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Emotions Grief & Loss Hope

The day God saved my life but called my Princess home.

November 10, 2018
no fear just hope

#TRIGGERWARNING: Pre-term Labor and sensitive details.

Cont….

I broke down at church Sunday morning during prayer time. I was sad for a moment but I prayed that God would surround me with his Love, at that moment , I felt an overwhelming presence of the Holy Spirit around me. It was so strong that I could not stop the tears. The next reaction was me running outside to the toilet and screaming there. Not that I couldn’t do this in the sanctuary, but I felt this was just my moment and so I obeyed.

I didn’t see it coming but this month has been really hard on me, as its supposed to be the beginning of my maternity leave and Olivia’s due date is drawing near.

AUGUST 6TH: I woke up thankful for another day with my baby still inside me and was ready for the new day. There were no major chaos in the morning apart from little blood clots here and there but nothing to worry about. I mean, I came from ‘gushing ‘ active bleeding the previous day’s, so seeing only clots was a sign that no more active bleeding was taking place and it was just my body getting rid of old blood.

My birthday was the next day and some friends were coming to visit that afternoon and also to bring me some delicious carrot cake to ‘celebrate ‘ even though I was still in the hospital and it might have felt ‘wrong’ to celebrate.

That afternoon, a few minutes after our friends walked in and we exchanged pleasantries, I felt the urge to pee and this time, I felt that my body was giving me signs that things were not right. Instead of peeing, a huge clot the size of my palm fell in the toilet and I again screamed for my husband , who came rushing from the room to the toilet.

We pressed the ‘emergency bell’ and the nurse came rushing in as well. Deep in my heart, I was trying to calm myself that this was not active blood but just old blood. A few days prior to this day, the ‘placenta specialist’ had seen that a part of the placenta had separated from the main part and was to come out either earlier or during delivery. So, when that clot came, I was re-assuring myself that everything was going to be okay and that this was the ‘outlier’ placenta coming out.

The nurse did an ultrasound and Olivia was still as active as before, the nurse said that, if any bleeding starts or more clots came, I should call them. I went back to the bed and continued chatting with our friends. Within minutes, I realized that my body was giving me signs again that something awful was about to happen but I pushed that thought away and continued chatting ~ though struggling.

After about 5minutes, I decided to request for a heat pad for my lower back pain, this did not help. I felt the urge to pee again and a bigger clot followed, I re-assured myself that my body was ‘cleaning’ out the unwanted parts and leaving everything clean for Olivia. {Did you ever wonder how your scar heals itself and new skin forms? Our bodies have the power to self heal and that’s how the body gives us signs and warnings when things are not right}.

I returned to bed and this time, I could barely hold any conversation and ‘kicked my friends out’ (“ I am sorry but you have to leeeeeeeave”).

I have told this part to some before, I know that every woman experiences labour pain differently. For some its a one on the pain scale and for others its a ten, but for all of them, the pain falls in the ‘child birth labour pain scale’. The pain I felt in those minutes, were out of this world.!! I know I can take physical pain but this was beyond me and quite abnormal. My husband said later that, I was almost tearing the steel bed down.

Have you ever witnessed a dam when the water is being released? the amount of pressure from the water gushing out is immense. This is the same feeling I felt, but for me, the opening was closed tightly. So one part of my body ~the uterus was shut with a cerclage which was closing my cervix tight and keeping Olivia from being born early.

While the other part of my body was responding to mother nature’s call to give birth. My body could not hold off the labor anymore and there was nothing that could be done from preventing my body from going into labour mode. Except, the cerclage that was till in place! The cerclage was doing the job it was intended to do and was damn good at it, except this time, my life was depended on it.

What followed, was tug of war, where my body was ready to bring Olivia out, but the cerclage was holding tight like the dam closure creating an uproar in my uterus which would have taken my life if everything that followed took even just more seconds. My body had rejected the cerclage and was fighting it as a foreign body and this is what the doctors had been referring to, ‘me as a ticking time bomb’ with my life in danger, leave alone Olivia’s.

