The Journey

A soul’s journey

Starts in the dark

Like ink on paper

It leaves its mark

To experience the joy and pain

As paint on canvas

Causes a stain

Worn out like a piece

Of fine old leather

That shows all the lines and scuffs

The story of the wearer

What would we be

Without what we’ve endured?

I’m sure it went differently

Than what you have heard

Days of sheer heaven

Nights of pure hell

Tell me a story

I know all too well

Carry that burden

Both ways are uphill

Live out a lifetime

That’s long lost its thrill

You can carry on this way

If you must

Searching in vain for loyalty and trust

It seems inevitable to me

That you’ll discover it’s a fantasy

And only in your reflection

Will you see your new direction

Set the course

It’s up to you

There is no other way

You’re already moving on from here

For you know you cannot stay

If you look intently

You will surely see

What’s really going on

You’re creating everything

As you go along

Breathe in some truth and

Exhale all the lies

Try a different reality on for size

The soul’s journey will take flight

It has already begun

A story not left unread

A song not left unsung

I am full

My mind never settles. It’s always full of thoughts, some meaningless and redundant it seems, and some are deep and profound…at least to me. Now that I am over four years into this hell journey of grief, it shocked me a little to have the reaction that I had just now, a full blown grief meltdown. Apparently, I am full of tears.

I know some things to be true: I am full of grief, in many different forms. I think of Colton so often throughout the day, I can’t help it. Sometimes I smile at a memory and I’m all good. Sometimes I hear a song and I sit and cry. Sometimes, if the clock catches me at 11:11, I ask for a hug and I get a full body chill during which I sit back, close my eyes and drift away while tears or acknowledgment, joy, pain, acceptance, remembrance, anxiety, gratitude, longing, and many other emotions have their way with me. Sometimes, I get nothing at all.

I am full of the condition of the world. I simply cannot watch the news without crying at least once. Being of Ukranian heritage, my grandfather being born in Kyiv, the devastation taking place there is crushing for me and I feel the pain for these people. I look at any one of them and know that they could probably slip into a family reunion on my father’s side unnoticed. We Ukranians are a strikingly handsome bunch….

I am full of people not giving a shit about each other. It seems, at least to me, that during the pandemic we all retreated into our little holes to wait it out, and now that we’re all peaking out and wondering silly things like “should I go out without a mask?”, is it ok to actually smile at someone and hope they smile back at me? Can I hope to ever lie on a beach in Mexico for a week and still be able to easily get back to the comfort and safety of my home? Is my retirement fund still secure and able to support me when I decide to say “See Ya!” in a couple of years and finally pursue my long list of “things I’ll do when I have time to do them”? Random violence is increasing, the economy is in the toilet, the next generation thinks that owning their own home is a pipe dream. I am full of it.

I am full of empty promises. Constant plans in place but no follow-through. We are ruining the earth by the way “progress” has us living our lives. I have a moment every time I take a load of single use containers to the bottle depot. It’s such a mixed feeling, for on one hand I am recycling and doing my part. On the other hand, I damn well know that at least half of it shouldn’t have been purchased in the first place. I see the homelessness here and the effects of addiction. Was it always this way and I just never saw it?? Since Colton passed I see it all, everything, highlighted in gory detail. I’m not sure if this is similar to what other bereaved mothers experience or if it’s just me, but it’s super painful and I would rather it stop. I know it won’t because I’m different now. I’m full. I wouldn’t call it a gift from the other side. It’s some sort of awakening that I have a love/hate relationship with.

I’m full of suffering in silence. I know how I feel every day. I feel like it’s a struggle to get up, put my ‘zoom’ face on and pretend that I’m fine. I know I’m not alone in this, though my reason is likely different from the people that I know and love. I have dear friends that suffer depression, not from losing a child but from a host of other reasons, health, relationships, money, where they are versus where they want to be, job stress, you name it. But they carry on, suffering in silence, with only those closest to them knowing the actual, down to the brass tacks reason for why they feel so lost, so empty, so….full.

