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Remember.

ivyprem05

Have you had a premmie baby?

Oh, you have?

So you know.

You understand what it’s like to have your baby too soon.

You know the fear that rises up into your throat like a ball of fire when the doctors say that the baby is coming now.

You know how the world spins out of control as you do the calculations, listen to the statistics.

You remember the different emotions all mingled in together with the tears and the sweat and the adrenaline.

Hope.

Fear.

Excitement

and

reluctance

You know that feeling of wanting everything to be okay,

waiting for that first cry and celebrating when you hear the tiny mewing, so different from your expectations

or

waiting for that first cry and hearing nothing

but the quick, sharp movements of the midwives and doctors -

orders barking across the room and if you look to the open resuscitation table, you catch that first glimspe of your baby.

Boy or girl.

Twins, maybe.

You’ve had a baby born too soon so you remember the tears, you remember those tiny little faces and crinkled eyes with milky blue newness peering out into the world.

You know that first, catch your breath moment of love, the first tentative touch before watching scrubbed in,blue gowned nurses run with your baby through the doors and out into the unknown.

If your little baby was ventilated, the memory of the hiss and whoomph of the machine, may still wake you at night,

the thought of the CPAP machine, pushing vital air into tiny lungs, just a little too underdeveloped to be able to work on their own.

The nasal canula covered in tape, pushing up tiny noses, which the NICU nurses refer to as ‘piggy’.

You remember the strange sights and smells and the sounds of the life giving machines that buzz and ping in the NICU and how your baby was wired up and canulated and monitored so that sometimes you could hardly believe that there was a baby in amongst all of that medical copper.

Doctors and nurses giving you updates on this tiny little creature, who is so much yours but in  many ways not your own. You nod and take it in, seconds later not remembering a thing, except for the first time you reached into the humidicrib and stroked the soft downy newborn fuzz and felt the warmth as your baby grasped your giant pinky finger.

There are words that keep you up long into the night, big words, bigger risks, while you sit and pump the milk that will eventually be tubed into a stomach that is the size of a marble.

If you are a dad you might have stood by your new baby’s incubator and wondered when this would end, wondered why it had happened and how you are going to juggle family and work and now daily trips into the hospital.

You will know about the babes that didn’t make it. You will remember them long after they have left this world.

You will know the mixed feelings.

Horror, sadness but thankfulness that your baby is still hanging in there.

You remember.

noah-email

You might know how it feels when your baby stops breathing.

Those heart stopping minutes as strangers work to save a little life.

The absolute relief when they are stable once more, the apnoea machines that alarm and the sternal rub that you become quite good at in those early weeks because your baby forgets to breathe more than once a day.

You’ve had a premmie baby, so you know.

You can remember the first feed that wasn’t a tube, the very first bath outside of the humidicrib, the first 24 hours without oxygen.

You know that often it’s one step forward and two steps back

and then one day it’s just three steps forward.

You know about the little celebrations,

hitting the 2kg mark (knowing that home is not far away),

the first time they wear clothes instead of nothing but a nappy and how happy it makes you feel.

ivyprem205

 

I know that , if you were one of the lucky ones, you can recall that last day in the NICU when you said goodbye, to the doctors and the nurses who had become your world, for a while.

Those first shakey steps out of the unit.

Perhaps, like me, you stopped dead at the doors of the hospital, unable to move, fearful of what lay ahead, wondering how you would cope with these tiny little beings, without the support of the NICU.

I remember those days that bled into weeks and then months.

I look at them.

I know they are miracles.

I remember.

donglehat9web

 

It’s Premmie Awareness week in Australia.

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33 Responses to “Remember.”

  • katef (193 comments.):

    yes… oh yes! Just yes.

  • river:

    On a personal level, I have known none of this type of worry, but I’m glad every day that your babies made it through to bring so much love and joy to your family.

  • Alison (141 comments.):

    Thank you for sharing with me, the happy ending (or rather, beginning) that I didn’t get with my premmie.
    Axxxxx

  • trish (487 comments.):

    oh Tiff, I remember. Brings tears to my eyes.

    A gorgeous contribution for premmie day and gorgeous little prems they were …and still are such precious treasures.I will never forgot the first day I met Ivy & Noah (& you ;) ).

    I only knew a little of what it means to have prems , one month is far different to 10 weeks prem.
    Still I know the dread of having them whisked away and leaving them at night …nothing prepares you and you never forget.

  • Veronica (623 comments.):

    Beautiful.

  • Darnonymous (26 comments.):

    Lovely. You said it all perfectly. Thankyou.

  • Marylin (120 comments.):

    So beautifully written. xx

  • Blossom (1 comments.):

    I am sorry you had to deal with that.

    look at them now..how wonderful they are.

  • Jeanette (275 comments.):

    Oh man, now you have me in tears!! All those memories

  • [...] Premmie Awareness week in Australia. Share your story like these great bloggers have – Three Ringed Circus and Bad Mummy share the [...]

  • Gemisht (78 comments.):

    Wow, amazing memories.

