Every time my mom would
share with us she was pregnant (jeez-what a sentence that is! It was three
times that I can recall!) I would send a wish out into the universe that I
hoped it was a boy. Yes, you read that correctly-it didn't matter
that my sister and I were outnumbered and up to our ears in testosterone, I
always hoped for a boy. Yes, the relationships I have with the boys
is different, and remarkable because of the differences-age, disposition and
temperament, but that wasn't it. I never wanted to feel replaced. I
know that sounds ridiculous when it's said out loud, but there you have it. I
never wanted to see another little girl doing all of the things that I had done
before her-watching my parents relive those moments with just a small change of
cast. Which brings us face to face with all of the feels coursing
through this mama's heart in month seven. I am officially in the third
trimester, and just mere weeks away from the end point of my pregnancy with Jack, thirty weeks,
and I find myself sending messages up to my baby boy that all go something like
this:
Sweet boy,
Please know I am not
leaving you behind. You are not being erased.
The brother that is on his way for Kennedy in no way makes up for the void that was left in her little
heart when you died. I know you hear the conversations she and I
still have about you and you see the tears she still cries on the nights she is
most lonely; still asking, trying to rectify it all in her mind, "But why,
mama? Why couldn't Jackie stay with us?" And though
she is so excited for Carter to come, she always includes you in the count,
always gives you big brother credit too.
And your room? I
know we never got it finished for you and I always feel guilty about that, but sometimes it was a blessing in
disguise for me. The fact that it still had Kennedy's monogram and
left over things on the walls made it a little more bearable when I had to go
in there after we came home without you. I don't know if I really would ever have had the strength
to cover you up that way. You probably looked down and saw me
struggling on what to do with that room; heard me crying and tell Daddy,
"We can't-then he really won't have a place in this house-I can't do that
do him." And so your dad, God love him, declared it: The boys'
room. And, maybe because I was grasping at something to make it not
hurt, or because deep down I like to think that you would have begged for a
little sibling to call your own, you would maybe have shared that room with
Carter one day regardless, and so we went with it. Who knows, I'm sure
Carter will, one day, get sick of feeling like there is not place for him to call 'just
his' but for now, it sticks. We tried to make it just a boy room-no
theme-we'll just wait and see where things take us. I hope you like it though.
And all of those
clothes that our family and friends bought for you? The ones that
hung there for over two years because I couldn't bring myself to touch them or put
them away? What becomes of those? Strangely, it was
something so many people asked about when they learned we were expecting
another boy, and it would drive me wild when I'd hear it: "Will you just
use all of the clothes you got from Jack?" Or "Good thing you already
have all of those boy clothes!" On one hand I get it, if he
were going to be a girl we'd use all of your sister's clothes and not bat an
eyelash; her hand-me-downs. But these aren't your hand-me-downs, not
really. You didn't get the chance to wear them and grow out of them,
so it's not the same. But they were yours first-that fact is not lost on
us. And so I know you've watched as I did nothing with them,
keeping your closet closed and certainly never looking through them, knowing
full well how hard it would be. And then one day not so long ago, I
did. With your dad, I poured over them and decided piece by piece
which I could bear to dress your brother in and tucking away the ones I can't,
like the tiny outfit we'd brought down to Philly with us, in hopes of bringing
you home in it. No, not that one-that is only yours. Going through the
closest was just as excruciating as I built it up to be in my mind. I
sobbed as I touched each thing; reminded how excited we were to have you wear
them-you'd already built quite an extensive wardrobe, bud. Daddy and
I made it through it though and talked through it and decided on our mindset
together. I'm trying to look at it as we are weaving you into your brother's
life the best we can. I avoid elephant clothes when I can because that's your
thing-it's hard to avoid though, they're everywhere it seems. I hope
it's ok; that you don't mind him wearing them.
So you see, Jack, we
are not replacing you, sweet boy. No, never that. We are
just finding a way to move forward and still bring you with us. I
promise I will always say I have three children. I will always say I
have one girl and two boys. I will never leave you out of the count
and you will always have a place in our home and, more importantly, in our hearts…
I have variations of
this conversation often, feeling like I’m pleading for him to believe me only
to realize it’s me the needs some convincing or more like reassurance
sometimes. And so, with only two
months and change to go, I am filled with mixed emotions, equal parts excited
and terrified.
Having my little lady, both of us officially off for
the summer, keeps my mind focused and busy and in a good place. We
are excitedly getting ready for a weeklong stay on Martha's Vineyard and the
beach life, doing our best to stay cool as the belly grows and the temperature
climbs.
Ice pops and happy
thoughts are what carry me through.
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