I remember being pregnant with my twins and thinking I had
it all figured out. I had a birth plan all written, and I pretty much knew
exactly how my birthing experience would be. I had been on bed rest for
contractions for months, and thought for sure that being induced would not be a
decision I would have to come to. We had spent months fighting to keep them
inside, so I figured they would just crawl out when the time came. Boy was I so
wrong.
Thirty seven weeks was our golden number. When that week
came my doctor was in shock that we made it that long. He took me off bed rest
and told me to get out on the streets and walk my heart out. I probably walked
forty miles in a few days. I was determined to get those babies out naturally.
I continued to have endless contractions in my journeys on the streets, but
every time I would go back into the office he would check me and I hadn’t even
dilated at all.
By the end of the week, and with no progression my doctor
scheduled my induction. Both babies were head down and I kept my fingers
crossed that my natural birth plan I had fought so hard for would be carried
out, despite my set back of being induced. I was frustrated as the next day
rolled around and my scheduled induction was up. I walked in the hospital, a
little deflated that the first bullet point in my designed birth plan would not
be happening for me.
It was early evening and my doctor began the process. He
said it could be fast, but most likely I would see slow progression throughout
the night. The next morning came and went, still no babies. My contractions
were consistent, but barely any progression still in my dilation. My desire to
continue my natural birth plan kept me hanging on with no drugs other than the
Pitocin to create stronger contractions. They would up the Pitocin every few
hours in a hope to see more progression. The pain was almost unbearable by
early afternoon. Every time the nurse or doctor would check me they found I had
progressed very little. Nurses would beg me to get an epidural or take some
pain meds, but my stubborn nature kept me driving to keep up the fight for my
natural birth.
By evening I was in so much pain that tears would roll down
my face every time I had a contraction. The Pitocin was turned up so high that
my contractions were only about a half of a minute apart, so I had little
breathing time in between. There came a point when baby B began to panic. Every
time a contraction would start, her heartbeat would plummet. It was like the
contractions were causing her to go into a panic attack. Her heart rate would
drop dramatically and then would become very sporadic through out the whole
contraction.
My doctor finally came into check the baby and me. After
finding out that I was only at a three he started to get serious, “Ash . . . I
know that you have written out this idea of how today was supposed to go, and
we have laughed and called you the iron cervix for the last few months . . .
but this isn’t working. I know you are against an epidural, but I really feel
like maybe it would help you relax and allow your body to do its job. You have
been fighting for this plan, and I don’t want to take it away from you, but I
really want to get these babies out without doing a C- section. If baby B
doesn’t start handling this labor better, I am going in after her. So you can
keep fighting through this the hard way, or we can try to do something
different.”
Within minutes my birth plan was gone and the epidural was
in place. With the pain taken away I started focusing on my struggling baby.
Every contraction seemed to affect her. Every time I saw her monitor waver I
chanted in my mind, “Please let her be OK, please let her be ok.”
A half an hour after the epidural was in place I got the
urge to push. I told the nurse who almost laughed, “Remember when we just
checked you, and you were only a three . . .” Finally I talked her into getting
my doctor, and sure enough— I was at a ten. They rushed me to the operating
room. Since we were having twins, it was that hospital’s practice to deliver in
the OR.
As soon as I began to push baby B’s heartbeat would almost
stop. After a few more pushes my doctor started to panic, “We have to get that
baby out of there!” He grabbed his tools and suctioned baby A’s head right out.
She was beautiful, she had a healthy cry, and she looked perfectly pink—well
perfect except for the little red yarmulke that had been left by the suction
machine.
He searched for baby B’s head, “I feel a hand . . . and a
foot . . .” My heart dropped—TRIPLETS? “She has flipped . . . I am going in
after her.” And he did, clear to his elbow! He grabbed her by the feet and
yanked her out. She was as dark as a blueberry. My heart stopped as I held my
breath to hear her cry . . . Silence. The nurse could tell I was not breathing
well and handed me an oxygen mask. I tried to stay calm as I could hear them
flopping her around and trying to get her to breathe. As more time passed I could
feel the tension in the air—something was wrong with our baby. I pulled the
mask away from my face and screamed, “What is happening . . . she hasn’t made a
sound . . . is she ok . . . please, somebody tell me what is going on!”
