Sunday 26 April 2020

Abigail Angelo est (Abigail is an Angel)

Love, Romance, Nature, Desktop, Angel, Baby, Heart
Source: https://pixabay.com/photos/love-romance-nature-desktop-angel-3020862/

Deus est Bonus. Deus in caelo est. Dues angelos creat. Angeli sunt in caelo. Angeli Deum amant. Angeli cantant. Estne caelum bellum? Caelum est bellum.

What language are these words in and what the heck do they mean? Don't even try to ask Google Translate. I can asure you that it won't be acurate at all. In fact, it will be hilariously wrong.

So what do these words mean? I'll tell you eventually.

Abigail is an angel. No doubt about that. What exactly is an angel though? An angel is one of God's living creations that don't have a physical body.

This is the dictionary definition.

"a spiritual being believed to act as an attendant, agent, or messenger of God, conventionally represented in human form with wings and a long robe."

So Abigail must have been a messenger, right? I'm not sure about the wings and robe but the rest of it is pretty acurrate. There is more:

"a person of exemplary conduct or virtue."

Was Abigail virtuous? Is she virtuous? Does she have high morals? It's hard to tell since she didn't have long to live on this earth. She didn't do anything wrong, so she is not sinful. I don't want to say that she didn't do anything right because that would be far from true.

She brought love from heaven. She is a messenger of God and from God.

That first paragraph was in Latin. Here is the translation:

God is Good. He is in heaven. He creates angels. The angels are in heaven. They love God. The angels sing. Is heaven beautiful? It is beautiful.

Yes, heaven is beautiful. And so is Abigail.

Thursday 23 April 2020

Abigail's Mission in a Few Words

The screen shot is what I was working on in the photograph below, with Bill Lantz looking over my shoulder at our midwife visit in October 2019. This was before we knew something had gone wrong early in Abigail's development. We wouldn't find that out until November 8th.

We did know she was a girl and we were excited to meet her. My midwife had sent this list to my phone and asked me to choose words that I wanted to associate with this pregnancy and birth. To look at the list now feels... whole. Every last word means something to me in connection with Abigail's coming. What an amazing little girl she is to have addressed every word on my list! What a blessing to our whole family she has been!
🦉🌷🦋❤️

Sunday 19 April 2020

Salt and Pepper

Sparky Mama, Binky, and Sparky

We got three chicks yesterday. We are getting 8 more soon to make 11. If you were one of my siblings the day we got them, you would see how protective I am of them. I still am that way a day later because I don't like it when someone picks up a chick by their wing or drops one from too high up.

This is because I've had chicks before.

The first chick that died in one of our homes was named Salt and Pepper. He was a gray ball of fluff with little black and white specks covering his body. He never did anything wrong and was the smallest out of all the chicks we had. Guess how he died? Pasty butt.

Pasty butt is when the chick's rear is covered in waste, preventing it from going to the bathroom. The waste builds up until the chick passes away. To prevent this, someone must wipe the baby chicken's rump clean of the waste with a warm, wet, paper towel.

Salt and Pepper never did anything wrong. But his owners didn't know there was a problem so, sadly, he had to go. It brings me comfort to know that Salt and Pepper is smiling down from the clouds, watching to see how carefully I take care of his kind.

He wasn't just a piece of meat and neither are any chicks. They are all creations of God that He loves very much. Abigail is one of his loved creations as well. She never did anything wrong, but she had to return to her Heavenly Father, just like Salt and Pepper.

And I think they are great friends.

Dedicated to all of the chicks who have passed away in our home.

Friday 17 April 2020

Grieving and Feeling Ministered to in the Age of Covid-19


On Wednesday of this week, Jacque from Angel Watch stopped by, keeping her distance on our front steps, to give us this bear and a couple of books for grieving families. This is a Winnie Bear. It's named for the baby of a mother who originated this practice for Angel Watch. They take a blanket that is special to your baby and turn it into a teddy bear, complete with the baby's name and her birthday, if you like. I think ours turned out absolutely adorable. The first thing Layne (10 years old) said when he held it was, "Aww, it's as big as Abigail!" Then he fetched Abigail's owl, Athena, and pretended our Abby bear was holding the owl like Abigail did on her one day on earth.

I'm grateful for the bear, and kind of sad Jacque couldn't come in and chat more. I know Angel Watch normally links people to local grief support groups that meet in person, and right now none of that is going on.

