It’s hanging again. Her ornament. It faces my spot on the couch where I do most of my work day in and day out. It hangs at just about eye view. The silver shininess of the ornament catches my eye when I glance out the window to look at the snow that continues to layer itself on our apple tree outside.

I can’t imagine not having her ornament on our tree.

It’s something little. To most people it might even register as insignificant. It isn’t Earth-shattering or all that big and bold. It’s just an ornament on a Christmas tree. Right?

It still means so much more to me.

I bought it on clearance in late Spring after her first Christmas. I was meandering around Hallmark, looking for things which have long since been forgotten. I noticed that the ornaments were 75% off the lowest marked price so I took a look. One “Baby’s First Christmas” ornament from 2003 was sitting in the pile. Just one. I bought it without thinking.

I didn’t hang it in 2004.

I was just coming out from under the dark veil of denial of the first year of adoption. While our relationship was fine, I was beginning to feel things that I didn’t quite understand. In fact, some of the things I was feeling felt wrong. Was I allowed to regret things? Was I allowed to miss her so deeply, so viscerally? Was I allowed to think of “what if” and ask why? I didn’t know. The thoughts scared me. They overwhelmed me. And so acting like any other reasonable adult, I ignored them just as I ignored the ornament when I pulled the decorations out to deck the halls that year. I ignored what that meant.

I don’t think I hung it up in 2005 either. In fact, I know I didn’t. My heart was heavy with the realization of all I had lost as I cradled my newborn oldest son in my arms. I couldn’t begin to comprehend what hanging her ornament or lacking to do so meant for me. I couldn’t even comprehend at that time how the relinquishment of my firstborn was going to forever affect how I parented the children under my roof. I wasn’t in denial that year. I was clueless as to everything that placing a child had done to my soul.

Come 2006, after completing almost a full year of therapy, I pulled out the box and opened it for the first time. Turns out that the little star that said “Baby’s First” wasn’t properly attached to the ornament and fell off. I hung it that year, the first in our new home, without the star. It was a step. A baby step. But a step.

In 2007, I fastened the star to the ornament with some fishing line, courtesy of my nature loving husband. And every year since, it has been proudly displayed on our tree.

Maybe the story of how an ornament hangs on our tree means nothing to you. It says volumes about my healing. I was once unable to even consider hanging up something that put my heart on the line, my story on a tree, visible to all who entered our home. It has taken me years to get to a point where I not only need to hang it up like the rest of our ornaments but I am proud to do so. That ornament? Is a silver, shiny, dangling representation of my daughter, what she means in my life and what I have been through to keep her in my life. It’s not just an ornamental decoration to me.

Ornamental Reflection

This ornament and its reflection, both visual on the ornament and here in words, represent this journey I have endured and will continue to endure for years to come.

 

It’s just such a hard time, the week or so after her birthday. Memories that I don’t specifically sit down to recall pop themselves into my brain anyway. I’m caught off guard by flashes of faces, reminders of moments. They eventually make me sit down and look through my old journal entries about this time.

Six years ago, in a post about my first full post-hospital day, I wrote the following:

Josh and I snotted all over each other last night. It breaks my heart that this is hard for him as well. Seeing him cry hurts me just as much as seeing my father cry… both of which happened yesterday. But Josh held me as I cried. And I held him as he cried. We wept for something that I don’t think either of us fully understand. I wish I could take away his pain.

There are so many reasons why I married my husband. The fact that he understands this loss, feels it in his own way and almost always lets me grieve when I need to is one of those very reasons. I say “almost always” because we had an issue on Sunday, her birthday.

He thought he was being supportive by being extra affectionate, loving, present and un-sexual-touchy-feely (hugs, holding hands, etc). I thought he was ignoring me in my grief as he didn’t actually verbalize, “How are you today?” Oh, the different ways in which men and women communicate. They’re funny, no? The truth is that I let my own emotions cloud my judgment on that one. I have no doubt that my husband understands what I’m going through and supports me in my healing journey. In fact, he understands it better than most anyone, having been through everything he has been through with me, with us.

Our anniversary is on Friday. Because, yes, I love to shove everything into one month per year. Why not? I’m hoping that he knows how much I love him… for all that he is and all that he has done and all that he thinks to do. Even if we do communicate differently.

© 2011 The Chronicles of Munchkin Land Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha