One of the things that pulled me out of the mommy wars was all of the stories. This week I’m sharing the stories of other moms that have touched me through their experiences. If you have an experience you would like to share, please email me at sarah@momtomommedia.com and I’ll publish it here this week. (All names will be changed to initials to keep them anonymous.)


This is the story of M’s Mom:

I sit here trying to come up with a story from my own experiences, and realized I have one from my very first days and months in this world…

My mom was turning 18 when I was born. She didn’t have a car. She lived in a tiny house with her boyfriend that routinely didn’t have water or electricity. She worked at a fish restaurant and had dropped out of school already.

I was born in April instead of July 1978. My mom wanted to breastfeed but I was too tiny, they said. She tried to pump but for many reasons she had to stop.

She didn’t want to leave the hospital. But she had to. No one was paying the bills but her. So she left the hospital and didn’t come back. When it was time to be brought home, the hospital couldn’t find her. She had no phone. She not once visited me after the first week. By all accounts, she abandoned me and they tracked down my aunt saying they were going to call authorities if my aunt didn’t want to take me.

My mom confessed this to me some 34 years later. Throughout my life, I had this fantasy that she spent her days or nights with me, stroking my tiny hands, singing to me (those things came much much later). I was shell shocked to discover I was alone for two months. Does it hurt? Yes.

But the full story is this… no one was supporting her. She had been supporting herself, a boyfriend, and now me.

She didn’t come back to visit me because she didn’t want to let me go. She wanted to run away with me, drop these other responsibilities and never look back. But I was too small. The demands were too great. Her love was too big.

She sat with me and waited for my reaction to her story.

“I can’t imagine how terrible that was for you. I love you.”

I am so glad to know this story now that my son is born. I understand now the heartbreak and confusion she faced.

I understand.

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3 responses to “A Week of Empathy: Alone in the NICU”

  1. Jen Avatar
    Jen

    I can only imagine how much grace this mom must have felt to have received such compassion from her daughter 30+ years later. Beautiful.

    My first-born was a NICU baby. I was 34 years old when he was born. I was receiving maternity benefits, had a husband who was employed, a house, a car, and no other pressing business, but it was still not possible to spend as much time with my baby as I wanted. Due to his medical state, I just had to wait and trust he was in loving hands with the NICU nurses. I hope this woman knows how loving the care was that she received – she wasn’t alone. The nurses are amazing people. I’m forever grateful they were with my son when I couldn’t be – they held him, sung to him, loved him.

    Thank you for sharing this story.

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  2. M Avatar
    M

    Wanted to follow up this story. I finally told my mom about this and how it was posted here for you all to read. She was overwhelmed. She would like to tell you all this:

    “The hardest part was going home. That I had to go home. I didn’t WANT to leave. I didn’t even have a quarter to spare for a pay phone.”

    She thanks you Sarah for sharing her story. It means a lot to her that other moms both were able to hear what it’s like to have a baby in NICU and to have moms come to her daughter with stories of their own.

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  3. Katie Avatar
    Katie

    I just wanted to say that this story made me cry. I’m so glad that God healed these wounds. Women face so much. Becoming a mother makes you realize the weight of what mothers have given all of us throughout history by the awful challenges and pain they’ve endured in giving us life and love.

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