





I just spent several hours with a friend who lost a baby. A couple weeks ago, my friend and her husband were chosen by a woman to adopt her unborn baby.
This weekend, my friend took the baby in her arms almost immediately after witnessing the birth. She and her husband roomed-in at the hospital just like birth parents. The baby boy latched on to her breast and she was able to nurse her tiny newborn even though he had not grown in her womb. Her milk let down and she heard the baby swallowing. Yes, a woman can nurse an adopted baby!
Some might say what’s the big deal? It’s not as if the baby was really hers anyway.
Legally, true. The baby was not hers…yet. But she and her husband anticipated the arrival of this baby and prepared for him to join their family. They were chosen among others to parent this baby. The cradle in their bedroom is empty. What a loss of a potential future.
Let me put future adoptive parents at ease. This type of situation is rare. Very rare. Usually if there is doubt about a woman’s intention to place her baby for adoption, social workers put the baby into temporary foster care before going home to his new family.
It is better to have loved and lost than to never have loved at all.
So is this a quote or a cliche’? I have contemplated this saying as it relates to the losses I have experienced. In particular, my daughter’s death has brought me great pain and will continue to do so. Wouldn’t it have been much easier for everyone involved if she had never been born so she couldn’t have died, causing me and my family infinite grief?
Easier? Definitely. Yet I treasure the memories I have of Abby, and I’m glad that she lived with me for 2 years before she died. After she died, I had to come home and parent my other children and be my husband’s wife. I had to keep on living.
Although the death of my daughter is different than my friend’s failed adoption, I see her coping in similar ways. She is thankful that she has her daughter to come home to. She is thankful for the 24 hours she had with him. She is thankful for this time because she would’ve wanted this immediate bonding if she had the opportunity to adopt him. Just because the adoption fell through doesn’t mean she wishes she had never known him and loved him. She will treasure the video and pictures she has, his footprints inked on a card, the feeding chart she filled out in the 24 hours she mothered him.
This baby went home with his mother. And yet this is a heartbreaking situation for my friend and her husband who eagerly anticipated bringing home this baby.
This will be my second Christmas without my daughter Abby who died when she was two years old. Throughout the year, I am asked how I handle the holidays. Articles and books that I’ve read suggest that after the death of a child, you should change holiday traditions and make new ones so the past isn’t so painful. My daughter was only two so we didn’t have a whole lot of traditions established with her. So we’re not changing anything! We read Luke 2, then open presents one at a time while everyone else watches. That’s Christmas at our house every year. Sometimes, extended family members are present. And there’s always good food. It’s fun. When it was just the two of us, we went to midnight mass on Christmas Eve.
I think everyone who was in our living room for Christmas 2004 remembers the little girl who pulled out her pigtails while prancing in her black velvet dress and tights. She carefully opened all the little pots, pans, and plates that went with her kitchen. And the dollies! It was the year of the doll. Her Grandma gave her a doll. Her other Grandma gave her a doll. And one of her great-Grandmas gave her a doll. I’m glad I didn’t get her one.

As Christmas approached last year, I contemplated a certain box in the attic that contained a stocking with Abby’s name on it. For months, I dreaded opening that box and seeing it. Thinking about it made me nauseous. I wondered if we should hang it on the mantle with the others. After discussing it with my husband, I decided to go ahead and put it out.
The following is what I wrote a year ago after putting out the Christmas decorations with the boys:
Caleb pulled a stocking out of the box and asked if it were Mary’s. Alex looked at it and said that it was Abby’s. Caleb then hung all 6 on the fireplace. Alex sat down in the rocker, dazed. I asked him what he was thinking about. He said he was thinking about his stocking and he was so excited. Then he said that he was looking at Abby’s stocking too and that made him sad. Then he began to cry. I pulled him to the floor with me and we cried together (a first). I asked him if he thought it was ok that we hung Abby’s and yes, he wanted it to hang there. He missed her. Later, Alex told his dad that he didn’t get a chance to put any ornaments on the tree because he was lying on the floor crying, looking at Abby’s stocking.
This year has been a little easier in that I haven’t experienced months of dreading Christmas. Alex asked if we would put out Abby’s stocking. Then he asked if he could put a picture in it for her. He thought it would be a good idea because she didn’t need any presents since she wasn’t here to open them…So he found a picture of him and Abby and signed the back. Later, when a friend was visiting us, he gave her a piece of scrap paper and told her to sign it so he could put it in her stocking.