For what seemed like an hour no one said a word and all the
nurses and the doctors were gathered around our baby. I felt like I was in a
dream as my heart cried out, “Heavenly Father, please, help this baby girl.
Please help her keep up the fight and make it through.” I sat frozen with my
head in my hands. Every things seemed to be in slow motion. All the nurses
scrambling—no one looking me in the eye.
And then it came . . . the loudest baby scream I had ever
heard. It was as if she was answering my prayer, “Mommy, I am not only here . .
. I am a warrior, I wasn’t going to give up that easy. I am a fighter!!!” The
sound every mother waits for. They
rushed the twins off to the NICU while I caught my breath.
As the doctor was getting me ready to head back to my room,
he found something interesting. He held up the placenta, which was the last
thing on earth I wanted to look at in that moment. He looked puzzled and walked
over to where I could get a better look. He said, I have never seen anything
quite like this before. Both babies umbilical cords are connected in different
places, but baby B’s cord was barely even hooked on to this sac. Can you see
where baby A’s cord wrapped around the whole right side of the sack? That is
what it normally looks like. I have read
about this many times, but never seen it so dramatic. I have no idea how that
second little twin of yours even got any nutrients, let alone lived. Usually
when it is this disproportioned, one twin ends up getting all the growth and
the other one doesn’t make it. You are so lucky, obviously that little girl is
a fighter.”
She was a fighter—just ten minutes into her life and we had
learned a lot about our little twin . . . Bostyn. She wasn't going to give up.
Fast-forward a few years. Emmett is in law school at
Gonzaga. Bostyn is four years old. We were at church one Sunday afternoon and
Bostyn comes into my class crying with blood running down her eye. I took her
into the bathroom and cleaned her up a little bit. A few nurses who attended our
church took a look at her and suggest I take her to the little 24 hour clinic
close by. I took her in, they threw some glue in her cut and sent us home. Easy
enough.
That night Bostyn woke up screaming. I tiptoed in and
reminded her that her eye was just sore from her cut. She went back to sleep for a
few more hours. At 1:00 a.m. she was screaming again. This time I flip on the light
and run over to her bed. Her eye was the size of a baseball and totally swollen
shut. Emmett ran her into the hospital, which was an hour away.
For the first few days they treated her for a MRSA
staph infection. By the second night Emmett and I were sitting in the room watching
the infection spread like wildfire down her neck, and over to other eye. By
this time she couldn’t move her head and could barely see out of her only open eye. Doctors kept reassuring us that it would start to go down, but as the evening
turned to night we all started to panic. Doctors began coming in to schedule
surgery for the next morning to start to drain her neck and try to get rid of all the infection.
I remember at one point stepping out in the hall and pacing
the floor. My baby, who had an identical twin sister, was going to have scars
all over her neck and face, or worse . . . they weren’t going to stop the
infection and she wasn't going to live. I felt worthless— I was right there, and
I couldn’t do anything. I couldn’t save my little girl. I paced the hall for
twenty minutes searching for an answer inside of my mind. Nothing came.
In my pacing, I came to a dark hallway where the lights had
been turned down. I rounded the corner out of plain view, and lost it. I burst
into hysterical tears. Through my sobs I
prayed harder than I had ever prayed in my life, “Please. The infection is
spreading through her body. They are not finding answers and I feel helpless,
there has to be something that can be done to save this little girl. I need an
answer, and I can’t sit here any longer. Please send us someone who can save
her.”
As I whispered in my mind my final AMEN, words began popping
into my head. I almost ran down the hall. I wasn’t sure where I was going, but
I knew exactly what I was going to say. I finally made it to the nurses station
and with a power not of my own I began shouting out demands and pointing at
people, “You are going to call the infectious disease specialist . . . You are
going to go order this test to make sure this infection has been properly
diagnosed . . .” I don’t remember much more of what I ordered that room full of
nurses to do, but I do remember by the next morning many specialists had entered her room, prescriptions were changed, and Bostyn could move her neck
and see out of her good eye. She didn’t have to have the surgeries or have draining tubes inserted.
