I always wanted to be a Missionary. Now that I have four children at home, eight in Heaven, I realize that my Mission Field is my backyard and my family and I are a testimony to Life!! Here I recount my musings, my stories, thoughts, and adventures as a Mommy and as a Missionary helping to build the Culture of Life! Won't you join me?
Showing posts with label loss. Show all posts
Showing posts with label loss. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2013

Sarah Therese

As any of you who have read this blog before probably know, I make many more re-birth announcements than I ever thought I would. 


Way back when I started this blog I thought I would chronicle fun and moving stories of how we were growing our family.  I never imagined it would turn out so differently, or that we would be growing our family - in Heaven.  Yet, here I am again, wanting to relate the blessed and sad, the death and Heavenly life of another precious little one who has gone Home to wait for us In Eternity. 

I realize that many of you didn't even know I was expecting again as we kept it quiet and were only just starting to tell people.   



It was another traumatic experience however I have so much peace. I want to, in a special way, thank St. Philomena for her intercession and I know she was close by me during this time. 

On Monday, June 10, 2013,  I started to think things weren't right with the baby (though I had a nagging intuition for a while before that). I went to the ER after experiencing some troubling cramps and asked my husband to prepare the kids just in case.  At the ER it was confirmed that there was no heartbeat or movement and that the baby had not developed much beyond 10 weeks.  ( I was technically 12 weeks on Monday).  I explained the situation to the ER doc and my past history.  He was the SAME ONE who gave me such a hard time when we lost Claire.  I prayed for him.  He was much mellower this time and didn't make any comments that were hurtful.  Thank you, God. 

The whole time I kept praying "I trust You.  I Trust You." and I asked Jesus to allow me to surrender to suffering that He may send.  St Philomena's intercession was very evident as she made it clear several weeks ago that she would like to be a special player in my family's journey towards Holiness.  (I have had  a devotion to her since I was in High School).  Unfortunately the doctors figured they knew better than I did so they sent me home.  I knew from past experience I had at least 12 hours before things would get more dicey so I went home at 1am.  The next morning I was up by 6am and calling my OB.  He had off that day and I was instructed by the staff to wait until Wednesday morning for a D & C.  I calmly explained that I had no reason to believe my body would wait that long.  (And honestly, a D & C, while safer for my condition, is not ideal as I prefer to baptize and anoint my children.)  I was told by an irate nurse to "just go back to the ER then."   I abandoned the situation to God, praying over and over "Jesus I surrender to You completely, take care of everything"   and I headed back to the ER.  My dear friend, you know her as "Doula-Bestie-Extraordinaire", who was with me for all the trauma with Lolek's loss (she was literally measuring cups of blood as I hemorrhaged) met me at the ER. By now I felt as though I was in early labor in earnest. 

Thankfully after about 2 hours in the waiting room a Tech-Assistant whom I had befriended last time I was in the ER (a few weeks ago for a suspected DVT - it was not! ) recognized me.  He came out to see why  I was there.  I explained the situation.  He disappeared and 5 minutes later returned with a wheelchair. "You shouldn't be out here" he said and he told me he found me a room with the "really good doctor who listens."  What a blessing!!!  He was right too.  She (the doctor) is the first who has EVER listened and grasped my situation.  After explaining everything to her she responded by saying, "There is no way I can send you home."  I was so relieved I thanked her for understanding and for listening to me and burst into tears. 

She arranged with the OB on call to find me a room for observation to stay in until the scheduled surgery, should I somehow make it that long.  I waited for 13 hours (DBE and I managed to find creative ways to entertain ourselves!)  in the ER before a room on the pre-surgical unit was secured.  They gave me morphine which slowed the progression of labor.  I was of course not allowed to eat but I snuck some water.  At 9pm I was moved to the pre-surgical unit for "observation."  I explained to the nurse what to expect and let her know that I was progressing more rapidly and doubted I'd make it to the morning.  She looked slightly concerned as she wasn't an L & D nurse and had limited mother/baby experience.  By 1am I was extremely uncomfortable.  I decided worrying was useless and once again abandoned the situation to God.  I was prepared to deliver my baby, I had all my baptismal supplies and a small box for her body.  But if God so chose, I was ready for the D & C and would be at peace with it.  I Trusted His Providence.  I was able to sleep for half an hour.  Then my water broke and I knew what was to come. 

