their baby's eyes. Before our appointment, we didn't know if Abigail had any eyes. And I knew, after my Chemistry professor handed out earplugs for a particularly ear-shattering classroom demonstration/combustion, that she couldn't hear because she didn't stir a bit when the explosion sounded.

During the appointment, we looked for eye sockets, anything that could be eyes. Even the experts couldn't find her eyes. She has lips and a nose, but the rest of her head consists of miraculously wired but abnormal brain tissue. This brain tissue allows her to move normally in the womb and her heart to beat strong and steady, keeping her alive with me. She is strong and beautiful in her own unique way, but she doesn't have what the rest of us were blessed with. She is blind and deaf. These were sobering realizations for me.

When the doctor saw that her little hand was actually classic to amniotic band syndrome, she began to form her theory. She searched around some more and found a club foot, also tied into the amniotic membrane. It also appears that amniotic band syndrome was the cause of her interrupted cranial and facial development. The skin of her head is tied into the placenta along the wall of my uterus. She seems to have one free hand and one free foot, normally developed, which are active every single day and help me to feel a connection to my child for which I will always be grateful.



When I got home, I visited a support/awareness page on facebook for amniotic band syndrome. Again, I found that Abigail's case is more severe than most. So many of the pictures on that page were not of tiny babies fighting to live but of healthy older children missing whole fingers, or hands, or legs. They used hashtag #luckyfin and were happy and adorable, despite their struggles.




There is even a famous NFL player with ABS who is missing a hand and rocking the football world. But in Abigail's case, the amniotic bands had taken more than a few fingers or a leg or hand. They had interrupted the normal development of her whole head. They had taken her chance to live beyond birth.

As the doctor prepared me for what birth might be like with a child who is so sewn into her membranes, I cried and cried and tried to be brave. She will most likely come out all at once, and she will most likely be stillborn. There is no way to predict for certain because babies have presented themselves to the world in many miraculous ways, despite diagnosis and prognosis. But given what we can see in the 3D ultrasound, it's not encouraging. Abigail has been alive for over six months, and she has less than three months left of life on this earth.

Less than three months to live.

In all the time she has been here, she has been living vicariously through me. She eats what I eat. She breathes the quality of the fresh country air I breathe. She experiences the vibrations and to some extent the emotions that I experience. To know her physical experience precisely would be impossible. There is still so much specialists can't perfectly determine about the function of the normally developed brain. Abigail's one-of-a-kind brain is a whole different story. However, I draw strength from the faithful words of my Neurobiology teacher, that Abigail's "spiritual senses are perfect." I believe that. I believe that she is having a physical experience that is suited and custom-made for her, and that her spiritual processing of that experience will stay with her forever. She will forever be bound to us in the love we share, and she will forever be "bone of my bone and flesh of my flesh." Our heartbeats pound together and settle down together. She is experiencing our family on a physical and spiritual level. She is ours and one of us, and these are the truths that really matter as we gear up to celebrate Abigail's first Christmas with the Lantzes.

Abigail's First Christmas: Getting Ready


It has always been our habit to consider a baby's first Christmas as their first December 25th outside the womb. But the rules are all different with Abigail.

Her life is likely to be entirely within the womb, though we are praying for time with her after her birth, as well. What's true for us is true for everybody: we never know how long we have with our children. But when your child is given a terminal diagnosis, it feels more urgent. You feel there will never be enough time. For that reason, Bill and I are grateful to have received Abigail's diagnosis in the middle of the pregnancy. We had twenty-two blissful weeks of planning and dreaming and hoping for a healthy child, and now we have the rest of the pregnancy, however long it may be, to plan and dream and hope with a different understanding of Abigail's reality. I know there are families who welcome a baby with anencephaly into their hearts at the very moment of birth and, with shock, discover that the baby they have long loved and planned for will not be staying.

Because we know, we have been given the gift of cherished time. Rather than merely tolerating the last two trimesters of this pregnancy, Bill and I are watching and appreciating every moment. The times when Bill puts his hand on my belly and feels her move are deeper and sweeter. The way we talk about her is more reverent. The comfort we give each other is more fervent.

