Editor’s note: This post was written in the wee small hours of the night, listening to Jumby’s sick ragged breath. I wasn’t going to post it, because it is raw and scattered, but I made a promise to myself and my children that this blog be a record of the good, the bad, and the ugly. Feel free to skip it if you are looking for something light and fluffy because that isn’t on today’s menu.
There are moments, no, days really, when I feel wholly unprepared for this mothering gig.
Today is one of those days. It has in fact, been an entire week of these days.
When Bug was alive, I was younger and infinitely more naive. I didn’t or couldn’t comprehend the enormity of the task I faced, raising a disabled child. Fric and Frac weren’t hurdling towards independence with an alarming alacrity and my husband still crawled into bed with me every night.
Three and a half years later and it feels like I’ve just blinked and the world has spun into something I hardly recognize. Suddenly I am alone most days and almost every night, with no husband to talk with, or to share the burden of child rearing with. Grief spun it’s magic on Boo as well and his life – our lives- went in a direction I could have never had foreseen.
My husband, sweet Boo, finds peace stretching his intellect in a job that takes him away from us for more time than any of us care for.
Fric and Frac bounce towards adulthood with every breath they inhale, eager to shed their childlike skins and stretch their boundaries of independence as far as the elastic of youth will let them.
And I found Jumby, sweet Jumby who is everything I hoped for and inspires my heart to grow Grinch-like, with every laugh, every cuddle he awards us with.
But in the background of this new life I’ve worked so hard to build is a shadow of angel wings, hovering over my head, reminding me of how fragile all of this, this life around me, really is.
My naivete has been stripped away leaving me struggling with the hard truth that at any moment life can change and the magic of these moments I wrap myself in can swiftly turn to dusty memories as I once more swim in the quagmire of grief.
It is hard to admit and it shames me to say it, but I’m scared.
I’m scared of what the future holds for my son, my forever boy, the child brought to me by fate and luck and determination. Jumby’s battle for life has been hard fought and too often he walks the precipice of death for my comfort.
I am imminently aware of how quickly his life (and mine) can go sideways with one infection, one bad swallow, one breath.
With Shale I knew this too. But it wasn’t a reality, it was a concept floating at the peripheral of my intellect. Surely he could die, I’d think to myself, but so could any of us. You never know when a bus is going to come out of nowhere and mow you down.
I understood his body was wrong, built differently and more fragile than his siblings while he was waiting to be delivered from the harness of my uterus. I knew Shale was medically fragile but he was strong. Resilient. Until that very moment when he ceased to be.
My child’s death has brought with it a clarity of just how very real death can be, and I look at Jumby and I worry. I worry that I will make a mistake, not notice his resiliency slipping and I will lose the boy I never thought I could love this much until I held him in my arms.
I worry for my older children and the scars they now sport through no fault of their own. I wonder who they would have turned out to be had they not had to bury their little brother at ages eight and nine. I wonder if my grief has added more crisscross scars across their hearts.
They laugh at me when I question them, gently prodding at them to reveal their feelings. They kiss me on my forehead like I’m a dotering old woman and squeeze my hand while assuring me they are fine, they will be fine, they have survived. But it is then that it strikes me, they have survived.
They’re children. And they are survivors. The only thing children should ever have to survive is a fruity old aunt with bad breath pinching their cheeks too hard and the teen aged scars from middle school.
Yet my children, all of my children have survived tragedy.
Fric and Frac and Jumby, enduring perhaps the worst tragedy of all.
This scares me and I wonder if I’m the mother I can be, the mother I should be to these three precious gifts I have been blessed with.
I’m so scared I’m gonna screw it all up.
While other parents dream of empty nests and weddings and graduations, when I close my eyes each night I dream of just one thing:
Having another day with each of them.








Carmi
Just another day…
Thank you for the timely, achingly beautiful reminder of how important this needs to be for us all. And thank you for once again baring your soul so that others may face their own challenges with the same grace and strength you’ve always exhibited.
mariah
We all need these reminders… Life is fragile. Thanks for the reminder.
