
Yesterday at my weekly therapy session, I mentioned that today is the four year anniversary of Oliver passing away and Dr. N asked how I felt about it. I answered quickly that I had been feeling somewhat numb lately and that it had been hard for me to muster up any emotion. Yet by the time I finished that sentence my eyes had welled up with tears and a pit in my stomach had formed. Either my therapist has some magical powers over my emotions or I was stuffing them away and purposefully not giving myself space to feel. After I admitted that I give myself an average of 20 seconds to ‘check in’ daily and see where my head is at – we confirmed my fake ‘numb’ was due to the latter. We spent the hour bringing up some painful memories and she encouraged me to sit, feel, write, and remember. She also suggested I re-read my blog, from beginning to end, from a view up above. To read it with compassion and see what emotions evoke from re-reading my own story. I did it last night in bed – which was NOT a good idea for someone who already struggles to fall asleep easily – but it evoked plenty of emotions. Good, bad, insightful, ugly.
Re-reading the blogs from the first anniversaries, or the re-telling of the most difficult days is incredibly hard. I can instantly feel what I was feeling in that moment but at the same time I’m thankful that it’s not my constant anymore. Grief is such a journey and the stages of it ebb and flow. I am no longer in shock or survival mode – just making it through each hour. I more so tend to bounce back and forth between denial, depression, and acceptance. As the years pass, I move closer to acceptance.. which is actually one of the stages I was scared of initially. I used to believe that acceptance = moving on and forgetting. What I now know, I will never forget. But I have grown in my grief and I have learned a lot along the way.
In honor of my two boys – who both passed away this week – four years ago – I am using this space today to memorialize what I’ve learned… because of them and for them.
I’ve learned that grief BLOWS. It comes with so many stages, feelings, expectations, false assumptions, guilt, and disappointment. When you think you’re coming out on the other side of it – you can get pushed back down. I don’t cry myself to sleep nightly anymore. I no longer see a newborn baby or hear of a mom pregnant with twins (I haven’t quite overcome a triplet announcement) and want to dig myself into a hole. I am generally happy day to day and I have re-discovered the joy in life’s little moments. But at the same time, I will find myself wide awake in the middle of the night wondering how I slept for 3.5 weeks in that same bed, with one baby kicking in my belly and two babies that had already died. I lose my breath, I panic, I want to throw up. I catch myself looking at Tommy and imagining two more versions of him and the sadness can take over my entire body. I question how much I can share about my boys four years later and wonder how it’ll be received. I had a close family member recently tell me it’s time to ‘move on and let it all go’ – that its been ‘long enough’. Experts say there is no timeline to grief and while I can convince myself of that majority of the time – when the waves crash, they crash hard and I often wonder how long they’ll continue to roll in and whether I’ll start losing my support system. I’ve learned that I don’t know the answer to how grief will continue in my life, but that is okay.
I’ve learned that using my pain for good – is good for me. I donate one photography session a month for a family experiencing a difficult time in their life. Whether it’s baby loss, pregnancy after loss, diagnosis of a terminal illness, honoring loved ones who have passed, families battling cancer – it’s a way I can give someone the gift of lifelong memories. Something tangible they can hold onto and smile at years later. I have helped gather wedding dresses for donation to the Angel Baby’s program. I share coffee and conversations with other women who are experiencing loss or going through infertility treatments. Most recently, I spent an afternoon with the directors of a local hospital and talked about how they can improve their bereavement program. I shared some of the support we received when we were losing our boys and how amazing our hospital handled the delivery. Never in a million years did I think I’d have the courage to sit in front of these women and share my experience in such detail. I cried, they cried, but I left feeling like I made a difference. As Tommy gets older, I don’t have as many opportunities to share my triplets’ story so being able to ‘give back’ is my way of keep their spirit alive in my own heart. And I vow to continue looking for opportunities for as long as I live.