This December 25th will be Abigail Reileen's first Christmas. The name of this blog, Abigail's Stocking, is drawn from this idea. We will be putting up a stocking for Abigail and talking about the intangible gifts we can offer to our angel that will give her what she truly wants, a reunion in heaven with her whole family.

We haven't really started decorating for Christmas yet, as it's Thanksgiving Day. But last Saturday the local Relief Society put on a Super Saturday crafting event, and I signed up to make a bunch of little wooden-and-sticker ornaments, complete with Mod Podge. I arrived a little after ten in the morning and was the only one at my table at first. This was fine because I wasn't feeling particularly social. I came with the hope of making some special ornament for Abigail and some other cute decorations. It had been about two weeks from our diagnosis.

The first day I had been almost proud of myself for handling the news so well, but I was soon reminded forcefully of what I had long heard about grief: it comes in waves.

Over the previous two weeks, I had gone from peaceful acceptance to sobbing unacceptance to anger and self-pity and back to quiet acceptance. On Saturday morning, I felt okay. It was nice to be done with the previous week of school and two very challenging tests, one in Neurobiology and one in Chemistry. And now I was at an event just for women to get together and be creative. What could be better? I quietly began the process of choosing stickers to put onto my little wooden and paper ornaments and Mod Podging them on. There were red and green and gold and silver stickers. Some were pictures of Christmas trees and snowmen, and some were words like "together" and "tradition." I was having a nice time, and then another woman came to sit across from me and start her own Christmas project. We engaged in a little small talk, and one of the organizers came over and talked with us, too. But slowly, as I worked, I began to notice that I kept taking short gasps of air every so often. Sometimes these gasps of air accompanied some thought about Abigail. After all, I was writing out her name in red stickers across a decorative Christmas gift tag. But in general I have found that it is impossible NOT to think about Abigail. Everything seems to direct my thoughts to her.

Lesson in Neurobiology on movement? Abigail.
Little girl shopping with her mother in the supermarket? Abigail.
Facebook post by my friend or cousin, both of whom just brought home twin girls? Abigail.
Sitting on my bed and staring at the wall where I would have put the bassinet? Abigail.

There's no escaping the thought of her. And if I do by some chance get busy thinking about school or reading with my older kids, or some non-Abigail house project I need to get working on, the precious movements inside my womb will awaken me to Abigail once more.

So as I sat there, talking with new friends about Christmas traditions and whether we tell our kids there's a Santa or not, I couldn't do a thing about the random gasps of air. I knew it meant I was suppressing my breathing unconsciously, but I didn't know how to fix it. I tried mindfully breathing in and out. And I hurried up to finish the ornaments I was working on because now I couldn't wait to get out of the stifling indoors. I don't think anybody noticed my mini crisis, and that was good because talking about an anxiety attack does not actually help an anxiety attack. I went to the wall where there was a plug and plugged in the glue gun so I could string my ornaments with the pretty candy-cane-striped string provided in the kit. And I reminded myself to breathe.

It was a slow and painful death-by-anxiety-attack, and eventually I felt close to hyperventilating. I steadied my voice and asked my friend if I should leave the gun plugged in for her. She said yes. I stood up and returned to the table, carefully keeping my ornaments separated in their baggie since Mod Podge tends to stick horribly whenever it comes into contact with itself. And then I explained that I needed to go home. My new friend asked if I was okay. I told her briefly that we had received a terminal diagnosis for our baby and I was having a hard time, but that I just needed to get out into the fresh air. She offered to give me a ride home, but she wasn't even finished with her project yet and I really wanted to be alone, so I declined.

As soon as I was outside in the brisk November air, I could breathe. And as soon as I could breathe, I could cry. I cried all the way home, letting the tears dot my face. I know there's nothing wrong with crying but I prefer to do it out of sight. It was a melancholy day after that, but I got lots of hugs from my sweet husband and my other kids. And Abigail made sure to make her presence known. Sometimes the movements brought tears, but other times they brought a smile.

I'm glad I went out and made ornaments for the tree. I'm glad I have a cute little one with Abigail's name on it.


The more things with her name on it, the better, as far as my heart's concerned.