If there was no cerclage holding my cervix, Olivia would have come literally ‘gushing out’ of me from the pressure released inside of me, but now the cerclage was causing this abnormal and outrageous pain.
I was in so much pain and was screaming that I just wanted to be free of the pain. Which at that time did not cross my mind that freeing me of this pain, meant Olivia being born earlier. There was nothing about her that was causing her to be born earlier but just my body failing me too soon.

All along since my admission, the doctors, had been hoping that I could reach viability , which is 24 weeks, the baseline which is when they would intervene. That Monday, we were 23 weeks and 1day and the doctors were planning to do the steroid shots the coming Friday, to prepare her lungs for delivery incase pre-term labor still came.

So, we were right in between the viability gestation. So close yet so far, which is so traumatizing and I kept asking myself “who decides such standards , especially when life is at stake?~ most agonizing decisions in medicine (article).

For me, I did not really read deep into the statistics of what the success rates of micro preemies meant, all I wanted was my baby here with me. I read stories of 22 weaker babies graduating from the NICU and other preemies now healthy teens with healthy lives. I was just desperate that we could get to 24 weeks and that’s why we had shifted our weekly goals to daily goals ~ we just had to reach Friday the 10th.

Through all the groaning and excruciating pain, all I remember is Eyup’s gentle hand holding onto mine and his voice softly calming me and reminding me to breathe. However, the pain was beyond any breathing rhythm and I continued to groan right through his calm assurance. Despite all this , he did not stop assuring me that all will be ok.

Back to the bed, the nurse was trying to wrap the ‘contraction monitor belt’ around me to check how far they were. At this time, my husband ‘snapped ‘ at her and said that at this moment, she can see that this was not necessary and I needed the doctor right away.
I was then wheeled to the examination room. My husband was trying to recall that one minute rush to the examination room. He was so fast that he doesn’t remember the details. In the examination room, I couldn’t even get myself to sit on the chair. I managed to sit and within minutes, four doctors rushed rushed in the room.

I will not forget the look of one of the doctors, the same one who had just done the last ultrasound where everything was okay. its like she was saying to me ‘’ am so sorry, how did we even get here”.

I have always refused those ‘intimate’ gyn checks even when I was pregnant with IJ. I only unconsciously allowed it during the delivery and I remember it took me a long time to even undress in front of my husband. However, during this stay at the hospital, I became a master and all decency was thrown out of the window, all for my baby to survive.

Anyway, in the examination chair, there were about four doctors staring at me and checking what was happening. During this time, the pain had subsided and one of the doctors sitting right in front of my wide legs said “ I am going to have to break ‘the water” and puff, water came gushing out like the dam that was finally free.

Within minutes of doing that, she then said “ I can see her head, your beautiful daughter is born”. This sentence made us confused , was she alive ? why is she not crying? why did the doctor say your beautiful daughter is born?.The doctor then asked if we wanted to hold her and my husband’s reaction was NO!! which he later realized was him responding in shock.

The doctors turned to me and I gladly accepted and took her with open arms. This is the best decision I ever made for both of us at that moment. I have heard many women share with us of how they never had that precious opportunity of holding their baby angel.

The doctors left the room and I held on to my baby tightly , not wanting to let go of her. What followed was Eyup holding Olivia and letting out a loud cry, more like a groan, never seen him in so much pain.

Olivia was absolutely beautiful. Born with her hands on her chin looking so peaceful and her long legs crossed. I held my gorgeous daughter and sobbed with tears running down my cheeks some more.

I counted her feet and we were amazed and marveled at her long fingers, at how her nails were already long and I stared right back at her face and whispered “am so sorry child that my body was no longer safe for you to stay in’’. My heart broke as I was holding her, I then realized that I will never know how her voice sounds, she’ll never play with her sister IJ, or I’ll never have the joy of watching her wrestling with her papa. We wanted a second child and for a long time, we were ecstatic that is was happening and now it was being crashed right in-front of us.

No parents should go through the whole birth process and not get rewarded with hearing their baby cry. At this time, I also realized that she was in the best place, a place where she will never know pain and she will know that she was loved dearly.

At that moment, sadness filled our hearts as she was no longer crying in our arms and we just had to hold on to her, love on her and let her name ~ Hope’ come alive in our lives.

