Episode 52 SN: The Right to Choose your Reproductive Destiny: Tova’s Story
This show is focused so far on the unexpected elements of the emotional or physical toll of pregnancy and birth. Today that story is extended to include the emotional and physical impact of a pregnancy that didn’t find its footing and ended in abortion. Abortion is obviously a topic most people have strong feelings about. And unfortunately, those strong feelings tend to flatten the conversation, when in reality like all elements of reproduction, thinking and talking about abortion requires nuance. Some people may seek out first trimester abortion early in their pregnancy and feel like this choice. This procedure is like any other medical procedure. For other women. It comes with more personal or cultural or religious baggage and it’s in no way easy for them to make that choice. In today’s episode, my guest has a second trimester abortion and her pregnancy which many complications arose. And her experience of working through the grief of this loss is impactful to hear and very much a story that I will carry with me for a long time.
To find Tova’s book, Finding my Muchness, here
And her current Venture, Spark’d Earseeds
Statistics on Abortion
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db136.htm#:~:text=The%20estimated%20number%20of%20pregnancies,2007%20has%20been%20well%20documented.
https://www.guttmacher.org/gpr/2019/09/us-abortion-rate-continues-drop-once-again-state-abortion-restrictions-are-not-main
Twins in the Womb
https://www.verywellfamily.com/twin-chorionicity-explained-4114659
https://fetus.ucsf.edu/monochorionic-twins/
https://women.texaschildrens.org/program/texas-childrens-fetal-center/conditions-we-treat/monoamniotic-twins#:~:text=Monoamniotic%20twins%20are%20identical%20twins,they%20also%20share%20a%20placenta.
Di/Di, Mo/Di, Mo, Mo
Audio Transcript
Paulette: Hi, welcome to war stories from the womb. I’m your host, Paulette kamenecka. I’m an economist and a writer and the mother of two girls. This show is focused so far on the unexpected elements of the emotional or physical toll of pregnancy and birth. Today that story is extended to include the emotional and physical impact of a pregnancy that didn’t find its footing and ended in abortion. Abortion is obviously a topic most people have strong feelings about. And unfortunately, those strong feelings tend to flatten the conversation, when in reality like all elements of reproduction, thinking and talking about abortion requires nuance. Some people may seek out first trimester abortion early in their pregnancy and feel like this choice. This procedure is like any other medical procedure. For other women. It comes with more personal or cultural or religious baggage and it’s in no way easy for them to make that choice. In today’s episode, my guest has a second trimester abortion and her pregnancy which many complications arose. And her experience of working through the grief of this loss is impactful to hear and very much a story that I will carry with me for a long time.
Let’s get to her inspiring story.
P: Thanks so much for coming on the show Can you introduce yourself and tell us where you’re from?
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Tova: Hi, my name is Tova and I am coming to you from Las Vegas.
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P: Oh lovely. Is it is it 1000 degrees there?
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T: It is a basically about 1000 degrees. Yes. Yes Today is particularly hot I think perhaps the hottest day
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P: so today’s episode is on abortion, which is a tricky topic and looking for people to talk about it in 2022 There’s still a lot of shame around it, which I’m disappointed to see. I’m the mother of two teenage daughters. And I hope they don’t grow up with the same context that many of us grew up with. particularly unfortunate given that abortion is relatively common. I think the numbers I’ve seen and suggested that on average in the US there’s something like 6 million pregnancies and just under a million abortions a year. I’ll put links to these numbers in the show notes. Having said that, I only know one person who’s had an abortion and I only know about that because I was there right
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T:Â that you know you only saying that I know of right which can’t be right.Â
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P: Like can’t be right. There must be people around me doing that. So I appreciate that you have offered to share your story which is a little bit of a of a different version.
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T: I think it’s probably a lot of a different version. But yes, yeah. Well,
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P: I’m imagining that most people who have to make this decision when you did have to do it for similar kinds of reasons.
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T: Yes, yes I. At this, you mean at the stage of pregnancy where I was when I met my students? Yes, I believe most. Most, if not almost all people who get to that point, though I can’t speak for everybody and I personally know from not only my experience, but then post my experience the women that I connected with which were a huge part of my story. My journey as they say,
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P: so do you want to sort of walk us in is Was this your first pregnancy? It was not.
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T: No, So this was my second pregnancy. My oldest I was married my oldest daughter was just about one years old when I got pregnant. Me and my husband. We had a plan as everyone does that, right. That’s what the whole show is about.Â
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P: Yeah. Yeah.Â
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T: Like we’re gonna have two kids. We’re gonna have them close together. They’re gonna be best friends. Yeah. And then we’re done. And then we’re like getting back to life as usual. That was our plan. And so we had our first daughter that pregnancy was a little there were some issues that came up but ultimately everything was okay. And then as soon as she turned one, we were like, Okay, let’s get working on the second. So we can get through that we had decided like on her first birthday. We’re like that’s the start to try. I also apparently in retrospect, doing some dad got pregnant on her birthday.Â
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P: Wow.Â
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T: So like, we were like, Okay, let’s try and that second pregnancy turned out to be identical twins. They were girls, which was really surprising because that stuff happens to other people and not that it’s not hereditary identical twins is completely random. They say and there are no twins not there’s definitely no identical twins in my family like I don’t know any.
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P: So how far along Do you find that out? Is that eight weeks or 10 weeks orÂ
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T: we found out? I was like literally already showing it five weeks? Like I’m a little girl and I was like, this is weird. And I joke to my husband the night before the first ultrasounds like five or six weeks, you know, I was like, Oh my God, why am I already showing like is this gonna be twins and then lo and behold, we shut up at the ultrasound. And they relied like that.Â
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The tech didn’t know how to communicate, and was like, Oh, it’s twin… There’s two and I was like, What are you talking about? No, you’re mistaken. And my nose was like, yeah, no, we’re no, she’s like, No, there’s no there’s the one and there’s the other but I don’t see a separation between them. She said. I was like, What the hell does that mean? Like I don’t know anything about what you’re talking about.Â
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P: And it sounds like conjoined twins.Â
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T: And that’s what I said. I said what are they like, conjoined. I was like, she looked at me like I was the idiot. And she said, No, there’s supposed to be either in two sacks, but we’re not there in the same side. And there’s supposed to be a membrane between them. But I don’t see it. You have to get a higher level ultrasound to see the membrane. I said, Well, what does that mean? And she was like, well, basically, if there’s no membranes, really high risk. And you know, it’s basically a done deal. I’m sure. I’m sure it’s there. We’ll send you for the ultrasound. Like yeah, yeah. So immediately, I went home and I was like, Hello, Dr. Google.Â
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P: Yes.Â
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T: And I started immediately learning what the risks were a if they don’t see the membrane, and then everything else that falls into that pocket have identical twin pregnancy complications and it’s a big bucket.Â
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T: Okay, a little twins anatomy here. Baby sits in a sack connecting to the placenta with an umbilical cord. That SAC has two membranes and inner one called the amnion. And another one called the Korean majority of twins have their own placenta and their own amniotic sac. twins who share the amniotic sac, so no inner membrane separating them. Also share one placenta 70% of identical twins share placenta, but only 1% share both a placenta and a single sack. Sharing a placenta the source of nutrition and oxygen and waste removal can cause issues Tova will talk about some of these two I wanted to outline our resource sharing and blood supply with resource sharing. The umbilical cord that connects the babies to the placenta can attach the placenta in different places. If they attach it away that doesn’t share the placenta evenly. The fetuses can grow at different rates. Second issue is that when those two umbilical cords send out blood vessels into the placenta, these vessels can grow together, meaning twins will be sharing their blood supply, which can lead to issues 90% of the time, it does not lead issues and everyone’s fine and 10% of the time, it does lead to issues.
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T: So when there is no membrane, the probability of those cords getting wrapped around themselves and each other tied in knots and everything is tremendous.
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P: It sounds right, that makes sense. Right? And so that’s the risk. That’s what’s creating the risk.Â
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T: That’s what’s creating one of the risks Okay, all right. So then the membrane they went for the higher level ultrasound they saw the membrane so that mitigated the risks of the take most of the risks of the tangling, all the risks are still there to a degree, but that main tangling up
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P: just a quick word here before we dive into some medical terminology. There are three different categories to describe how to ensure the amniotic sac and the placenta, die, die mo die, and Momo die die is like to singleton pregnancy sharing the uterus. Everyone gets their own amniotic sac and their own placenta. Mo di refers to monochorionic di amniotic twins, so one placenta, but each baby gets their own amniotic sac vomo refers to monochorionic mono amniotic twins who share a placenta and a Sac
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T: so hours were Momo that’s what they call them. A one placenta one sack but it did have the membrane the primary risk when you have a Momo identical twin pregnancy is that the placenta itself isn’t feeding into both umbilical cords evenly, and that the blood flow flows through the placenta from one baby into the other. Or that there’s you know, the veins and arteries across the surface of the placenta they overlap and where they overlap things don’t always go where they’re supposed to. One baby generally would get more of the blood and nutrients and one baby would get less. So both babies are at risk, one for overload and one for deficiency. And when that happens, it’s called twin to twin transfusion syndrome or TTTS. At the time, this is 13 plus years ago, it was very hard to find people who knew what they were talking about very hard. Even the doctors there were there were like three doctors in the country who say that they understood this disorder and it was so rare. And I would say one of the biggest points of pride or just a positive outcome from my experience and the collective experience of a lot of women or families that experienced this at that time or since then, is that we found each other and collectively that community has made a huge impact on awareness and Doctor knowledge and ability to treat this. So that’s a little sidelineÂ
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P: that’s amazing.Â
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T: It was amazing because back then like it was like finding a needle in a haystack. I don’t know if it’s just that I’ve been in this haystack. Now that I know I can see all these needles, but I can get to that toÂ
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P: you guys find each other on Facebook.Â
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T: It was pre Facebook groups. There were there was a twin to twin transfusion message board and anonymous message board, which is where I started and there was just a handful of women who were like I was just diagnosed, they don’t know what to do help. I mean stuff like that. Now now it’s all on Facebook. So anyway, we we found that we were pregnant. I read all the research on TTTS. Ultimately, the goal was not to get it right. Like ultimately, if the placenta is doing its job, right baby a baby B they’re both thriving, all is good. So I found a new doctor. We saw him I think at like 12,13 weeks, and he was like oh everything is good. There’s a membrane I have a picture. It’s beautiful. One baby on top of the other. They look like they’re in bunk beds. And they were like, right, he’s like, okay, come back in four weeks. We’ll see how they’re doing.Â
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So we came back at 16 weeks. And he saw the very first morning signs of TTTS. So the first warning signs are an imbalance of fluids. So each baby surrounded obviously there’s a membrane and you want each sack to be about the same. And one of them was smaller one of the sex was a lot smaller than the other. And he basically said here’s the deal. At this point at 16 weeks, they’re already showing it imbalance This is most likely going to develop into TTTS and you’re probably going to lose them both. And if you don’t, they’re probably both going to be born with like severe disabilities and you don’t want that I imagine so you probably want to just terminate the pregnancy and I’ve done all this research. Yeah, I was like well first of all, I know that there are like treatments for this. So there was this laser treatment, which was relatively new. At the time, there was like an amniotic reduction which removes some of the amniotic fluid from the baby that has more to allow for self correction and the other baby to get like there weren’t things and I was like, can we talk about those things. He’s like, they’re probably not going to help too much. And he’s like the laser surgery like nonsense. Like, okay, like, is it even possible to terminate one in order to save the other?Â
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P: Yeah.Â
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T: And he was like, no. I was like, what? I read it on the internet, like,Â
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P: yeah, yeah, yeah,
T:Â what are you talking about? So I was like, we can’t talk or be doctor. It was really, like I’m joking, but it was obviously horrifying. And then he literally said, I have to go teach a class now. I won’t be here in two weeks. I have vacation. So you’ll come back in four weeks and we’ll see if everything’s still okay.