Waiting for Abigail is no easy feat. But we will fill this time with as many remembrances and special moments as we can.

In the afternoon, we called all five of our boys out to the front yard and asked for their help in planting a bulb garden for Abigail. There were crocuses and giant daffodils and giant tulips.





They loved doing it, and it was good for my heart. There will be Christmas and there will be spring. And Abigail will be there for all of it, either here next to my heart or in heaven surrounded by God, angels, and family. And whether in a Christmas ornament, a stocking, or a tulip, she will always be cherished and remembered.

Peace Like a River



For thus saith the LORD, Behold, I will extend peace to her like a river, and the glory of the Gentiles like a flowing stream: then shall ye suck, ye shall be borne upon her sides, and be dandled upon her knees. Isaiah 66:12

On Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, we grieved for Abigail. My heart broke. Bill's heart broke. We cried and we toyed with hope and then felt hopeless again.


On Wednesday, we went to the temple.


In the temple we do vicarious work for those who have already passed, and the veil is thin there. People have seen visions and felt the presence of loved ones long gone on. As we go through a ceremony of an ordinance for someone else who has left his or her body behind on earth, we also get to remember when we went through this ceremony for ourselves, and it's a beautiful reconnection with God. It's a time when we remember our promises to Him and His incredible promises to us. Bill had a family name, an ancestor whose ordinance work hadn't been done yet, and he brought a little piece of paper with that name to the temple to go through the ceremony on his behalf. I didn't bring a family name, but planned on getting one in the temple. On our way in, we met with a woman who asked me to take one of her ancestors' names for the ceremony.


This was our first time in the Payson temple. We moved up here in July, at the very beginning of my pregnancy and hadn't been able to get all our temple things together to go until now. I looked up at the beautiful building and took a deep breath. Temples have always been places where the Prince of Peace can reach me with His peace. We went inside, changed into white clothes, and met in the temple chapel where we waited with others who were about to perform the ordinance. We met Bill's parents there in that quiet, contemplative room. In the pews, there were book holders containing scriptures, and I picked up a copy of the Book of Mormon, opening it up randomly. It's one of my favorite ways to hear from God. I opened it to Moroni chapter 7 and read:


"Wherefore, my beloved brethren, have miracles ceased because Christ hath ascended into heaven, and hath sat down on the right hand of God, to claim of the Father his rights of mercy which he hath upon the children of men?
....and because he hath done this, my beloved brethren, have miracles ceased? Behold I say unto you, Nay, neither have angels ceased to minister unto the children of men." (verses 27 and 29)

I silently thanked God for these passages of scripture which spoke to my heart and told me it was not at all wrong for me to pray for a miracle.

If you have walked through a temple prior to its dedication to the Lord as His house, you have seen a Celestial Room. It usually has a high ceiling and chandelier, and is like the Holy of Holies of ancient temples, except that instead of there being one priest allowed inside with a rope tied to his leg, all who have come to covenant with God in the temple are admitted into it. The ceremony ended here and we sat on a couch and prayed and whispered reverently to each other. I was happy to see my parents-in-law there, and they spoke words of comfort to us. Abigail will be ours forever. She will not ever be truly gone. And she counts as one of our children. These true ideas had been difficult to get hold of. They kept slipping away from me as I was grieving before. But here, in this holiest place, I felt the truth and the comfort wash over me.







My soul experienced a vast transformation from the sorrow, anger, fear, and deep grief I had been feeling before. The grief was still there, but all fear and anxiety and anger disappeared. That night, I slept sweetly and awoke with words from the ceremony running through my mind. I repeated them in my mind over and over again, cherishing them and turning them into a prayer for Abigail. God's promises are sure. His love is real. His peace is unlike anything this world has to offer.

On the previous Monday, I had stopped by a store to pick up some clothes for Bill, and almost hit a whole flock of seagulls, Utah's state bird, sitting there on the asphalt.







Seagulls are the state bird of Utah for a very special reason. It hearkens back to the days of the Mormon pioneers who settled here and experienced the highs and lows of farm life right off the bat. A whole crop of wheat, still tender in the fields, was being devoured by a swarm of locusts. The pioneers went out with pans and bonnets and anything they had to beat back the swarm in a desperate attempt to save their fields from the devourers. And they prayed for a miracle. God sent an enormous migration of seagulls to devour the devourers and the pioneers were saved.

