On this Christmas Eve morning, I'm going to post a story that is about my saddest Christmas. Even so, it is also one of the most memorable and most treasured even though it happened ever so long ago. Perhaps it can help others who have experienced sad Christmases.
Christmas Spirit—Lost
and Found
By Nancy Julien Kopp
The first Christmas commercial flicked across the TV screen
in early December. My eyes were closed, head resting on the back of my chair, a
cup of tea balanced on my lap, but I heard the tinkling of sleigh bells, the
sound of carolers and laughter. I stayed still, wishing the joyful sounds away.
I didn’t want to feel Christmas this year.
I didn’t spend my days Christmas shopping or decorating the
house or baking cookies. Instead, I read books about babies born with spina
bifida, asked questions of doctors about hydrocephalus, and made phone calls to
a hospital an hour away from our home to ask about the condition of our only
child, born in November.
It was 1966, and we didn’t have the option of staying with
Julie at the large children’s hospital over an hour away from our home. When
she was a few days old, we drove on icy roads to admit her after our
pediatrician had made the arrangements. A paperwork snafu gave us four precious
hours with her in the crowded waiting room before the clerk told us to go to
fourth floor west where a nurse waited for us.
Ken and I rode the elevator to the fourth floor and walked
down a long corridor. A white-uniformed woman walked toward us. She put her
arms out to take our baby girl. As I placed Julie in this stranger’s arms, I
wanted to cry. I wanted to scream. I wanted to
crumple in a heap. Instead, I looked into the nurse’s eyes,
and we smiled at one another, woman to woman.
She held Julie in the crook of one arm and smoothed the pink
blanket with her free hand. “We’ll take good care of her.” She turned and
proceeded down the long, empty hallway before I could make any farewell gesture
to our sweet baby girl, before I could hold her close and inhale that special
baby smell.
We returned a few days later to find that we could only view
our daughter through a nursery window. She lay on her tummy so there’d be no pressure
on the bulging tumor in the open area of her spine. She would have surgery to
close the opening. Later, a shunt would be placed at the base of her brain to
drain fluid. Farther down the road would be more surgery to straighten her legs
in hopes that she might one day learn to walk on crutches, not a certainty,
only a hope.
I asked a nurse about the big wooden rocking chair sitting
in the nursery.
“Oh that’s for our
hospital volunteers who come in to rock the babies. It’s nice to have a personal
touch.”
Why couldn’t it be me who rocked her? Why not a mother’s
touch? But hospital rules in those days were stringent, and parents were
discouraged from asking favors. The rocking chair appeared to be the one thing
that didn’t scream institution. Bare
walls, bare hallways, no color except in the waiting rooms. But that would soon
change.
I still didn’t care about Christmas, but the hospital
volunteers must have signed on as Santa’s helpers. The next time we visited,
the halls glowed with Christmas banners and
ribbons and small, decorated trees sat on tables in the
waiting areas. The babies had dolls or toys tied to their cribs, a gift from the
hospital auxiliary. The nurses wore Christmas pins on their uniforms, the green
and red colors standing out on the snowy fabric. I chose to ignore these
obvious signs of holiday spirit. When Christmas drew too close, I pushed it
away.
As we waited with other parents to talk to our child’s
doctor, I wondered if these mothers were skipping Christmas this year, too. I’d
probably go out soon and buy the necessary gifts for our parents and siblings,
but it would be an obligation, not a joy as in past years.
On Christmas Day, we stopped by the hospital before going to
my parents’ home. By this time, Julie had been there for nearly four weeks and
gone through two surgeries. When the elevator doors opened onto fourth floor
that Christmas morning, holiday music played softly over unseen speakers. The
melodic carols fairly floated down the long corridor. The banners and ribbons
on the walls seemed brighter than they had on our other visits. A nurse passed
by us with a “Merry Christmas” greeting, which I didn’t return.
Julie was awake when we arrived at the nursery window. Still
lying on her tummy, she raised her head and looked right at us with her big
blue eyes. I had a sudden vision of Mary
and Baby Jesus looking at one another just like Julie and I were doing. The
message was there for me. I needed Mary’s faith, needed to
stop the sorrow and self-pity, needed to dwell on the positive strides Julie
was making.
Ken put his arm around me while we watched our little girl
on her first Christmas morning. The music surrounded us, and I felt the ice
around my heart crack and break into tiny bits as I let the spirit of Christmas
warm me. I’d pushed it away with every bit of force I could muster, but today
thoughts of Mary and her precious son took over. After all, wasn’t this what
Christmas was all about? The birth of a child the world had waited for?
Wouldn’t we want to teach the treasured story to our child one day, too?
Shame for the way I’d tried to shut Christmas out of my life
brought a single tear trickling down my cheek. I should have embraced this
special holiday from the day I’d heard that first TV commercial. I needed the
spirit of Christmas more this year than any other.
We blew a kiss to our little girl and walked hand in hand to
the elevator. I’d finally opened my heart to what Christmas had to offer when I
found the spirit in the face of our baby girl. The carols sounded sweeter, the
nurses cheerier, and the decorations more elegant. It would be a Christmas
etched on my heart forever.
When my first child was born in a military hospital, he was declared a premie, because of his low birth weight. Several days later I was told that I would be dismissed, but that my child had to stay. Since I had no car and was living with my aunt some thirty miles away, I knew I would not be visiting. "What happens to the babies whose mothers are dismissed?"I wailed. A tiny little black nursery worker laughed at me and asked, "Didn't you see that rocking chair? When those babies go home, they so spoiled."
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing a very difficult time, it is surely very helpful for other parents in similar circumstances.