My ward at church had our monthly book club via Zoom this past month and will do it the same way in April. It was good to see faces and hear voices. I wonder when we will get to hug again.

It's been a time of many mercies and small miracles after our big miracles that accompanied Abigail's birth and our time together. Still, there's a wistfulness when the isolation you naturally feel in grief is reinforced by actual physical isolation.

I think we are all going to feel so amazing when we can gather again, even if it is for the purpose of grieving those we have lost.

Last week, Bill's aunt, Diane Brandt, died from the effects of Covid-19 after a battle that went on for almost three weeks. We are sending our condolences virtually and wishing there was more we could do. But I love the way people have surrounded Bill's uncle virtually. People have brought him meals, too, which is the one physical aid we can still give to each other. I have been enjoying his facebook posts about Diane's life, videos and pictures of the family, pets, and pursuits that meant something to her. The way we grieve has been changed, hopefully only temporarily. It's still beautiful, but it feels...
I don't know, somehow empty. To touch is to connect on another level.

One of my artist friends who works with photo manipulation created this beautiful piece called 
Social Distancing



In grief we mourn the loss of the person who died. But today we also mourn the loss of contact that normally would have comforted us. Bill and I, and the boys, feel very thankful we were able to share our love and grief with family and friends with a funeral after Abigail's death. My heart goes out to everyone experiencing grief right now, whether it is new or old. The things that have helped me are the same things I try to do for others:

send a text message or email
make a phone call and plan to spend time just talking
go on a walk with someone you're quarantined near
drop off a gift at the door
share a favorite book, or talk about what you're reading
really respond to facebook and instagram posts, not just with a like

Thank you to our earthly angels!! I'm feeling ministered to during this time, and it is making all the difference. I hope I can return the favor and pay it forward.

Some good news for Abigail's fans and family: We just got the call that the last few pieces of her memorial have been delivered to our mortuary! We will be putting them all together tomorrow afternoon, hopefully getting them set soon after.

Sunday 12 April 2020

I Miss Her

I miss Abigail.  I miss her for so many reasons.  I have waited so many years to be able to hold a baby girl of my own and when I finally got to hold her, it was only for a few hours and then she was gone.  I miss her when I wake up in the morning and the kids are running around like crazy.  Maybe they would be a little bit calmer if I was sitting on the couch with Abigail in my arms, they would realize that they need to settle down a little bit more and not run around so much.  Maybe if they heard Abigail crying, they might notice they are being very loud or obnoxious and change what they are doing.  Maybe if we had Abigail around, they would have been able to give mommy a break a few times during the day so she could spend some special time with Abigail while feeding her.

I miss the smell of newborn baby and being able to laugh with her while I'm spending time with her.  We've always wondered for the past few years if having a baby girl would help to settle these boys down a little bit.  We won't know, at least not any time soon, as we still struggle to help our kids to be happy and obedient.  Yesterday was a struggle, as one thing after another happened, wondering if there was a little girl around here, if the boys might stop acting the way that they do sometimes.  But we also started to get some flowers in her garden over the last few days




I miss being able to think about Abigail without being on the verge of tears.  Katrina and I joked around when we were first married. She called me "heartless" one time when I looked over at her during a sad time in a movie and I wasn't crying and she was.  I knew she was joking, but could see where she was coming from.  I didn't cry much.  Now, if we watch anything that even closely resembles something happening to a little girl, I can barely stop the tears.  Katrina has been asking me to write a post and I think I've been mostly avoiding it because I didn't want to think about Abigail.  If I don't think about her, then I won't cry.  I don't like being vulnerable.  I don't want to be vulnerable.  I struggle with being vulnerable.

-----------------------------------
I wrote this blog post a few days ago.  It wasn't a good day for me, but I wrote what I wrote.  I wanted to delete this post, but I felt it was important to share my feelings.

Since then, things have settled down a little bit.  Today is Easter Sunday and we got to go the cemetery to talk to Abigail at her grave site.  We think about Abigail regularly in our home, sometimes when we want to and sometimes when we don't.  We are grateful for the knowledge and testimony we have of the gospel of Jesus Christ.  We know we will get to see Abigail again when she is resurrected, just like the Savior was, and we will be able to spend some time with her and I'll get to dance with her.

Abigail's First Easter



 Spring has sprung in Abigail's Garden.

Today as part of our Easter celebration, we listened to Andrea Bocelli and then to The Tabernacle Choir.

Then, per five-year-old Daniel's idea, we took plates of candy to neighbors.