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P: That’s a weirdly long leash.Â
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T: Yeah, he basically was set and then he left he left us in his office to go teach a class B my husband sat there looking at each other like, what just happened? Sorry. Yeah, a lot of curves and you’re totally allowed to curse. Yeah, I was like, what what?
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Like, like, basically you said, Come back in a month and we’ll see if your babies are dead yet. I mean, that’s what he said to us. Yeah. We were like to find a new doctor. And we ended up going to New York to Presbyterian Hospital where they had an expert on staff who was one of the few people trained in the laser surgery that is used to ablate the overlapping veins and arteries. On the surface of the placenta or otherwise deal with high risk pregnancies of this type. And we started going there. And we were going every two weeks.
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P: Was that prognosis more positive? Did they think the pregnancy could still work out?
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T: They did all the ultrasound the high level ultrasounds, all the things and I’ll be honest, it was so early, they were excited air quotes since we’re not going to see me but they were excited for my case, because they believe these things to be so rare and they had just started like the guy who technically was trained in laser had just finished his training in Europe on how to do it. And he had never actually done one yet here in the States. So I was like, his potential to to do this big surgery. The way TTTS progresses is in in five stages, or five stages. The first stage is an imbalance of fluids. This second stage is when the imbalance maybe reaches certain measurements like they would measure the widest gap of a fluid in the baby that was more tightly packed. And when it hit a certain stage, you were officially stage two when a certain measurement then and this was back then, not only has it hopefully changed, it probably has changed but we change these layers. So they would not do laser surgery unless you hit stage three, but we were not there.Â
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P: Yeah,Â
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T: we were basically at stage one, one and a half and he was like this is good news. You know, we’re going to monitor this carefully. We’re going to do high level ultrasounds throughout the pregnancy, baby B had a lot of fluid and baby A had less but baby it had she had a healthy amount of fluid. It was just less the secondary and third signs were like kidney failure because the baby was less the kidneys fail to develop. So when they start seeing that there’s other secondary signs and I had none of that. I was all wet all of it was just a fluid imbalance. So I was coming in. Believe it was every week, maybe twice a week, driving into the city paying $40 to park high level ultrasounds, keeping an eye on it. And the thing that we knew was that if we were qualified for laser surgery, we would do the laser surgery. We talked about doing an amniotic fluid reduction.Â
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P: Yep.Â
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T: But some people had done a fluid reduction and then subsequently did a laser surgery if they still needed it if the amniotic fluid reduction didn’t work, but the amniotic fluid reduction increases the risk of rupture, and so they don’t want to do it if a laser surgery has the potential to be needed.Â
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P: Yeah,Â
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T: especially in my case where they were super excited to maybe be able to do it. They didn’t want to do an amniotic production. They wanted to wait and see.Â
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P: Yeah.Â
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T: Because if it stayed and each baby was developing well and their kidneys were developing well, and there were no secondary signs we were we were good and we were aiming for 24 weeks, like the bare minimum, because also they said and again, I think they know better because of the accumulation of parents who voiced their experience. They said after 24 weeks, the risk goes down. A lot of anything happening, whatever. It’s not true, but that’s what they said. So we were aiming for 24 weeks.
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P: God This feels like a bit of a sprint.Â
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T: It was horrible. It was I mean it was it was just like in the thick of trauma day after day after day not knowing and you’re like you’re living and your body is doing this. And you don’t know what’s going on in there. Like you’re just like I don’t know, you just don’t know like day to day is was it where’s the fluid? I’ve been like feel does it feel fluid on the right side or like what do I know like and then they’re not doing anything but watching it. Right? Right? If we had the laser ablation and they each were just getting 50% of the placenta and they were kind of functioning on their own things. And one died, it would suck, but it wouldn’t affect the survivor.Â
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P: Yeah,Â
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T: since we couldn’t get the laser ablation we never qualified for it. We knew if God forbid one died, that would create basically a de oxygenation of the blood in her system, which could then flow through the placenta into the healthy baby and shut her down you know, create damage of some degree and you don’t know don’t know the degree, you don’t know anything. You don’t know anything. That was it. That was our that was our situation just after we go get the things consistently. The baby that had more fluid, they were like she’s fine. The baby that had less fluid was the one they were more concerned about. They were like She’s good. She got like two and a half centimeters, the other one had like 12 or 13 centimeters. Again, my numbers might not be 100% but they were optimistic. And then at 23 weeks and 2 days maybe I went in for my weekly ultrasound. And I was feeling actually really good because the pressure on my stomach was less than it had been and I was getting bigger and I’m small I’m like maybe 5 foot one and so it was a lot, a lot of carry weight. And we went in and did the ultrasounds and they were like, oh, have you eaten anything? And I was like, I’m like okay, and the doctor came in and basically he was like so the baby with the more than one they weren’t worried about died.Â
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P: ugh
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T:Â sometime between our previous ultrasound which was like five days earlier and that day she had died. And so that’s not anything more profound to say. It was horrible, horrible, horrible,
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P: so unexpected.
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T: It was very unexpected, because for the first time I was feeling good, of course I was feeling good. Because her fluid level because we’re in so anymore because she wasn’t super fluid. Yeah. And so the baby they were more worried about Baby A. She was doing fine on camera. But there was no way you know, her fluid levels were more balanced now. But there was no way to know what happened to her brain.Â
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P: Yeah,Â
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T: which is where the damage would have happened at the impact of the death of her sister. And so we were at like I said 23 weeks and it was 23 weeks and five days.
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P: Oh my god,
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T: we discovered that. And they specifically by the way, scheduled that appointment before the 24th week when they were scheduling it, they look at the calendar, they look at my dates, just because of all the impact that those numbers have on so many parts of this process. So basically they said to me, so here are your choices. And we I mean we obviously had discussed this at length throughout the prior weeks like what happens if what happens if what happens if what happens if and we had decided that without the laser surgery. If one of them passed away We were going to terminate because the risk to the survivor was too great.Â
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I mean, and I was in the at this point. I knew women who had had their twins and last one and a half survivors who had severe mental and physical handicaps. I mean across the board from similar situations. I didn’t know a ton, but I knew enough I had seen even the ones who some of them who had the laser they’re survivors still had issues. But there was one in particular as the woman in Europe who her her daughter at that point was maybe eight or nine her survivor and I mean it was heartbreaking but she was going through raising this child could not was Yeah. And so we had 24 hours to make a decision because they needed to start the process on the 23rd day 33rd week and sixth day in order to fall within 24 week guidelines of New York City. And so that’s the decision that we made.
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And that’s what we did.
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I guess you might want to ask a question.