It’s crippling, feeling full. You think you still have ‘room’, but you don’t. You’re full. Now what? You’re fucked, right? You’re trapped. Wrong.

Once you’re full, something is bound to spill over. You absolutely have NO CHOICE but to let something go. There’s no room left. Once you find yourself in this moment, you must make a decision.

What will you let go?

Well, it sounds easy. But somehow, back along the road a ways, we had this thought….the thought was “I can handle this”. “I’ll be fine”. This is an illusion. Everyone has a moment when they feel full. Anything beyond that moment is just so freaking painful. Who do we think we are that we can keep taking on more and taking on more and still not be full? Trust me, there will come a day when we finally say to ourselves….Enough.

For me, my new reality is a burden I must carry, but I will have to work on how much ‘external’ things I let in. I simply cannot deal with my grief, family health issues, work, home, people that I love….plus everything else. Something has to go.

And so, I am making a conscious effort to let go of the swirling mass of external stress that threatens to sweep me up in its hurricane force winds, and stay centered in my space, concentrating on the things that matter the most to me, period.

Imagine a world where everyone did just that.

Before long, maybe we’d all have a little room left.

And maybe, just maybe, full can take on a new, happy, comfortable feel.

Not My Train

Waiting for stars to align

Seems like a waste of time

But I’ve nothing better to do

Than look for a sign from you

I climbed a mountain today

To see a different view

But all that lay before me

Are more mountains, this is true

Now I am growing weary

As I carry a heavy load

Ready to lay my burden down

And travel an easier road

Packed my bags, went to the station

Ready to board the train

I checked my reservation

But was told to go home again

For it’s not time until it’s time

Sadly this I know

You cannot board the train until

The Conductor tells you so

So I’ll climb another mountain

Wait on stars

And sing this sad refrain

As all I know is that for now

This was not my train

Every Chapter of You

This morning I saw a Facebook post from a woman I used to work with. She has a son around the same age as you would be now. He came to visit her and her post was that he jumped in a mud puddle like he used to do when he was little. He did it for the sheer joy of it and to cover his mom with the muddy water. She loved it. I smiled as I read it, but it got me right in the feels. It started me thinking about all of the different chapters of you and how I miss them. Individually, I focus on the stages of your life and how they affected me and what I learned about you.

As a baby, you were as close to perfection as you possibly could have been. A full head of thick dark hair, big beautiful blue eyes and a dimpled chin. No one had to wonder if you were a boy or a girl. Strangers often fussed and smiled at you saying things like “what a gorgeous little man” and “wow, look at that head of hair!”. As a young, first and only time mom, I remember being so scared to take you home from the hospital that I sat in the car and cried that day, hoping that I would somehow miraculously know how to take good care of you. I remember the weeks of no sleep, trying to get you to nurse, making sure you were clean and comfortable. I remember sitting on a step stool in your room, holding you, when your dad came home from work. The look on his face made me suddenly realize that I was still in my robe and that I hadn’t had the time or the energy to shower, not to mention that dinner was not ready. And before I knew it, that first year was gone. I learned that you were going to be more work than I had ever imagined.

That marriage struggled on for another couple of years, but during that time I learned a lot about you, and a lot about myself. You and I went through a time of tremendous growth. We had some huge obstacles to face, and we faced them together. My health took a tragic turn, and in fact, you nearly lost me. But as I lay in that hospital bed for 23 days, the one thing that kept me fighting was that I had a job to do. I could not leave and let you be raised by anyone else. I firmly believed that you and I were a team now and I remember feeling so adamant that no one else knew what you needed more than I did. You gave me the strength and determination to carry on. We needed each other.