Later we had home church. Bill spoke about the Savior's last week, ending with the resurrection on Easter Sunday. We took the sacrament in remembrance of Jesus' body and his blood, which was shed for us.

Then it was time for a walk, noticing the early signs of spring as we went. It was beautiful but cold.




Then we drove to the cemetery to visit Abigail's grave. We are still waiting on one more stone and a marble vase before it can be properly marked.


It was still cold, so we stayed close to keep warm.







 We sat around her grave and we told her what we would do with her after the resurrection when we see her again. Daddy almost made me cry when he said he would dance with her. 🌷❤️🦉


When we got home, Corbin promptly zonked out.



I'm grateful for family and for the promise of eternity and eternal connection. I thank my Savior for descending below all men so that He could succor me in all my suffering. I am truly comforted that He knows and has felt what I'm feeling now. And that His effectual aid extends beyond the grave to our ultimate resurrection.



Happy Easter, my friends!

Nature and Abigail

Chicks, Easter Chick, Easter, Yellow, Fluffy, Cute

Today my family and I went on a little walk around the block and were trying to notice nature all around us. What helped me focus on that was taking out my camera and recording animals, plants, and trees. I was grateful for the nature that God has given to everyone on earth and it made me wonder how heaven looks. 

Every living thing will be in heaven, including the plants and trees. Nature will be everywhere. The only difference between heaven and earth will be that heaven will look like Spring all of the time. The scriptures clearly tell us "...not a hair on your head will be lost" (Luke 21:18) and so will it be with the plants, trees, and animals. Not a leaf, branch, hair, feather, nor piece of fur be lost.

But how does this relate to Abigail?

Abigail's body was like all of ours. Imperfect. Jesus Christ's body was imperfect as well, but his spirit was completely perfect. So is Abigail's. I know Abigail is beautiful because all of the love she brought me.

We visited Abigail's grave after the walk and my mom told everyone to tell Abigail what we would give her when she is resurrected. Of course my mom stole the best one: "I will give you a hug and cry" so when it was my turn I responded, "What she said". 

I'm not just going to give her a hug, I'm going to give her a really big, brotherly, bear hug. When I cry, I'm going to cry a lot. And they won't be sad tears.

They will be joyful ones.

Sunday 5 April 2020

Thoughts About Abigail

I have not written in a while because I wasn't sure what I would say after Abigail left. I have different feelings everyday, but I always find myself in deep thought whenever someone says her name.

Baby, Hand, Infant, Child, Father, Parents, Sweet

Abigail's name means "gives joy" and is very, very accurate because of the angel she is. In Hebrew, it means "my father's joy" and though I'm not her father, she is my joy as well. In fact, she is her brother's joy. According to Wikipedia, Abigail is "an itelligent, beautiful, loyal woman" which I am sure she would have been if she had lived longer on this earth. It brings me peace to know that that is exactly how she is described in heaven right now.

You would almost think that Abigail would have been able to stay on this earth and that she would be completely fine. It would seem that the two cleft pallets would soon heal and there would only be two identical scars on either side of her face that would hardly be visible. Maybe her brain would finally fully develop and the placenta would be able to be carefully removed from it. She would grow up just like any other child except for her undersized feet and fingers.

But this was not to be. She would return home to her Heavenly Father in 22 and a half hours, letting every one of her siblings hold her before she had to do so. Abigail would leave her oldest brother in tears once he held her. He is now very thankful that someone had donated blankets and that he had one to cry into. He has promised that he would never wash the tears out.

If I had to use one word to describe Abigail, it would be love and--if you gave me another one--I would choose joy. Not just because that's what her name is, but because that is what she is. She is my hope, she is my heart, she is my joy.

And I am glad that she's mine.

Wednesday 1 April 2020

Collateral Beauty and Getting Old is a Gift


Abigail is a gift.

She came like a shooting star, passing through the night sky of our lives, then vanishing from our view. But her beauty and the majesty of her mission stay forever in our minds.

During America's stay-at-home order for the Covid-19 Coronavirus pandemic, which some people have suggested should be known as The Great Pause, many have pondered aloud about the blessings of Coronavirus. Obviously, pandemics are frightening. We worry for ourselves and our loved ones and we feel protective, isolated, and uncertain as we take steps to "flatten the curve" and mitigate the disaster suggested in the word "pandemic." However, many people have seen beauty in the sudden pause, the forced rest, the togetherness of families, the spontaneous and planned acts of charity, the productive and compassionate use of technology to connect and bring hope. It's all beautiful when you look at it that way.