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P: I’m so sorry. are covered with goosebumps that’s so traumatic to make it that far. And I think I wrote to you that we had a very touch and go pregnancy till the very end and then she they took her early she had open heart surgery. We never talked about it.Â
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T: ReallyÂ
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P: we never talked about what happens or what it was too scary for some reason. And this is a complete fantasy. I’m imagining that articulating it puts it out in the world in some way that I can’t manage. Right so
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T: I would agree with you there the the talking about it. I make it sound like We’re so mature and coming to the table like two thoughtful adults. That’s not exactly what it looked like. I mean, I think with with the twins having our daughter at home, and she was like one and change at this point and she was not an easy child. Or an easy teenager but I just knew I couldn’t. I couldn’t manage I wasn’t equipped and I wasn’t going to burden her with that. My sister in law has a special needs daughter who is high level needs not high level. Like she needs a lot of help and still not as much as many other you know special needs kids. And I look at my sister in law in Awe, I’m not equipped for that I am far too selfish, if that’s what it is. And I’m like, No, well,
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P: are you making this decision for your daughter as well? Right. So,
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T: I mean, I’m making the decision. For everyone. My marriage, my daughter, my future like thing and and even I hate to say it in a way but like for in my situation where they were twins that were bonded. Like there was something about them being able to rest together that brought me peace.Â
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P: Yeah, yeah
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T:Â I mean, I know that for a lot of people in my circumstances. Obviously you just don’t want one. If you can have one you’ll yeah but considering all of the all the moving parts of this, you find comfort where you canÂ
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P: Yeah.Â
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T: And then there was comfort in that you know that they come together
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P: and you did everything you could right You did everything at 7 million appointments and different doctors and you know kind of tracking you down and doing your own research and finding the people and
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T: I mean, we knew more than most of the doctors, even the specialists. And in the months and years afterwards, the amount of work or like I was saying achievements or knowledge that has happened in this so rare again, air quotes because you can’t see them. It’s not as rare. As one might say it is rare, but it’s not that rare.Â
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P: Yeah,Â
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T: I was saying that we only at the beginning when I was pregnant. It was 2009 basically 2009 so I guess Facebook existed but didn’t really have groups and stuff like that. And the message boards that I was on were anonymous message boards on other platforms you just find it like and and what I noticed on those boards and they had sub groups and stuff, but it was almost like people would come in and say help I got a diagnosis. I don’t know what to do. And people would come on and be like, Oh, you’re gonna be fine. I got my diagnosis last year with your pictures and my beautiful twins. They ended up fine we got the laser everything’s fine. You hear a lot of that it’s gonna be fine because in my case, it was fine.Â
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P: Yeah.Â
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T: In the years post our loss, a lot of those groups started to reform on Facebook.Â
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P: Yeah.Â
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T: And a lot of the people from those groups that were anonymous in those groups, now we’re showing up not anonymous. On Facebook, in new groups. And it was the same pattern where somebody new would join the group and say, Oh, I just got a diagnosis. I don’t know what to do bla bla bla bla bla and people would chime in, everything will be fine or now. They ultimately I mean, they said other things too, obviously. But what I eventually started to realize was that you would sometimes see these women who would post and you would follow along we had our appointment above and then they would post bad news. We lost them both we did the surgery one was fine and then the other day, and then you would never hear from them in the group again.Â
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It’s not that they weren’t there that nobody wanted to hear from. Right. Like if you’re a new mom and you’re like, Oh no, I just got a diagnosis. And you’re the mom with two dead babies. You’re not gonna be like, Oh, everything’s gonna be fine. But my babies died..Right? So those women became invisible in the group, except when people would post pictures of their identical twin and it was hell on earth.Â
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You’d be scrolling your feed, already grieving your heart out and then identical twins, which is like the number one trigger like you see that? And it just, it just breaks you. So people would ask to not post pictures. And then the people who had survivors, they’re like, Oh, well, we should be able to post pictures of our children. Because we’re so proud and happy. We want to give hope to other parents who are currently pregnant and we think our picture give hope. And we’re like, no, like you cannot do that. It’s like trigger warning there. was a big rift in this community. And I have a big mouth Jewish mom was like, Fuck this. This is not working for everyone. So I posted and I was like like, I was like you cannot be posting this. It’s too painful. And they basically said, Well, if you don’t like it, go start your own group.Â
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So I did I started a group for those grieving a TTTS loss. There’s well over 1000 Women in that group now.Â
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P: wow
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T:Â there’s a lot and that’s obviously just a small fraction of the families who go through this are the ones who are having a find on our group on Facebook, but it is through that platform that these families have been able to come together and compare notes and learn that there’s more than just twin to twin transfusion syndrome that there’s another variation called TAPS, which is they used to call the acute TTTS Where it suddenly showed up, like the baby died, where now you can see warning signs and you can test different blood levels to see indicate like none of this information existed. We have parents in that group who are vocal proponents and teaching and connecting with the biggest doctors around this so that they know better and can do better and train on this It is it’s through the families. It’s through the parents who connect and the ones who go silent in the main TTTS group because they’re like, no one wants to hear from me. And so we I created this new group, this new platform, I don’t run it anymore. I like handed it off to like after like seven or eight years because you can only hold on to that for so long. But I’m still in the group. Occasionally it’ll pop up
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P: going through this process. Do you go to the hospital you have to go to like Planned Parenthood orÂ
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T: Well, in my case, so I was 23 and a half weeks I went to the outpatient portion of the hospital because it’s a three day process by the way, it’s not like so you go the first day I went and they in my case, I inserted a needle and they stopped her heart with potassium, I think immediately so it was quick and painless. And you can see it on the monitors for me, obviously, and scary and all the things, but again, I was comforted by the knowledge that she felt no pain. She got to go surrounded by my wombI mean that she would not have to be born. I know people who you know know their baby’s not going to start and I respect everybody’s decision to do what they need to do. But for me, being able to know that she never do anything but the comfort of my body and my love. That was big.Â
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And then they are they give you like seaweed insert to dilate you and you wear them. They come back the next day to see how dilated you are to just basically go home still carrying in my case two babies. And then 48 hours later I went to the outpatient portion of the hospital. They had asked me if I wanted D & E or if I wanted labor and delivery but they and my husband highly discouraged me from going through labor and delivery because it would be in the hospital with other moms who are laboring and delivering. And also because I knew I wanted to have another baby. I don’t want that.Â
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P: Yeah, totally
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T:Â to tarnish my future labor and delivery with with with my future babies. That being said of all the decisions we had to make throughout this entire pregnancy. That is the one that stuck with me as perhaps the only one that I wasn’t sure I made the right one. But I don’t think there was a right one. So I don’t know that I made the wrong one. I just I made that decision. I wasn’t aware when you do a D and E or D and X at that point. I went in they walked me into the operating room. They basically knocked me out and I woke up 17 minutes later and the babies were no longer in my body. That’s the process as far as what I experienced. The babies are not fully intact that I did not know had I known that on know if it would have been I don’t know I don’t know if it would have affectedÂ
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P: your questioning whether you should have gone through labor and delivery.Â
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T: Yeah. Because in the aftermath of it, you feel crazy, right like okay, there’s the grief. And then there’s the what a fucked up story. Like you tell that story you’re like that can’t have possibly happened. And I had no evidence of them. No evidence of them that was what I didn’t have. So I was especially so what do they do with the babies? Right, so in most cases, the hospital respectfully disposes of the remains. And at that point, I could not, I could not make decisions.Â
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P: Yeah,Â
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T: and I was like, okay, like, I keep I don’t know, just do what you normally do, I guess, right? My biggest piece of gratitude is that somebody in my family who had had miscarriages were Jewish. I’m not the most observant person, but they were like the babies have to be buried in a Jewish cemetery. I was like, I don’t fucking want to know anything about what you’re talking about. Like, I was still praying it was in those two days.Â
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T: she was like they have to be buried at the Jewish cemetery. And I was like, leave me alone. If this is important, do arrange it. You go call whoever needs to call my in laws, the doctors. I don’t care. But I don’t have the I don’t have the bandwidth for it and figure it out. Because I’m not dealing with it. The only thing I did do is I said to them at the hospital. I said my family is taking care of it so that somebody’s going to make sure they’re buried in a Jewish cemetery. And they were like, oh, so we should just like, refrigerated or whatever. I was like whatever you do, I again, yeah, zero bandwidth. So after everything was said and done, I’m back at work, right? an entirely different person than I ever was everything I ever knew everything I ever was everything I ever thought. Everything I ever saw myself as like not anymore. And I had no proof like people are treating me like I’m normal and there is nothing friggen normal. But did I imagine this? Like I literally started thinking did I imagine this? Did this really happen? I did. It’s that’s a pretty disturbing kind of place to be. And then I called my mom and I said by the way, where are those babies buried and she you know, traditional Jewish history historically does not allow the mom to know these things. Like they think it’s better. Like oh, just pretend it never happened. Because Are you sure you want to know? And I was like I am 100% Sure. I was at work and she told me the name of the cemetery. And I Googled it. And there’s a search bar on the website, where you put in a last name and find out where anybody at that cemetery is buried. So I put in my last name. It popped up fetus A and fetus B. It was literally the first real world acknowledge meant that they existed. Was this our website? Not the original question, but the original question was about why the labor and delivery versus the D and D are just
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P: because you wanted it to feel real. So that’s, that’s a legitimate that’s a legitimate thing. And the other thing I was gonna ask is, if you have any rituals around the loss, I know in Japan and probably other places there are rituals around miscarriage and stillbirth and abortion so smarter we don’t have that really here. There’s nothing
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T: in the communities that I’m part of people will do like the balloon floating things or they’ll celebrate a birthday steal or some of them will. They’ll buy gifts. They’ll go with their living children buy gifts on that baby’s birthday, then donate them. That’s really nice. Yeah, there are beautiful rituals. That people families create for themselves. I didn’t I have my own private things that matter to me even to this day. It’s been 13 years I wear a necklace with a little sun and a daisy on it, which were their nickname sunshine and Daisy. I mean, Its the only piece of jewelry I wear I never take it off. I think part of it was my husband was very much like a thing happened and now we’re going back to our life. You know, they deal with it differently. He even actually got close to an acknowledgement of actually grieving for years. I think there was like he was thoroughly there to like, support me and protect me or give me the space I needed all the things he thought he was working doing for me, but if you asked him were those your daughter’s key would be like No, I think it was probably at least it’s been 13 years. I think it’s probably seven or eight years before I ever heard him. Even acknowledge them in a slightly more personal like he finally got a space to kind of process it and it happened quickly and quietly. It was only like something I kind of tuned into going on with him. So for me to like do a ritual felt annoying or like you know that it required other people’s involvementÂ
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T: you know, it was it was.
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P: I totally relate to that. And I, you know, my daughter survived and she’s 20 now and I did not use the word dead for 10 years. I couldn’t use the word but all through my pregnancy. They’re like oh, she’s definitely gonna die. She’s not gonna make it. She and I and I literally could not use the word and her name and a sentence for 10 years after and it worked out.
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T: Right. Yeah. I fully, fully relate to that. Yeah, there’s there’s certain words constantly like they just you make those associations and there are unbreakable that said,Â
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P: Yeah,Â
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T: but um, yeah, so I did find so much of my own healing feeling or voice. My healing came from using my voice. So for instance, I like the doctor that was so excited to do the surgery but never got a chance. He was a young doctor, he was very ambitious. He was nice guy. He was kind he’s also the doctor that did the abortion. And he you know, he would call and follow up with me afterwards called to see how I was doing. It was really nice. And about a few months afterwards, probably around I saw I went to the cemetery about six weeks, probably within the timeframe of that, I decided to write the doctor a letter I wrote him a four page single spaced letter typed sharing my experience after because a he was with my husband on team like, let’s just do the DNX you don’t really want to see those babies and and that and then also the other women who I was connecting with online who whether they had labor and delivery or some of them also had they would get handprints and footprints like the hospital had a process and I told him we should have to and actually then he called me and thanked me profusely because like you know, sometimes get a car but I never get something like this. This is so meaningful and touching that you took the time to write this. And he’s like and you’re right. He said if you if when we send a patient to the hospital, knowing they’re gonna have a stillbirth. There’s a whole plan in place for capturing the lock of hair and the handprint and it never occurred to them in these circumstances to do that, in fact, the place where I went to have the actual surgery where they removed the babies. It’s like one of those multi surgeries. You’re sitting there with a bunch of other people getting their, you know, ingrown toenails like worked on and just the sensitivity meter was so off as like out to here, walking into surgery. In this. Yeah, the girl that the nurse walking me down the hallway like I was crying, and I sniffled. And she turned to me and she said, Do you have a cold? It’s like, no, yeah, I’m crying. What so stuff like that?Â
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P: Yeah, yeah.Â
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T: In the surgery place. There was like a feedback form. Like after my surgery, they gave me apple juice and some crackers. And I was crying and they gave me these tissues and the tissues were like sandpaper on the feedback form. I was like, maybe try some soft tissues. Your tissues suck.
