Holding Silvan (18 page)

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Authors: Monica Wesolowska

BOOK: Holding Silvan
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MY MOTHER GOES to the photocopy store with Silvan's photo to make traditional Catholic memorial cards to give out at the memorial and to send to those far away. At the store, his photo creates, in her words, “quite a stir.” Employees gather around to see the beautiful baby. This is him at the peak of his beauty, hazel eyes open, fat pink lips, face bathed in golden sunlight. They all want to know if this is her beautiful grandson.
“Yes,” is all she can manage.
“Why didn't you tell them the truth?” I say.
“Well…” she says and trails off with her eyebrows raised in perplexity, as if I'd asked her why she hadn't barked at them, or chirped, or mooed.
 
AT THE MORTICIAN'S , there's a box of tissues in the middle of the table, but no water fountain. At the mortician's, you can cry but not replenish your tears. I have been dreading it but, of course, the mortician is smooth and good, even gets me to laugh at the spelling of his Polish last name that is so much more complicated than mine.
This is a family-owned mortuary, one of the last. Because of this, they're able to tailor their prices. And because of a newborn loss within their own family, they “service” newborns at cost. He tries to sell us nothing, no coffin, no memorial urn, no spot in a crematorium. He simply tells us how much he will charge for cremation, and when we will be able to pick up “the balance of the remains.”
“The balance?” David asks.
“Yes,” the mortician says, “the balance of the remains.”
“But what happens to the rest?”
“The rest of what?”
“Of the remains.”
“You get all the balance of the remains, but I have to warn you that with a newborn it will seem shockingly little.”
“But why do you keep calling them the balance of the remains?” David persists.
“Because that's what they're called.”

All
the remains are called the
balance
of the remains?”
“Yes,” the man says, refusing to explain that some of the remains may stay in the crematorium, mingled with the remains of others. Instead, he says, “No one should be sitting here in your situation. This is so rare.” This doesn't seem to help.
And yet, he is probably right not to explain, not now when
Silvan still feels freshly yanked from my arms and too specific to be joined to anybody else's grief.
 
DAVID'S MOTHER ARRIVES in time for the memorial service. She's anxious again, unsure how to behave now that she's missed the grueling end. To get his mother to “get” it, David takes her into the office (not yet transformed into a nursery; at least we're spared that) to look at Silvan's last photos on the computer. Before David's even reached the shots where Silvan has lost weight, she's crying. I hear the sound from the living room.
“What's that noise?” Margie asks.
Margie's looking at the photo album. Like me, she loves the last photos because she remembers him like that. She likes the photo of his single pimple. Like me, she finds it cute, and proof of almost normal life.
“That noise?” I say. I go out onto the front porch.
“I think somebody's sawing,” I say, coming back in.
And then I realize it's coming from the office.
Construction work. It's almost like grief. Tearing down to build again.
Hearing Linda's tears, I love her once more.
 
