Twelve Birthdays Without You. Still At a Loss for Words…

Today is Dominic’s birthday. He would be thirty-five if he lived.

I find as the years roll by it becomes increasingly difficult to “age” the person I last saw into the person he might have become. Oh, I can guess-but that’s hardly worth doing since we all know life rarely follows a straight path.

And that’s what defies language and steals my breath. On milestone days especially, I’m not only mourning what I have lost but also what I will never know.

It would surprise my mama most of all that on this day I’m at a loss for words.

I regularly embarrassed her with my non-stop commentary as a child. I told stories about what I heard and saw (and what my young mind THOUGHT it heard or saw) to anyone who would listen.

But I realize now there are moments too sacred, wounds too deep, experiences too precious for words.

Either you are there and share it-or you’re not-and can’t imagine.

This is one of those times.

Dominic would be thirty-five years old today if he had lived.

He’d be several years out of law school, on some path toward making his mark in the world, maybe (?) married, perhaps even a dad but definitely, positively here and part of our lives.

To be honest, I wouldn’t even care what his life looked like right now as long as it was LIFE.

Something very few people know and even fewer would note is that on Dominic’s birth day, the doctor who delivered him had just the day before become a bereaved parent himself. His daughter left this world by her own hand.

Another C-section, Dominic was lifted up next to my face by this sweet and vulnerable man while the tears poured down my face. I was crying for HIM not for me. I was undone that he had shown up and delivered my child while his own laid lifeless wherever they had taken her.

I thought I understood then.

But I had no clue.

I understand now.

Sometimes you show up and do what you need to because it’s the only way for a heart to survive. Sometimes you walk on because standing still leaves too much time for the horror to take root and overwhelm you.

I miss Dominic.

I miss the future we would have had together and the family we would have been if death hadn’t invaded our reality.

I would literally give anything other than the life of one I love for Dominic to be alive right now.

But it’s not an option.

So I’ll spend his birthday thinking about what we had, lamenting what we will never have, rejoicing that his faith is made sight and I’ll cry.

Because a mama’s arms are made for holding her child, not holding his memory.

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Author: Melanie

I am a shepherd, wife and mother of four amazing children, three that walk the earth with me and one who lives with Jesus. This is a record of my grief journey and a look into the life I didn't choose. If you are interested in joining a community of bereaved parents leaning on the promises of God in Christ, please like the public Facebook page, "Heartache and Hope: Life After Losing a Child" and join the conversation.

4 thoughts on “Twelve Birthdays Without You. Still At a Loss for Words…”

  1. My son would’ve been 35, yesterday. May is hard because of that and Mother’s Day. Wishing you peace.

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  2. hugs & prayers for you and your family, Melanie. Now I will remember Dominic’s bd, it’s just 2 days after Nate’s. You express my thoughts exactly…no matter what and how, he would be part of our family. That empty chair still holds him, though in a different way. Thanking the Lord we have forever to look forward to…

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  3. Oh, Melanie, how I understand how the passage of time does not make this day any easier.

    My heart is with you.

    Isabel, Christina’s mom.

    “I believe in pink. I believe that laughing is the best calorie burner. I believe in kissing, kissing a lot. I believe in being strong when everything seems to be going wrong. I believe that happy girls are the prettiest girls. I believe that tomorrow is another day and I believe in miracles.” ― Audrey Hepburn http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/692403.Audrey_Hepburn

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  4. Oh, Melissa. How I relate to your words today. Most days it’s as if you’re right there in my head speaking out what I’m thinking. I just want you to know that you’re making a difference, one you never envisioned, one you would never pick as your mission field, but nevertheless a very important and necessary one. When I found your blog in 2018 on Facebook after my Rachel died it was a God ordained discovery. I had no idea there were grief blogs, grief writer’s, on Facebook. You were a lifeline thrown to me as I was drowning in my deep missing. I’ve always said if something good can come from Rachel’s death, it is God. I’m sorry that today, as you should be celebrating Dominic’s birthday, you are instead sorrowing. But you are helping so many hurting hearts in the midst of it. You are comforting us with the comfort you receive from our Father. One day I will meet you face to face and wrap you in a hug only those who are on this ugly hard journey know to give. Until that day. I am praying for you.

    Kristyn Rafferty Rachel’s mom

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