I will spare you the gory details.  Lets just say, I delivered Sarah's tiny perfect body.  Baptized and anointed her.  Kissed her and held her.  Then carefully, Doula-Bestie placed her in the little box.  Being the amazing Doula and friend that she is, she had spent the night with me. She donned gloves and prepared for the worst, which very shortly followed.  I talked the shell shocked nurse through what to do. (how many chux pads to get, what to expect, how I needed to be upright, that I would need a bag of fluid to help my BP and heart rate as I was already mildly tachycardic...   I hemorrhaged badly, as I expected.  I of course retained the placenta.  After a very short amount of time the nurse and the tech realized  I wasn't exaggerating about what I told them to expect and how bad it would get quickly.  They had to call the OB on call 3 times before they convinced him I didn't need to be "observed" and that I would in fact bleed to death unless he came in for an emergency D & C.  So after an hour I was finally brought down to the OR for the procedure. 

I am glad to say I retained my sense of humor through it all, and managed to make the nervous nurse and
tech laugh.  The nurse thanked me for "teaching her so much" and explained that she had no experience with "mother-baby" emergencies as she mostly dealt with patients who were there for bariatric surgery or occasionally a heart procedure.  Rarely did she get "real emergencies" like me.  I of course mashed on my uterus the entire time, knowing it would at least help with the clotting and hemorrhaging, and remembering that it also helps me to not pass out.  I am infinitely thankful for "DBE" who was helping with everything and helped to explain to the nurses what my situation was - as she witnessed it all first hand and close up the last time.  (But this time she could at least wear gloves and didn't have to call 9-1-1, I was already in the hospital!)

Eventually I was prepped and the anesthesiologist satisfied.  The OB showed up, I explained I had retained the placenta and would continue to hemorrhage.  I reminded them that I could not have Pitocin as it increased blood clot risk and asked to be given lovenox or heparin immediately following the surgery to prevent another PE.  They agreed. 

What happened next was quite a remarkable and blessed experience for me.  

All day I had been praying the Stations of the cross.  I love them.  I was wheeled into the OR but not put under immediately.  Instead, for some reason they prepped me while I was awake.  I was laid on the operating table, my arms were stretched out to either side and strapped down. I was strapped to the table.  My legs were stretched out in front of me.  I was unable to mash my uterus and felt myself bleeding even more uncontrollably.  I was in so much physical pain.  And then they removed my gown to put on all the monitors.  I lay there, in the shape of a cross, bleeding, naked, and in pain.  I was so moved all I could pray was "Thank you."  Finally they brought the anesthesia over and I was put to sleep.  Is it possible to be facing ones mortality (yet again!) and yet feel privileged?  Because in that moment, as crazy as it sounds, that is what I felt. 

When it was all over I was given my lovenox, it was confirmed I had retained the placenta.  I was eventually brought back  upstairs.  I slept a little and woke up to call the Funeral Home. I was able to sleep holding Sarah's box.  I made sure to keep her body moist.  The wonderful Funeral director came to take her body and I spoke with him for a while.  He has managed all our babies' burial services and is so kind and compassionate.  I cried healthy, sad tears of finality as I handed her to him and he and his wife left my room.  

I am now home recovering.  I am more sore and in more pain now, as I am experiencing the effects of the surgery -  they seem to have positioned my legs badly and I have torn and pulled muscled in my thighs and bruises on my arms where they strapped me too tight.  I have shortness of breathe upon walking even a few steps, and dizziness which will wane as I build back my blood supply.  After having not eaten for 36 hours I am gaining my appetite back.  I am very pleased to say it has been 48 hours post hemorrhage and I have not thrown a clot.  I thank God and St Philomena for her intercession!

I  feel as though I should be falling apart.  But I am not.  I recognize that I miss my baby and have moments of healthy grief over my loss.  But early on in the pregnancy it occurred to me that I should not pray for her to be allowed to be born full term and alive, especially if that is not what God had planned for her.  Who am I to deny any of my children Heaven?! So instead I prayed that God's Will be accomplished and that I be given the Grace to accept it, whatever it would be.  I believe He answered those prayers tenfold. 

I can see His Hand at work in all the circumstances surrounding Sarah's delivery and death, and in the way I was allowed to suffer, without the fear I thought I would face.  

