Why Gratitude?
When my sons passed away, it felt as though the whole world had ended. Initially, I was in a fog of morphine. Literally, in the hospital I had a morphine pump and could push it if I needed to numb the pain.
The first night, when I woke up without any morphine in my system, I found myself screaming and crying on the floor. My husband had to race to the nurses station for help. I don't know what they did or how they got my back in bed, but they did. And from then on, I had to learn how to live. How to take each breath. How to walk around with empty arms, cradling my babies that had died.
My babies were dead. What was I to do? I drank to oblivion. What else is one to do? And then, miraculously, I got pregnant. My sons sent me a miracle in the shape and form of a beautiful, healthy, prayer answering baby girl.
I had to get my act together. I had no choice. My sons made the choice for me by sending my their sister. They had chosen me for this very special soul. I was not going to let them down. Failure was not an option.
I had to learn to cope; I had to learn to survive. I could not drink, I could not throw away this precious life. For now I knew and still I know how amazing a little baby can be.
And so I read, and I meditated, and I established a practice of writing a list each day of what I could be grateful for. At times the list was total BS. I lied. But I did it. I was grateful for my dog. I was grateful for my family. I was grateful my sons stayed as long as they did. I was just grateful. And you know what? It worked. It took longer than most say it will, but about 6 months later and even now, I can say I am grateful for my sons, I am grateful they stayed until I was 36 weeks and 1 day pregnant and I am grateful they sent me first one little sister and then another.
If they hadn't stayed as long as they did, I wouldn't hold the two precious souls in my arms, that I hold now. I can still be brought to blinding, heart stopping tears in a moment. I still drop to my knees in the animal roar of pain out of nowhere. But, more often than not, more days than not, I am happy. I am grateful. I am thankful. I am alive. My daughters are alive, and my sons are near. I hold them in my heart, I see them in the sunlight, and I feel them in soul. They are here. They are just beyond my reach, but never far, and I am grateful.
xx