I probably wouldn’t have even decorated at all if it had been just me and Todd. But I feel I have to for the kids. Life goes on. We must be festive, right? We hosted our church’s Christmas party, so that gave me enough incentive to get everything done. So how am I handling this Christmas? So far, just one stocking, one day at a time.

Approaching the six month anniversary of my daughter’s death was the hardest time for me up until that point. (Springtime was even harder six months later) Days kept turning into weeks which turned into months. I imagined that six months would turn into a year and the days would keep on passing until the time without her would be longer than the time we had with her. That thought was unbearable. Almost as horrible as her death itself.
I have not yet reached the 2 year anniversary of her death or what would have been her fourth birthday. And we are not yet longer without her than what we had her. That day is quickly approaching.
But another milestone has come and passed. My second daughter is now older than Abby ever was. I have a blonde, delightful toddler girl again.
Twenty-one months ago, death took my sweet baby girl away. Then I wrote these words six months later:
hair like hers
wispy and blonde
I see a girl with her mother
alive
I used to have a girl like that
but now she is vanished . . .
As I contemplate these words, I realize that I have a girl like that again. It has been both strange and wonderful to have our baby girl Mary blossom from infant to little girl. Strange because Abby is gone. Wonderful because Mary is present with us. Strange because they’re so much alike. Wonderful because they’re so different. Sisters. Mary will not remember her sister, but she can identify her in pictures. Sometimes when Mary sees herself in a picture, she says, “Abby.”
I read a Christmas letter from some friends and they have a girl the same age as Abby. I laughed as I read the news from the family until I came to the part about this particular daughter. Then I burst into tears. So much we have lost. We remember Abby as 2, but she should be here with us now and be nearly 4 and I’m reminded again of what I wrote many months ago.
I’m glad that she’s alive
alive alive alive
God is holding her
He’s holding me
separate we are now
but we will be reunited

six months in September
hair like hers
wispy and blonde
I see a girl with her mother
alive
I used to have a girl like that
but now she is vanished
I want to borrow her from God
for a day or an hour
please lay her on my chest
warm and alive
let her heave one more breath
but no, she is vanished
my sorrow grows
I want my Abby back
to kiss her and love her
give her back to me
why did you take her?
these outrageous mixed emotions
they suffocate me
she’s decomposed and vanished
I’m tormented
overwhelmed by her absence
yesterday’s tears multiply
I’ve surrendered to my weeping
finally
and I’m exhausted
but this anguish mingles with joy
I’m glad that she’s alive
alive alive alive
God is holding her
He’s holding me
separate we are now
but we will be reunited
I will touch her soul
and kiss her
oh joy
she’ll know me
sorrow will vanish
anguish and weeping
vanished
joy will come
joy will come
Guinever Van Campen
September 2005
My five year old, Alex said, “This is the worst thing that’s ever happened to me.” I told him that it’s the worst thing that’s happened to me too.
When Alisa drove me home from the hospital, I assumed that I’d be going home to an empty house. I thought I’d be going to bed to weep, to be alone in my sorrow. But almost immediately, people came to the house. People who we haven’t seen in months and even years. People who we see every week at church and my girlfriends from my birth circle. I just never imagined the outpouring of love we would experience from our friends and neighbors and strangers too.
Four months ago when Todd and I added a fourth child to our family, I was overwhelmed. Baby Mary is so very demanding of my time and my energy–much more so than my other children ever were as babies. It would have been OK if she were my only responsibility. But she wasn’t. There just never seemed to be enough time to devote to my husband Todd, and our children, Alex, Caleb and Abby plus all the necessities of managing our household. Now I am more overwhelmed than ever with only three children living in our house again. I am comforted by their presence, and their hugs and Mary’s constant nursing. And am comforted by Todd’s arms around me. We are expressing our grief so very differently.
I don’t understand this, and probably never will. I don’t like it at all. My baby is gone. My pastor, Bobby said, “Every one’s days are numbered and it was just Abby’s time.”
I’ve recently had a foreboding. Like something like this might happen. This foreboding started last summer when Alex’s swim teacher, Rachel, died in a car accident. A woman about my age died unexpectedly and it really reminded me of my mortality. I couldn’t sleep for days. My heart ached for her motherless child and for her family I didn’t even know.