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P: Yeah, yeah. Something comforting, right?Â
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T: Like be comforting. Yeah, I just found like, the more I opened my damn mouth, the better I felt. Yeah, about like making it better for the next person, right and next person who goes through this, give her some Kleenex instead of sandpaper, right, the next person who goes through this don’t let the nurse say something so stupid. Right. And, and that is really what fueled basically my last 13 years. My whole life, everything. Everything became about how can I take this experience and use it for every little bit of good that I create from this it to a degree and it’ll never fully but to a degree amortizes the giant pneus of my loss. And specifically also I’ve been on a mission. You know, I started a business after this a whole women’s empowerment brand around helping these women that I was connecting with refind their light and their joy after grief and trauma and pregnancy loss and infant death. And each little piece of that puzzle was a piece of my healing and a piece of making my loss worth it and a piece of justifying the choice that I made. And I realized that early on that if I had followed through and continued to pregnancy and my daughter was born with all the disability any of the all of it my whole life would have been derailed. And it would have been about raising this child about helping my other daughter cope with a disabled sister. My marriage likely would have fallen apart my finances would not have worked all the things that these families go through. Thankfully, because of a 24 hour window, I was in a position to make that decision for my family.
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P: Yeah,Â
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T: and I’m grateful for it every day. Because every day, even now I try to live my life, making that decision worth it, whether that’s building the business to make other women happy, or showing up at the coffee shop with a smile even if I’m having a shitty day because I know it’s going to impact somebody else. Everything good that I can do is in justification of the reality that I’m not home taking care of a disabled child for the rest of my life. The price I paid to have a beautiful, easy life is a huge price. So this would be paying it forward.
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P: It is an amazing way to memorialize the twins. to live that goal the time.
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T: Yeah, you know, I used to when I was doing the work working with those moms, a lot of them would get so trapped in their grief. Because the grief became the link to the baby to the child right if they if they if they somehow move out of the grieving stage. It’s like they’re leaving that that baby behind and their memories behind or they forget or it’ll show that they don’t really love that baby. So much of the work I did was trying to let them see that it’s not that you’re leaving the baby behind. The baby is pushing you forward. Like do to live find beauty you’re here. That’s what they want for you and to be able to celebrate life and marry that concept to the memory of that child instead of the grief to the memory of that child. It’s so much better. It’s just better.Â
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P: Yeah,Â
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T: that’s what I had done actually with for me with with this. I got pregnant very quickly after the after the twins died. So they died in September. I was pregnant again by January with my youngest, so I’m not a waiter. I’m notÂ
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P: so on purpose.Â
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T: Oh very much on purpose. Thank God Yes. Like literally literally I woke up after they knocked me out for to remove the babies from my womb. I fell asleep crying. I remember and I woke up on my husband was standing above very first words out of my mouth where I want to be pregnant again. And I don’t know if I met pregnant with them or like let’s get the show on the road becauseÂ
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P: yeah, yeah.Â
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T: Unfinished business. I don’t know. I don’t know which I’ve never but those are my first words. And through that pregnancy, I was very much obviously still very much in grief. And I proactively was looking for light. So I had a visual of this new baby inside of me I felt dead on the inside. Just black. So it was like everything below skin level. And then when I found out I was pregnant, it was like again, the visualization of this tiny teeny tiny beam of light inside of me that was just trying to grow like trying. And so I started wearing sequined clothing to visually connect myself and my outer skin to that tiny little bit on my deep deep inside. And that’s kind of the platform that actually fueled the whole business I created was like this idea of joy and light on the outside being a catalyst to connect your joy and light on the inside.Â
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But for two years straight straight through that whole pregnancy. Two years straight. I don’t think there was a single day I didn’t wear something sparkly even on like my crappiest days and I came to fully connect, that proactive seeking out of joy with my twins. I mean obviously there were many many, many, many days where I would cry and grieve and you know all the dark side of grief. But be like I was saying being able to anchor them in my memory of them and my love for them onto something positive.
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P: That’s amazing, amazing thing to make your connection stronger every day and something that you enjoy visiting and know right like That’s amazing.
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T: Yeah, even this interview because like I don’t really have much opportunity to talk about them every now and then in my new business. You know, it’ll sprinkle it in, but it’s not a main, you know, focus. But yeah, it was like I was looking forward to the interview. Because I like to talk about them and I don’t get an opportunity and a lot of people are like, Ooh, you know, like you wouldn’t want to talk about something sad or you know, something so filled with grief. ButÂ
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P: also the truth of the matter is it’s more complicated than that. Right? There is definitely grief but there’s a whole bunch of other things right. So
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T: yes, there’s I mean, the grief is it’s part of the foundation. And a lot of time has passed. I remember early on I was on those boards, the pregnancy loss boards, unlike Baby Center even before Facebook, and I remember seeing somebody post Oh, it’s been seven years since my loss and I’m so sad or whatever, whatever and I turned to my husband and I was like seven years oh my god, I don’t want to feel like this in seven years. Why are you still talking about it? Your perception of it is so different. Before and then immediately after, and then like down around like 13 years. It’s a whole other. Yeah, it’s a whole other thing. It’s a part of me. I couldn’t make them live. I couldn’t change reality. So
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P: well and the whole pregnancy the whole process is so transformative, right? I mean, it’s different than you know, I miscarried at six weeks It comes with different expectation and a different experience and a different so it is a unique experience in that way and I understand what you’re saying I can see why
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T: Yeah, I look at pictures of myself from before. And it literally feels like I’m looking at a different woman. I was a different person entirely. I mean, I would say especially in like the first seven or eight years, and when I was doing that work that was completely different parts of my old me have returned you know, I’m like naturally kind of a sarcastic cynical a little bit kind of New Yorky and and as I went through the stages of healing and connecting with other women, just kind of seeing how we’re all more the same than we are different even though we’re different than we are the same. Like it really opened me up and really allowed me to learn how to listen and like see people through a deeper lens. It taught me something I never knew before or wanted to know like how to sit with someone in a when they’re in pain. Yeah. Oh, no, no, I am not the person for that. And still now years later, it’s still okay like, hard sometimes but I know how to do that. I know how to show up other people better than I ever would have. I have not experienced any of it.Â
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P: yeah, yeah That makes total sense. We you tell us what’s the name of your business? How do we find it?Â
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T: Well, the business I started back then was called Finding my Muchness. I actually have a book. Like I wrote a book I have been having here because I was cleaning. So that was me a bunch of years ago. You can’t see it on your podcast, but I mean my muchness the website I think has a lot of buggy errors because I haven’t really touched it in many years. It was built on that premise of like the line I used to be much muchier but then I lost my muchness it’s a line from Alice in Wonderland. And I heard that line and I was like I was like there is something I can sink my teeth into the business today. Today. I own I run it with my husband. It’s called ear seeds and we make acupressure products that are worn on your ears for all sorts of health conditions.Â
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I had spent my whole career in the fashion industry in New York City making stuff once I started the muchness project and was doing meaningful work for the first time in my life. I could eventually no longer work in the fashion industry. I started having panic attacks because I was trying to proactively live a life seeking moments of joy. And my job required me to be like, oh China, that’s the wrong shade of pink re do it. Do it like I couldn’t do it. It was just too conflicting. I’m so now actually I couldn’t even this to like this experience.Â
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I had to quit my job in the fashion industry. I did it for 20 years. I couldn’t do it anymore. I learned online business. My husband was an acupuncturist. He was fully supportive of me making that move. And he also has always been committed to kind of finding ways to help in his industry to help the practitioners. And so it’s about two years after our loss when I finally quit my job, and then three minutes later the insurance company that covered like 90% of his patients changed their insurance plan. So both of us found ourselves unemployed staring each other in the face at home with two babies.Â
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And we’re like, What the hell do we do next? And this was eight, almost nine years ago and then we came up with this idea for this business and we started it in New Jersey. It’s been fantastic. Honestly, I mean, to be able to create a business that helps people and then to hear from the people who it’s helping. It’s almost an extension of what I was doing this this idea of learning that for every little bit of good that I put out. It just it’s like reaching out your hand. To help someone originally it was the moms on the message boards, you know somebody saying Help, like I’m drowning?Â
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P: Yeah,Â
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T: I said like on the message boards when I was early in my loss I would want and be like help drowning. And some Mom who had been there before me would like reach your hand across the internet, be like you’re not drowning, you’re fine. Come and pull it up. And then as I started to understand the grieving process and see the patterns that that we all would go through, and someone would come on a message board and say help, I’m drowning and I would reach my hand and say can not drowning. You’re gonna be okay like and pull them forward. Now, even through this new business, which is in total, totally different. It’s just meaningful
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Tova it so moving to hear about how you translate this exceedingly difficult experience into something beautiful. That’s helping people. Thanks so much for sharing your story. You’re very welcome.
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Thanks again to Tova for sharing her story.Â
Episode 51 SN: Race, Identity & Motherhood: Naomi’s story
Today’s guest, like many of us, encountered some unexpected twists and turns at the delivery that were challenging to manage in the moment. But the focus of the story she shares today is about race and identity–she gives us a sense of what it’s like to live in the world both as a daughter who doesn’t resemble her father, and as a mother who doesn’t superficially look like her son…what assumptions people make and share and what these assumptions suggest about how we define motherhood.
You can find Strength of Soul, here
More of Naomi’s work: The Hidden Curriculum and Rethinking Race in the United States
Audio Transcript
Paulette: Hi welcome to war stories from the womb
I’m your host Paulette Kamenecka. I’m an economist and a writer and the mother of two girls.