You as a little boy. Tiny little jeans. Cowboy boots that were too big but you had to clomp around in them anyway. Little sweat suits with Spider Man or Star Wars on them. Your love of all things Star Wars started early on and never really left. It was in this early preschool chapter of you that your health issues really began. So many ear infections, a constant runny nose and those high fevers had us visiting the doctor on a regular basis. Through those first few years of school, I remember lots of one on one learning to keep you caught up with your peers to the best of my ability. You never seemed concerned. You were always such a go with the flow kind of guy. You never really complained, at least not enough that I would remember it. I thought that after you had your first surgery to remove your tonsils, adenoids and to drain the fluid in your ears that you would be A-OK. And you were, for awhile. I saw how resilient you were and it gave me hope.

You as a preteen. Oh, how I loved this chapter of you! It always made me smile watching you try and figure out who you were. It was fun to frost the tips of your dark hair when that was the style in the late 90s and to see the burst of confidence that it gave you. I remember the silky shirts and board shorts and silver chain. You were so loving to me during those years with your big hugs and I love yous. It was this frosted haired little love that was in my dreams not that long ago, arms open wide, wanting a big hug. You didn’t say anything, but I felt that hug, so thank you for that.

The teen chapter of you was a source of both pride and terror for me. You got your first job the day you turned 15. You learned to drive. You bought your first car. It was during these years that I was at work more than I was home, and trust and responsibility became a huge thing between us. I had to be mom and dad for you. Not an easy task but you always knew that you could ask me absolutely anything, and you did. Because of that, we both learned a lot. I am thankful for your tight little circle of friends. I am thankful that you were such a good boy and that we had a relationship that I could be proud of. This was also the beginning of the surgery chapter as the first was before your Grad in 2009. I was so proud of you, the way you powered your way through the Welding program and your final school year with a determination and strength that made my heart nearly explode with love and pride.

The young adult chapter. So many changes in both of our lives! Randy and I bought our first house as a couple and life was different. Our family circle got bigger. You had a positive male role model. You learned a lot about relationships and how a man should behave. You had a social life. You had a couple more surgeries. Infections. Near misses. You rallied and you survived, even thrived. This chapter was such a struggle. There were periods of time when we relied on each other heavily. I cared for you, worried for you, and you made it through. You moved out of the house. You fell in love. I remember being so thankful that I could still lure you back home with a roast beef dinner and movie night.

The years away from you. This chapter was incredibly hard. We had to move away for our jobs and I hated being in a different Province from you. I know you hated it too. We made the most of our visits but it wasn’t the same. I wasn’t there to help you. I wish with all my heart that I didn’t have to be that far from you for those three years. It will always be one of my biggest regrets. I trusted in the fact that you were in a loving relationship and you seemed happy. I am thankful for that.

The Cancer chapter. This chapter is so painful for me that I can barely write about it, even now. As a mother, all I wanted was to be there for every step of your journey. But you were all grown up, part of a couple, and the two of you did many of the steps of this journey together. I remember feeling so out of the loop and helpless. I didn’t really know the details of what you were going through, the procedures that took place, the team of doctors, the list of your medications. All I knew was what I could hear over the phone, lots of it left out to spare me I’m sure of that. I’m so so sorry that I wasn’t there to go through every detail and every step of this chapter with you. I know you were terrified. You told me in your texts. I could hear it in your voice on the phone. The visits were too few and too rushed to really talk it all through like we both needed. I carry so much guilt and sorrow over not being there with you for every day of those first few months that I know you needed me. As your mom, I was gutted. All I could do was try and reassure you, let you talk it out, and send money. It wasn’t enough. Then, somehow, you were done, and they gave you a clean bill of health and told you to go live your life. I know none of us ever know how long we have left, I was just sure it would be measured in years, not months.

