Some would ask why I stand
Some would ask why I stand
by Lisa King
When I was young I had my whole life planned out….I wanted to be a teacher, I dreamed of traveling to the USA (which was pretty much the furthest place you could go from my home in Tasmania, Australia), I would get married and have a family – two boys and two girls sounded perfect.
I was lucky enough to be able to travel and
study in the USA for 13 months, and then I came back home to Tasmania, and continued
studying to be a teacher. It was during
this time when I met Aaron as he had started to come to church with a
friend.
Nine months after we met we were engaged,
and nine months after we were engaged, we were married. For our first four years of marriage I was
finishing my degree and then started teaching, while Aaron worked full
time.
I loved my job as a teacher but Aaron would wake up every day and just dread going to work. He had worked full time since he was very young and didn’t go on to study any further past year 11. I couldn’t understand how someone could just keep getting up day after day, to do something that they didn’t like. I started to talk to him to go back to school as a mature age student and after lots of encouragement, he finally decided to apply and was happily surprised to be accepted to our local university.
While he was studying I became pregnant
with our first child, so it was a very busy but also exciting time. When our first son Jalen was born I gave up
my full time teaching job and stayed at home full time. Almost two years later we had our second son
Noah. He was a beautiful baby but from
three days old he screamed non-stop – day and night. It wasn’t a regular newborn cry, but a very
high pitched distressed cry.
After weeks of going back and forth to the
doctor, we were finally able to see a paediatrician. He didn’t tell me at all what I was expecting
to hear – he thought that Noah was having seizures and wanted me to bring him
into hospital for some tests. Just over twenty four hours later we couldn’t
believe what we were hearing – Noah had a condition called hydranencephaly. Most of his cortex (brain) was missing and
replaced with fluid from a possible stroke in utero during the second trimester
of my pregnancy.
We were told that the damage to his brain
was so severe that he would not respond to us, he was having seizures, he would
be blind and deaf, he would rely on us for everything his whole life, and if
that wasn’t enough to hear, we were also told that his life would be very
short. He would possibly only live for
two to four years.
Aaron and I were devastated and our life as
we knew it came crashing down before us.
I remember thinking that this was something that always happened to
someone else – I couldn’t believe that just the day before we thought we had this
perfect (but unhappy) baby, and now we were taking our disabled son home, and
we had no idea how long we would have him for.
One thing I do remember is looking at Aaron and saying ‘we can do it
together’ as I was just so glad that we had each other. I knew that our life was now going to be very
hard and not at all what we had planned, but I also knew that our relationship
was strong and together we could get through anything.
Having a child with a severe disability is
exhausting emotionally, physically, spiritually and financially. There were many days when we were just so
drained, and it could’ve been easy to just say how unfair it all was. But we also knew how blessed we were to have
Noah with us, and for us to have the responsibility of being his parents. His body wasn’t perfect, but his spirit
was. As a couple we decided that no matter how long
Noah was with us for, we just wanted to give him the best life that we
could. It could’ve been easy to let it
all overwhelm us, but we grew to appreciate the little things. Instead of celebrating milestones such as
crawling, walking and talking we were so grateful for the little smiles that he
started to give us. We really
appreciated the little things. Our days
were full of appointments to therapists, doctors, chiropractors and naturopaths
– all helping us to give him the best life possible. Noah used a wheelchair, was fed by a
permanent tube in his stomach, needed numerous medications and therapy every
day, and had seizures every day of his life.
We were so happy to learn that his hearing
was perfect and even though he was cortically visually impaired (his eyes were
okay, but his sight was hindered by the messages going to his brain) he would
have times when his sight seemed very good.
As he grew he began to giggle and laugh and we knew what a miracle he
was to be living and also responding, because of the damage that he had to his
brain.
Aaron finished school a couple of years
after Noah was born, and started teaching in a High School close to home. He loved his job and it was so good to see
him wake up and look forward to going to work.
We had always wanted to have more children, and had two more boys –
Harrison and Kobe. I always wanted to
have two boys and two girls, but absolutely loved having four boys.
Noah continued to surprise the doctors and
even though he had many admissions to hospital during his life, we celebrated
his tenth birthday in June, 2011. As
Noah got older the smiles and giggles came less and less. It was obvious that
his body was becoming more and more tired as he had to deal with many illnesses
throughout his life.
In October 2011 we took him to hospital
just like we had many times before, as we could tell he had another chest
infection. However this time was
different to every other time. I had
never seen the doctors move so fast as they worked out what to do to help
Noah. For the first time in his life the
doctors decided that he needed a tube placed to help him breath and then they
talked to us about flying him to a hospital which was hours away, so that he
could get the best treatment possible in a paediatric intensive care unit.
After a week in the PICU and lots of ups
and downs, it became very obvious that Noah’s body was shutting down. He could no longer breathe on his own and
needed a lot of medical intervention to just keep him alive. It was the time we had dreaded his whole
life. It was time to say goodbye to him
and let his beautiful spirit leave his tired body.
The next day was the hardest, longest but
also shortest day of our lives. Our
family and close friends came to say goodbye to Noah and we sat around him, held
onto his hands and stroked his beautiful face as we spent our last moments with
him. Our hearts were broken, but we also
felt so much peace as we knew that it was his time to go, and that we had done
all we could to give him the best life possible while he was with us.