I am human, and find myself battling fear of another Pulmonary Embolism every so often, and dealing with some hormone-induced anxiety whenever I get short of breathe, but that is nothing compared to what I think many people expect me to me experiencing.  (and after my PE I have found that a level of anxiety associated with symptoms and past experiences is normal.  So I can recognize it for what it is and move on).

I can only attribute it to God's goodness and His Mercy and to St Philomena's help and I praise God for His goodness. 


Some links you may find of interest after reading this story: 


Monday, January 28, 2013

Here We Go Again - Bing Mary

When I first started this blog I was newly pregnant with Claire. I thought I would happily blog about the joys and trials of pregnancy and then about the adventure of having 5 and hopefully more children.  I was blissfully ignorant of the world of infant loss and miscarriage and naively assumed since my first 4 pregnancies were uneventful that all mine would be.  Boy was I wrong.

At that time my biggest fear in life was miscarriage.  I didn't know how anyone survived it.  Then Claire died and I learned that I was strong enough to hold my tiny baby in my hands and attend her burial service.  Then I figured she was my "1 in 5" - one in every five pregnancies statistically ends in miscarriage.  I felt relieved that I'd "never have to go through that again."  Until Francis.  He taught me that nothing was certain and that all life, even if very brief, is a gift to be thankful for, and that blessings can come in very unexpected ways.  I secretly hoped I was done with loss and pondered how "those women" - the ones with multiple losses - endure.  I pondered this until Lolek's death and all that I went through facing my own mortality squarely in the face.  Losing Lolek taught me how to surrender and quite simply changed the paradigm through which I view life, faith, prayer, and God's Will.

Imagine then how it felt to find out that despite doing everything spot on perfect as far as NFP and avoiding pregnancy goes, I felt when that faint blue line showed up on the EPT.  Thy Will be Done!  That was the prayer for the little one whom we named "Baby Bing."  Thy Will be Done.  Not please let this one live, or don't make me go through another loss again, nor I'll name the baby after a really cool saint if he or she can just live, or even, I've had enough suffering, God, can You please just let this be normal?  Simply Thy Will be Done, often with an added, and please help me be surrendered to Your Will, and only content to know that whatever comes of me or this pregnancy is what You want for my own sanctification. There is freedom in praying that way, and it took quite an ordeal to teach it to me.  I was happy and content to be pregnant again.

Of course it wasn't a piece of cake.  Thanks to Lolek and my subsequent PE I immediately needed to start injections (self administered) of blood thinners.  I couldn't use my beloved midwives and instead needed to use not only an OB/GYN but also a hematologist and internal medicine doctor  as well.  This is quite a sacrifice for a girl who does not like doctors (no offense - there are some fantastic ones!) and who thinks birth is a natural, normal event not usually requiring medical intervention.  Well, unfortunately I am the exception to that rule.  So it was off to the races and blood draws and early ultrasounds and doctor after doctor.

Through it all I made sure to make memories with this baby.  I didn't know how long I had with him under my heart, so I made a point to consciously make memories.  Bing and I did Christmas shopping together.  We spent Advent together, he was with us on our family outing to "Bethlehem" and the live Nativity.  I am so thankful that we made these memories because it was at one of the ultrasounds that it was determined that Baby Bing was not growing.  In fact he barely made it beyond implantation.   Bing was conceived and lived long enough to begin the whole process of developing what would be his gestational sac and placenta but he ceased to develop.  God wanted another soul.  This is called a "blighted ovum" in medical terms.  My body recognized pregnancy and since the sac continued to develop I endured 10 weeks of pregnancy and all the wonderful puking, nauseated, hormonal bliss associated with it.

Since I have a a very well documented history of almost dying after a loss I was advised to go for a D & C.  I was hesitant at first, wanting to make absolutely certain that a teeny baby wasn't "hiding."  (In early ultrasounds it IS possible to receive a blighted Ovum diagnosis only to see a baby a week or two later.  From my research this seems to happen about 40-50% of time depending on the date of the "diagnosing" ultrasound.)  After confirming that there was no longer a baby, and that the sac was losing its integrity, I agreed to do a D & C.  There was no baby to bury and I was hoping it might avoid some of the drama I had experienced in the past. Unfortunately that wasn't entirely the case.  Drama seems to be a specialty of mine.