That day I fought . . . for my daughter’s life. I fought for
a power to send someone to help save her, and I was given the words to command
the right people to come our way.
Sometimes we fight for
a purpose, and sometimes we fight for a fear.
About three months after we got married Shawn and I had our
first big fight. He came to me one Sunday morning and said he was going to go
to the drag strip to race his jeep while we were at church. The minute those
words left his mouth here is how my mind worked: He obviously doesn’t care
about me; He is willing to break a commitment he made to me about what we would
spend our Sundays doing; He doesn’t care about my feelings; He doesn’t care
about the example he is giving my kids; If he can be easily swayed on our
simple commitments to each other then one day some girl will talk him into
walking out on our big commitments; He will leave us; He will cheat on me; Then
he will be murdered in a dark parking lot for sleeping with another man’s wife.
Boom, boom, boom . . . Within a fraction of a second the
scenario my mind created was flaring red flags through my entire body. He can’t
possibly choose a choice I don’t agree with, or else he doesn’t care about US. He can’t use Sunday for racing his
jeep, or he is not going to be a good dad. He is going to abandon us. My kids deserve a perfect
example in every way; we don’t deserve THIS.
I guess he didn’t want to marry me in the first place. If he can’t even keep
his word on something as simple as how we will spend our Sundays, he is never
going to make it.
By the time he walked out the door to leave I was like a
volcano spewing with all the fear of my past, and the imagined pain in my
future.
I ran out into the garage and like an idiot rattled off
every fear that had crossed my mind, “Shawn . . . I thought you were the kind
of father that would give these kids a good example . . . I thought you were
going put their need to see a good husband above your stupid ideas like white
trash drag racing. If you can’t even give up a simple thing like what Sunday
activities you would rather do than go to church, maybe MY kids and I deserve
better than this.” My eyes burned with
all the fear that was driving my words. Did he even love me? Did he really want
to be their dad? In that moment I could not detach his desire to make his own
decision about how he would spend his time that day, from his willingness to
love my kids and me.
As he should have, after getting berated by his crazy wife,
he left. I watched him drive away and I felt like a piece of me died again. My
mind went back in time to Emmett telling me he was going to leave and run to
Walgreens. I could almost feel my soul scream, “Don’t go . . . please .
. . something is wrong. Please just stay here with me.” I could feel the toxic
shock of fear wave through my entire being. Emmett had left when I felt he
should stay—and he died. How could Shawn do this to me again? Was he ever going
to come back? Was today going to be the day when some normal, healthy, not
broken girl would come and show him all that he was missing? Or would it be the day when deceit would come his way and drive him to his death?
The thoughts that overtook
my power seemed as real as the car that had just sped away. How could he say he
loved me if he didn't even want me to be a part of his decisions? If he couldn’t see how important it was to me for him to go to church
with us, why would he not chose my choice? How could he come back and be a father now if he wasn’t perfect in
everything he did, or in the promises that he had made? If he was going to
disappoint us, maybe it would just be easier to walk away. If I wasn’t
worth making good decisions and fighting for, maybe we were done.
My fear of losing him was trying to get me to believe I no
longer wanted or needed him. I truly thought we would get divorced that day—either
because of my unwillingness to accept his personal choices and imperfections;
or because of his unwillingness to include me in his decisions and follow the simple commitments we had
promised each other.
He was only gone forty-five minutes. He later told me that
he drove to the racetrack, determined to show me that he could do what ever he
wanted without “asking permission”. He said as he pulled up to the track he
sat in his silent car for a half an hour struggling with the internal battle of
what to choose. He too felt the overwhelming feeling to just give up that day.
To stop fighting for what we had been building, and stop trying to carry such a
heavy load that had been placed upon us.