When I was a teenager, only fourteen years old, my mother made me a gorgeous pioneer dress with a full-circle skirt for dancing so I could be part of a pioneer play called Promised Valley. I didn't play a specific character, but I did get to sing and dance and act, and I will never forget taking off my bonnet and smashing at invisible "crickets" during the scene that reenacted this miracle. Seeing these seagulls at such a moment, when I was in the middle of my worst grief was a small miracle. And yet, I had so much trouble accepting it. It was as if they represented someone else's miracle, not mine. At that point, I was sure I would not be receiving a miracle. Who can argue with an ultrasound image like that? My baby was going to die and there was nothing I could do about it. No amount of healthy eating or daily walking would change what was. Neural tube defects are not something that resolves by itself in the womb before birth. 
It was just a flock of seagulls.

But I took a picture and kept it in my heart.

Sunday, that permission from the Lord to pray for and hope for miracles soothed my soul, and I came to see the seagull as a symbol not just for their miracle, but for all miracles.




Right next to the women's dressing room in the Payson temple is a giant painting of a pioneer woman holding a little girl while looking down at the sunflowers that have fallen from the little girl's hands. The expression on her face held me captive as I passed it, and I stood for several moments just connecting with her in her sense of loss. I knew that she was grateful for the child in her arms but that, all the same, she was experiencing grief. I knew that look because I had been wearing it for the past several days.

Loss looks the same on everybody, I guess.

And yet, there was a quiet strength in her visage, and I drew strength from that, too. Not only did this pioneer woman survive through everything that had happened to her, but she was only just beginning to create the foundations of a beautiful culture in a new land. She had more to give, even though her heart had been broken. There was just so much of the tragic and hopeful mixed in this painting, that I couldn't get it out of my head. The next morning, I was still thinking about it, and talked to my husband about how it had made me feel. Then I started singing a hymn: Blessed, Honored Pioneer. I didn't even know I knew so many of the words to that song. It is rarely sung except on July 24th, for Pioneer Day in Utah. I decided to look up the painting so I could see it again, and was awestruck when I saw the title: Blessed Honored Pioneer.

I cannot reproduce the picture here, but if you'd like to see it you can either visit the Payson Temple yourself or see it on the artist's website. Because it was commissioned for the temple, it is not sold in prints anywhere, so these are the only places you can see it.

Blessed Honored Pioneer

As if this weren't enough communication from heaven, there was more as the day progressed. On my way to class, I began to feel the anxiety creeping in again, and I determined to hold on a little longer to the peaceful spirit from the temple. I turned on the narrator on my Gospel Library app and listened to Moroni chapter 7 read aloud to me while I drove. It was comforting to hear those words again, and in the context of the chapter. It was a letter from Moroni's father, Mormon, to him. My scripture app automatically went to chapter 8 when chapter 7 was finished (it's a long drive) and I was startled to realize that the very next chapter was about infants who die without baptism, or the baptism of infants.

Verse 8: Listen to the words of Christ, your Redeemer, your Lord and your God. Behold, I came into the world not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance; the whole need no physician, but they that are sick; wherefore, little children are whole, for they are not capable of committing sin; wherefore the curse of Adam is taken from them in me, that it hath no power over them...

Little children are WHOLE!

For a mother with a baby that had just been diagnosed with a defect that left her without parts of her skull, brain, and face, these words could not have come with greater power. I was struck by the word "whole." It is comforting to know that my baby, whether she dies in the womb or lives a few hours or days, will be whole in Christ. When I meet her, on this side or the other side, I will see her that way, knowing she is whole eternally because of Christ.

I am thankful for the temple, for scriptures, the word of God, and the power of music and art in communicating to my heart. There is so much to be grateful for, though I still don't understand why this has happened and is happening. I know we are not alone. As my mother keeps reminding me, God loves me and God loves Abigail, and He has a beautiful plan. I just have to believe that there is beauty in this and that one day I will see it.

