The first week or two that Ellie was home, I felt like I was sinking.
A big part of it was anxiety over bringing home a baby with special medical needs. She was still recovering from surgery, little wounds healing, and this new piece of hardware on her belly that I was, to be honest, afraid of. What if it gets infected? What if it gets clogged? What if it falls out? If she cries too hard, will that hurt the internal stitches? What if she has to go back to the hospital? It was awful. I am not a generally anxious person, or parent, by nature. I’m not used to coping with this kind of stress on a daily basis.
But we had checkups with the pediatrician, and twice-weekly Visiting Nurse care. I started to understand what was normal and what were red flags. Ellie gained weight, I got used to the equipment, and I stopped getting the heebie-jeebies every time I looked at her belly.
Still, I got that sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach on a fairly regular basis.
It should come as no surprise that I have found it difficult to be around other babies. I had no shortage of pregnancy buddies – it seemed like half of my friends and cousins were pregnant at the same time as me, and new ones keep announcing. It’s incredibly hard to watch each of them in turn bring home their healthy babies at two or three days old. To see them breastfeeding with relative ease. To watch their babies hold their heads up straight and put weight on their legs and take a bottle.
What I found more surprising, though, is my visceral reaction to seeing pregnant women, whether friends or strangers. Each time it’s like a PTSD flashback. The emotional trauma of Ellie’s unexpected NICU stay and medical issues has applied itself, somewhat retroactively, to my pregnancy. The anxiety that I felt at the end of my pregnancy, between the polyhydramnios and the low-side-of-normal fetal movement, is now the only thing I can remember. Like a big flashing WARNING SIGN that I didn’t realize at the time. And I see other pregnant women and I remember that I didn’t know, then, what was coming. I couldn’t have, really. I had a few odd symptoms, took tests, and everything seemed OK. Or, at least, unexplained. Just one of those things. Now, to be overly dramatic, all I see is the truck that I didn’t realize was about to run me over.
I am, to put it bluntly, jealous. Achingly jealous of all those healthy pregnancies and “normal” babies. How many babies get discharged from the hospital with their mothers? 95%? 98%? Why never mine? Was it really that much to ask? I have days when all I want to do is shake my fist at the sky, curse God or Fate or Luck or Statistics, and throw myself a pity party. I am so mad, so jealous, so upset to know that I’ll never have that experience. I want to hide from my friends and my family and their “normal” single babies.
But it doesn’t last long, and that’s how I know we’re going to be OK.
Yes. This sucks. It sucks a lot. It sucks that Ellie had to have a G-tube, sucks that we might be looking at some moderate-to-significant developmental delays. It’s an uphill climb, for sure. But to paraphrase my friend Amy, spending time at the Big Hospital gives you a certain amount of perspective. You look at the kid to your right and think, “what are you even doing here? What do you have, a sniffle? I have it SO MUCH WORSE than you do.” And you look at the kid to your left and your heart sinks and you think, “thank God I don’t have to worry about that.”
Some parts of this suck, but it could be a whole lot worse in a lot of ways. As the weeks go by, as I get used to Ellie and her needs on her own terms, the intensity of how hard it is to see other newborns or other pregnant women is tapering off. It’s still there, and it might always be there. But it fades a little. I don’t actually want to withdraw from my friends. It sucks to have a big part of my day-to-day vocabulary be foreign to almost everyone, but instead of pushing them away, I will try to draw people in. I don’t want to hide myself or my daughter or what she needs. And I don’t want this to come across as being about Ellie, herself. She’s a sweet, wonderful baby. She didn’t choose for any of these things to happen. She doesn’t know any other reality. She needs what she needs, regardless of how it might be similar to or different from any other baby.
So I hold my head up and I go about my day. I get used to my new normal. I work on accepting it for what it is and try to just shrug and move on when I start to think about what I had hoped it would be. It’s not that different from the early days of twin infants, when people would stop me in the grocery store and, wide-eyed, ask me how do you do it? Is there really a choice in the matter? We take care of our kids. This is our life. We love them and we do what needs to be done, whether that means juggling two newborns at a time or learning how to work a feeding pump. We just do it. End of story.
But I will always be a little jealous, a little wistful for the majority experience that I’ll never have.





