How we look at things makes a big difference in the message we receive from it.

Shortly after getting out of the hospital, Bill and I watched Jumanji II again. It was a movie we had watched twice in the theatre while I was pregnant with Abigail. The timing of the comedian/actors was impeccable and I found myself laughing through the movie both times. We bought it as soon as it came out digitally so we could watch it at home.

This time as I watched it, I tried to remember how much I had enjoyed it before, and how Abigail had kicked up a storm in my womb as I laughed and laughed. There were sweet moments in the movie, too--lessons for the characters to learn and express. Self-appreciation, the importance of leaning on your friends in your vulnerability, and forgiveness.

When I first got home from the hospital, I was relieved to be home and not in a hospital. I was happy to have access to my other children again, to comfort them and enjoy their personalities. And I was driven toward the work that had to be done for Abigail's funeral. Many of the arrangements had already been planned and prepared beforehand. The casket had been made. The funeral gown had been purchased. The burial plot was ready and waiting, and I had written my love note eulogy while still in the hospital. But there were still things to do. I focused on helping Bill to gather his thoughts for what he wanted to say, encouraging our sons to practice the song they were to sing at the funeral: "Families Can Be Together Forever." I focused on welcoming family who came from out of town to help us honor Abigail. All of this felt natural and precious and time slowed down for it.


But after the funeral, I felt physically and emotionally exhausted. It was finally time to feel the backward motion of what can best be described as emotional whiplash. Had it really happened at all? Had Abigail been born, spent her whole life on earth in one day, and gone on to heaven? Had we buried her already? All in less than one week? My head and my heart spun with the surreal speed with which the entire thing had taken place. Time is a luxury we take for granted.

Now that Abigail was gone, I didn't want time. It seemed to stretch out in front of me for miles with no rest stops, an unending march toward my own death so far in the distance. I just wanted to crawl into that hole with Abigail and be buried, too. The fact that I had died, that my heart had stopped, actually gave me a worse case of survivor's guilt. Why was this sweet spirit gone and my crotchety old self still here? I'm 36 years old, but I feel ancient. Life has been incredibly long and more painful than I ever could have imagined before living it. I felt tired. I prayed and prayed and prayed for God to help me to feel like living again. He sent me little messages, in the form of a special card written by a friend or the words to a song, the embrace of a child, the face of my husband.

I could barely pay attention to the movie as we sat on our bed watching Jumanji II. My heart was broken and my will felt so weak. I related less to Danny Glover's cheerful, smiling character who always saw the silver lining and more to Danny DeVito's grouchy old man. His character had just undergone hip surgery and all he would say to anyone who would listen was how much getting old stank. Never get old, he advised his grandson, the main character of the film who was going through his own existential crisis.

Yeah, I thought darkly. Never get old.

But that moment of resonance was only leading me inevitably to the moment at the end of the movie when his character arc would be complete, and when he would say the line that struck me to the core.

As he's playing a video game with his grandson, he starts the familiar phrase he's been saying through the whole movie. "Growing old..."

"Yeah, yeah, I know," his grandson interrupts. "Growing old sucks."

But no, that's not how he was going to end it this time. "Growing old," he says instead, "is a gift." Cue the twinkle in his eye. My spirit felt like a live wire inside me, and I knew God was watching me watch this movie and putting that scene in my path so I would experience this moment.

I knew it was wisdom. And I knew, of course, that life was a gift from our Heavenly Parents to us. It just didn't feel like one anymore. Abigail's life had been a gift. I hung onto that fact, and I added to it the message I had felt resonate in my bones: my life is a gift. Living right now is a gift.

Since then, I have continued to receive these little messages all around me, because I've been looking for them. My search for meaning intensified the day we received Abigail's original diagnosis of anencephaly on November 8, 2019. After her death on February 26, 2020, this search goes on. I am especially looking forward to the April General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints this weekend because the words of living prophets are a bounty of little messages when you're open to receiving them.

Today, I tell people I am doing pretty well. I cry and I struggle against thoughts of worthiness and worthwhileness. I try to get back that surety that I have felt at various times in my life, the surety that allowed me to walk through the fire with Abigail in the first place. And I watch for messages from the Lord. I need them now more than ever before in my life. I need them just to get out of bed in the morning. They continue to come through my children's hugs and tears, through my husband's words and glances, through scripture, in movies and music and books, through friends and flowers, even a cloudy sky.