Today’s guest, like many of us, encountered some unexpected twists and turns at the delivery that were challenging to manage in the moment. But the focus of the story she shares today is about race and identity–she gives us a sense of what it’s like to live in the world both as a daughter who doesn’t resemble her father, and as a mother who doesn’t superficially look like her son…what assumptions people make and share and what these assumptions suggest about how we define motherhood.
Let’s get to her inspiring story
Hi, thanks so much for coming on the show. Can you introduce yourself and tell us where you’re from?
Naomi: Absolutely. Thank you, Paulette, for having me. My name is Naomi Rachel Enright and I am based in Brooklyn, New York.
P: Oh, wow. That’s lucky. Brooklyn’s like the place to be.
N: It’s a pretty cool place. I must say. I do love it. I love it. My son is being raised here was born here too. I do love it. And I love New York in general. Like I grew up in New York, in Brooklyn and the Bronx, actually, I went to high school in Manhattan. So I am a New Yorker through and through for sure.
P: Wow. So we’re here to talk about family so before we’re talking about the family you created let’s talk about the family you came from.
N: Okay.
P: So why don’t you tell us Do you have any siblings?
N: I do. I have one older brother. His name is Nikki and he is six and a half years older than me and also lives in New York. So that’s that we’re both still here. Yeah. And so
P: you have kind of an interesting story of your family moving here. Why don’t you tell us a little bit about that? Because I want to get a sense of whether the context you came from affected the context you thought you wanted.
N: Oh, wow. Okay. Yeah, no, that’s a great question. So I was raised in New York, as I said, but I was born in the La Paz Bolivia by chance actually, my father had a job there for two years. And so I was born there and spent the first 10 months of my life there and I am, ability and citizen but my origins are Jewish American on my father’s side. My paternal grandfather came to Ellis Island in 1910, from Russia. And my paternal grandmother was the daughter of Lithuanian immigrants. I mean, I think, you know, sort of the borders have changed over the course of time and so I’m sure maybe that you know, it’s like modern day Poland. What do I know but Eastern European, and my mother is from Guiaquil Ecuador, and did not come to this country until age 19. She came here on a scholarship at Tulane University. So she left at age 19 for that. And my father, my mother met through the Peace Corps. Actually, my father was a Peace Corps volunteer. He was teaching English and he was teaching English in Guiaquil, and my mother was one of his students. And so that’s how they met and fell in love. And were married for 44 years, I suppose. And my brother actually was born in Guiaquil. They had thought they would live in Ecuador. They were there for a few years before my brother was born. And then they came about the time they left Bolivia so he was about 10. months, I think as well. And then my mother jokes that she’s like a salmon because the salmon returns to its birthplace right to have its children. She wanted us born if not in Ecuador than in South America. But looking by birth, yeah, she was like this will do. So that’s my origins, you know, sort of ethnic, you know, familial origins, or
P: I know from your book that having an American father and Ecuadorian mother those two backgrounds together, played an important role in your life, and we’ll get into that. But on a more basic level, did you know that you would want a child? Did you think I’m going to have a family?
N: Yes, it’s funny that you asked that because when I was expecting my son, and I’m the mother of one child, in his first almost year of life my father was we told me that I had been preparing for motherhood since I was about five he would joke because I did I always wanted to have children. I always thought a lot about becoming a mother, wanting children how I would raise them. I used to in fact as a little girl, I would name my kids so I have these list of things for my future unborn children. So it was definitely a want of mine, you know, a desire of mine. And I think that you know, there was some truth with my father said it wasn’t a preparation, a lifelong and I’m also an educator. And so I work with children of all ages for many, many years, you know, nearly 20 years and I have a way with kids I relate very well to children, and I relate well to actually a wide range of ages…I always had some younger cousins I would take care of and use or pretend they were my babies. I have a, my youngest first cousin, I actually named him and so, you know, I felt this real, you know, sort of very connected to him. I always joke that he was my first baby, which my son does not like he’s like, actually, I’m your first baby and your only baby. So yeah, so motherhood was definitely something I wished for. And I’m very, very lucky and happy that that I achieved it. I am a mom.
(4:45) &P: Yeah, amazing. So before you got pregnant, what did you imagine pregnancy to be like?
N: Wow. It’s funny, you know, because I think that a part of me always thought of pregnancy sort of in the abstract, and I did not think of what the reality of being pregnant and and bringing a child for a lifeforce would, would be like. I remember clearly sort of the first inkling that I was pregnant, and I had, you know, sort of cramping that was out of the timeline of when I would be having cramping. And I remember thinking, Wait a second. That’s strange, right. And I had actually been my parents also sitting over there for some reason. And so the next morning I texted my husband, I said, you know, I had this strange cramping and it woke me up in the middle the night and he said he instantly thought she’s pregnant and he was like, she’s definitely pregnant. So he had the first inkling that I was, despite my having the physical sensation, he, he was really convinced that that was the, the, you know, my our child or future child making his presence known.
P: And that’s a testament to your abstract notion of pregnancy,
N: I guess. Exactly. That was like, I don’t know what that is. But But yeah, and so then it was confirmed within I guess, about two weeks from that. And my pregnancy itself was quite healthy and easy. I remember my hair looked great. I felt really great. So I would say my son was good for my curls when I was pregnant. And I was thrilled and excited. But as the pregnancy became closer and closer to the actual birth story, I remember feeling very nervous and very scared and you know, sort of this realization that you know, this is not abstract anymore. You know, this is going to happen, I’m going to give birth to a human being and I was terrified. And I ended up having a very, you know, not really complicated but it was it was a tough story because I went into labor
P: let’s go slowly here. Yeah. So tell us how how are we know today’s the day that you’re gonna go into labor like what what happens that day?
N: Well, that’s funny. Yeah, that’s part of sort of, you know, you know, the best laid plans, right. I remember packing my bag for the hospital and, you know, having it ready for whatever, two weeks or so in advance of my due date. My due date was November 24 2010. And so I had it packed and I had my novel, I had my lollipops, you know, I was like, Oh, this would be great. Thinking I was going to like to have some resort. And I remember that on was it it would have been I actually tried to have labor pains on the 24th. And so on the due date, and it looked like I might go into labor. And my husband, it was all like, you know, ready to he was like, alright, you know, we’re gonna go and we call the doctor and then it stopped. And so, you know, it’s an essence post labor and I was deeply distressed by that. I remember I was very upset because I had felt like oh, you know, this is it. You know, we’re ready. We’re gonna go we’re gonna have his kid. And it was not to be and I remember I texted uh, one of my best friends was pregnant as well and expecting very close to my date as well. And I told her and I was like off I’m so annoyed, right this this kid does not want to get out. And she said, we looked that way. It looks like he wants to see in the belly and you know he was expecting a boy. And I said, as long as he’s not past December 1, I was like, You better be born at least within a week. I said, and so you know, that week went by and that Monday before the first time where I had acupuncture, you know, sort of like get things rolling. And then that Tuesday the 30th it really started to get in motion and surgical contraction in this sort of thing out this is really going to happen you’d like we’re close you know maybe was even the mountain the night actually Monday night it was Tuesday went to the doctor you know as waddling along could barely walk, you know, huge It was huge. And I’m a fairly small statue you know, I’m not even five three and I had this huge belly and I was for waddling along and in a lot of pain I remember I love sciatic pain because of the weights and so my back hurt and I couldn’t walk I was so so uncomfortable. And went to the doctor and they said you know I think your close so you can go to the hospital and so are they actually said you can go like have a like a bite and then go to the hospital. And my doctor was of course in a realm of you know, in the neighborhood of doctor or you know, as my son was born in what was then Brooklyn Methodist Hospital, and my doctor was just about two blocks away from there. And then we went up to some diner and my in laws were in town and so my in laws and my husband and I went to have to food sort of you know, it was like, let’s have food and see what happens, you know, then we’ll take her in and sort of leisurely to the hospital. And I couldn’t hold on the food and I was not well and they all were like you know what, I think we just need to go to the hospital. We walked the block and a half or so that it was to the hospital. And I remember I remember sort of the you know, the wailing and the pain and really immediately asking for an epidural and I had I had not what I would want one I have I had totally the whole pregnancy tradition which is natural law. You know, I can do this, you know, women, you hear me roar. And
P: I hear some Brooklyn in there,
N: did you but all of that went out the window. Right? As soon as it really came you know the pain was there and the contractions and the reality was setting in what was to come I immediately was like, give me all the drugs. And of course, you don’t get that right away. And so I had to wait to whatnot. But I remember when they gave me the the epidural and I remember immediately calming down and being like, Oh, this is a really nice room. We’re gonna get the show on the road. So it’s a very funny switch of energy and behavior. And we really thought that it would come you know, fairly soon right that I would have like contractions I would dilate and I would give birth and we’d have this baby in our arms and be shorter lives as parents and as a family of three. But oh, that actually was not the case and I dilated to eight centimeters and I ended up I remember they had to give me I was GBS positive, I remember.
P: Yeah.
N: And I remember that when I for that I needed to be given antibiotics, right so they wouldn’t affect the baby. And I developed a fever from the antibiotics. It’s so funny to be remembering all this right? Because it’s so so long ago really in this way it was over a decade ago. But it’s so vivid, right? It’s like I remembered as if it were yesterday. I tried to use the case ready for any transformative experience. And so I did I developed a fever, and there was a horrible, horrible storm. I remember that night there was this rainstorm, and the wind was howling and there was the rain was hitting the window. And I have all these very vivid memories of the contraction and so looking at the different points in the room. I had my different points there. I’m of the doctor and my husband everybody told me to focus on as the contractions came. And I remember one of those points was the window and so I would see the rain and I would see the branches and it looked very ominous, frankly, you know, look very scary to me. And I was like This is terrifying. Like I don’t know what is about to happen and I’m so nervous.
P: I’m not sure you want to give birth on a dark and stormy night.
N: Exactly. I was like this is not making me feel good. And of course with a fever you feel awful anyway, right? Like I had the muscle aches. I mean, it was just awful. And I don’t know my doctor I loved loved, loved my doctor, you know, I felt like he was almost like an uncle. You know, he just adored him. And he was so kind to me and so good to me. And he was a jokester a little bit, you know, they’re a funny and this is with him, you know who make me laugh and he was very funny and light hearted and warm. And so I had this very comfortable rapport with him. And I remember he said to me, you know, Naomi, I think that you’re gonna have to have a C section. And I thought he was kidding, because he’d always been funny, right? So I started to laugh. And he was completely the most serious I’ve ever seen him and he said, No, Naomi, I’m serious. It’s like we have to get this baby out, and you’re not dilating and you’re feverish, and you’re delirious because I had barely slept. And so he’s like, you’re gonna have to have a C section. And I was very upset by that, because I had always throughout the pregnancy said as long as it’s not a C section, I don’t want a C section. And so I was deeply distressed to realize that I would, in fact be giving birth via C Section.