The doctors came in and the confusion continued, how did this ‘big’ baby pass through the cerclage that’s was so tightly closing my cervix?
The doctor checked me and realized that, the reaction that almost took my life, was due to the pressure that ripped the cerclage (wired suture) from one size and tore my cervix and she came ‘flying’ from that ruptured side , even though the rest of it was still in tact.

The doctor took the cerclage out and advised that I needed to go to another surgery to check the damage caused as she couldn’t determine that fully in that room. I was prepped for surgery and Olivia was cleaned and placed in a small ice bath and she could stay in the room with us.

This time, in the cold and bright operating room, I was put completely under, I just remember seeing my feet flying on opposite directions and realized how fit they were apparently only under anesthesia ;)~ again all decency lost.
During surgery, which took quite long, my husband was waiting for me again not knowing the extent of the damage and whether I was coming out soon.

Thankfully, I was released to him even before my feet ‘woke’ up. We spent the night at the hospital with Olivia in our room looking like a princess who was just swimming in water.
I have read of parents who had the privilege of having their angel baby with them, either in a refrigerated cot or ice bath and I was grateful for this moment.

God saved my life
God saved my life – Grief Image by Nelly.

The nurse came in every few hours to change the ice as this made her skin look beautiful. That night, I laid in bed still in shock, stuck to a catheter and watched Eyup go over the ice bath a couple of times and just stood there staring at Olivia and sometimes holding her. The ice bath was clear, so I could see her from my bed and I will never forget how peaceful my princess looked still with her legs crossed.

I guess she was going to be lady like her big sister IJ. We loved on her, prayed together but it hurt knowing that this was also our goodbye moment , such strange moment of hello~goodbye.

As much a sadness still fills our hearts and whether the joy of our second daughter that we will never get to experience, there was no time, fear was part of the chaos that have changed our lives.

There was no time, I felt afraid. I felt the presence of God so strong the entire 1.5 weeks I was in the hospital up until that fateful Monday when my life was at stake and my princess was instead called home.
My body gave a chance for a beautiful girl to grow in it but she could not survive ‘mother nature’s ‘ call of labor and was born sleeping ~ she passed as soon as the excruciating pains and the war in my uterus begun.

On Tuesday 7th, messages came from every where. For those who knew, did not know how to say “ Happy birthday’’ but still , it couldn’t be hidden as it was indeed my birthday. At one time, someone said all the 3 wishes at once to me ~ “congratulations on the birth of your daughter , my condolences and happy birthday”. She said that even though Olivia had passed, she was still born to us and we were her parents.

Later that day, the “Make a Memory’ foundation came in to make beautiful picture memories of Olivia and us. We brought a few drawings from her big sister and made it a special time. During the photo session, we become again vulnerable to each other, Something am still learning. We are so thankful for the privilege of something so basic as pictures, but for us this was our intimate memorial for Olivia ~ just a princess with her mama and papa.

We had some carrot cake later in the day with some friends and colleagues who had come to visit. All this time (about 1 week, I had only been texting with my mom and she was still in shock as to what had happened. Eyup had been keeping her posted since I was rushed to the hospital and the surgeries etc, but she still wasn’t sure on the chronological order of the events and chaos. So me calling her a week later, helped put things in perspective like she confirmed.

I think I have mentioned this before, I know I am a woman of faith, but my mom is on another level. I have never seen her troubled ~ she is the one you call when in stormy sea and she tells you ‘’ He Knows , why are you worried?”.
However, this was the first time I was hearing her saying that she hadn’t slept well that week and her heart had been troubled, but hearing from me about what happened, really made her thankful.

I was shocked! My mom then said “ Nelly, we have to change our hearts to that of thanksgiving”. She continued to say “my heart is sad for the granddaughter I was looking forward to seeing end November but I am thanking God for your life.

Do you see how prophetic it is that she was born on the 6th, and your life was literally at stake but you survived all that and God let you have your birthday the next day day after the dark stormy day”? At this time, I was literally speechless and tears were rolling down my cheeks. I knew that the God we serve is all powerful, all knowing like mama likes saying. I put the phone down and gave Christ my heart and confessed of all negative bitterness which had put me in control of my heart.