By the time he walked in the door we were both a heated mess
of fear. We battled all afternoon back
and forth. I was determined to show him that his stupid choices could ruin our
family some day; and he was determined to show me that he had to be able to make
his own choices and still be loved regardless of if they were perfect or not.
We both had very valid strong points, but this day neither
of us could look through our own pain to see the other’s fear.
The crazy cycle is a wonderful definition of what we were
in. My fear of living the past over again urged me to try to push Shawn into
making all the right decisions— for me.
His fear of feeling mothered and control caused him to want to make his own
decisions— just to make sure he still could.
I don’t know about other blended families— but for ours when
a major argument would happen, it seemed our natural reaction would be to walk
away. We both had felt like we had been through enough in our first marriage,
that this was supposed to be our easy one . . . right? Any heated fight we
would have, even about simple things, would somehow end with one or the other
of us thinking or saying that maybe we made the wrong decision to marry each
other. Maybe we would be better off alone.
It was like no matter how many good days came our way, the
minute contention showed up on our doorstep we would want to abandon any of the
hard work we had made in our marriage. It seemed we would just give up the fight and walk away.
At times, blending two families is difficult. You both come into the
marriage with fears from the past. Whether divorce or death— your past has been
hard, and therefore your new marriage has many challenges right from
the beginning. Fears are powerful especially in new families that have come
from a broken past. The power of your pain can ignite at any given moment. For
us in the first few years . . . it happened often.
Sometimes the strength of
passion can help us overcome and fight through; but other times the weakness of
passion can hold us back and hinder us in our progression.
Shawn and I have come a long way since that day, but we haven’t
stopped fighting. But now, more often than not . . . we fight on the same team.
We are passionate about our family, we fall victim of fears, but a few things
have changed . . .
One day our crazy cycle was in full force. The kids were all
downstairs and we were up in our bonus room going back and forth over
something about parenting. It was going nowhere fast, and neither of us was
willing to compromise our stand. All of the sudden Shawn said, “Ash . . . stop.
Get on your knees.” We knelt down together and Shawn offered the sweetest
prayer. He asked that the dark feeling in our home could leave and that we
could see each other’s point of view.
By the end of the prayer I felt a peace surround us. We
stood up and threw our arms around each other. He looked at me and said, “What
were we fighting about again?” I replied with tears in my eyes, “ I have no
idea . . . but whatever just happened there . . . was amazing. You are worth
fighting for, I don’t want to fight with
you anymore, but I want to fight for you. We are not perfect people, but I
don’t want anyone else. This blending family stuff is hard. I never even had a
clue how much extra work it would be to try to make our families come together
. . . but I chose you. I chose us. I will fight for us!”
I wish I could say that that magic moment has cured us of
the urge to nitpick the way we parent each other’s kids, or the way we baby our
own . . . it hasn’t! I wish I could say that at times we both don’t want to run
away and that we are the perfect blended family—we aren’t. But the prayer on my
knees with my husband was a powerful reminder that God can help us even when we
can’t see what things are worth fighting for.
We are
all fighters in one way or another. Some are fighting for their lives; others
are fighting for their country. Then there are some of us who are fighting for
a cause we don't even know. Sometimes we forget what we we are fighting about, and
other times will never forget the fight that got us through our battle.
We were
born to be fighters. Just like my daughter Bostyn who fought her way into this
world, we all have the desire to win and succeed. But what if we are fighting
for the wrong cause? What if all the fighting we are doing alone is only
getting us farther away from what we really want?
Every good
fight starts with a drive, a powerful force of motivation: Fighting for your
little girl in a hospital bed; fighting your own battle with cancer. Some fight
their way out of addiction or depression. Some are fighting their way through
an imperfect relationship. Sometimes the victor will have to walk away and not
look back, and other times the win may come as they have to hold on— even when
they can’t remember why they are there.
No
matter who we are, we will have to fight a good fight. Every good fight ends
with love; every bad fight ends with hate. Fighting as a team will get us a lot
farther than fighting alone.