P: Some people have overlaid feelings about the C section beyond that it’s a surgery and that there’s recovery, but that it means something about the birth. Is there any of that going on or you just don’t
N: that was 100% What was going on? For me it felt like then I hadn’t done my job I hadn’t followed through a you know, as like the woman who gives birth vaginally and I was just very upset. You know, I felt kind of like, but that’s not what I’m supposed to do. Right? I’m supposed to give birth vaginally and I’m very upset by this. So it was entirely about the narrative of what is the quote unquote, right way to give birth.
So yeah, so that’s what it was. And of course, I was frightened of the surgery. I was and knowing that the recovery would be alongside caring for a newborn. So that was there. But I would say the overriding feeling was certainly you know, sort of that societal narrative and societal pressure of the right or wrong way to to give birth or to have a child period right to become a mother and so yeah, and so I remember I was very upset by it, and he had to really calm me, you know, they were like, listen, like you need to, you know, like you need to get this baby out and we need you to be in a good place as well right for you physically as as well as emotionally. And so you know, eventually was like, Okay, right, I guess this is this is how I’m gonna give birth right?
And I remember, you know, wheeling me into the room preparing the whole scene, the curtain ray in front of me and my husband has scrubs and of course, my husband hadn’t slept at all either, you know, he was delirious as well. Not feverish, but he was delirious and about to become a father and so for him was also you know, this is a latch, right, and we’re not even parents yet. And I remember in the operating room, being very cognizant of not seeing what was happening, and being very frustrated by that, you know, so very sort of divorced from my own birth story. You know, I sort of felt like am I even here, right? Because the curtain was in front of me, and I couldn’t see anything. And I could only make out certain things either by what I saw or what I heard more of what I heard them saw.
P: let me ask you a question about that. So I see section two before they put up a curtain I was like, You’re not gonna make me watch right. I don’t want to. I don’t want to see the woman sawed in half. That’s, that’s not my game. But people have said that they sometimes surgeons allowed like to have a mirror on the other side so you can see what’s happening. I wonder if that was an option for you or
N: no, that was never brought up that was never offered and I don’t think I would have necessarily wanted that per se. For me, it was more about not seeing the action of the doctor, you know, and the nurses and my husband, you know, that was more of the frustrating part to me. You know, I felt sort of alone despite having all these people surrounding me. And that bothered me, right and I remember when they finally did get my son out and I heard his cries. I said, my baby, my baby, that’s my baby. I want to see my baby. And I had to wait, you know, because of course, you know, they have to cut the cord and you do the weight and all that stuff. And so it felt to me like a lifetime. I was like, I hear this baby who I’ve been trying for the last 41 weeks, and I want that baby. I was like, give me the baby. And I couldn’t hold him of course, right? Because it’s a C section. And so my husband, he brought him you know, all wrapped up and clean. And I kissed him and I remember thinking he was the most gorgeous thing I’d ever laid eyes on that he was just precious precious. And I was then wheeled away which right I had to go to the recovery room. And that also was upsetting. I was like so I just kissed this baby who is in a world now thanks to my body and my husband, you know, and I’m not happy that I can’t be with him. And I’ll never forget that as they were really getting out. There were nurses wheeling, of course, right the gurney and they were having a conversation. But at one point I thought they were talking to me and they said to me like how are you? And I started to answer and then within moments I realized they weren’t talking to me I was like I’m actually not really here. Like no one’s talking to me was also sort of, you know, this kind of alienating isolating experience and in the recovery room. The first person I talked to on the phone beside of course. My husband of course, who was in the room with me was my cousin and my cousin is my first cousin. He’s the son of my mom’s sister, my aunt, and we grew up together. And I consider my brother, right for me I really feel that I have two older brothers and I adore him and so I always remember that he was the first person I got to talk to after becoming a mom and for him who is my older brother in essence right and has seen me grow up for him. He says you know, I can’t believe my little cousin’s a mom and remember, he was like, that’s crazy. So you know that that conversation sort of sense you know that wow life is really about to change, like it has changed. It’s about to become very different. And so I was in there and I couldn’t have water I had to do is chew my ice cubes which also aggravated me I was like I am thirsty. Like I want water and my baby. And I don’t know how many hours later it was you my son was born I think at 1:36pm and I didn’t see him till I guess like 730 or eight o’clock at night, something like that.
P: wow
N: Maybe it was early and it was like 630 but it was you know significant chunk of time. And they’re you know when I finally got to see him and hold him in the room was just phenomenal. And my husband were watching the video and I said to him in my arms I said you grew nice and strong in there because he grew he was eight pounds and 21 inches you know he was he was a very sturdy he was a strong baby’s born with muscle you know, it’s like you were like doing like push ups or something because he was so strong and so healthy. And so Did you know In retrospect, of course it took many years to come to peace with this but I in retrospect it was absolutely right call for me to have that C section. But it was a very hard way to to become a mom and to then navigate feels initial days and weeks and even months, perhaps even years of motherhood.
Yeah,
P: I have to say we have some similarities in our story. We both had C sections. Yeah. And a lot of the things that you described, I’ve never focused on in my own story, and you’re totally right. All that stuff is really alienating and it’s so weird to be wheeled to the recovery room. Just like you after the C section I was alone, but everything that unfolded after your C section is strange. I understand that the nurses can talk to their colleagues during work. But it’s strange to have that conversation literally right over you and ignore you in the process.
N: precisely
P: the lack of interaction sounds industrial, really just contrary to the spirit of what you’d expect after birth. Why was there such a long period before you got to eight your son?
N: I’m not sure I have a feeling perhaps had to do with having been ill right having had a fever and not having slept and maybe they thought they right from time.
P: that makes sense
N: But it was a it was like I’m not going to sleep like Are you joking, right? I was like I still want to see my baby. So that’s not going to happen, right? I didn’t sleep at all. You know, all I did was talk to my cousin and sort of you know, count the hours until I got to see and hold my child but I think that was the thinking the thinking was you know this woman needs to rest on before we really thrust her into the the ring.
P: for so many women that that last piece does not happen. It doesn’t people don’t dilate. Fully. Exactly. What would you do? Right?
N: Exactly. No, it’s that’s actually a really good point. Because I remember you know, my family saying to me, and you know me if this had been another time or another context, there you or your son would have been in danger, right? I mean, and that really also helped me to come to peace with with a C section as well. But I remember even people you know, even people initially in those first couple of weeks and whatnot, you know, saying like telling you their own birth stories in a way that I was like, I’m not really interested in your story right now. Right because I just went through it yesterday. Right? And it was traumatic on a number of levels. And I remember that upsetting me, right that people should be like, Oh, for me, it was so simply and I went in and I went out I had a baby. And I was like awesome for you. Right? Bully for you. Right? Because that’s just not what you say to, in my opinion to to any woman who’s just given birth like it’s actually about your story. It’s not right. It’s like in that moment, it is that mother and her baby and and that journey that they took to reach that point. And and so that was also upsetting to me in those first couple of weeks. I had more than one person you know, and I get it to I get like we want to reminisce you remember, especially now right now that’s years later like it, it’s so vivid, I get it right. I get that, you know, this is a transform experience that all parents remember and want to share and share. But I think you know, timing is everything. And so that was rough too. Yeah,
P: I agree. I do think it’s like traveling to a place that people who haven’t been there, just have no idea what it looks and feels like. That’s right. It’s just it’s a really hard thing to translate into language just like just like the pain of delivery, right? Like you imagined like, you know, I’ve hurt myself before and I’ve toughed it out like this is a pain that kind of defies defies analogy, right? It’s not like anything else. So it’s really hard to kind of get there.
P: Now that we’ve heard about your experience, I’d like to talk about how you’ve written about your experience. I don’t know if you’ve written more than one book, but you’ve written strength and soul. Is that the name of the book? That’s probably my one and only look at, which is super interesting. Take on your well, maybe I’ll let you describe it. So can you describe it?
N: Sure. Yes. So So interestingly, so you know, I describe my ethnic background, right Jewish father and Ecuadorian mother, and And so growing up there were lots of questions about like, my family, a lot of assumptions made a lot of othering you know, is that your real dad? Are you adopted, you don’t look like him this kind of thing. And so I was grew up with this way of people sort of making an oddity out of my family. And it’s always it was something that I think sparked a lifelong interest in examining identity and and racism and understanding the ways that we conceptualize of ourselves and of the world around us, and of history, and the assumptions we make and how that’s connected to to systemic racism.
P: So when we start, let me stop you there for a second because this is totally relevant to your story. So I read that beginning piece of your book about people asking you on the playground is that your dad when he comes up to you and how people treated you differently when it was just your dad and you and your brother versus all of you? Yeah, and I’m wondering how that I mean, that lives in your head. So how does that affect your thinking about I’m going to start my own family?
N: That’s a really great question. It’s interesting because my husband is white. My husband is of Irish and German origin. Grew up in the Midwest grew up in Ohio. And when I you know, when he and I became serious, and you know, certainly after we were engaged in married, and planning a family, letting a child let’s just say because we were already family, I had more than one person for sure. There were my father’s saying, you know, if you have a kid or kids, they’ll more than likely look white, right because adults my husband is white, and you are largely European in your heritage, right, and your ancestry. I mean, I’m brown skin, but I’m got a lot of European running through my veins. And so there was sort of this, you know, sort of this question, you know, what would this kid look like, you know, what would our kids or kid look like? And I remember when I was pregnant, thinking, like this, these can be light skinned, like there’s no denying in my head, and more than likely this child will be light skinned. So it’s really prepared for that possibility and more than like pure reality. And I remember once having a dream a very vivid dream, not too long before giving birth around the summer, I don’t know. And it was a sort of a golden skinned baby with, like, sort of caramel eyes and like, just very golden hair, you know, and I remember thinking, the urge, you know, maybe like that kind of maybe it’s my baby like, maybe that’s gonna look like my kid. And the truth is, I wasn’t far off because my son completely looks completely white American. There’s no one who would ever look at my son and think that he’s a brown skinned mother, and an even darker skinned grandmother and dark skinned biological family members.