All the people in my life who had died thus far have been old. My grandfathers. Todd’s grandfather. My great aunt. My great-grandmother. Although hard when it happens, we expect death in the elderly. We don’t expect it in a healthy woman in her 30’s or 40’s.
Then Petros Roukas, pastor of our sister church, committed suicide. I was reeling. I didn’t understand that. My heart ached and still aches for Jan and for the church family at Tates Creek Presbyterian Church.
Then a few days before Mary Suzannah was born, our dear friend Coral’s best friend Corrie passed away. Just 22 years old. She had Muscular dystrophy and died in her sleep. Coral was with her.
Three deaths. One right after another. All with people just an arm’s reach away from me. When would tragedy strike a little closer to home, I thought. I was scared. And then this Tuesday. I want to go back and let it never happen. But of course, I can’t do that.
Oh Abigail. Abigail Helene. Abs. Missy. Little Miss. Sweetie. Abby. Those are the names that I’ve called her. You’ve joined your tiny sibling who I never got to hold, yet who I loved deeply in the very short week that I knew I was pregnant.
Oh baby, sweet baby. As I sat in the little room in the ER, waiting for news, I cried and I prayed. I didn’t want God to take her. I begged for a miracle, for Him to bring her body back to us whole. As Abby’s pulse was dropping, my heart was dropping too, into the grave. I was broken and desperate. But even as my prayers were lifting up to God, so was Abby’s spirit going to Him too. I did not get the miracle I asked for. Our Heavenly Father wanted our sweet Abigail Helene back home with Him. And now she’s smiling and laughing and singing in Heaven.
We loved Abigail as God knit her in my womb, and we loved her for the 2 very short years that she filled our house with laughter. “Couch a minute.” That’s what Abby said many times a day when she just wanted to sit on the couch and cuddle or read a book. I wish I could go back and do that a few more times. “I do it.” “I did it.” That was Abby’s mantra the past month.
In the seconds before the paramedics arrived and took Abby from me, she lay limp in my arms, blood poring from her wounds onto my shirt. Her blood covered my clothes and stained my skin. I’m reminded of Christ’s blood that blankets us and makes us pure. Most of you here today know what I am talking about, but I know there are some here who don’t know about Christ’s redemptive work on the cross. Sure you’ve heard of it. You might know that Good Friday is the day Christians remember Christ’s death on the cross and that Easter is the day that Christians celebrate his Resurrection. But do you know this to be absolutely true? I do. And this Easter I cling to the cross and the promises of it. If you don’t have this same certainty about eternal life and heaven and hell that I do, please please talk with someone who does so that you may find peace too.
I’ve been numb. I haven’t shed as many tears as other have. I didn’t know when my sobbing would come. Maybe as we lowered the casket to the ground? I was thankful for an empty house on Thursday morning when my desperate, loud cries finally burst forth.
What started it? Well, the Mother’s Day after Abigail was born, Todd gave me a little girl charm with Abby’s birthstone. I’ve never worn it because I didn’t have a necklace to put it on. Then I remembered the charm. I just had to find it. I opened my jewelry box and started looking. I couldn’t find it. I became frantic and then there it was. I shouted and screamed for her to come back to me. Have you ever been with a laboring woman in the few moments before birth where the noises are primal as she pushes her baby out?
My cries were primal again. But this time instead of pushing her out of me so I could take her in my arms, I was pushing her down, down into the ground and pushing her out of my arms into Jesus’s arms, releasing her spirit up up to heaven. I birthed her and now I have deathed her.
I began this memoir with something that Alex said and I’ll end with another thing that Alex said. “What’s going to happen to Abby at the resurrection of the dead?” Wow! This is coming from the mouth of my five year old? Well, he had memorized a children’s catechism. I explained to him that Abby’s spirit is in Heaven right now. Her spirit is what made Abby, Abby. Her personality. But we’re going to put her bones and her skin and her body into a box into the ground. At Christ’s second coming–at the resurrection of the dead, Abby is going to get a new body so she can dwell in the New Heavens and the New Earth! But her spirit is there now. And this certainty that I have that Abigail is with our Heavenly Father right now is what gives me peace.
Elizabeth Benton Broderson Bray
February 16, 1970 ~ August 25, 2006
I have two really good options: I can either try this new drug and maybe get a little more time to spend with my family and friends or I can stop all treatment and meet my heavenly family a little sooner.
That’s what Beth told me when the news about her cancer was so grim. “Grim” is my word. Beth would never say that. Her words and attitude were upbeat and positive until the very end, even when her prognosis was so devastating.