The final chapter. It’s the one in the book of us, where all of the chapters lead us to this moment. We’ve lived, we’ve loved, we’ve learned life’s lessons. When we look in the mirror, we’re supposed to see an old face, lined and weathered by the joys and losses of a life well lived, full of wisdom and stories and the satisfaction that comes with dreams that have been fulfilled, goals that have been realized. The way it happened for you, the way your final chapter was written, was not the way any of us could have imagined. It was not the ending that any of us had planned. The mirror reflected a man weathered not by age but by illness. Lined by pain instead of a lifetime of laughter. This chapter, It left me wanting. It changed me. My belief system, my perspective, my goals and dreams, my everything. This chapter of you brought me back to your side. It’s what we both wanted and desperately needed, and for that I am grateful. This chapter of you is filled with love, overflowing, because it has nowhere to go. This chapter of you has brought me to my knees.

The story should end there. Yet somehow, there is another chapter of you. This is the chapter that continues with me until my story is complete. This is the epilogue. This is where we find out the meaning of what happened in the book. This chapter of you continues with me as I search for meaning, learn all the lessons, live as you would want me to, as if you were here. You are as big a part of this chapter as you were in all the others, and your story doesn’t end until mine does.

Hold On

Early in the daylight hour

A songbird calls to me

High above the Lighthouse tower

Way across the sea

A moment of enlightenment

Dawns just like the sun

And moves me to a purpose

Where before it there was none

Memories like shards of glass

Cut through the waves of time

Sharpened are their edges

By the daily grind

They fall away in steady rhythm

Though I grasp I can’t hold on

They soften and then melt away

Eventually they are gone

Ceasing to exist is only

To begin a different way

Giving one more reason

To believe another day

On and on the years slip by

As they’re known to do

They take my hand and lead me

One step closer to you

The Countdown

On the last day of the year, many take to their journals or social media to summarize the events of the past 365 days or set their goals and wishes for the year ahead. I’m no different, as I’ve posted my thoughts on December 31st for many years now. Though I rarely stay up for the countdown, it’s hard not to get caught up in the hope of something new and exciting that promises to start the very next day.

But now, I live with a totally different countdown. It’s not filled with excitement or party planning. Yet, I try my best to search for a shred of positivity woven with strands of gratitude, knowledge, personal growth and love.

I’m eternally grateful for the weeks that I was able to spend with Colton before it was his day to leave. I had six weeks to show him that my love, loyalty and dedication was something he could count on when he needed me the most. I humbly recognize that I am an exception to the rule and that most bereaved mothers would give anything, literally anything, to have that much time with their sons before they passed.

My countdown starts on November 30th and ends on January 15th. Every year as December approaches I can feel the anxiety increasing as the memories begin to flood my heart and mind once again. The first two weeks were spent in the hospital, where they were still trying to pump him full of antibiotics to ease an infection in his chest. I listened to the frustration, anger, and sometimes terror creep into his voice as he soldiered through test after test, and I watched in horror as the vomiting and weight loss began to transform him into someone other than my beautiful son. I remember he very quickly got to the point where he no longer wanted all of the additional blood work and antibiotics ( oh how he hated needles!) and just wanted to be kept comfortable. He quickly became resigned to the fact that he didn’t have much time.

When he was feeling clear headed, he would go over his to-do list. He wanted to sell his truck, to make sure his bills were all paid, and that he was able to give some of his prized possessions to his nearest and dearest friends. He wanted to ensure that his young spouse was taken care of to the best of his ability. As painful as it was to watch this, I now look back with great pride at his maturity and sense of responsibility during this most difficult of times.