I’ve learned that my faith is rocked to the core. When I picture Ollie and Grey, I picture them looking very similar to Tommy and living in the most beautiful Heaven. I picture all of our loved ones who have passed, spending time with them and filling my spot until I can be there myself. I believe in God, I believe in Heaven, I believe in having faith. But I have taken a 4 year hiatus from having a strong spiritual relationship. Last week, Riley had her first reconciliation. We spent a few days prepping her for it and talking about what the sacrament means. Mac was raised with a strong Catholic foundation and was able to share memories of his first reconciliation and how he has always enjoyed ‘ridding away sins’. I was raised with a Presbyterian mom and a Catholic dad – and while we prayed at dinner time and before bed – we didn’t go to church regularly and I definitely wasn’t raised with an overpowering pillar of faith to lean on. As an adult I went through RCIA and received my communion and confirmation – and though I now feel more ‘legit’, I still feel like a phony when Riley’s asking me specific questions and I turn to google for the answer. Fast forward to her night of reconciliation and the recommendation was for the parents to also make confession as a way to set a good example for our children. Riley had her moment and came out skipping because I’m pretty sure she used her time with the priest to brag about how awesome she is. Mac went next and walked out saying he felt lighter. I completely chickened out and lied to Riley saying “only one parent has to go – there’s a lot of people here and we don’t want to hold up the line”. What was really going through my head was that I didn’t know how I was going to sit face to face with a member of the church and confess that I blame God for so many things. I blame Him for taking away our sons. I blame Him for my pain. I blame Him for my inability to create the family I dreamed of. And if I instead took the easy way out and just confessed to a random sin – it felt worse than not partaking at all. I left church that night proud of my daughter but so disappointed in myself. I know deep down it’s not God’s plan (shout out to Drake) to hurt me, to take my babies away, to prevent me from being the mother I deserve to be. But because I don’t understand the reason for it all and I’ve worked so freaking hard to stop blaming myself – I don’t know who else to blame. I don’t want this to be the way. I don’t want to carry the weight of anger. I want to have a solid relationship with God and be able to rely on my faith when I don’t have the answers. But I have to first work through forgiveness and that is a big one. Do they make spiritual therapists??
I have learned that loss recks havoc on a marriage but can also bring out the absolute best. Mac and I have endured a lot the past 6 years of marriage. We have handled grief differently and not always in sync. We have spent hours in marital therapy digging through our past and how to make it work for our future. We have gone to bed angry, said hurtful things, and put unjust blame on one another. We are far from perfect and I can guarantee we have plenty more mountains to climb. But we have made it through the worst (hopefully). Mac has learned about depression, PTSD, anxiety and how to handle me when I’m down. I have learned how he grieves, how he strives for a plan of action, how he takes the reigns when I’m unable. And I have seen a side of him I could not have dreamed of. On Sunday night, before he had to leave town for the week, he took Tommy to the cemetery to pay a visit. When they came home, Tommy came running up to me and said “me and dad played christmas music for Ollie and Grey and my brothers LOVED it”. This morning I woke up to a card by the coffee machine that had the kindest message in it..
“there isn’t a single person in the world that can fully understand how you feel today, what you went through or what you’ve done to get yourself and our family where we are today. I love you so much and although I don’t always express it, I am so proud / thankful of the work you put into yourself and our kids”
I am married to a man who gets me and appreciates me. And although I would give everything in my soul to not have ventured down the road we did, I truly believe because of Ollie and Grey – I have a better life partner.
I have learned how to put one foot in front of the other in search for answers and resolution. My closest family and friends know I am in physical pain daily. Ever since I delivered the triplets, I haven’t had much relief in terms of abdominal pain, backaches, etc. I have put it off for years because I didn’t want to venture back into familiar doctors offices and potentially hear bad news. I thought working out, eating healthier, testing out oils and herbs would make a difference but I was just buying time. A couple months ago I finally starting making phone calls and doctors appointments and conquered a few fears. The worst of them being a scary procedure at the very same hospital I delivered the triplets at. I cried throughout the whole thing but silently talked to my boys in hopes they were with me and could give me some strength to just get through the freakin thing without having a full blown panic attack. Mac and I met with my surgeon and talked about what our future holds – the likelihood of ever venturing down the path of IVF again vs. having a highly recommended hysterectomy. We talked about the triplets, the outcome, the trauma my body has endured. Conversations I have avoided for so long – ones that weren’t any easier than I expected – plenty of PTSD triggers. But I made a step forward and I’ve learned there is a some relief in doing so.
Lastly, I have learned how lucky I am to be a mom. I knew this the second my journey to motherhood began but I feel it now more than ever. I don’t take a moment for granted with the two children I can mother here on earth. They are my reason for being and they are the root of my happiness. Riley is the most empathetic, kind, funny, creative and caring seven year old I know (biased) and Tommy is just… absolutely one of a kind. My dad said it best when he texted me yesterday and said he was thinking about how special Tommy is and that it’s because of two angels that made sure he had a big life to live here.
I have so much left to learn about myself, about loss, about life but I’m making a dent in it. I miss the ‘what could of been’ and ‘what should of been’ daily. I dream of what our house would be like if all my children lived in it. On days like today and weeks like this one, I feel heavy with sadness. But I hope I am making my boys proud and I hope when I reunite with them someday, they know I’ve tried to do this ‘thing’ right.
I love you Ollie and Grey.








(My big triplet belly and my Aunt Patty’s famous baked french onion soup)
