I may be sad, but sadness doesn’t dwell in my heart because , where there spirit of God is, there is freedom and joy which passes all my understanding. I know that God continues to give me peace that gets me through the days as His mercies are new each morning. He is mourning and rejoicing with us all.

God is love and He brings life in our bones. I pray that you and I will one day sing “it is well with my soul’” what victory and testimony that would be.

Love always,
Nelly.

Emotions New Normal

Uncertain Territory | Feeling Lost and confused

November 1, 2018
no fear just hope

I am getting ready to go to work and I realize that today would have been the beginning of my maternity leave. In the Netherlands, you can to start your leave at 36 weeks~this gives you time to ‘nest ‘ and get ready for the baby.

So how is this day looking like to me? Well, this week has been full of me getting random flash backs of Olivia’s face, my bump and feelings of “what if”. I was really looking forward to this maternity leave as it was going to be different. With IJ, I was at University so no leave just books. After giving birth to IJ, I was in class sitting for an exam 5days later and still walking like a pinguin.

Yesterday at work, we were planning some meetings for the upcoming weeks and in my mind, I was talking myself “… I would not have been here, I would have been on my maternity leave, then I wouldn’t have to be assigned those duties”. Anyway, I am here now and I have to do my work as to the Lord with full attention.

Now that I somehow feel ‘sorry’ for myself that instead of being home and finishing up Olivia’s room , re-washing and ironing her clothes, like I did for IJ, I ‘have’ to be at work. So how do I deal with those sad emotions of ‘defeat’? I have to turn them to Christ.

This is easier said than done because as humans, we like to take control of our emotions but this would mean, us dwelling in the sadness as if the darkness has won over the light. It hasn’t won!! Even though it seems to be winning , darkness shall never consume the light!!.

I am going to work, with the confidence that Paul had when he started this verse with BUT. I am also confessing today that…..
“But my God shall supply all (MY) your need according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus.” Philippians 4:19.

I am going with the confidence in my God. Normally, we tell others that we will pray for them and that OUR God will come through for them but sometimes it requires a new set of confidence to tell that to your self (MY GOD). The same victory your God did for those you believed Him for, He will do for you, just as He was mighty in the lives of others, so He is with you.

Declare out loud that he is your healer, provider, comforter, or any victory you are expecting to experience. God longs to be given all the control. Lets us boast of His power. As humans, we boast of so many things but God says in His word (Jeremiah 9:24)that if anything, let’s us boast of the fact that we know and understand Him.

Uncertain Territory
Uncertain Territory – image by Nelly.

Uncertainty:

Right now, I am at a place where I have seen what God can do and trusting Him to do what I am confident He can do. I am uncertain of how my emotions will be this afternoon or tomorrow or next month when Olivia’s due date comes. However, what am certain of is my faith in the one who holds the universe just like Abraham did.

“It was by faith that Abraham obeyed when God called him to leave home and go to another land that God would give him as his inheritance. He went without knowing where he was going” Hebrews 11:8”, NLT.

During this uncertain times, I have to honestly let God know of my emotions and fears just like David did “This is new and unfamiliar for me God!” I choose to trust God more now, having the confidence that he got my back.

My unfamiliar ground, is very familiar to God. Nothing gets him by surprise as He’s all knowing and has already figured out a way out of it. Remember, He is the ‘God who moves the mountains’ and makes a way where there’s no way. Trust Him that as you move into the unknown and unfamiliar ground, He’s with you all the way.

By His grace, He will bring you to a time where all will be familiar to you.

Love always.
Nelly.

Emotions Grief & Loss

No more silence! | Speak your voice | Stand up for yourself

October 17, 2018
no fear just hope

It has been 10 weeks since I gave birth to Olivia Amali and no matter how hard it has been and continues to be, I am so thankful that being able to write down my story. This helps me dig deep down my heart and my emotions to find the words and courage to highlight every step of the journey and have everything to remind me what it really felt or feels like.

This is my way of coming to terms with what happened and a way of letting the pain in my heart come out through words that can in someway encourage someone else. I am not looking for sympathy but if you meet me, a big bear hug will be lovely ;). Also, just like my girlfriend shared with me, do not be afraid to share pregnancy news with me or talk baby stories with me :). I have learned that through my pain I am opening up a platform that allows other mamas to talk about their feelings and experience.