  • Barbara (156 comments.):

    Wow. Beautifully written. I had only a very vague idea of what having a premmie was like before I read that. Thank you for sharing it.

  • Super Sarah (31 comments.):

    You write in such a way that I feel I understand a little bit more, the trauma and stress that a parent of a premmie goes through. I feel eternally grateful for my overdue babies. Thank you.

  • Pre Schools Phoenix AZ (1 comments.):

    Great post!

    <3 Lindsay

  • Sarah:

    Shivers Tiff…..genuine shivers xoxo

  • Beautiful post, Tiff. Having worked in a NICU, I think you have summed it up marvellously. It makes me happy that you have your two gorgeous little miracles :)

  • My Two Seasons (13 comments.):

    My oldest daughter was premature and we went through much of what you have described here. I had to have an emergency c-section with her though, and I didn’t get to see her until the next day. I cried my heart out when it was time for me to go home and leave her in the NICU. This brought back all the emotions and feeling from that time.

    Your babies are so precious… Thank you for sharing this Tiff.

  • Liz (18 comments.):

    I do not know of these worries, but I am thankful that you and Heather(Spohr) and people like you are kind enough to share your stories. It does wonders for a mother to count her blessings each and every day. I read you all, rarely comment, but always cry. Always mourn with you and celebrate with you and give thanks for my children, their health and their intelligence and their beauty. Thank you thank you thank you. I am grateful each and every day.

  • MidLifeMama (22 comments.):

    I was lucky – my son was 8 weeks early, but he never needed respiratory support and left the special care nursery to come home after 18 days. But that doesn’t change the fact he was early, and that his first months of life were a balancing act of being elated and worried, enjoying him but being worried. Now he is a strong healthy almost 3 year old who you would never guess was a preemie. Thank GOD for modern medicine and for all the nurses and doctors who took such good care of both of us.

  • [...] a few months now, but reading the blogs of other mommies for quite some time.  My heart cries for those who don’t have a similarly happy story to tell.  It breaks for those whose tears come from a place darker than anyone should have to endure.  I [...]

  • Meg:

    Beautifully written as usual Tiff!! Lovely words. Very moving. I am thinking of all those with premmies. xoxo

  • achelois (62 comments.):

    Well that was simply beautiful.

    I was a tiny teeny weeny premmie baby 45 years ago now! In an incubator for 3 months. My mum still cannot see a picture of a baby in an incubator without bursting into tears.

  • PlanningQueen (63 comments.):

    As always Tiff, so beautifully written. Having not had a premmie baby, this gave me a very personal insight into what an emotional experience it must be, Thank you for sharing it.

  • Amy:

    Beautifully written, Tiff.

  • Katrina (1 comments.):

    What a wonderfully written post. Brought tears to my eyes, and I’ve never even had a preemie. But through your words, I can get it, just a bit. Just a tiny bit. Of what the experience would feel like.

    Wow.

    You children are beautiful.

  • Christina @ ingallslife (6 comments.):

    tiff, thanks for sharing your heart with us. you have a beautiful way of sharing. i see a bit of you in each post. your ivy and noah are wonderful. i have not had a premie, but we did spend time in the hospital with #2. she has been hospitalized four times in her short 20 months. also #1 has allergies kind of like ivy’s she is doing better for now… ivy and noah are so cute together, your photo shows the love they have between them.
    also, thanks for “visiting” have a great week

  • Catherine (1 comments.):

    Ivy and Noah are just beautiful.

    I also had preemie babies. Twins. This post brought it all rushing back. That hiss and whoomph, those furious calculations, those endless months that just seem to stretch on and on. You have described it all so well. It still makes me feel as though the bottom has dropped out of my stomach, just reading about it.

    Sadly one of my little girls didn’t make it home, she died in the NICU. I remember, my two little miracles.
    Thank you for sharing.

  • Danielle (117 comments.):

    This brings tears to my eyes. I REMEMBER!!! Thank you for sharing. My kiddos both tried to come 12wks early and were held off with medication until only 5wks early. We still spent time in the NICU with Sam, and you are right I do remember. Here’s to 2009 being a year where the incidence of preemies decreases and statistics for survival improve:-)

  • lceel (354 comments.):

    I’ve been coming back to this post for two days. I STILL don’t know what to say – but that they are miracles.

  • Mum:

    How well I remember!(both yours & mine) and your brave post has made the memories so vivid. Thankyou. xoxo

  • Hyphen Mama (316 comments.):

    OMG, I’m full of tears and I have to leave the house now.

    Your writing is so much from the heart and soul. So beautiful.

    Your babies are so gorgeous.

  • Lisa LeBlanc:

    Oh my goodness…your words are my words but words I have never put down or spoken to anyone…no one but me. My twin boys were born at 28 wks weighing in at 1020gm and 980gm, this after 14 weeks of bed rest due to premature rupture of the membranes at 14 wks of Twin A….after 2 years of infertility treatments. Those feeling are as real today as they were 15 years ago. Bless you for your lovely posts about being a preemie mom and what it means. Your little ones are precious. Lisa in Texas

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