No one would ever think it and so as soon as he was born, I looked at him I was like, wow, really? This kid is way lighter than even I expected. Right? I was like, I was kind of prepared for me to be light skinned, but this light skinned you know, I mean, he looked completely white. And I remember thinking even in the hospital room, like hmm, you know, it’s gonna be interesting right to be in the world with him. A little did I know just how interesting and how challenging and exhausting frankly, it would be right to navigate motherhood with a child that most people do not associate with me. And many people discard me as he’s not afraid to discard the possibility that I could be his his mother. And that was very painful for me. Because growing up it was hard. You know, I hated when people ask me those questions. I my brother, in fact, looks just like our father. I mean, I used to joke that my brother was our father dipped in milk chocolate. It’s my father’s face. Like he is my father’s you know sort of doppelganger, really, and I look less physically like my dad, but I certainly have shared physical traits of my father. And what made it even more challenging, sadly, is that my father right to my white parent, and just falling ill soon after my son was born, you know, he fell ill in January 2011. And I was very convinced it was very serious. And, frankly, the family didn’t really believe me. And they were like, Well, you’re a new mom. You know, you’re not sleeping like you tend to be a very a worrier. I’ve always been a worrier. This is true. And so they kind of thought I was over blowing things, and they were like, oh, Naomi, he’ll be fine. He’s fine.
But I was like knowing that right was like he’s losing weight. He’s not giving him an appetite. This is not the father. I know. Right. My father always been very healthy a good eater, you know, Walker. So I was just deeply, deeply concerned from that point from January 2011. And over the course of that year, which is the course of the first year of my son’s life, my father was dying. He was dying at year and we did not receive confirmation of that until September
P: oh wow
N: September 2000. Let him I thought it was diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer which we know is different. Right? And he died November 29 2011. And so the very day a year before that I had gone for acupuncture. I’m beginning to you know, begin the journey of of giving life and having a challenge becoming a mother my father died and left this world and was deeply traumatic, deeply traumatic, because not only was I close to my dad, we were the best of friends, but I lost the connection, the context in essence, the physical context or contextualization, I should say for my son from my side of the family. And so when when I’m out in the world, my mother would think goodness is alive and well. People are just scratching their heads. They’re like, how did this happen? Right because my mother looks to the naked eye people think she’s black American. People look at me and think I’m Latina, or Middle Eastern. Maybe when people look at my son, I think he’s white. And so we are three generations of the same family. And yet, right and so there’s this real fatigue, you know, and being out in the world and even with my husband and son, you know, people often just or I can just tell you, you know, they’re looking back and forth and sort of trying to figure out, you know, what’s the connection here? You know, that’s the mom, you know, I’m gonna people that actually voice these things. It’s not just that I can tell by expression and because I have a lifelong experience with people staring and wondering. They have voiced it you know, I’ve been asked how long I’ve looked after him.
P: Oh, my God.
N: And this is from, you know, when he was relieved, I mean, now it’s different because he is, I’ve raised my son, you know, we’ve raised our son to have a very clear understanding of the way through the assumptions that people will make about us, and how those are always a reflection of their reality. Right? Like, what they know what they want, they think they know, and not of us, which was how I was raised. I was raised to know that the questions people pose to me, were not a reflection of me. And I always felt very empowered by that. And so I think that because of that intentionality, and my parents raising of me and my brother, I was prepared to be my son’s mother. That’s what I always say. I always say to be my parents daughter prepared me to be my son’s mother. Because I was you know, super heavy armor you know, I had the armor to be able to handle the questions you have to handle the the comments, and although you know, I’m not no one is made of of iron, and so it was very painful for me often and it was particularly painful because I didn’t have my dad and so I don’t have my dad. And so it was Yeah, and my son has my father’s eyes. And so that’s another thing that’s interesting is that people are very struck by his eyes. His eyes are really striking they are he has a blue green eyes that change with the light or what he’s wearing. And so they’re really a beautiful shade. And he also it’s interesting, because it has its shape of my mother’s eyes, and so they’re almond shaped. And they’re really striking, right? Because you don’t tend to see that shape without that color. But people always say that, you know, people are like, Oh my God, he’s got the most beautiful eyes. And I have to often be like, yeah, they’re my dad’s eyes, right? And so I’m always sort of reminded of his absence, you know, in those interactions, and people often assume he’s got his dad’s like, oh, he must have his father’s, which is always actually kind of annoyed me.
Because, right the assumption is, there’s no way that can come from you. So when I wrote this, you know, my book is is an examination of the contrast in the assumptions that were made about me with my mother and father, particularly my father, versus the assumptions made about me as a mother. And so as a mother, I’m assumed to be his nanny, his caretaker. And then growing up it was assumed that my father had adopted me. And I think there’s a lot of that’s a loaded, loaded assumptions. Because they are sort of attached to privilege and power and inequity really, right. And so I was just fascinated. I was like, Wait a second, you know, there’s something here right that there’s this huge contrast and was a suit about the same person me in the roles that I hold with these two people, one who gave me life and one whose life I brought forth, right, it was like this is fascinating.
And of course, it also sort of coincided with my lifelong interest in examining these issues. And I’ve also worked in around this all my life, too. I was a language teacher and in my Spanish teacher and in my language classroom, we were talking about identity a lot about culture. And all of this has just been a lifelong passion of mine. And so, you know, then having a child and sort of being given this, the huge responsibility of raising a person which is just in and of itself, a huge responsibility, preparing them for the world, and then visa vie all these issues. And then of course, you know, the wrench of my father’s death, you know, sort of the twists, you know, my father having died so early on in my child’s life, and in my journey as a mother, right, like that was so, so painful for me very traumatic, very traumatic and remains a source of pain for me, you know, I think I will always be sad about it. I will always feel that absence but luckily, because of my, my writing, really, I write a lot about loss as well. And Strength of soul is also born out of that loss as well. And so I feel like you know, language for me has always been a healer. And when I’m able to write about my father and my journey as a mother, I find each and every time it feels like balm for my soul, and it’s also a gift for my son, I feel, you know, I feel like I’m giving my father to my son. My son really sort of has a sense of who he was.
And my son has a sense of who he is right? My son knows that despite how people see him, and the assumptions they make about him, right. People do not think that he’s bilingual. People do not think that his name is pronounced in Spanish. Or of course, they don’t think I’m his mom. He’s so so at this point. He’s 11. Now, you know, he’s just ready to take it all on, right. Like, knows who he is. And I’m feel that that’s totally because of the efforts on my husband and our families parts. And so I feel very proud of that. And I feel sort of empowered by that because it feels to me like you know, the outside exterior is not going to dictate for us, you know, who we are and how we feel basically, in the world.
P: It is a tricky thing that you’re describing. And I can imagine as a child was confusing for people to constantly asked about is this your father, and to question your role as your son’s mother, maybe suggesting that there’s something that’s not right or that doesn’t make sense about a mother who looks like you having a child who looks like your son. Maybe that’s what feels offensive.
N: I mean, I think that we make assumptions as human beings regardless right? And assumptions about everything assumptions about you know, belonging, about family about what language you might speak, you know, where you’re from, etc. And, you know, I feel like that’s just a human quality, right that we’re going to do that sometimes. However, I think there’s a distinction between assuming and acting on the assumption. Right, I That, to me was the fascinating part, particularly as a mom that people would voice these things to me I was like, really, you know, I’m like you like That’s why you should keep to yourself, right? Like, why would you ask that?
P: I’m always thinking, you know, I can hear you say that out loud.
N: Like you said out loud. Exactly, exactly. I mean, the thing is, over the course of my son’s life, I have learned how to handle it so so well, I have to say because initially, I would just get upset, you know, making the anger I would feel hurt. And I would you know, just not want to leave the house. You know, I hated those mom and baby groups. I hated them. Because for me, it was like, you’re all staring at me. Like I have no place here. And I could tell that you’re like, how did that happen? You know, how is she that kid’s mom? And then I’ve only spoken to my son in Spanish in essence since his birth, right and so there’s and that to me, it’s been a godsend. It is protection for me because even though Spanish is not a private language, particularly in New York City, it is our own little sort of secret in a way right? It’s like people do not expect the child to respond to me in Spanish and they certainly don’t expect him to be like mama, blah, blah. Blah, right. And to me that feels like yep, you know, you figure that out rarely let people sort of sit there and you know, sit with that right that makes me feel you know, sort of empowered and and happy. But you know, in the beginning wasn’t like that of course right? When he was pre verbal right when he was pre verbal is like, gosh, right? Like no one knows anything here. He can’t you know, also speak to them. But I have a memory two memories that stand out from when he was quite small. He was about three when I was asked how long I’d been looking after him. I remember I was on a train platform with him and someone asked me, you know, how long have you he’s so cute. How long have you been looking after him? And without missing a beat I said since he was in utero.
P: Oh, that’s a great answer.
N: Thank you. Yes, I was pretty proud of myself. And she kind of blanched it was like, Oh, he’s yours? And said, yep. And she goes, Oh my god, I’m so sorry. You know, I was like, I mean, I guess you know, he’s really looked like you which is not true. He does not look at me look like me. Superficially, I always say, actually, he does not look like me. But for those who look beyond the surface, the child looks a lot like me, and particularly now that he’s older, but he has my lips. He has the shape of my eyes. He has my smile. He’s a lot of my gestures. And so it was like this kid is definitely looks like me, right? But people they just see, you know, his, his light skinned his late eyes and his light hair versus my dark skin, dark eyes and dark hair and they’re like, No way, right?