While waiting to hear from the OB to schedule the procedure I cracked a tooth and needed emergency root canal surgery.  While in the endontist's chair, after having my mouth numbed and all the scary stuff that was to somehow fit in my mouth explained to me, I started cramping.  I excused myself and went to restroom.  Yes.  My body was beginning its miscarriage "labor."  I got myself as ready as possible and hurried back to the dentist's chair.  They continued with the root canal while I silently counted how long the contraction cramps lasted and prayed I wouldn't hemorrhage in his chair.  (Hemorrhaging is a specialty of mine.)  As soon as he was done (it took longer than planned as there were some complications - of course) I called my OB who wasn't there. So I headed to the ER as per her earlier instructions.  Once there I spoke with the OB who was filling in for her.  He did not understand, nor try to understand, my "special" circumstances and sent me home.  So I went to a different ER.  They were fantastic and understood right away why I was there.  They didn't want to have me come in after it was too late and need a transfusion (been there, done that!).  The magnificent doctor was prepping me for an emergency D & C.  Except it was midnight and the OB on call didn't want to come in.  In fact, he (or she) refused.  The ER doc valiantly tried to convince them otherwise.  To no end.  His hands were tied.  He was so frustrated and truly was concerned for my health.  "I don't want to see you back in here in an hour or two needing bags of blood."  I was grateful that he understood my situation.  But I had to leave.  I was scared.

I managed a few hours of sleep and called my OB's office as soon as it opened.  Thankfully she was back.  "Go to the ER NOW."  Were my instructions.  I refrained from grumbling "I tried that already!"  Doula Bestie Extraordinairre, who had spent the night with me in the second ER met me at my OB's hospital.  It was very nice.  They "got it."  They understood.  They knew exactly why I was there and why I should not be allowed to miscarry at home.  I felt better.  The ER doc dispensed with what he called "unnecessary exams" and got right to the point.  "No use waiting, we need to get you on the OR schedule and get your OB over here.  I'm on it!"  and he literally bounced out the door.  From then on they all knew I was a ticking time bomb.

The funny thing about miscarriage is that despite what doctors tell you, its childbirth. You have contractions, your body follows the same pattern it would if you were laboring to give birth to a healthy full term baby.  Everyone expects tons of blood and guts but that doesn't happen until your body is actually expelling the contents of the uterus  - and if your baby was far enough long, you will birth the baby first and then the rest - just like normal, healthy, childbirth.  Before that you will generally lose your mucus plug, then perhaps spot. But not much more.  Unfortunately its been my experience that miscarriage and second trimester loss contraction cramps are WORSE than the ones I endured giving birth to my live children.

I was offered pain meds.  They made me loopy and able to ignore the pain, but they didn't stop the pain.  The day wore on.  I hadn't eaten since 2pm the day before.  The contraction cramps were getting closer together and more intense.  Doula Bestie was keeping an eye on me. Eventually I was transferred to the pre-Op area and prepped for the procedure.  The contractions were right on top of one another.  It was a race against time, and if time ran out, well at least I was in a hospital   I knew what would happen - and it would not be pretty.  I was terrified of hemorrhaging.  Terrified.  I tried to pray Thy Will be Done, but its hard when you're scared.  And I was scared.  Eventually I gave up.  Hold my hand, Mama I prayed in my head. The last time I had been in the hospital Mary truly became my mother, and she helped me surrender.  I knew she could do it again.  I was increasingly uncomfortable - no rest or relief between contractions.  Then the hot and cold flashes started.  I denied to myself that I was in transition.  Then I hiccuped and Doula Bestie said, I bet you're in transition   (She's good) and I continued to deny it  - which of course if what every childbirth educator worth her salt will tell you is "self doubt" - a sure sign of transition.  So I denied that too.  Despite my valiant attempts at denial (I do that during all my births) I knew I was really up against the clock.  I fought the fear.  I needed to surrender it.  I didn't want to. (Why didn't I learn this lesson well enough the first time around!?)  The anesthesiologists were coming.  Whew.  I began to think I made it just under the gun. And then it happened.  The hemorrhaging started.  The anesthesiologists were at my room and there I was, losing it - in every way possible.  I started shaking and burst into tears.  Poor Doula Bestie leaped into action.  She worked to calm me down, and explained to the bewildered and startled anesthesiology team why I was freaking out and bleeding everywhere.  They got a move on.  One gave me a tranquilizer which I think was actually the sedative because things got fuzzy pretty quickly after that.  "Let's get you into the OR right now and take care of this" said another.  Doula Bestie whispered everything would fine and I finally surrendered. I could feel myself continuing to hemorrhage as they wheeled me down the hallway.  "Ok, Mama, He wins." I thought to myself.  "I get it now."