FOR THE MEMORIAL service, we've decided only to invite people who have actually met our son. Already you can predict the future course of friendships from who is there. It is a motley crowd. Our whole immediate family, of course, and our closest friends; but there are a few surprising additions, a few odd absences. Margie and Gavin are there. And Kerry, Silvan's nurse. And a pregnant friend of a friend whom we barely know but who spent hours holding Silvan at the hospital. Eve is too far away to come back so soon; for this I forgive her. But I'm not so ready to forgive Claudia and Brian. Claudia and Brian seem to think that they can neither bring their children to a memorial nor leave them at home, and I wonder if our friendship will survive it. Michael, in his second year of residency, almost makes the same
mistake of being absent. He calls an hour beforehand to tell us that he can't get time off from his shift without compromising his status. He's asked his supervisor, a woman he says hates him, for a few hours off and she has been unsympathetic.
“Michael,” David says, “you are in training to be a doctor who delivers babies, your best friend's baby has died due to complications of a delivery, you need to be here. This is my
son's
funeral.”
An hour later, Michael arrives, swift and bashful, joining the rest of us in the backyard. Who else is there? It is a blur.
We stand in a big circle on the cracked concrete beneath a rickety pergola built by the previous owners. There is not enough room in the shade so David and I stand in full sun. More than the details, I am aware of the space we hold between us, these people come to encircle us, the warmth of everyone standing in a circle on that cracked, red concrete.
We begin with the witnessing. It is sweet. People say what they can, though there's little to say about a newborn, but that is part of what I've wanted to acknowledge. I try to imitate his little cry, the one I imagined meant he wanted me. Other people mention his softness, or their sense of peace as they held him. A close friend of my mother berates the universe for giving our family so much pain, and this is nice, having her express on my behalf an anger I'm not aware of feeling. I tell everyone I am forever grateful that I got what mattered most to me. “Silvan died in my arms,” I say.
We must have sung; we must have recited prayers – I have a program to prove it.
And yet my memory of it feels vague. It is a memory of memory becoming vague. I fail to record it in my diary. David tells me later that other people liked it, that his father told him we did a nice job. And I do remember feeling buoyed, completed. To dedicate this time entirely to this little being is incredible. But it is also incredibly little compared to the life he could have lived. To think that all we have left are these tiny stories is painful.
To think that never again will so many people remember him so well…
 
