CHD, CHD Awareness, Heart Mom, life lessons, loss, Open Heart Surgery, parenting, trauma, Uncategorized

my heart.

Two years ago today, I sat in a small windowless room at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia as a pediatric cardiologist, a stranger, sat down and began drawing a picture of a heart. It was my daughter’s heart. It was imperfect. It was broken. I listened as she explained that at some point at the beginning of my pregnancy, my daughter’s heart never finished forming the way it was supposed to. She told me about the surgery needed to fix her little broken heart. She gave me statistics and survival rates and asked if any children in my family had suddenly and unexpectedly died. She probably talked for five minutes, but it felt like an hour. I sat there with my thighs stuck to the plastic seat, trying to take it all in. I tried to pay attention but only heard half of her words. Grace sat beside me the whole time. So there I sat, trying not to cry or scare her. Finally, the doctor explained the logistics of the surgery. She told me that the surgeon would have to saw through her sternum to get to her heart. Then, she said they would have to stop her heart to perform her surgery. This was my breaking point. Fat tears started running down my cheeks and filling up my mask. 

Grace, who had been playing a computer game while we talked, looked up at me and said, “Mommy, am I going to die?” At that point, I didn’t even know how to begin to answer her. I didn’t know what questions to ask, and I didn’t know how to explain this in a way that she would understand. A week before, we celebrated her 7th birthday. She was healthy then. She was whole. Her heart was fine. Now, she was weeks away from surgery and recovery that most adults don’t have to endure. A summer already altered because of a global pandemic would now be filled with medical tests, surgeons, doctors, and lots of time in bed, inside, away from friends. 

Somehow, despite ER visits that included chest x-rays, three bouts of pneumonia, and dozens of visits to the doctor, no one had ever noticed her murmuring heartbeat. Somehow, despite all of the extra ultrasounds due to my “geriatric pregnancy,” no one noticed the large hole in her heart. Somehow, her body, though struggling, had continued to survive. Three weeks after the appointment with the cardiologist, I was sitting in the hospital hallway waiting for the call to tell me that her heart was beating again. Then they called to tell me her sternum was pinned back together. Then, we began the healing process. 

I went through all of the motions of this like a numb machine. Worst-case scenarios swirled through my brain on a daily basis, even when she was “in the clear.” Eight or nine months after her surgery, I found myself sitting on the edge of the bed sobbing, seemingly out of nowhere. I tend to stay on the positive side of things and focus on all the good, but in reality, even though people constantly remind me that she is ok, I have spent the last two years fearing something else will go terribly wrong. The trauma of that day is still with me, and I am allowing myself to feel that trauma and sit with it.

Someone once said that having a child is like having your heart walk around outside your body. When you are told that heart may cease to exist, and she has become your whole world, it feels like a vice squeezing your chest and stealing your breath. Unfortunately, that feeling remains long after the threat is gone and your child is well again. I have learned from fellow heart moms that this is common. We worry about every rash, splinter, or blue lips when our child comes in from the cold. The slightest fever in our child can send us back to that small windowless hospital room where we learned how fragile life truly is. So, be patient with us and know that two or five years still may not be enough time for us to feel okay about what happened. Like grief, trauma is an unpredictable beast with its own timeline. 

“After all, when a stone is dropped into a pond, the water continues quivering even after the stone has sunk to the bottom.”
~Arthur GoldenMemoirs of a Geisha

The repaired sternum
Standard
belonging, CHD, CHD Awareness, faith, Heart Mom, homeschool, imagination, kintsugi, life lessons, loss, Open Heart Surgery, shame, Uncategorized

Kintsugi

Kintsugi is the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery and filling the cracks with gold, silver, or platinum. This repair shows that the brokenness is part of the history of the piece instead of some reason to throw it away or hide it. It celebrates each crack by filling it with precious metal. The piece often looks more beautiful as a result of this process.

Shortly after her seventh birthday, we found out that a part of my daughter, her most precious part, was broken. To repair it, the surgeons would have to further damage her tiny body by breaking through her sternum and stopping her heart, cutting out a part of her pericardium, and using it to repair a large hole. Much like a broken piece of pottery, she would forever have a crack down the center of her chest.

Shortly after her diagnosis, a friend sent us a Kintsugi kit. We opened it and looked at it, but my daughter wasn’t ready to do anything with it. Today, as part of our homeschooling, we watched a video about the art of Kintsugi and talked about how we are like that broken pottery. We opened the kit and pulled out the two beautiful whole bowls. Using a piece of cloth, we smashed the pottery with a hammer. We took time to look at each piece and see how each one fit into the other to create a new bowl. We glued the bowls back together and sealed them with gold.

Through this process, we talked about times when we felt broken. We talked about how sometimes we feel like all those broken pieces just lying there on a cloth. We talked about things in our life that make us feel new or better. We talked about how music, art, family, our dog, cuddling, and our hammock are our gold paint.  These things help us feel whole again. I told my daughter that we could look at these broken times as part of our history and recognize that they are not weaknesses, but the things that make us stronger. She said her surgeon made her stronger with stitches. She said she’s lucky because she only has one crack and the bowls have cracks all over.

This discussion led to us eventually painting her scar gold like the cracks in the pottery. She looked at it and smiled. She loves her scar. She asked if it could always be gold and I replied, “It is even if you don’t see it.”

My daughter is seven. Deep discussions don’t happen much. Even today, we only touched on the significance of the art we did. My wish for her is to remember it. I want her to see gold beaming through her skin like sun rays bursting out of her chest every time she looks down at her scar.  When she gets hurt or fails or life just knocks her down, I hope she finds her gold paint, puts herself back together with it, and realizes she is stronger and more brilliant every time. I hope she never feels shame when things go wrong, but instead sees the lesson that comes from breaking.

“The wound is the place where the light enters you.” 
~ Rumi

Standard