The next few months were so hard to adjust
to. Aaron took a month off work as we
spent time together going through his medical supplies, returning equipment
that he no longer needed, and just grieving together. When Noah was alive we were constantly
watching the clock to know when Noah’s next feed or meds were due. Without Noah we now had so much more time and
we didn’t know what to do with it. All
we wanted to be doing was caring for Noah again. We missed getting up in the night to change
his position in bed. We missed
suctioning him day and night, we missed putting on his body splints to keep his
muscles from getting tighter. We missed doing physio therapy, and having to
lift him in and out of his wheelchair. We would’ve given anything to have all
of that back. Our family just wasn’t
complete without him.
Aaron was taking Noah’s death especially
hard. A few months later we decided to
take our annual family holiday, and invited my extended family to join us for
the first time. We were worried about
going for the first time without Noah and hoped that having them there with us
would make it easier. Our first day
there was spent at our favourite beach.
We laughed and jumped in the waves together and Aaron made a comment to
me that he felt like his heart was being healed by being there with my
family. We both talked about how even
though life without Noah was so hard, we knew that it could be good again, and
we knew that Noah would want us to be happy.
That night after Aaron went on a short
fishing trip, he had a massive heart attack right in front of us. He wasn’t able to be revived and was
pronounced dead, just three and a half months after Noah passed away. I remember pacing the floor and looking
towards Heaven asking ‘why is this happening!?’. I still don’t know and I don’t think that
getting the answer will make things any easier.
Instead I decided to not look for answers, but to just try to deal with
it the best that I could.
The last four and a half years have been
very hard, especially as I have had to help my three boys through their own
grief, while going through so much grief and trauma myself. When Aaron died, I knew that I could question
why, and I could get angry and say life wasn’t fair and sometimes I do. But I
knew that if I let myself be consumed by all those negative thoughts there was
no way I would cope with what had happened.
It was hard enough just living without them and suddenly being a widow
and a single Mum.
There have been many, many tears over the
last four years. I know I’ll be with
them again, but it doesn’t necessarily make things any easier. I do believe that families are forever, but a
third of my family is not with me right now, and that’s so hard. What I have learnt through all of this is
that grieving is okay and there is no timeline for it. It’s hard to watch someone grieving. It’s hard for people to know what to do or
say. It’s easier to just sometimes avoid
it.
But people shouldn’t be expected to ‘move
on’ or to get over it or to be okay because of the faith that we may have. When my boys are having a hard day, I have
learnt that it’s okay to just allow them to have a hard day. Sometimes the only
thing that helps is to feel whatever we are feeling at the time. Grief cannot be rushed and I’m so grateful
for beautiful friends who know this, and allow me the time and space to just
grieve or talk about what we are going through, or to talk about Aaron and
Noah.
When Aaron and Noah died I knew that I had
to live my life to make them proud, and have tried to teach my boys that as
well – we now had to live for them. The first two years were very hard, but I did
all I could to make new happy memories with my boys, and to try to see the
positives in our lives as that’s the only way I could cope. We went on our first big holiday together, we
would fill our weekends with activities that we couldn’t always do when Noah
was alive. If we were having a really
hard day, we would often just jump in the car and go and do something fun to
try to cheer ourselves up. It didn’t
mean that we stopped feeling grieving, but it helped us to get through another
day without them, and the weekends we used to dread because they were long and
sad, we now look forward to.
On especially hard days such as birthdays,
anniversaries, and other celebrations we would go somewhere that we hadn’t
before, or would go somewhere special for dinner. We would release balloons on their birthdays
and spend the day with beautiful friends who would drink Aaron’s favourite
drink with us around his grave, as we shared silly stories about him.
It’s now four and a half years since Aaron
and Noah passed away and it’s still hard without them, but we now have a lot
more happy days than sad days.
It’s such a long and lonely road no matter
how many people are supporting you, but all of these people have helped us to
stand again. I believe that for someone
to stand again, they need time, patience, love and someone to lean on until
they are steady on their feet again.
When you are going through something so hard in your life it is also
easy to fall again at different times. It takes a long time before you really
feel steady on your feet and can stand without needing as much support.
I am grateful for amazing family, friends
and even strangers who have helped us over the last four and a half years, and
who have helped me and my boys to stand again.
Read more about Lisa's journey:
http://www.lisajking.blogspot.com.au/
Related stories: Silence Breaks
Read more about Lisa's journey:
http://www.lisajking.blogspot.com.au/
Related stories: Silence Breaks
6 comments:
Lisa you are an amazingly strong woman. I will never forget the day that Noah passed away and then so soon afterwards Aaron. May God keep you strong always and lots of blessings to your beautiful family. Hannah Levi,Israel.
Lisa you are an amazingly strong woman. I will never forget the day that Noah passed away and then so soon afterwards Aaron. May God keep you strong always and lots of blessings to your beautiful family. Hannah Levi,Israel.
I LOVE Lisa! She is AMAZING! Her blog and courage has been a strength to me after my husband passed away. I cry every time I read her story.
Thank you Hannah. Love to you and your beautiful man! Xxx
Love to you - hope you're doing okay xx
such a wonderful post and tribute to you and your amazing boys..all of them, big and small.
thank you for sharing it.
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