And then I woke up.

Groggy in post-op.  I blinked.  I didn't really remember anything except random faces in the OR, bright lights and an oxygen mask.  That was it.  I noticed that my hair had been taken down and arranged nicely around me on the pillow.  I was nauseated and had a massive headache, but I wasn't bleeding profusely.  I was on my second bag of pitocin and I could feel it working its magic.  It was over.

I learned an important lesson thanks to Bing. Surrender means that you must surrender even your fear.  And that new fears need to be identified and surrendered too. Fear prevents you from accepting God's Will.  I had much peace during the short time I had with Bing and that was because I was actively seeking abandonment to God's Will and total surrender.  When I had to face my biggest fear, and probably the only one I had left, I was paralyzed.  I was too afraid to Trust God fully.  So I turned to His Mother.  She got me there.  But He first allowed me to experience the very thing of which I was most afraid - because I needed to learn that I must surrender even my fear and my emotional wounds to Him.  It was a powerful lesson, and one I can say that I am thankful for.

The kids asked to name the baby "Bing Mary" and I couldn't argue it.  Somehow it fits.  He will have a place in our family just like the brothers and sister who preceded him into Eternity.  I miss him.  I wanted to hold him.  I wanted to watch him grow and learn and change and to see the person he was to become.  My heart grieves for his loss, even as I can have peace knowing that God had other plans, and His plans, though mysterious, are perfect.

I miss baby Bing, as I miss all my children who have been privileged to look on the majesty of God's Face before me.  I realize I am one of "those women" now  - the very ones I was afraid of becoming- the ones who have endured loss after loss.  And somehow I can find peace with it.  Somehow, and it is only through the Grace of God, I know that I am and will continue to be OK, even if I must face more losses in the future.  I know now that nothing is outside of His Will and that He works for our good, and in the future, I will heed the lessons my teeny baby taught me - to surrender fully to His loving and perfect Will - no matter what.




Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Its Been a Year, Lolek Pio

Its been a year.  A whole year.  I haven't been able to blog about it until now.  A year ago tonight my tiny baby son was born at home, Eternally Asleep.  He was so tiny.  I was only 13 weeks along with him.  His nickname was "Baby Green Chocolate" and we gave him the name of Lolek Pio.  My dearest friend was there with me.  She is a doula by trade and to have her there with me was such a blessing and such a grace.  We had found out the night before that Lolek was no longer alive when she accompanied me to the Emergency Room.  She held my hand as the ultrasounds tech's silence spoke volumes.  She drove me home and we collected supplies.  She spent the night at my house as my kids spent the night at hers with her amazing Husband.  (My husband was away that weekend and didn't get back until after Lolek had been born).  She taught me how to crochet the next day as we waited for contractions to intensify.  She helped me clean his tiny body after he was born and she helped me Baptize him.  And then she basically saved my life.

After Lolek was born I had about a half an hour with him.  I held him, cleaned him, anointed and baptized him and kissed him.  I had prepared a tiny coffin for his body and I placed him in it after I had held him as long as I could.  My friend took a few pictures of him for me, so I could remember him (like I could ever forget).  After half an hour and after he was safely in the coffin, I realized that I didn't feel well and that I hadn't delivered a placenta.  When he was born he was attached to his umbilical cord and I had to cut it.  So I knew there was a placenta and a cord that needed to be delivered - albeit small ones.  Lolek's coffin was placed in the fridge on a shelf I had cleared for him (I know it sounds wrong, but its the best thing to do if you are waiting for a funeral director to come and take the baby's body for burial arrangements.)  I told my friend that I hadn't delivered a placenta.  Thats when I realized that I was bleeding  - a LOT.