Not the News We Were Expecting



It certainly caught me by surprise.  I had happily taken the morning off of work so we could drop the boys off at their grandparents and Katrina and I could visit the ultrasound tech in peace. We were waiting outside for the tech to show up with my for-some-reason-sunburnt nose.  Katrina and I were laughing and joking with one another about the day and about our boys.

When the tech finally showed up, the office wasn't ready for visitors at all.  He had to move some items out of the ultrasound room and there were business cards all over the floor.  When we got into the room, the ultrasound projection screen wasn't working, so we tried to help him figure out what was going on.  He was able to find another screen that worked, so Katrina laid down in her spot on the cold bed and I took a seat next to her.  All these things added up to us just being in a real silly mood.  Maybe Heavenly Father was preparing us for the news were about to receive?  I really don't know.

It couldn't have been more than a few moment of the tech looking around at the baby, but sitting there in silence for those few moments got me uneasy.  I mentioned to Katrina that she should tell the tech what brought us to his office that day, how the college student who did the first ultrasound had though he saw a bubble or something around the baby's head.  After Katrina briefly explained, the ultrasound tech said that it looked like our baby had a pretty severe case of Anencephaly.  What the heck was that?  He started using words like "not viable" and after that, I couldn't really pay attention anymore.  My head started to spin and I had to leave the room. I walked into another room in the office that was a birthing room and sat down and put my head in my hands.  All I could think of was "what does this all mean?"  I sat there for a few moments and then got up and walked around again, not quite ready to go back into the ultrasound room.  "I figured she she might have a facial deformity" is the thought that kept going through my head.  "I never thought it would come to this".  This felt like too much to take in.

After what felt like forever, I went back into the ultrasound room, having no idea what they had talked about while I was gone, and it wouldn't have mattered, I could only think of "not viable".  I vaguely heard them talk about other options, more ultrasounds, 3D/4D to identify how severe the anencephaly, blood tests and the such that would cost quite a bit of money.  It's all pretty vague now.  But the next thing I remember, the tech is giving us hugs and telling us how sorry he is.  He gave me a big hug and refused to let go of my head for about 30 seconds.  It was probably good because I felt overheated and like I was going to faint again.  We got out of there with tears rolling down our faces and the little girls from the other family in the waiting room asking their parents what was wrong with us.

The drive back to my parents was even more painful.  In between tears, any talk of Abigail just brought more and more tears.  Were we not going to be able to see our little Abigail alive at all?  Were we going to have to go to the hospital to have this baby?  Were we going to go in for more tests to see if anything could be done?  Were we going to get to have our little Abigail forever?  The car ride felt like forever.

I just had to tell my parents that day.  We both couldn't imagine showing up to their house with our eyes all red and try to play it off like everything was fine.  I asked my parents if I could talk to them in another room and they knew something was wrong immediately.  One of our kids had told them about how the first ultrasound guy saw something off, so they knew we would have some kind of news.  I barely held it in, but was able to get out what I wanted to say.  Of course my parents were very caring and loving as they always have been, and offered to help pay for anything we might need.  All I needed at the moment was their love and concern and that was enough.

Katrina and I drove home in silence, with the kids being loud and playful in the back.  We talked briefly about the treats we were going to get and decide on the movie we were going to rent for them, but other than that, Katrina and I sat in silence.  Any mention of Abigail might have made the tears come flooding back.

We sat the boys down before we watched the movie and explained what was going on with Abigail.  The reactions were varied, as you'd expect from a group of kids from all different ages.  Layne, thinking of his favorite book/movie Wonder, wanted to find a solution to the problem.  Sam sat there in silence.  Ben had a few questions.  The two youngest were barely paying attention.  Afterwards, I barely felt like watching the movie.  I went into my bedroom and sat next to Katrina on the bed.  There was a lot of crying off and on the rest of the day.  I tried looking up anencephaly on my phone, but could barely stand reading anything about it.  I went to sleep that night exhausted and not knowing what or how to feel.