I first came in contact with Beth, who was a certified nurse midwife, when I started teaching childbirth classes in late 2001. I sent all midwives in the area a note to let them know what I was doing. Beth called to wish me well. Then my classes started to fill up with her patients. She told me that when couples take my birthing class (and other private classes like mine , it makes her job as a midwife so much easier. What a complement!
My next contact with her was when one of her patients labored for many hours only to find out the baby was breech once she started to push. So they wheeled her to the operating room and gave her a spinal for a cesarean birth. I didn’t understand. Truly, I was naive. So I wrote Beth a letter and asked her if she wouldn’t mind explaining the reason for the surgery to me. In my opinion, the laboring mom was doing fine, the baby was fine, the baby was right there, ready to be pushed into the world; why not just go for it? Beth took the time to e-mail me and tell me that she has to pick her battles. She wasn’t going to push for a breech vaginal delivery on an “unproven pelvis.”
So started a 5 year e-mail correspondence, and an occasional phone call or lunch together. After one of our meals this Spring, she wanted to get together with the other doulas and natural childbirth educators or “birth junkies” as she called us. Sometimes I spotted her teeny tiny car with the butterfly license plate in the parking lot of the Good Foods Market and Cafe, so I would go find her. Once she sat across the table from me sipping a shot of wheatgrass. I’ve never seen a drink so green or smelled one so gross. I teased her about it, and she said that she was willing to try anything if it might make her healthier.
A couple years ago, one of the ladies in my childbirth class said, “Beth went home sick today.” Another person said, “I had an appointment with Beth, but I had to see someone else.” Comments like these continued.
So I asked Beth the dreaded question, “Is your cancer back?”
The answer was yes.
I was devastated. I didn’t want to lose my friend. I didn’t want the pregnant women of Lexington to lose a great midwife.
Midwives are pretty special people. And Beth was a midwife among midwives which made her extra special. I don’t think I ever met one of her patients who had any complaints about her. Beth listened — really listened — and followed the midwifery model of care, being patient during labor, letting it run its course no matter how many hours went by, as long as mother and baby weren’t showing any signs of distress. That’s what set her apart from other medical caregivers. In my birthing series, I have couples come back to class with their newborns to tell their birth stories.
After hearing a birth story from one of Beth’s patients, there sometimes would be a couple who would think, “That’s the kind of birth I want, and I’m not going to get it if I stay with my doctor.” So they would switch to Beth, usually late in their third trimester of pregnancy.
Beth’s dream was to have a home-birth practice. She was caught in the same place where other hospital-based nurse midwives find themselves: Her malpractice insurance didn’t allow home births (not all insurance provides have this rider for CNMs), and Beth would lose her admitting privileges at the hospital if she were to do homebirths.
And rare is the M.D. who will provide backup care for a midwife doing homebirths, whether she is a CNM like Beth or a certified professional midwife.
I like to think that if circumstances had been different with her health, and if she didn’t need the health benefits that came with working from a busy OB/GYN practice, she might have had her home-birth practice. I’m confident that she would have been catching lots of babies in the comfort of home.
There was a time when it looked like there might be a birth center opening in Lexington. When it didn’t work out, I told her how disappointed I was. Then she told me about her mission work and how she was trying to raise money to open a birth center in Africa. She told me it would be great if Lexington could have a birth center, but the women of this little village needed one more than we do.
When my daughter died, Beth was in the middle of one of her several hospital stays. I heard through the birth junkie grapevine that Beth had gotten a pass to get out of the hospital so she could attend the visitation. But when her health took a turn for the worse, her doctors wouldn’t let her out after all. My doula friends told me that Beth really wanted to be there but just couldn’t. Since Beth couldn’t come to me, I went to see her the next morning, not knowing what shape she would be in. She sat up, lively, and we paged through my daughter’s photo album as we talked of birth and death, just hours before my daughter’s funeral.
Shortly before Beth died, two of her doctors, independently of each other, told her that she should stop all treatment, quit work and enter hospice care. Yikes. She didn’t want to do that. She thought maybe the drugs were working for her. She felt she could keep on working. So she sought another opinion. There was one more option she hadn’t tried– not a cure, but a drug that might extend her life. She went just a couple times. The chemotherapy didn’t work, and she was swelling more than ever. After deciding to stop treatment, Beth wrote in her online journal:
After much prayer and gut-wrenching conversation, this is the path Scott and I have chosen. While I fully believe that God could heal me instantaneously and completely, I realize that my time on earth might be limited and I intend to make the most of it.