The second two weeks were spent at his home, as the hospital thought that his pain could be managed with the assortment of medications that he was on. If a visual is needed, imagine bottles of medications covering nearly half of the kitchen island, that each had to be administered at the correct time with the correct dosage. A formidable task to be sure, yet it was taken in stride. Looking back, I found this two week period to be the most stressful for him, and it turn, for all of us. Everything became much harder to deal with. As stretched as our health care system is, they had done a remarkable job of taking care of the round the clock duties of caring for a palliative patient. It just wasn’t as easy to do this in a home setting. Yes, we bought a lift chair. We had the bedside table on wheels, the hospital bed, the drugs, whatever he needed. But the fact was, at least in my mind, that the level of care and respect for his condition was not the same. Extended family started to arrive, and of course would gravitate to the house to see him, and I know he felt obligated to visit with them when he could. Long passed the point where he perhaps should’ve said that he needed his rest. Things that I remember during this time were that when he felt up to it, all he wanted to do were the simple, ordinary things of life. He would get up and shuffle around the living room in his bare feet, toes cracking, and push the swiffer around to pick up the dog hair. Of course, we were there to do this task as well as all the rest of them, but he did it anyways. There was a time or two when I recall that he felt good enough to go to the dog park and watch them run around. There was a new Star Wars movie out at the time and he was determined to see it. We did actually get him to the theater and he sat next to me and made it all the way through, only to be devastated to realize that the next day, he couldn’t remember the movie at all. It was also during this time that I could watch the decline taking its toll, and I stood as a silent witness as the Cancer chipped away at him. The last time I remember him in a normal restaurant setting was on December 30th, his step brother’s birthday dinner. I remember this outing as a gift, because he was in decent spirits and was able to eat a good meal.

The last two weeks of my countdown take place in Hospice. I remember thinking that this would be the worst possible time but actually, it turned out to be something completely different. A unique, special, spiritual, devastating, enlightening, tragic, soul crushing time filled with beautiful horrible moments.

During the time in Hospice my countdown included a visit from one of Colton’s very best friends, Jesse, his wife and their New Year’s baby, a son that they named Ezra Colton, for my son. They brought him to meet Colton and I’ll never forget watching my son holding his little namesake with such a look of love and wonder on his face. There was a front page article in the local paper because of the New Year’s day birth, and the story was also about him being named for Colton and what Colton was going through. There was a lot of activity leading up to this time. A pub night silent auction fundraiser was held, a gofundme was set up online, and radio spots spoke of his fight along with news of a concert to be held by the metal band that he had been the voice for during the last six years before the Cancer took that from him as well.

Still, I remember the last two weeks as Colton taking back some of the decisions for himself regarding his time left, his treatment, and how he wanted to say goodbye. I remember shaking my head in disbelief when he told me that he put a call out on Facebook to all of the friends he went to school with to drop by to see him and they did. They came in groups, they came before or after work, they came to hang out with him in the evenings. They played guitar and sang for him. They sat around and took pictures and told stories and made him smile. For that I am and will forever remain grateful. Family took turns making meals in the kitchen there, and people would gather. Eventually, we limited the visitors so that he could keep his strength up and so we could have a little more much needed time with him. During this time, my husband and I were given a parent’s room for the remainder of the time so that we could be there with him, and to give our host family a much needed break. Even though we were in the same building though, not all of the conversations that were whirling around in my head were able to be had. So many missed conversations. Hindsight is a cruel companion, when it constantly reminds you of what you could have or should have or what you now wished you had said. It has made a backpack of these things over the last four years for me to carry, and the weight of it increases each year. As I write and let some of it out, I seem to compile more of it to add to the pile. I now simply try and find comfort in the fact that I was there to hold his hand, that he knew how much he was loved, and that he was of sound mind to do this on his own terms and in a way that made us all so very proud of him.

The final week of the countdown contains a lot of things that I find I cannot write about yet. As if the simple task of my fingers moving on the keyboard will somehow drastically change something. Surely nothing can change it, right? I know on the deepest level that nothing can change the course of events as they took place. They are etched in my memory, carved into the walls of my heart like ancient writings that describe lost civilizations and stories of great victories and losses of times long past. One day I’ll have to let it out, those last few precious moments.

Four days before Colton left, he had opted for sedation. His wish was for medical assistance to quicken his death, but he would’ve had to been transported to hospital, and this was not what he had wanted. So, he opted for sedation. This gave him the opportunity, and us the final gift from him, of his being able to say his goodbyes. He was able to walk up to each one of us, give a hug, tell us I love you. I will never forget that moment for the rest of my days. We had obtained a copy of the Star Wars movie that he couldn’t remember seeing, and we all sat with him and watched as he was given his meds and fell asleep., surrounded by those who love him beyond measure.