The Day Life Changed


November 8, 2019
The nice family sitting in the waiting room of the birthing suite where we had our anatomy scan at 22 weeks didn't expect us to emerge from the scan sobbing. We didn't expect it, either. At around 18 weeks, we had a scan to determine the sex of our sweet little baby, and it was discovered that I was carrying a girl, our first. While this news should have put me over the moon after fourteen years raising five boys, for some reason I didn't celebrate as I should have. Even before there was any indication that something could be wrong, I had that feeling. Too good to be true.

After we learned she was a girl, the thing I wanted more than anything were some pictures of her tiny face. I asked the ultrasound tech, an undergraduate neuroscience student at BYU, to try to image her face for us. He struggled to do this, which I thought was odd since he had said that her whole body was facing us. He determined that something must be blocking her face, and he suggested we get a follow-up ultrasound from someone more qualified to do a complete anatomical scan. We set the appointment and a few weeks later we ended up in the birthing suite office, looking for an extension cord to get the ultrasound tech's equipment hooked up to a bigger screen. 

As we were looking, the soft music in the office turned to an iconic montage song from the Disney movie, UP, the one that represents Ellie's and Carl's life together. For a brief moment, I remembered the scene of Ellie in the obstetrician's office, grieving because she had received the news that she wouldn't be able to have a child. That's not a good thing to hear before an important ultrasound, I thought. 



But there was a sense of irony and humor in my thought because I had convinced myself over the past few weeks that nothing was truly wrong with our baby girl. It was either a mistake, some glitch in the machine, or else something minor, like a sack of fluid we could resolve with some neonatal surgery. Nothing we couldn't handle.

My marriage was strong. My family was strong. Our faith was strong. I had a sense that we could handle anything as a team. While my husband and I were out of the room, looking for an extension cord, the ultrasound tech found another monitor to use with his equipment and invited us back in to begin. I hopped up on one of the uncomfortable beds they use for these types of exams, on a strip of paper meant to keep the place sanitary, and exposed my belly for the gel-covered ultrasound probe. After a few moments of getting oriented to what he was seeing, the ultrasound tech asked us what we had seen at the last ultrasound. I explained that there had been some concern about some obstacle to seeing her face, and we just wanted to get that checked out.

Our tech investigated the area of the skull and the face, and after what seemed like a lot of patient waiting on our part, he explained that the reason the other ultrasound tech had trouble seeing the face wasn't because it was covered up. It was because large parts of her skull were missing. "Some sort of anencephaly" he said, though I wasn't entirely sure what he meant at that point. As our guide explained what he meant, words like "not conducive to life outside the womb" and "stillborn" came into the conversation. My husband asked to be excused to leave the room, and I sat on the bed, wondering what to think about all of this. 

I needed more information, so I asked questions. I'm really good at that. I asked about possible care options and cases where babies had pulled through. Our tech didn't like to sugarcoat things, and told us that we could probably still have a birth plan much like we'd had before: a home birth with our midwife. There would be one crucial difference: the lack of an expectation that the baby would survive. A planned funerary service rather than a planned newborn phase. I didn't cry, not until I asked him to explain to me where her face was and he showed me what looked like a vacant bubble of fluid with just a few visible patches of tissue. "I think these might be nostrils," he said.

On the drive to pick our kids up from their grandparents', I said to my husband, "If she has lungs, and she has nostrils, maybe she should be able to breathe, right?" But neither of us knew. We had been prepared for something to be wrong with our little girl, but "not conducive to life" was not anywhere on our radar. It came out of left field. At no point had this possibility been entertained by either of us. A funeral instead of a birth? How do you wrap your mind around that?

How do you wrap your heart around it?

We knew it would take time to let this soak in. When we arrived at my husband's parents' house, he quietly told them the prognosis, and we planned to tell our kids when we got home, where they could feel comfortable and safe despite the scary news. We picked up ice cream and a family movie, and sat the kids down in the living room to give them the news. We explained that Abigail would always be their little sister, but that she would be watching over us from heaven, and we would have her with us forever. We also informed them of Abigail's deformity, that her skull and face were not completely developed. Our ten-year-old said that he didn't care what Abigail's face looked like, he would love her anyway. He's been rereading R.J. Palaccio's book WONDER this past month, one of his favorites. The little ones didn't seem to understand at all, and were eager to watch the movie. Our oldest (12) has been the most perceptive and quiet. I generally believe that openly talking about things keeps them from becoming a source of undue pain or shame. I don't want any of my kids to feel ashamed of Abigail. She is beautiful, our first daughter, our miracle. We will all love her no matter what she looks like or how long she is physically with us.