Jim
Today I have made a point to look for blogs that I can start to read that would inspire me to become a better person, and I am so glad I have found yours. Thanks for sharing, and giving us your words
Trista
I read this post when it first went up, but didn’t know what to say in response because I’ve never been in your position. But it stayed with me, and I kept thinking about it. I went back and read some of your archives, and now can say that your children don’t appear to have simply ‘survived’, they have thrived, and Jumby has been enveloped in a wonderful family. They sound smart and funny and your devotion and the magnitude of your love for them is apparent because you worry about them so much. No mother should have to endure what you have, and I haven’t experienced anything close to your loss, but I think even the best of us fear we’re going to screw something up that will have devastating consequences for our kids. Thank you for the reminder to appreciate every day with my child.
Like other readers, I come here for the humour and honesty, but also for the heart.
shelly
Motherhood…It’s a universal club of worrying.
Musingwoman
People say suffering makes us stronger. That may be true. But, it doesn’t stop it from hurting like hell. *hugs*
Chelle
You’re there for them and that’s what matters. You love them, you kiss their boo-boos and make them giggle. They’ll remember that when they are out on their own and pass it on to their kids. Don’t worry about a bus, just make every day special.
GamerGirl
You are an amazingly strong woman. I cannot imagine what 1 day in your life must be like, but you do paint the images so vividly that my heart both breaks and swells to 10X it’s normal size. Your children are beautiful and well loved. I’m wishing you a million more days with each of them.
Anissa@Hope4Peyton
T,
You know I’d give anything to say it’s all going to be ok and you’re worried for nothing, but I don’t shoot rainbows and glitter out my arse…contrary to popular belief. I just know that you give all you have to your kids, your love is amazing to bear witness to and whatever the future holds, they could never ask more than that from you.
XOXO
A
BeachMama
Your words hit home, although I do not have a child who is sick or fragile, I still lie awake praying that nothing will ever happen to them.
I have read your story and countless others who have lost children and my heart goes out to all of you. It just reminds us that life is fragile and we have to be thankful for each day.
Starfish
I think you are so very lucky, you have so much love in your life. You are gifted to be able to write your feelings and thoughts. I love reading your blog.
Live fearlessly, live for adventure, do what you love and you will always be truly living.
denie
dear t…know that somewhere on the other side of the world is a mom who feels your pain and fear and is praying, for you, for jumby, and for the two survivors. and for boo…you are loved.
Katherine
I’m sorry that you have to live with this fear.
Very beautifully written.
Kat
Lynn (Walking With Scissors)
This type of post always makes me feel woefully inadequate as a commenter. Just know that there are legions of people out there (myself included) who read what you write about your children and hear through your words how very much you love them. They are all very blessed indeed to have you as a mother. ((hugs))
Maya
great- now I’m crying.
what a beautiful woman you are.
Kelly
Beautiful words.
Colleen - Mommy Always Wins
We all worry we’ll screw it up, though your road has been quite a bit more bumpy than most (and I apologize that ‘bumpy’ isn’t quite sufficient for what you’ve been through). I only hope you feel a little comfort knowing that what you endure on a daily basis makes the experiences of the rest of us pale in comparison, and yet we still worry, too.
(And I apologize for all the $5 words it took me to get my point across!)
Domestic Goddess (in training)
Your post made me cry. Now my makeup is all smeary and my son wants to know why I won’t stop hugging him. I’ll be sending his therapy bills your way.
TAMI
Beautiful post. I think you said all that I as a mother fear, only I just have the fear of death of my children, you have dealt with it and survived. I am in awe of you and what you have done over and over again.
churchpunkmom
What a beautiful post, Tanis.
It is amazing the change in perspective that grief leaves us with.. sometimes I’m glad for the different view, sometimes I hate it.. and sometimes? I’m just bitter.