The last three days of my countdown felt like both an eternity and a split second of time running concurrently. The first long night I refused to sleep at all, holding his hand and listening to the snores and sleep sounds and observing the night routine of the hospice team. Time to think. Time to think. Time to think of all of the missed conversations. Time to wonder. Did I say I loved him enough? Does he know? I figured he could still hear me so I would say it again. We had made a pact, he and I, that he would make sure I was there when it was time to go. Would he be able to keep it?

On the evening of the 15th, my countdown ended as I went to his room from the kitchen to say goodnight. I saw beads of sweat on his upper lip and his forehead. He’d been struggling to stay. I ran to get a cold wet cloth to wipe his face. I heard his breathing change. He kept his promise. He hung on until I was by his side.

I couldn’t have asked for anything more.

As I finish this blog on this, the last day of December, 2021, I still have a couple of weeks left in my countdown. As the rest of you count down to the new year tonight, here is my wish for you and the new year: let go of everything that you can, the doubt, the bias, the blame, because all that you can take with you ….is love.

Tomorrow’s Song

There is a place within us

We sometimes need to go

Where sorrow is the only friend

And happiness the foe

Identify the emptiness

Experience the pain

Maybe when they’re reconciled

We learn to live again

Forward is the only road

Though fear and lonely tread

Looking back will drag you down

And fill your heart with dread

Sorrow gains acceptance

As tears given their due

Forced to walk without the one

My soul was granted to

Thin the veil from here to there

And yet I cannot see

How does one bridge the gap

Tween now and being free?

Harbor lights announce the night

The ocean plays its song

When streams in the morning light

The weak become the strong

Milestones

As if I could possibly forget your birthday. Or that look on your face on Christmas morning. The words you would put onto a Mother’s Day card. The way you would smile and pat your belly like an old man after one of my roast beef and loaded mashed potato dinners. I remember everything. It is a blessing and a curse. I remember shaving your head, while your hair was so thick that it took three or more times to get it looking the way you liked it. I remember what you liked to wear, nothing fancy, as long as it was black. I remember all of your fashion stages as you were growing up, from the blonde tips to the chains around your neck, and all of those track pants and hoodies and hats. I remember measuring your foot against my thumb as I held you after you were born, and I remember how you liked them hanging out of the blankets on your hospital bed so I could grab them as I walked by. I remember how your toes always cracked as you walked across the floor, I remember your face so clearly, your beautiful blue eyes and dimpled chin, and a smile that could melt my heart, I remember you. I remember details until I can no longer breathe.

Milestones are like missiles aimed straight at a grieving parent. We can’t dodge them because it’s as if we have a huge target on our backs, and they’re coming for us. All year I watched your friends turn 30, the celebrations, cakes and candles. I watched their children grow. I watched as they got new jobs, new homes, new reasons for the new smiles in the new photos. Today I posted old photos with old smiles because that is what I have left. Old memories. Still, I’ll never give them up as they are keeping you alive in my mind, and they are what keeps me moving forward, passing all of these milestones.

30 years ago today I became your mother, I only had you. You were all I needed. Some days I don’t feel like a mother anymore, as I watch the ones I know love and care for their children and even some with grandchildren. It becomes even more difficult to identify with them. I am on the sidelines. I am the one wearing the sad smile. I am the one that wishes them a happy birthday and liking their photos on facebook while I cry for you. I can feel a part of me shut down. Those feelings aren’t for me anymore because you’re gone. I was cheated out of them, and now I’m left with memories and milestones. They make me wonder.