I realize that, the more I talk about Olivia Amali, my spirit is lightened as I feel proud talking about her.I remember writing down prayers and my fears when I could not find words to explain what life felt during those challenging weeks. I remember one day being alone with Olivia in my arms after the photo session with the ‘make a memory foundation’.

I reached for my phone and took a selfie with Olivia as I couldn’t seem to describe how I was feeling at that particular time and taking a picture was the only way I could look back at my face and see what it was screaming for in silence. I haven’t had the courage to look at that picture since the day we left the hospital, it’s going to be so hard to look at it but am thankful for it.

In that photo, I know I look dumb but am definitely present and sitting right in the middle of my messy emotions. I can not explain how I got the courage to take that selfie, or the posts I continue to write. I know the strength wasn’t my own to be able to document my life in the darkest storm but am so thankful.

There are so many women who have suffered losses in one way or another and it is a difficult thing to talk about. I know some people, they would not want to remember such pain and such un-welcomed memory but I do. I want to go through emotionally what I went through as everything happened so fast during my admission at the hospital.

It felt like I was just going through the motions to survive and keep my baby ‘’baking’. By going through my emotions, I also remind myself of how great our God is. Giving birth to Olivia, not being able to hear her cry, and coming to terms that she might not make it made me hurt more and broke my heart. However, it is something beautiful that birthed a miracle in itself.

I have definitely become a different person. I have begun to embrace the fact that this is my journey, my story and as painful and heartbreaking it has been, it has also allowed me to really cherish and appreciate each moment and not take the miracle of giving birth for granted. Olivia Amali has renewed my wonder for life.

No matter how the cycles of pregnancy ( from conception to delivery) are assumed to be so basic, they are also extraordinary and are literally a matter of life and death. There are a beautiful miracle and brutal reality of how humans enter the world and we all have beautiful yet delicate mysterious birth stories. The pregnancy cycle leading up to delivery is one mystery and miracle the human mind can try to intervene but still can’t fully understand.

Sometimes, it doesn’t matter whether one is healthy or not, each pregnancy to delivering a healthy baby is a miracle. As much I want to validate Olivia Amali’s life with a greater reason by honoring her, her life, and building a community that would ensure that her life would never be forgotten. I also want to make sense of the pain, the loss, and the longing I feel. I am sharing my story for something so much bigger than me, bigger than Olivia.

I long that this will bring hope and joy to those who are hurting. To build a community for those who feel alone and to be a source of everyday help amidst the confusing and terror-filled walk of grief. I have received some very insensitive remarks about what happened that made the experience seem so light.

So sometimes, I start writing down my journey and story in frustration just to open up about how painful the experience was and paint a picture just for everyone to understand what I really went through. The truth is, one can never grasp as I am still struggling to understand what I went through myself.

Instead of trying to make everybody understand, I now take those remarks as the Holy Spirit nudging me to reach out to the Lord and rest in His goodness, with a confident trust that He did not- and will not leave me alone. Letting me know that He is the only one who is bigger than my story, He is the one who can grasp it more than anyone and He is the God who knows what it is to lose a child and to be silently grieving.

There are so many families hurting because of the loss of a child and the more we dig into our griefs and terror filled stories, the more ways we see God revealing His joy and hope to others. I therefore, choose to walk down this road of grief and sit in the messy emotions not knowing how He is going to use my story or other women’s stories in the long run but for now, I will rattle through my words until I find the right way to express them.

I will be present and share each time I get a chance, and I pray that God will use our words and let them reach the intended people. I want families and mamas to hear our story and realize that the terror in their current situation is only for a season. I pray that families will choose to be ‘present ‘ in their dark days and encourage them to be hopeful while not ‘hiding the pain’ and that it’s okay to keep their grief silent only for themselves.

No more silence
No more silence

I also pray that as they open up and grieve and move from ‘silent grief’ to ‘public grief’, they will find a community or platform where they can openly acknowledge and freely talk about it.It is really true that when a baby dies, the pain is no longer the family’s but becomes a community pain.

I now get words of comfort from random parents during school drop off, lovely elderly neighbors I haven’t spoken to (more like waved at):) in a long time and many others. My family is grateful for all the love and support we have received and happy that we can grieve her not only silently in our home but openly in the community.