I didn't want to tell my side of the family. I didn't want to tell anybody, as I was still processing it myself and didn't want to deal with other people's reactions. But I especially didn't want to tell my younger sister who is due in January, two months before we expect our sweet bundle of joy. To tell a woman such devastating news while she is pregnant seemed like a terrible thing to do.

So instead, the first people we told outside of Bill's parents and the kids were the Smiths. It was Bill's idea because the Smiths had their own story and their own baby angel. He thought they might give us some perspective, or some comfort, or maybe just telling someone who had been through it would be relieving. I'm really glad we went. Not only did we get a free farm kitten out of the visit, who would become our "therapy cat," Sunny, but the discussion we had with the Smiths soothed my heart and took away the aloneness I had been feeling in this. Because the Smiths share our faith, we were able to have deep conversations with them about our baby and their baby, and there was so much comfort in understanding that our daughter would not be gone, even though she may not live for very long.



The next few days were LOOOOONG. Grieving had given me a semi-permanent headache. On Sunday, we decided to video call my parents and share the news with them. Still wanting to keep it from troubling my pregnant sister, and wanting to tell her in person when the time came, we asked them not to share it with anyone else. My mother had been crocheting a baby blanket for our girl, which I knew. I told her we still wanted it, of course. She showed me the bonnet she had made to match the blanket, and I said that it was perfect because I had seen other babies with anencephaly wearing bonnets like that. She said she would be honored if her granddaughter would be buried in it, and Bill said we would look for a burial gown that matched. 



It was Sunday night that I found anencephaly.info and began to read birth stories of other babies with anencephaly. I was surprised at how many of them were born alive, despite the awful statistic I had read that 75% of these babies are stillborn. It gave me hope that maybe our baby might be born alive, regardless of what the ultrasound tech had said.

But when it was dark in my bedroom and sleep evaded me, I remembered the image of the empty face and wondered how I could even hope that a baby with so many challenges could possibly survive. It seemed impossible.

So many things seemed impossible.

How could she be kicking and doing flips in my womb if she were so close to death? Her body seemed in all other ways utterly perfect, even down to her little toes. How could I reconcile the haunting image on the ultrasound with the fact that my baby was ALIVE and kicking? How could I plan a burial service when she was obviously still here and fighting for life?

On Monday, I went back to school. I dreaded telling my neurobiology professor the most because of something she had said during an early lesson on the history of neuroscience. We had been discussing Descartes' views of the brain/spirit duality, and she mentioned that all of us in the class probably had some vestiges of Cartesian views on duality. How much of the personality of a person, their memories and consciousness and emotions, was purely physical and how much could be attributed to a separate spirit? She had made the statement that she didn't personally think there needed to be a separation at all, that the brain accounted for all the activity usually attributed to the spirit, including a person's memories. I was afraid she would be cold and clinical, possibly believing that my baby wasn't really a person at all if she lacked the higher brain function associated with memory-collection and storage.

But people surprise you. She wasn't cold at all. And her sympathetic embrace brought my tears out in the open. She said that my baby could hear and experience and feel us, that her spiritual senses were perfect and she could hear our voices and sense our love as we talked to her. I'll be forever grateful to her for treating my baby as a person and seeing that there are things beyond our reductive senses that are just as real.

When I told my chemistry professor, it was less personal. It's a larger class, and we don't have much of a one-on-one relationship. I informed him of our diagnosis and he let me know that there was some flexibility in the schedule if I needed any due dates changed, in light of our news. I thanked him, and that was it.

There are still steps to be taken, so many steps. There are things to be considered and things to be decided, and things to be prepared, not only for the possibility that she will be born sleeping, but also for the possibility that she will be born kicking. In the first few days since learning of Abigail's genetic defect in her development, our emotions had been all over the place. At this point, an uneasy grief settled in, and I began to wonder if I would ever be happy again.

(Next post: Peace like a river.)