Today, you would be 7. First graders.
And that is how we celebrated you..
Because of COVID, and restructuring of the hospital where you were born, our usual visit/donation was not really an option. Really, we knew for many months that this year would not be the same. But we did the best we could to keep your memory alive.
We started by making a donation to the school where you should be this year. They had coincidentally just started a "closet" at the school for students/families in need. So, we donated clothes, shoes, accessories.. that you would be wearing.
It hit me harder than expected when that clothing arrived on our doorstep. Most notably, a pink tie-dye sweatshirt.
It was so unlike anything your little brothers own, so it was unavoidably 'different.'
Different in a way that hurt. Different in a way that ached, as it reminded me what was missing.
I could hold it up and see my baby girl. How tall you would be. Imagining you picking out your outfit for school. It's like seeing someone through the fog. It's both clear and blurry as your brain fills in the blanks.
But in this case, it was my heart guessing who you would be today.
And it brought me to my knees. Right there on the kitchen floor, I just cried.. holding that pink sweatshirt. I felt like I couldn't breathe.
Grief is just like that.
That gnawing pain of what-ifs and could've beens.
But it is also a gift.. because it means I got to love someone (or two someones) that deeply.
And all I can do, year after year, is find a way to channel that love.
You left, but it didn't.
So, a few kids in our community will have new jeans, new shoes, and new gloves.. because YOU were, and are, so loved.
After dropping off the clothes, we headed to your birth hospital.
I knew I wouldn't be going inside this year, and I went back and forth on if we should bother. But as the day got closer, the idea of not going was literally painful. It would keep me up at night.
I knew I had to go.
It is still the only place you knew -- the only place you breathed air into your lungs. And as long as I am able, I will go.
Even if I have to sit outside. Even if it's cold and dreary.
I will go to remember you.
I will go to read to you.
But I don't read because I think you can hear me. I read to remind myself I still have breath in my lungs. That I am a mother with a story to tell -- about that place, and the two people I met -- 7 years ago.
It is crystal clear when I am sitting there with you.
"Goodnight stars. Goodnight air. Goodnight noises everywhere."
Happy birthday, my babies.
Goodnight, Jasper and Bodhi.
You are loved.
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