My heart aches for the unspoken griefs that other families carry, the fears and pain too deep for them to speak loudly of, the unfulfilled dreams and silent shames. Marriages quietly suffering due to the traumas that have shaken couples, abuses, unmet potential, children losses, broken hearts and the fear of never being enough.

No one actually brings such grief in the public. Couples mourn in the silence of early miscarriages and all the above. As much as no one brings such griefs up, let us strive and live in kindness knowing that for many out there, these struggles exist daily to them even when we do not see it openly. I want to remind those of us in grief to mourn in hope by intentionally choosing to ‘sit /being present in the grief’. it doesn’t mean sitting in the grief forever but for a season as God leads our hearts to healing season.

Let us, therefore, feel the freedom to mourn but with hope – hope which is beyond this world. Thessalonians 4;13. “Brothers and sisters, we do not want you to be uninformed about those who sleep in death so that you do not grieve like the rest of mankind, who have no hope”. One thing to remember is that no matter how messy they are, our emotions are still valid.

However, there is a healthy way of grieving one where you do not let the grief soak you to the point of it being used by the enemy to destroy you. As Christians, we grieve knowing that we have the assurance of the resurrection in Christ Jesus. Let us not glorify the ashes but allow His praise to be always on our lips.

I want to continue sharing what and how our journey towards healing looks like to encourage others that we do not have to do this alone. God is never surprised with everything that happens in our lives. He is faithful, He is all powerful and He has not forgotten about us. He is still God , good and there is nothing that can take us away from His love.

Let us embrace the purpose of suffering and pain as it’s through them we can experience God’s comfort. “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies and God of all comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any affliction, with the comfort with which we ourselves are comforted by God.”1 Corinthians 1:3-4.

I pray that one day, I will share of what it feels like to be on the other side of these grieving season and stand in awe of how we survived the terror that shook or world. With confident trust and faith, I know that by God ’s grace, this will be a reality and we will abound in joy and happiness.

For now, we continue in this journey, accepting that this is how our story with Olivia Amali was meant to be and we have to continue to be grateful for that. In the meantime, we continue to open up and share experiences that are most often stuffed away, let us continue to raise awareness and break the silence of the ‘silent griefs’ while helping others cope.

I wish for kindness – kindness for everyone whose pain remains unseen and unspoken as everyone we meet is always fighting a battle we know nothing about.

Love always,

Nelly.

Emotions

I cried and also prayed! | Emotions getting the better of me

September 11, 2018
no fear just hope

I am not a crier in real-life sad events but I am the same one that will get emotional over those emotional/happy endings in movies whether it’s from Disney or an action thriller. I can count the number of times I have actually cried (never did) and I mean the real outburst crying with loud noises ~ more like wailing this is excluding those outbursts that happen during prayer. Growing up, whenever we would get punished either by the teacher or parents the sentence that you heard repeatedly was “ stop crying now or I will give you a reason to cry.”

With such warnings as a child, you found yourself coping, enduring pain, and not showing any sign of weakness from canes and all other forms of punishment. It was more like a mental game, like the days you would ‘suck it up’ and not show any sign of feeling pain, the punisher would sense that you are in some way rude and implying that you are tougher than them ~ lack of respect.

I was never once given permission to feel my emotions or told to cry it out. Since then, when things shook my world, I found myself unconsciously suppressing my feelings/emotions. To me this was perfectly ok as I ended up successfully dealing with those issues. I would occasionally find myself silently sobbing with eyes filled in tears streaming down my cheeks.

You would have to look me in the eyes to see the pain and sometimes catch my mouth gasping for breath in the middle of the sobbing. I am more of a silent sobber. The first time I sobbed was when my dad passed 13 years ago, I only had tears streaming down my cheeks. The same for when my brother and sister passed on four and three years ago respectively, I sobbed dearly.

As you can see, I grieve in my heart and this explains why the only ‘flaw’ according to my husband is I don’t talk, that I keep ‘sad’ feelings to myself and don’t open up my ‘sad’ emotions. I have no problem in inviting you to my happy place but my sad place is only for me and am not sure if its healthy or not.To be honest, this is so embedded in me that it happens unconsciously.