I wonder who you would be today. I wonder who you would love. I wonder if you would have children, how many, and who they would look like. I wonder what job you would have and if you would like it. I wonder if you’d still pursue your music. I wonder how you would spend your days. I wonder what you would do for fun. I wonder how you would age, and how the wrinkles and grey hair would add character to your handsome face. I wonder if you would be happy. I wonder what we would talk about.

Then, I imagine that I already know all of the answers. I have built such a wonderful and happy life for you here in my mind. We have endless conversations. You come with me when we’re out on the ocean, at the cabin or at the beach, even when I’m walking the dogs. You are with me. Because I remember you. To Eternity and Beyond, I remember you.

“A part of me died that day”/”I still feel like he’s here”/What is Fetal-Maternal Microchimerism?

It may (or may not) be a well known fact that during pregnancy, the cells of the baby migrate into the mother’s bloodstream and then return to the baby. This circle of cell travel is called Fetal-Maternal Microchimerism, or (FMc). Long after birth, these cells remain in the mother’s tissues, bones, brain and skin. This happens even if the pregnancy doesn’t go full term. Your child becomes a literal part of you.

In researching this fascinating topic, I found that an article stated that not only have fetal cells been detected in the mother, but also maternal cells in the fetus, and that the shared cells have been demonstrated to persist for nearly four decades after pregnancy. This, in part, is why mothers may be a suitable donor for their children and vise versa.

There are several definitions of Chimera (ki’mira) the root of this term.

In Greek mythology, it means a fire-breathing female monster with a lion’s head, a goat’s body, and a serpent’s tail

An organism containing different tissues, formed by processes such as fusion of early embryos, grafting, or mutation. “the sheep-like goat chimera”

Essentially, a Chimera is a single organism that’s made up of cells from two or more “individuals”, that is, it contains two sets of DNA, with the code to make two separate organisms. Fraternal twins can be an example of this.

But in the case of fetal-maternal microchimerism, the mother and child are bonded in a way that I had never comprehended prior to reading this. Of course, it makes perfect sense. Some illnesses vanish during pregnancy because the baby’s cells rush to mend the mother while she’s busy building the baby. Cravings may be the result of the baby’s cells sending “messages” to the mother to consume the needed vitamins and minerals to build a strong and healthy child.

As a mother, isn’t it true that you can intuitively feel your child even when they are not there? You’ve just read scientific proof that we carry our children for years and years after we’ve given birth to them. They in turn carry a bit of us as well.

This carries significant meaning for me as a grieving mother. I was able to share some of this information in a Facebook group of grieving moms and the response was overwhelming that they found this a source of comfort, knowing that even a small part of their beautiful child remains in them, alive and well. So many of us feel that “a part of me died that day”, “a part of me is missing”, “I’m not the same person anymore”, etc. Now we know and can say for a certainty that this is the truth.

Now, let’s be real. I’m no scientist. I just know how I feel, and this information validates that the bond that exists between a mother and her child simply does not end the moment that the child dies. If the cells of the child are a part of the mother’s heart and brain, even in her bones, well then it stands to reason that the connection continues to exist. I’ve felt that anyway, because of the emotional attachment that Colton and I shared, and continue to share. This just validates that the physical attachment continues to exist as well.

My hope is that this will bring comfort to you, the will to carry on and to take those precious cells of your child with you on your journey.

My View

I stand and stare at the ocean view

I say your name to hear the sound

It may seem like a strange thing to do

But I feel that you’re still around

All I think and what I feel

Is it real or just an illusion?

Hope and Despair live together there

In a Gemini world of confusion

Does time mean anything where you are?

Or is it now here just for me

When our thoughts are the same like they used to be

Is it just here in my eternity?

I cry when I miss you, then I smile because you know

Maybe time only passes as the tides ebb and flow

When my thoughts turn to beauty and I notice the time

The repeating numbers I see, are they really a sign?

Are the shivers up my arms

A chilly hug from you

While I ask you a question and look at my view?

The answer finds the ocean and bounces back to me

You may not see me, Mother,

But you know I’d never leave