She posted that on Aug. 8, just 17 days before she died. She continued to work. She did what she loved up until the very end. The day before she died, I talked with her on the phone during her lunch break, and she told me she had just attended a long labor, and it was a great birth. She spilled soup on herself and asked if she could call me another time. That was the last time we talked.
The next night, I was lying in bed, having contractions. I was 39 weeks pregnant and beginning to think I might have a baby that night. Then my phone rang a little after midnight. That was weird. I wasn’t on call for a birth right now; my doula days were on hold for awhile. I wasn’t supposed to be getting calls; I was going to be the one making calls once I was in labor.
It was Nancy, a midwife who worked with Beth. She told me that Beth had passed away. I was stunned. I thanked her for the call and continued having light contractions.
I sobbed. I thought there would be more time. Her death seemed so unexpected.
I thought she would be at my baby’s home birth, not as my midwife, but as my friend. I thought she would see her husband graduate in December. I thought she would get sick (as if she weren’t already) and enter hospice, and I could go and say goodbye. A nurse at the hospital where she worked was putting together a scrapbook for Beth. I hadn’t even made my page yet. A few of us had talked about making a video for her. That hadn’t happened yet. There was no goodbye.
As my thoughts raged on, I was happy for her, happy that she didn’t linger any longer than she did. I was glad that she caught a baby the day before she died. I was glad that she went out to eat with her husband the night before. She lived her life, really lived, until the very end.
Then my tears turned to laughter when I imagined her in heaven. I knew Beth was a Christian, because we had talked about our faith. She was at peace with dying. I thought of her and Abby together, and smiled. As a birth professional, she had the pleasure of witnessing one of the most intimate and happiest moments of life.
But not every pregnancy comes to this joyous conclusion. Sometimes a pregnancy ends in miscarriage, or the baby is stillborn or dies in infancy. So Beth also was with couples during the worst moments of life, too. I think she’s still catching babies, but in a very different way than she did in this life.
My contractions eventually stopped that night after the news of Beth’s death. It would be three more weeks before my little one finally made his appearance. There was an empty chair in my living room the night my baby was born.
Only weeks earlier, I had attended my first and last birth with her. I had always wanted to see her in action, but I’d never had the opportunity. It seemed like whenever I was a doula for one of her patients, Beth was sick. So I was thrilled to finally be at a birth with her. It is a precious memory. We talked about her cancer as we walked to the basement after the birth. She showed me her swollen ankles and told me it helped her to be sympathetic for her pregnant patients.
I knew Beth the midwife, and I know that was only part of who she was. What made Beth a great midwife made her a great person. I know I can speak for all the birth junkies when I say, the birth scene will not be the same without you. Thanks for your wisdom in birth and your gentle hands during delivery. You are missed.
Unexpected grief. Happens a lot. But who would’ve thought it could be during the Ice Wars? Skater Michael Weiss described the program he was about to do as emotional and spiritual. Hmm. . . what did he mean?
When Weiss’s music started, I immediately recognized those first notes of I Can Only Imagine. The song had been sung at my friend’s funeral in August and was played at the funeral of my brother’s mother-in-law in November.
Surrounded by Your glory,
what will my heart feel?
Will I dance for you Jesus,
or in awe of you be still?
Hearing this Mercy Me song reminded me of the recent funerals and of all the people in my life who have died. While the commentator droaned on about triple toes and double salchows, I was wishing he would just stop commentating and let me sing along to the song. I almost didn’t notice when Weiss did a black flip because I was thinking of Abby and Beth and Barbara all singing and dancing in heaven. And I just found out another sister in Christ had lost her husband.
Will I sing “Hallelujah”
Will I be able to speak at all?
I can only imagine
I can only imagine
I have lost many loved ones recently and the only thing that makes it okay is knowing I will see them again. Because of God’s saving grace, they have been released from the pains of this world and are living in glory. As the song continued, I imagined seeing my Saviour and letting my daughter Abby take me by the hand and show me the wondrous things she has discovered. I could only imagine heaven.
Later into the Ice Wars, Angela Nikodinov dedicated her program to her mother who had died recently. She skated to Faith Hill’s “There You’ll Be.” More death. More emotion. More grief on ice.