But I remember she was you know, apologetic and then ended up saying, you know, well, you know, you’re very cute and gratulations and I was like, Thanks, you know, and so ended up being sort of a passive exchange, it could have gone very differently, right. And I was trying to spin those moments to become sort of a learning teachable moment, which to also take psychic energy like that’s a little tiring for me, but I’d rather that then it becomes sort of you know, contentious, but I have another memory where he was not much older. He while he was like four. We’re on the train. And someone was staring at us. And I think sort of gone by that point, even at that tender age, was accustomed to people looking at us. And he was in his little brain trying to, you know, be like, oh, like, what is the big deal? Like, what are you looking at? You know, and I remember, he pointed at me and then look back at the person and said, Mama, and I was like, My job here is done. Like, it felt so, so affirming. To me. I was like this, my child gets it really he gets that people are gonna question I’m going to disbelieve and he’s gonna let them know what time it is. And that was at four right and so now he’s 11. And he’s just, he just knows what’s up, you know, and it makes me feel it makes me feel really good. It does. Because it’s been a hard road
P: what a moment to feel seen right when you’re when your four year old is like schooling the other train riders.
N: Exactly, Mama.
P: That’s amazing. And he’s bilingual.
N: He is he’s a native speaker of both. Yes, he is.
P: I’m So jealous because he so do you still speak to him only in Spanish or nowadays?
N: Well, you It’s funny you asked that because more and more the older she gets, you know for for particularly when it’s all of us together. It’s going to be in English right? But just the other night you know, we were having a conversation all of us you know my husband and I and after it was a dinner agenda generally, you know, the always the three lesson to speak in English but then after dinner I remember I was doing the dishes or whatever. And he started to chat with me again in English. And I said sufficiente Anglais I was like enough English, right? I was like, massive, but I will order Caressa which means like, gives me a headache. And so I told him he was like, switch, right? And so he switched, right so I feel like for my relationship with him for our own dynamic. I prefer it in Spanish right? And I’ll speak to an English in with his daughter, my husband and with other family members or like, you know, with a friend this kind of thing, but the minute I can or we can I want it to be in Spanish. And I think that’s in part because I don’t want him to lose it. You know, I feel that if he’s not using if you will lose it like any other skill. And I also for me, it’s also sort of a the cocoon of it. You know, it feels very safe and warm to me, right? I mean, it was interesting to me because when I was pregnant and expecting my son, I would speak to him in Spanish in utero. And I remember being taken aback by this because I go back and forth seamlessly for me both languages exist in my brain and had my entire life. I was also a Spanish teacher, right? So it’s like these two languages are entirely both minor, right? But all of a sudden, there was something about motherhood or impending motherhood, or Spanish became what I wanted to use. And I realized quickly that it was because my own mother spoke to me in Spanish speaks to me in Spanish, and it’s my language. Of, of comfort, I guess. Right? It’s like it’s my language of comfort in my language of safety and protection. You know, I’m sure I have even some, you know, subconscious memories of being saying you too in Spanish, you know, are you being soothed in Spanish as as a baby and as a toddler and so that was very eye opening for me, you know, to realize like, wow, like this is this language is definitely more significant in that sense. And so I remember you know, I remember when speaking to him and uterine Spanish, my husband saying who are you talking to? And I said, our son
P: in your family where you were raised, your mother spoke Spanish, did your dad speak English?
N: It’s funny. My dad was bilingual. My dad did speak. Both. But in general, yes. In general. My relationship with my father was in English, and my relationship with my mother is in Spanish. And then when we were the four of us, or as my brother got older and left the house and it was the three of us, I would go back and forth, but generally for us, like at dinner time, even if it was for three of us, it would be Spanish actually, because my dad spoke it. My husband does not and so that’s why it’s not Spanish in those moments.
I mean, my husband however, I will say, understands, I’d say like 90 to 95% of what is said. So like whatever I say to Sebastian, he will reiterate, right like your mother just said Go put on your shoes, whatever it is, right. So he understands. And I also always say that that my son would not be bilingual without my husband’s participation. Right. My husband’s agreement, right. My husband could have gotten in the way of it, you know, it could have been like, well, I don’t speak and I don’t want to not understand what my kid is saying, you know, he could have gone there. And he did not right I think he really understood how important was to me in Tripoli, given how the world receives us, right? He knows how that is for us. And I think sometimes it makes him feel saddened and frustrated, right? Because he knows it’s not as quote unquote, easy for me in the world with our son as it is for him. And so I think
P: I’m not sure I would quote unquote.
N: Well, I say up because I say, you know, there’s other ways it’s challenging to be a parent. Right? So it’s like, it’s hard for him in other ways, basically, but in this way, you’re right in this way. It is not hard for him at all. And so I think he really was like, You know what, our kid will be battling Well, you know, like, that’s an asset. It is. It is great that you want him to be really well. And here he is, right. And he you know, I mean, he even he told me recently they were reading a book about a Mexican American character. And so there’s a lot of Spanish in the book and the girl’s name and whatnot. And he said to me that he had corrected his teacher that that it wasn’t pronounced. He said, I told the teacher that we don’t say Gente, that the G is pronounced like an H. So it’s gente, which means people and I was just for me, it was just like, this beautiful, beautiful moment of him identifying so closely right with being a Spanish speaker and with being part Latin American, and saying we you know, he was like, you don’t say, right, I was like, Oh, my God, that is so beautiful, right? Because he gave me my son, you know, because of his presumption of whiteness has a very different reception in the world, you know, than I do from incidentally as a male as well. And so, I feel sometimes that he defies you know, all of these notions, you know, of who he is and, and that, to me, feels, you know, just just, it’s a celebration for me, because I think he needs to know all of who he is in order to, to, I think, to be more present in the world and to hopefully be more connected to people in the world. That’s That’s my thinking, you know, and that’s what’s behind the whole intentionality of his name and his and his bilingualism.
P: That’s super cool. Well, let me ask you a question. Looking like now that you know what, you know, looking back, is there anything you would you would have told younger you for this journey?
N: Wow.
That’s a great question. I think the one thing I would have told the younger me is to be prepared for, for surprises, you know, to be prepared for the unexpected. I think that when I had been thinking about motherhood, and certainly when I was closer to my within reach, right when I was married and whatnot, and you know, planning it with my husband, I had this idea that I would raise my kid with both of my parents alive and well and their participation in their involvement and I didn’t quite imagine necessarily having a kid who looks so white and wouldn’t be assumed to be mine. And I was wrong on both counts. Right. I ended up having this child with his physical appearance, and losing my father and having to navigate this new normal and this the reality versus sort of the ideal that I had concocted in my brain.
And so I think it would have helped me to know that the unexpected may happen. And I wish I could have been more prepared, I guess, in that sense. You know, I would have told my younger self she knows me like you don’t know what’s going to happen and be prepared for anything to happen basically, because he was he was a rude awakening to realize, like, Oh, this is gonna be a very different journey than what I expected. What I thought I would have and I think now certainly since losing my dad, and since you know, sort of having these immensely transformative experiences happen within a year of each other. I am now that person right now, I know not to think I know what’s going to come. Right. And like, actually, the only thing we know is that we don’t know what’s going to happen. Right. And I think that is actually healthy, sort of more of a protection in a way right? I mean, even with a pandemic, right. I mean, as devastating and as traumatic as it’s been, you know, in gradations, depending on what your personal story is, but I think it’s been globally traumatic, in a way I sort of was like, Okay, this is what we have to live with. Now. Right? This is what we have to deal with to roll with the punches over what they signify. So live in a global pandemic and wear masks and get vaccinated and do remote school and all these pieces. And I feel like my own tragic loss, kind of prepared me for that in a way you know, that tragedy will and may, you may or her and you have to find a way to integrate that tragedy and continue forward.
P: Yeah, that’s good advice for all of us. For younger you and for all of us now.
N: That’s right. Yeah.
P: Naomi thanks so much for sharing your story and I will put a link in the show notes to your book on Amazon.
N: Yes, a link to my book. And if you’d like I can also I can send you a couple of other links to other like through sites of of my work, and you could link those as well. I’m I’m very active on LinkedIn. So maybe that’s also linked if people wanted to connect or so I’ll send you those. I’ll send you more links for you to include in the in the episode.
P: Awesome. Thank you. So much.
N: Thank you, Paulette. This has been great.
Episode 51: Race, Identity & Motherhood: Naomi’s story
Episode 50SN: A Pregnancy that Outran Scary Predictions: Lisa’s Story
Today’s guest has an interesting spin on the difference between her expectations for the pregnancy and birth and her experience going into pregnancy. She had a number of health conditions that lead to a lot of cautionary talks about the many things that could go awry. And then when she actually was pregnant, she more or less skated through a problem free pregnancy. So she’s left with feeling grateful to have outruns so many serious issues and sad about the fact that she didn’t get to enjoy what was basically a straightforward pregnancy because she was constantly on alert.
You can find Lisa’s writing here
PCOS
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/pcos/symptoms-causes/syc-20353439
https://www.webmd.com/women/what-is-pcos
https://www.cdc.gov/diabetes/basics/pcos.html#:~:text=What%20is%20PCOS%3F,beyond%20the%20child%2Dbearing%20years.
Epilepsy
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/epilepsy/symptoms-causes/syc-20350093
https://www.webmd.com/epilepsy/default.htm
Epilepsy and Pregnancy
https://www.cureepilepsy.org/webinars/epilepsy-pregnancy-contraception/
https://epilepsychicago.org/what-is-epilepsy/sudep/?gclid=Cj0KCQjwpcOTBhCZARIsAEAYLuU8fRCTSVMxWjho2b1pckFcUOEhXYtS6Nvros5kCvTJZgKhCcC3EUsaAncmEALw_wcB
Fetal Surgery for Spina Bifida
https://www.ucsfbenioffchildrens.org/clinics/fetal-treatment-center
https://www.ucsfbenioffchildrens.org/conditions/spina-bifida?campaignid=71700000085986996&adgroupid=58700007287088131&adgroup=FTC-NT+-+Conditions+-+Spina+Bifida&creative=537193062435&kwid=43700065426505077&matchtype=p&network=g&adposition=&target=&device=c&devicemodel=&feeditemid=&loc_physical_ms=9031971&loc_interest_ms=&targetid=kwd-803521056122&utm_source=GOOGLE&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=FTC-NT+-+Conditions+All&utm_term=spina+bifida+fetus&&campaignid=14146813904&adgroupid=125672267659&adid=537193062435&gclid=Cj0KCQjwpcOTBhCZARIsAEAYLuVdDLyuSmXsok5GdMl3I_JALDEjLXlO00R2JNSHebSUzLG5DWzjA6QaAn3mEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds
https://www.chop.edu/treatments/fetal-surgery-spina-bifida/about
Pyloric Stenosis
Breastfeeding across the US