We are all walking forward.

Shortly after I came home from the hospital, I moved Abigail's bassinet into my bedroom, right by my side of the bed, under the window. It's where I would have put it if she had lived and we had brought her home. It's where I needed it now, even though she wasn't here anymore. I filled it with a box of 4x6 photos, mostly black and white, of Abigail's feet and hands and my children holding her, and Bill walking through the hospital with her like her sentinel in his Batman shirt.


And I filled it with baby blankets, all the ones she used in her hospital stay and the big one that had covered her throughout the night, the one my mom had crocheted just for her. On the top of the pile I put the preemie sleeper outfit that she had worn throughout that special day of being alive with us. It was a turquoise blue and said "Little Sister" in pink letters. It rested now, lifeless, on top of a swaddling blanket still stained, despite washing, from the piece of the placenta that had been her crown and constant companion in this life.


For the first week, I stopped by the bassinet before getting back in bed, and lifted the tiny outfit and blanket to my face. I tried to inhale whatever of her essence remained in the weave of the fabric. Until one day I lifted it and couldn't smell her anymore. I still looked at it, and held the big crocheted blanket my mom had made. It was almost as big as Abigail, all folded up on itself, and I held it to my chest as if it were her.



After we planted her cherry tree, I looked out the window as I held the blanket and imagined the cherry tree in full bloom with all its temporary seasonal glory.

When my kids came to visit me in my room during my recovery, they sidled past the bassinet and tried not to bump it too much because they knew that would upset me. We had family prayers around our bed, seven people crowded around on their knees with their arms folded as we prayed together each night before bed. The bassinet made it quite crowded on my side.

I knew I couldn't keep the bassinet there forever, but I wanted her blankets and her little owl where I could reach them when I needed them. Thankfully, one night I had a stroke of inspiration. That happens often when you stay up an extra hour lying in bed without distractions. I planned it all out in my mind, and then this bench became the solution.


Before we moved, it was put outside while we tiled most of the floors in our old house. When I asked the boys to keep busy painting the table and chairs white, someone painted this bench, too. It looked like a child had painted it. When we moved the furniture into the new house, there was no place for this window seat. The new kitchen had no outside wall and no window for a window seat. I put it outside by the grill and forgot about it. The other day I pulled out the cordless sander and did my best to add to its character, bring out some of that pretty burgundy red. My body is still very sore, so I only managed to give it a little more character, but I'm happy with my efforts. The bassinet is gone. All the blankets are in this storage bench, and the owl sits on top.


This will be a good place to sit and watch the cherry tree in bloom.

I sent the picture of the bench to my mom and sisters. My mom said, "You're not forgetting, just moving forward." That is right.

*sigh*

This is hard but necessary.

Abigail has been gone a month. I don't think I will ever get over it. But I am getting through it. We all are.

Last week, Bill and I pulled out another favorite movie, Collateral Beauty. I had been afraid to watch it because Will Smith's main character is a man who recently lost his six-year-old daughter to a rare disease.


It hits so close to home, but I needed to watch it again. His journey to acceptance involves writing letters to the three abstractions: Time, Love, and Death. So many of the things he writes to them are poetic versions of my own grief-stricken thoughts. In the case of this film, the title is the lesson, but the audience goes on the same journey as the main character to accept it--because at first it sounds like fluffy nonsense. The stages of grief do not often brook fluffy nonsense. We have to go through all of the main character's conversations with Time, Love, Death, and his ex-wife, before we can believe that there is any such thing as collateral beauty.

"It's there," the ex-wife promises him. And it really is. Bill and I have seen it, felt it, practically swam in it at times.

God is good all the time. There is a Divine Order, as Jeff Olsen says in his book, Knowing. Everything is in Divine Order, though it doesn't often feel that way to us. A simple search of chaos theory on the internet tells us how much we don't know about the way nature functions. What looks like chaos is actually order, and it is designed.

Whatever you're going through, I hope this can be one of your messages for the moment you need it. You are known and loved, cherished even. The way we cherish Abigail times infinity.

God not only loves us each profoundly, but there is a plan for our ultimate happiness. It can't be seen in intricate detail because the future is to be lived moment by moment. So I try to be content with my little messages: the glass butterfly I found in Abigail's garden (or did it find me?); the March snowfall that covered everything in a silent, serene white veil; the pandemic that halted the world for my grief.

There is definitely such a thing as collateral beauty. It's the part that makes life a gift worth living.