Things happened very quickly after that.  With Lolek Pio anointed, baptized, and safely awaiting the funeral director my mind was able to shift to survival - and that is exactly what it needed to do because I was hemorrhaging - badly.  In an instant my friend switched from concerned bestie to super-doula.  She got me into my bed flat on my back.  No sign of a placenta or cord.  She felt my uterus.  Way too soft.  She mashed on it - lots more blood.  Lots.  By now there was blood everywhere.  It was in the bathtub it was in a garbage bag we had placed over the toilet for the very purpose of collecting it (midwife trick).  It was all over my bedroom - buckets, bowls, if I hadn't been feeling like passing out I would have made a Halloween joke.  Doula extraordinaire called my midwife.  She talked her through a few things to check.  It wasnt looking good.  Then my midwife instructed her to measure the blood.  Yes, my dear dear friend was elbow deep in my blood.  I cannot express to you the very deep humility I felt and appreciation I have for her.  She measured: 1 cup, 2 cups, 3 cups, 4 cups, 5 cups, 6 cups....and there was still more.  After measuring six cups the midwife cut her off.  She was concerned.  Still no placenta.  By now I was mashing and squeezing my poor uterus - trying to keep it as firm as possible.  I knew if I didn't I would quite literally bleed to death on my bed.  "I think we need to call 9-11," I said.  My friend agreed. She called.  I mashed.

She took over mashing as I heard the sirens.  Sirens.  They must be worried.

The EMTs came in and God bless them, didn't barf.  There were two seasoned EMTs and one newbie on the squad.  I thought he was gonna pass out.  "That's a lot of blood ma'am," he said, ashen.   They took some vitals and did NOT look impressed.  I was instructed not to move as they made a hammock out of the bedsheets and carried me into the hallway where the stretcher was.  My husband was on his way home.  I asked my friend's husband, who got to the house just after the ambulance did, to call him and tell him to go to the hospital.  Then away we went.  I was quite dizzy and very lightheaded but I was determined to keep mashing.  I instructed on of the EMTS on how to "mash" on my uterus.  He had never done it before.  I explained that I would bleed out if he didn't.  The poor newbie looked scared again.  As soon as the doors closed they rolled out, sirens wailing, speeding.  I figured this meant things were pretty bad.  Usually the sirens don't go unless there is a real emergency.  The driver didn't even slow down for the traintracks!! He just yelled "tracks" and the EMTs in the back with me held me down as we flew over them.  Then they got my IVs going - one in each arm and put me on full oxygen.  I was having trouble staying awake and fought it as hard as I could.  I kept mashing.  I could hear the EMT call in to the ER.  He sounded gruff.  He said a lot of code words I didn't understand but I DID hear "tachycardic" a few times and "crash cart."  That was enough to give me a bit of an adrenaline rush.  The ambulance sped on.

I remember at one point time sort of stood still.  I was laying on the stretcher and I was praying in my mind.  I was asking for strength and for God to give me courage.  I kept thinking of my children.  All of a sudden I "saw" Jesus.  I don't exactly know how to describe it.  It was in  my mind but out of it.  Clear as day.  Jesus was on a horse. He was dressed as a Knight in Shining Armor.  He was wielding a big sword and a lance and He was fighting.  I distinctly recall just KNOWING that He was fighting for me.  And then it was as if WHOOSH I rushed into the fast paced present again. The ambulance arrived at the hospital and the EMTs jumped out.  I kept telling them I was Catholic and that I needed a priest.  They were busy.  They jogged me into the hospital and we took a route I had never taken before - bypassing all the desks, all the rooms and went into a special room.  I found out later it was the ICU "Crash Unit."  As they wheeled me in I saw 7 nurses all scrubbed up ready to pounce.  One was holding the paddles of a crash cart - ready to go.  It dawned on me that the reason I felt so awful was because I was in pretty bad shape.  I kept mashing.

They transferred me from the stretcher to the hospital bed and POUNCE!  every nurse in the room went to work.  I had my clothes cut off me as someone else was putting in another IV, I was being checked all over, vitals taken, oxygen started again, the doctor appeared at my side.  Laura, I am doctor so and so.  We need to get your permission for a transfusion if you need one.  I gave it.  I didn't have a choice.  Not if I wanted to live.  I told him that I had a retained placenta.  I kept mashing.  I told the nurses they needed to mash on my stomach.  They were so busy getting me prepped and waiting for me to flat line that no one heard.  So I kept mashing.  Eventually they let my friend back.  She took over mashing for a few minutes.  The doctor asked us to stop mashing to see what would happen.  It wasn't pretty.  Lets just say I didn't know I could "squirt" blood like that.  Poor doc.  He told me I could go back to mashing.  Then a poor tech said he needed to do a blood draw so they could get my blood type for the transfusion.  I was actually snarky and told him he could stand at the edge of the bed and catch it.  He turned pale and I apologized, holding out my IV intubated arm to him.  He hurried away.

