Two years have passed and still you haunt me, my boy.
It’s been two years since Bug turned sheet white and non-responsive. Two years since my husband ran out to start the car on a frosty fall evening in the middle of the night. Two years since I looked Boo square in the eye and told him this was the one time I couldn’t take my child to the hospital. I wasn’t strong enough.
It has been two years since I buckled Bug into his car seat and kissed his forehead, told him mommy loves him, and hold tight. Mommy will make it all better.
Two years since I drove as fast as my car could go, the pedal to the floor. Two years since I hoped I wouldn’t hit any animals in the dark, two years since I prayed for just this once to be stopped by a police car, anything not to be so alone with my fear and worry in the dark.
It’s been two years since I phoned my husband in the middle of the night, while he waited for a baby-sitter to watch Fric and Frac and told him I was more frightened than I have ever been before, so worried I would fail Bug.
It has been two years since I whipped into that parking lot and felt sick to my stomach. I feared when I opened the door to get Bug out, he would be dead.
Two years since I saw my son’s head hang at an unnatural angle, drew a deep breath and yanked him out of his seat and ran into the emergency room, with him hanging limply in my arms. He was warm.
It has been two years since I literally threw him into the arms of a worried nurse and he ran off with my son, calling out a code. Two years since I stood and watched them try and find a pulse, insert a central line, and scream medical terms that I understood all too well.
Two years since my mouth ran dry as cotton and my heart thumped like a rabbit’s.
It’s been two years since I asked to sit in a dark room and wait to hear any news. I couldn’t handle watching his little body lie there lifeless as they tried to perform an act of God and bring him back to me.
Two years since his pediatrician, bedraggled and haggard, with the light from the hall shining behind him, walk into that dark room and just start to weep. Two years before a stream of doctors and nurses entered after him and patted me on the knee and apologised for not being able to save him.
It has been two years since I sat there in disbelief and terror and waited to shed a tear while others around me wept.
It has been two years since my husband ran into that dark room and looked at me with fear and hope in his eyes. It has been two years since I had to muster the strength to tell him he was too late, his son passed away, I couldn’t save him.
Two years since I last saw my baby, kissed his face, sang his song and said good bye.
Two years since I walked out of that hospital, childless, with Bug’s clothing in a plastic white bag, and Boo by my side.
Two years since I drove home in silence, alone, to face my children.
Two years since I woke them up and told them their brother died.
It has been two years and it still hurts as much as it did the day it happened.
Two years and I haven’t stopped missing my Bug.
Two years and I still haven’t stopped loving him.
Two years and I still wish every damn day that fateful night had turned out differently.
It has been two years.
I’m worn out with wishing.

We miss you Angel boy. Thank you for being ours.








Ellieranc
(((Hugs))) My thoughts and prayers are with you and yours.
kittenpie
RM, I am so, so sorry this is your story. I am sitting at work here crying, because I can feel in your words just a tiny piece of the pain you carry, and just that little bit hurts. I can’t imagine, honey. I can only wish I was there to give you rib-cracking hugs and let you cry on my shoulder while I sobbed witih you, and then fed you ice cream and put you to bed when you were all wrung out. I would, dear, if I could. Meanwhile, I can only tell you how brave I think you are to share it.
Oh, The Joys
Two weeks ago was the first time in my life I ever had to be with someone when they died.
I am really struggling. I am trying to put on a good face, but I’m really struggling.
Somehow it is comforting to me though to come here and read you today.
We are not alone, you and I.
I’ll just be over here, grieving alongside you.
xo,
OTJ
In the Trenches of Mommyhood
Crying tears for you, with you today.
MBKimmy
I pray for you and your family, every time you talk about Bug I cry my eyes out … please know I am senging ((HUGS))
Jennifer McKenzie
I love you, Redneck Mommy. Is that weird? I’ve never seen you but I’m crying like Bug was someone I knew. Like you’re someone I know. I think you’re amazing.
Alli ~Mrs. Fussypants
Through my tears for you and your family, I can only tell you that I send you my love and wishes for comfort during this painful time.
God bless him and you.
mothergoosemouse
Just tears. Tears for you and Boo, for Fric and Frac, for your Bug. I’m wishing too; wishing that you’d never had to go through such pain.
Hannah
Nothing I haven’t said before. My sincerest condolences to all of you this week, I know it’s a particularly difficult time for you all.
Christina
I never know exactly what to say, but I am so sorry you’ve had to go through this. No parent should have to lose a child, and I can’t even comprehend the pain it must cause.
PJ
Time is supposed to heal … but I often wonder if the people who insist on saying that have ever experienced gut-wrenching pain. By sharing these poignant memories, you bring Bug alive for all of us, and you allow us to know him, to share in your grief, and to feel our own sadness at his loss almost as if he were our child too. Thank you for that. Love and prayers to you.
Mrs. Chicken
Oh T. I wish this for you, too. Alas, it cannot be. So instead I wish you peace and healing as the time goes by. And the hope that someday you will once again hold your Bug close.
mamatulip
Hugs. Hugs and love.
Worker Mommy
No parent should ever have to go through the loss of a child. I’m so very sorry.
My heart aches for you as it does for my friends little girl/family. She is now with out her mommy due to a senseless accident.
I can’t stop thinking about her. Scary how life can forever be changed in an instant.
Love to you !
Fairly Odd Mother
This is as haunting to read as if it happened today. My heart is beating so fast and there are tears in my eyes for your loss.
Di
There are no words…although I don’t know from my own experience, I know from what I have read, what my husband’s Mom’s best friend grieved at losing her middle child when he was 33 and just intuitively as a mother, that you never get over the grief of losing a child.
Elizabeth Edwards has some amazing insights into grief after losing her son Wade in a car accident in her book Saving Graces (see the following two entries):
http://dibookblogetc.typepad.com/my_weblog/2007/10/saving-graces.html
http://dibookblogetc.typepad.com/my_weblog/2007/10/elizabeth-edwar.html
At her talk at Quail Ridge Books last week, she touched on the subject and it seemed as fresh and painful as it must have been 10 years ago. Her only advice to people helping others grieve is to not let them do anything irrevocable. They can do anything….laugh, cry, scream, punch holes in the walls…but if they start purging photographs or editing out videos of the lost child…gently take that task away from them. Tell them you will take care of it…then put the stuff in your closet or rent a room if you have to…and make sure that stuff is there when they are ready to deal with it.
Grieve and remember…and remember that whatever you do and however you handle it…it’s OK. It’s yours!
kgirl
It’s taken me three days to try to read this post in it’s entirety, and I still haven’t gotten through it. But I will, because you had to, and because I truly feel like your memories of your Bug are a gift to us. But I’m gonna cry. A lot.
kgirl
It’s taken me three days to try to read this post in it’s entirety, and I still haven’t gotten through it. But I will, because you had to, and because I truly feel like your memories of your Bug are a gift to us. But I’m gonna cry. A lot.
Much love.
Butrfly Garden
I’m glad to see the sun was shining for you when you visited.
I just passed my “2″…Lord, it never gets easier.
We just learn to walk so it doesn’t hurt as much.
((BIG HUGS, rnm!))
Esme
I am so, so sorry…