Big Kid Stuff

On May 31st, our Wonder, “W” turned 4 years-old. In the past ten days she decided that it was time to use the potty exclusively, shedding what she refers to as “bulky” diapers, and to get a “big kid” bed, like her sister “H”. We obliged, and on Thursday evening the girls returned from preschool to find a new “big kid” bed for “W” all set up in their shared room and new down comforters for each girl in their current “favorite colors” (purple for W and pink for H). These are big moments in any family, but for our family this felt like a tremendous milestone… a big exhale. We celebrated “4” in the ways that other families do… everything was pretty normal; W had a birthday party, replete with backyard bounce house, bubbles, and cupcakes. This is a new kind of normal for us. Our “normal” has been so different and so variable that I can hardly accept this moment.

Only weeks after W was born, I thought out loud that I should write a blog about the experience of NICU parenting. I went so far as to keep a list of blog post titles in my phone – one I have to this day – because I was afraid (and rightly so) that I would forget about these moments, these stories before I had the chance to write them. I told multiple people about my intention, but couched it in my reality, thinking, “I do not have time to process this now; we are living in the trenches. One day I will be ready”. So, here I am four years later. It has actually taken that long to be able to talk about these things. I purchased the domain name, Maternaversity, in 2016, but I could not write anything. It was all too raw. I even admitted to my husband and to close friends that I thought I needed to go to therapy “at some point” in order to process my experiences and deal with episodes of overwhelming anxiety. I did this with a laugh, but it took me almost three years to even take that first step towards healing and owning my narrative. I believe it’s called “avoidance”. So, here I am… four years later… ready to share. The reason: this is a happy ending. I have a happy, healthy, smart, beautiful, tenacious four year-old who reminds me every day of what joy and resilience look like. I can do this. She did.

Why Maternaversity?

This is the post excerpt.

On May 31, 2015 my second daughter was born. She weighed just 1lb 15oz and was 26 weeks and 2 days gestational age, a “micro preemie”. I had an eighteen month-old at home, a husband who traveled for work several days per week, and a career in academia, suddenly on hold. This blog is equal parts therapy for me – post traumatic stress is an under-recognized experience for NICU parents (Washington Post, Feb 2019 ; BBC News, July 2018) and my attempt to reach out to mothers and families who may be experiencing something similar. I am not a medical doctor and as such, do not offer medical advice here. Maternaversity is simply a collection of experiences and reflections about what I’ve learned in the NICU and beyond.

Wren_NewbornHat&Hand