AFTERWARDS, WE “SIT shiva.” Though we have broken all sorts of Jewish rules by performing an autopsy and cremating Silvan, how glad we are for the ritual of shiva. How else would we carry on? We need time for organized grief. Our shiva is modified from the seven days immediately following burial to a two-day shiva happening on the weekend so more people can come. We don't know much about sitting shiva, nor do our friends, but one thing I learn is that the bereaved are not required to stand at the arrival of each guest. It is a good rule. I'm too tired to stand. I don't have it in me to give that much attention to others. Instead, I announce to each person who arrives, “The rules of shiva say I don't have to stand.”
Another thing I learn is that you only sit shiva for people older than thirty days. This is interesting considering that a neonatal death is defined as occurring earlier than twenty-eight days. So Silvan is considered more than a newborn both medically and spiritually. I wonder if my grief, and the grief of our family and friends, would have been any different had he died at twenty-eight days instead of thirty-eight. My grief for Silvan feels so particular – no one else in the world can miss him as much as I do – but ritual helps remind me that I'm not the only mother who has grieved.
All sorts of unexpected people come. A friend from high school. Two former students. I'm most touched by two men from work. They're both awkward, both thin with big old-fashioned glasses and unruly hair that gets cut at most once a year; they are older than me, poorer, single, childless. But they come all this way to my house to stand in my backyard and hold photos of my dead baby and say appropriate things like, “I am so sorry for your loss.”
Neighbors come and stand awkwardly at the edge of the shade. We have only lived in this neighborhood five months, but
still they stand there and look at Silvan's photo album, thumbing quickly through the final pages because they are too awful. How odd that I subject them to this. What do I want? Isn't it enough that they are here?
One neighbor is wearing a beautiful dress, kaleidoscopic, and I take pleasure in telling her how much I admire it.
My obstetrician is there.
My chiropractor's receptionist with a little potted plant.
More neighbors arrive with a bottle of wine and sit easily with my mother and pass the time of day with her.
As shiva goes on, more people we know less well arrive, and more food comes with them. Piles of cakes and cookies. Dozens of doughnuts. Everything sweet. By Sunday night, as people leave, we're begging them to take sweet things away with them.
Monday morning comes, and the house feels strangely empty.
We uncover each mirror. We take a first symbolic walk outside. I feel raw and exposed but glad again for rituals to mark the resumption of life. We circle back to the front porch where we have lit a memorial candle. It's on the little table where Silvan's body once lay. The candle is supposed to burn for seven days, but since we have modified our shiva, I think we should blow it out. David says he'll do whatever I want, but when I try to blow out the candle, my breath is undirected, broken by tears. We leave it burning. We go back into the house.
We drag through the remaining days of that week and on the seventh day, sometime in the night, I wake again searching the bed for Silvan. At least what I'm saying is, “Where's Silvan? Where's Silvan?” but in my semi-sleep I'm searching for Silvan's babies, a tray of two of them.
In the morning, we find the candle has gone out.
Fledglings
WHEN OTHERS DIED, I HAD A SENSE OF SOULS THAT lingered longer. I felt my father watching with approval from above. I felt Mark arriving in the body of an owl to forgive me for not having noticed the bathroom ceiling. But Silvan was so unformed that within days there seems nothing left. I continue waking in the night, patting down the bed, touching only absence. What baby am I looking for? “Olive?” I say, but Olive is Eve's baby. “Oscar?” but Oscar is Margie's. David wakes and reminds me, “Silvan is gone.”
Yes, he's gone. With relief, I lie back down. Silvan no longer needs me.
With relief, I accept that I'm the one left to suffer, not him.
Around this time, a friend gives me a book of “comforting faiths” – as if faith were a sweater in a catalogue, something to be ordered and tried on for size – and I read how some women like to believe that their babies' souls have returned to be reborn, sometimes into the same wombs. I'm not comforted at all. I am enraged. If the faith of my youth has dissipated, it is not to be replaced by some other faith. Silvan has had his life. Silvan is gone. And now that Silvan is gone, it is as Dr. Z used to say, we don't regret a minute that we had with him.
But in his absence, I'm also unformed, a mother who is childless.
Unformed, the two of us drift around the house, David and I, like newlyweds, strangely insulated from the world. David's
mother returns home, our families and friends return to the lives they were living before. Because we were grieving for all of Silvan's life, because we were fed and cared for during all that time, people seem to feel they've done enough. I understand. I am ready to be alone again. When my mother calls to ask if I am okay, I say, “I'm fine.” When she doesn't seem to believe me, I go on, “Losing a grown son to suicide is probably worse than losing a newborn.” I don't know if you can compare grief this way, but I sense more life ahead than my mother once did, after Mark died and I found her crying at the bottom of the basement stairs.
Slowly, David and I begin to tidy, to nest, to clear away the patient plastic bags that have lain in a corner of the dining room since the day after Silvan's birth. At least we don't have a full nursery to dismantle. At least we don't find baby accessories objectively attractive. With each item that I remove, glider, bassinet, changing table, the house looks better. It is a reverse sort of nesting. The only toy I keep visible is the white angel bear with the iridescent wings and halo that my obstetrician gave us.
The bassinet in the corner of our bedroom is replaced with a good luck money tree brought over by a neighbor who scuttles away after delivering it. He also lost a newborn, he tells us, a boy he had decided should be spared a grueling, risky heart surgery. This affords him entry into our house. From the house on the other side, a neighbor emerges to tell us that her twin nephews died as newborns too. In the newspaper, David reads that our zip code has the highest infant mortality rate in the state. This may have nothing to do with the particular damage Silvan sustained, but it connects us somehow, all these islands of grief, all these grieving parents who might understand us.
On our tidier island, we cook simple meals. We talk to friends on the phone. We continue talking to the social worker about what we expect from our friends and what we feel we are failing to get. Claudia comes over now that the memorial and shiva are over and says we need a new sofa. She thinks our sofa –
the sofa of David's childhood – is more ugly and uncomfortable than grieving parents should have to bear. Her anger about people not getting what they “deserve” repels me. No one deserves anything, I think. The sofa
is
ugly and uncomfortable. Someday I want to replace it, but certainly not now when I'm working on simply being grateful for what we have left. For one thing, the stack of photos – the extras from the memorial. They sit on the dresser by my open bedroom window. It is an impractical spot, but I must like how the summer wind keeps Silvan present as I go about tidying. He flits around, making a mess in my mind.

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