It’s been just over two years since we held our first son in
our arms. In those years, not a single day has passed where Aaron’s name hasn’t
been spoken in our household or when he hasn’t been on our minds. We think of
who he would be right now and what he would be doing. We listen to the sorrow
in the voices of his big sisters as they speak of missing their little
brother. We see him carefully sketched
in the sky of every single family drawing they make. We find ourselves absentmindedly running our
fingers over the treasured keepsakes that are the only tangible evidence of his
brief little life.
Aaron is, was, and will always, be a part of our story and a
part of our lives. These days, it has begun to feel like those around us have all
but forgotten the tiny little baby who stormed into our lives, stole our hearts
and was gone again just as quickly. There is this mistaken notion sometimes
that grief is supposed to follow a linear path and should get easier over the
course of time. Unfortunately, this just
isn’t typically the case.
Our children spent this past weekend with my parents so that
Chris and I could spend some much needed time focusing on one another. On the way to drop them off, we stopped by the
cemetery to “spend some time with Baby Aaron” just as we do every time we head
that direction for a holiday or family gathering. (For those that don’t know,
the cemetery is just outside my hometown and is just over an hour away from
where we live now.) They love to sit in
the grass and talk to Aaron while they rearrange every single trinket and
keepsake that we have placed on his headstone. This weekend, they pulled up
handfuls of little clovers so they could leave him bouquets of “flowers” and
talked me into making a clover chain to leave for him as well. They blew him kisses, told him they loved him
and then we continued on to see my parents.
When we picked them up yesterday, we had only made it about
fifteen minutes into the drive before my oldest daughter asked to go back to
the cemetery before we went home. The
weather was terrible, everyone was tired and we were running behind so we
reminded her that we had just been there and promised that we would go again
next time. She quietly agreed but when we checked the mirror a minute later, we
saw her tear-streaked little face and she gently explained that she missed Baby
Aaron and really wanted to go see him again today. We pulled over so I could
climb in the back to hug her and her sister. Then I tried again to explain why we couldn’t go to
the cemetery today and promised that we would get down his pictures and
keepsakes so we could look at everything when we got home.
So, that was what we did.
We brought down three large black and white NILMDTS photos that sit atop
our entertainment center, got out the blanket that he was wrapped in at the
hospital, and carried in the weighted teddy bear that we had made to match his
birthweight. Then we all sat in the living room floor as the girls carefully
wiped the dust from the photos and our youngest snuggled his head into the
belly of the teddy bear. We patiently
answered questions that we’ve already heard a hundred times about why Baby
Aaron had to die, how he got his “boo-boo,” what his head looked like, and why
he had to wear a hat. We had to
carefully navigate questions from our four-year old about why she couldn’t see
the pictures of Baby Aaron’s head without his hat. I had to fight back my own tears as hers
began falling when she told me that she was so sad because she couldn’t
remember seeing him at the hospital.
It tears me apart to see such innocent little people
struggling so hard to comprehend something that even their parents will never
begin to understand. We wonder at every turn whether we’ve handled things in
the best way for them or whether we should have done everything completely
differently. We fight almost daily to keep our emotions in check so that we
can help them to properly process their own.
Yet, they are often the ones who end up teaching us in the
process. We marvel at the wisdom and the grace that they continue to exhibit at
the most surprising times. We are often left speechless at the faith they possess
and the untainted trust in God that they harbor. Their simple explanations, unbridled
compassion, and awe-inspiring unconditional love for their baby brother are some
of the greatest blessings we have been given in this lifetime.
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