Sometimes
our fight can change the world, and other times our fight will merely save
ourselves. There is a battle raging in each one of us, a fight for good and a
pull of evil. Not every fight is worth dying for, not every motivation a good
cause. Not every fight will be viewed; some battles are never seen with the
human eye. We are all warriors from the battles we have won. We are all
soldiers when we battle with grace. We all have the power to be our own captain
and know when it is time to just let go of a fight that can never be won, or
pilot ourselves to a battle worth saving.
Don’t
lose yourself by fighting a fight of destruction. Some battles only rage
because of a fear of losing. If it were easy, it wouldn’t make us grow. Life is
going to be full of battles, good and bad. Whatever fights you are hanging on
to, make sure they will bring you up. Fight for the battles that are worth
winning, and let go of the battles that are worth losing. Fight for a cause you will never lose. You
are not fighting alone.
I always love reading what you have to say :-) having a blended family of our own I can totally identify..we always fight for US!
ReplyDeleteMy sister's baby A had nearly the exact same complication. He had a 20% chance of surviving and they're not sure how he received enough nutrients to grow. Long before he was born, his name was to be Jesse. It wasn't until a couple months after he was born that Jesse means gift. His twin's name is Jace and that means healer. Twins are beautiful and terrifying but there is no doubt of the divine love and miracles that come about. Jesse is, beyond any doubt, a gift. I can't imagine our lives without that flirty, little baby.
ReplyDeletePerfect timing! Blended family. Hard. Struggles. Want to quit. See your post! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteAshlee, Did you live in Logan, UT when you had the twins? Love your writing. Wendi Bohn wrbohn@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteBeautifully written Ash...I remember those terrifying days in the hospital. So glad things worked out the way they did. I love you all so much and am grateful for your open and honest account of your life experiences!
ReplyDeleteAshlee, thanks for your blog and sharing your life with us! I am crying as this post really touched me! Thank You! P.S. I think you and Shawn are adorable together and you look like a perfect match together!!
ReplyDeleteThis past year has been one of the hardest of my life. My kids are no longer under my feet, off to school all day. I have to make something of myself. And depression tells me to stay in bed all day. About 5 months ago, the word 'fight' started to ring through my mind as I got up each new day. Over the years, I've had different phrases or such come to me at particular times in my life but this last one seemed to surprise me, very poignant, that it was up to me whether I would win it. I have to 'fight' for my life. I lost 2 brothers who committed suicide, who gave up the fight. And so many times this past year, I have been at war with myself. Thank you for sharing your struggles, the pain and fear. Your words can help others to know they're not alone.
ReplyDeleteI am just now reading this...many years later. I pray you have come a long way in your healing. I felt led to comment to you. I will say a prayer for you. ♡
DeleteM.B.
Thank you! Blended families are sooo hard. So many times I've wanted to give up. Glad I'm not the only one. Love your blog
ReplyDeleteThank you Ashlee! I feel like my husband and I are always fighting... often about the most pointless things... It just struck me as I was reading that I have the choice to stop it. To pray and invite the spirit and fight FOR US! Thank you so very much! This was just what I needed to hear today! :)
ReplyDeleteOnce again you have proven the beauty and great worth of your family!!!
ReplyDeleteI think you are an amazing writer and a strong and beautiful soul. Please never stop writing as you are undoubtedly touching the lives of so many and helping them by sharing your struggles and triumphs. May God bless you and your family, and never stop fighting the good fight for Him. It warms my heart knowing that such a courageous and inspirational family exists and I feel blessed to be touched by your words of wisdom ❤️
ReplyDeleteAshlee, You have been through some hard faith building experiences in your life. I have always known you are strong, but the way you can give others hope through your writing and experiences is truly a gift. By the way one of our really good friends is an infectious disease doctor in Spokane. We just spent last week with them at their cabin and I asked him if he knew of you and your precious Bostyn. Of course with HEPA he couldn't answer my question, but if he treated her you were in truly good hands. His name is Dr. Mike Gillum. Much Love
ReplyDelete