My ship could be sinking but with confidence, I will tell you that everything is ok. This is because I want to save my ship my own way. I think the way I was brought up, made me suppress my weakness or vulnerability and that’s why I think I have never wailed as this is ‘undressing’ my heart right in front of others.

In August, I was admitted in the hospital for 12 days and each of those days, I sobbed in prayer on my bed and in the shower. Even in the shower where I was alone, I never wailed. I only sobbed in pain with tears streaming down my cheeks but found myself praying loudly. So when I say I cried ‘wailed’ this is huge.

This is especially because I come from a culture where if someone dies and he/she doesn’t come from a huge family or the clan wants to show how loved the person is, the community actually hires ‘wailers/mourners’. These are people who will be paid to cry at the funeral. They will put on quite a show and start willing even before entering the home. I notice that am slowly opening up and getting a front seat to what my emotions are and how they change. I am a totally different person now.

A few minutes after Olivia was born and we held her in our arms, my husband burst out and wailed. This was the first time I heard him wail or saw so much hurt in him and this made me really sad. You see, when it comes to feeling the pain of others, I could get a crown for it.

When my turn came to hold Olivia, I only had tears rolling down my cheeks uncontrollably and my lips trembling ~ I did not make any sound that day or on any of the other days that followed. The day I was discharged, we picked up IJ from a friend’s house and broke the news to her.

Even before we were finished talking, she burst out in tears and agony wailing, now we were all on the couch crying. Her next reaction reminded me of David and why he was God’s best friend. I-J started lamenting to God how he gave and now He has taken again. We told IJ it was OKAY TO CRY out loud as she felt and if she feels sad, she should show it.

I cried and also prayed

The next days, I began thinking deeply about that night and about David and how he was so honest with God. He invited God in his chaotic emotions, his agony, anger, joy and his general feelings. I began asking God to take the lead of my emotions. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t mean sobbing silently or wailing loudly is better than the other. Each of us mourns/grieve or shows sadness differently. It is not something we wake up and decide, “ooh today am going to sob or wail”.

Back to my wailing and praying milestone. I love to pray, both loudly or silently but to be honest, since the prayer my husband and I did at the hospital when I was discharged (5 weeks ago), I haven’t actually ‘officially’ prayed. I have done the usual ‘ 123/ popcorn/ flash/ arrow prayers’ which made me kind of catch up with God.

Where I just start talking to him randomly then stop and not give Him time to respond. Nothing wrong with such talks, I do this so often even on my bike, as prayer is any communicating with God but effective communication is when you allow both parties to respond to the conversation. So the other night, (Sunday night) as I lay in my bed trying so hard to fall asleep.

I felt the Holy Spirit nudging me that the next day (Monday) was the day I get to ’real pray’ and re-start the prayer journey and not the usual sporadic ‘popcorn’ prayers I have done for the last 5 weeks since Olivia’s birth. The ‘popcorn’ prayers will continue to supplement the ‘real’ praying’ and in no way substitute it.

I usually have such strong convictions and confirmations with things I need to do or decisions I need to take and I always know I have His Spirit and grace to back me up and it’s in no way my might to do the things He has nudged me. So when I woke up yesterday and kissed my clan off to school and work, I knew the time had come to fall on my face.

I locked the doors, turned my phone on silent, put on some worship songs, knelt on my floor, waited on God, and invited the Holy Spirit to come like a rushing wind and fill my house with His presence just like in the day of Pentecost. Within moments, I was wailing and bawling my eyes out, I cried so loud I could hear myself out because of the pain in my heart, and then I prayed. I felt like I was right inside God’s heart that is so full of love and it was a beautiful moment.

The wailing was separate and in no way connected to prayer as I have always wailed in prayer severally. This was me being vulnerable, inviting God to the front seat of my emotions and then praying afterwards. I felt so energetic afterwards that I made dinner for my clan ~ I had not cooked in forever thanks to the ‘meal-train’ from our church.

I will share what I cried and also prayed about when the time is right but for now, I am glad I got to ‘wail’. I do not know if I will wail again or if this was a one-time experience but for now, I cherish the wailing.

Love always

Nelly.