Unfortunately though that last dramatic blood loss made me very woozy.  I was seeing double and couldn't tell which way was up.  I started to shiver all over.  Uncontrollable shivering.  I was going into shock. Still I kept mashing. The doctor kept calling for bags a blood.  It wasn't coming so he sent a tech to "go and get it. Now!"  When the tech came back they started my transfusion - using the biggest needles possible. Then they  started a Potassium drip - which burns like nothing I have ever felt before - on the other arm. I kept mashing.  I was still hemorrhaging   Finally after what seemed like ages but was really about an hour and a half the OB on call came in.  Immediately she got me set up.  The nurses were trying to keep me awake and the one on "standby" with the crash cart kept moving closer.  She said there was no time for a D and C to get the retained placenta, I had lost too much blood and didn't have time to get to an OR. She looked at me, "I am going to have to go in and scrape it out. It's going to hurt, but we don't have a choice."  I nodded.  They got me set up in a makeshift way.  The nurses were afraid to move me as any movement sent my heart rate dangerously high.  And God Bless her, that OB, she got the job done.  We didn't even have time for pain killers.

I laid there in blinding pain and I kept thinking of the scene in Braveheart where he gets disemboweled at the end.  "Freeeeeeeeeedom" I whispered into my oxygen mask, laughing at myself.  Then I started shaking again.  Finally, finally, after quite a bit of time, the OB was confident that she had gotten everything.  She gave my uterus a good hard mash and squeeze.  It hurt so badly after being mashed and scraped and pounded on all night long.  Then she gave me two shots of pitocin.  I could feel the blessed contractions start!  FINALLY!!  They hurt like heck but I was so happy to feel them that I almost didn't care.  If they hurt they were working!!!  I didn't have to mash anymore!! I hadn't flat-lined, and I was alive!

My husband eventually arrived and was let back to the ICU with me.  I was holding my friend's hand as he walked back.  I am sure from his angle it looked like a war zone.  (The hospital collected buckets of blood too).  I, however, was being cleaned up a bit by some nurses and had blankets piled on my to try to stop the shaking.  I felt so cold!  The crash cart nurse put the paddle down.  She leaned over, "I can't believe you never passed out," she said, "I was watching your vitals the whole time and I am stunned I didn't need those," she referenced the paddles.  "Jesus was fighting for me," I whispered.  She smiled.

I stayed in the Crash Unit for a while longer as they waited for me to stabilize a bit.  They did an ultrasound to make sure there was nothing left behind and gave me some more pitocin.  Then they gave me some uber-painkillers.  They made me feel like I was floating on the ceiling.

I spent the night on two IV drips.  I didn't sleep.  The Potassium burned its way through my veins making it impossible to sleep, and my legs felt funny.  They hurt and then they would go numb, and then they would ache.  Nope, no sleep for me.

The next day my husband went home and met the funeral director. He gave him Lolek Pio's coffin and made arrangements.  Later that night he came and picked me up.  I was told I need LOTS of rest and to drink and take some iron supplements.  I was still on the very low blood volume side of things and needed to take my time as my body caught up with itself.

I went home and saw that my husband had cleaned up the mess.  He remarked later that he couldn't believe the odor the blood had.  "It smelled like Chrism" is what he said.  He was expecting a foul or nauseating odor and instead, he kept insisting it smelled like chrism.  "You smell like chrism too" he said to me more than once  - even after I had showered!  He also said he felt very strongly the presence of Padre Pio.  This didn't surprise me.  Two weeks before losing Lolek, Padre Pio was making it known that we were going to need him.  So when I started to sense that things weren't right with the pregnancy I immediately knew who to ask for intercession! That is why Lolek's middle name is Pio.  He was very near me as everything happened.

Little did I know that Padre Pio and Pope John Paul II were about to play an even bigger role in my life....  but that is for another post!

Baby Lolek Pio, I miss you and I long to hold you. I ask that you look down on us and along with your brother and sister who are also in Heaven, pray for us and for our friends and family.  Amen.