Blessed By Silas Winston Rondomanski

One year ago, August 17th, we said goodbye to our son for the second and final time.

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Our friends and family surrounded us as we faced the second hardest day of our life.  The outpouring of love and support given to our family at this time was truly amazing, and I am forever grateful.  I am grateful that we were not the only ones standing there brokenhearted.  My heart was touched by the love shown for Silas and for us.  We were not alone in our grief, and we still aren’t.

I still don’t understand why one so precious had to leave so quickly, so suddenly, but I do know this:  The hearts that shattered the day he died bonded the broken pieces together in love and sorrow for our family.  People are capable of great love and compassion in times of tragedy, and it is one way in which beauty can rise from the ashes.

In the days leading up to his funeral, God brought to mind the blessings Silas had brought to my life.  I couldn’t believe I could see the good in the midst of intense grief.  Each blessing proved to me that the pain of losing him was worth the blessing of having him, and my love for Silas grew even more.

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As our friends and family came through the visitation line during the hour before Silas’ funeral, I could see the pain and grief in their eyes and in their tears.  They tried to keep their tears at bay for my sake, but how can you when you see a mother and father standing there without their child?  They were absolutely devastated for us.  I just had to share why we were so blessed to be Silas’ parents.  Their tears gave me the courage to stand and speak for my baby. Below is the video of my words for my baby boy.

 

Peace and Understanding

I just don’t understand.  The one sentence I repeated over and over for days as I cried from the deepest, darkest place of my soul:

“My baby. I just don’t understand.”

The unanswered and the unknown can cause the most excruciating guilt.  I understand that the loss of my baby boy is not mine to understand.  Not every thing in this world can be explained.  It seems impossible to understand why a child should be taken from his mother, father, brother, and sister…and I will not try.

Even though I had been reassured that I could not and should not have been able to see that Silas was developing pulmonary hypertension caused by a congenital portosystemic shunt, I couldn’t shake the guilt. I hadn’t been able to protect him, even as he lay in my arms. I could understand that nothing I had done during my pregnancy had caused this, but I couldn’t understand why I hadn’t seen the subtle symptoms of pulmonary hypertension, even though those symptoms are similar to the breastfeeding jaundice he had, as well as that of being a sleepy little newborn in general. I felt that if we’d just had another week, we would’ve seen him fatiguing in the absence of jaundice and that would have clued us in to his condition. We weren’t given another week.

I know many friends had hoped the results of the autopsy would give us knowledge and peace. I was tortured by the results. Mothers are supposed to have a special intuition about their children’s health. Adding to the guilt was the thought that I’d had no inclination that he was going to leave us so suddenly.  In the weeks following receiving the autopsy results, I would listen to MercyMe’s “The Hurt and the Healer” on repeat, and I’m so thankful my cousin, Amber, shared that song with me for it spoke what my heart was crying.IMG_2111

I had to follow up with the liver specialist we had seen two weeks before his death. I had so many unanswered questions that were tormenting me.  I had to open the door to receive those answers in order to then close it and move forward.  Two weeks before he died, we had been sent in for a sonogram of his liver checking for biliary atresia because of his prolonged jaundice. They didn’t see the shunt on the scan. All of his lab results were progressing normally. We thought we had a healthy baby.

Silas’ doctor explained to us that Silas had two other problems detected on the autopsy. He had cortical dysplasia in his brain, another congenital abnormality. The report stated that people with cortical dysplasia can lead asymptomatic lives, but the doctor told us it can cause brain damage, cerebral palsy, and/or seizures. This condition would not have allowed him to be on the transplant list if he’d needed a liver transplant due to the portosystemic shunt. His liver was also fatty according to the autopsy results and had not been two weeks prior during the sonogram, and the doctor said that absolutely would’ve shown up on the scan. He is going to test Silas’ DNA for the possibility of a metabolic or mitochondrial disorder. We were told that each of these conditions by themselves should not have caused sudden death.  Currently, we know that having another child could present as low as a 5% chance and as high as a 25% chance of a metabolic or mitochondrial disorder reoccurring, but we won’t know for sure until the DNA tests have been completed. The doctor reassured us that is a low risk. He also reassured us our two older children are healthy. They stated that they would be running tests on any future children. I appreciated how they are going to be there with us in the future to help quell our fears.

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The hardest question I had to ask Silas’ doctor was, “If you had known all of this information before he died, could you have saved him?” I had to ask, even though I thought my heart would break with the answer. I wanted him to tell me it was inevitable. I wanted to know my baby hadn’t died in vain. It would’ve killed me if he could’ve been saved. I can’t imagine the additional guilt I would’ve felt if it could’ve been caught.

The doctor said he felt Silas’ death was inevitable.

I thought the answer would take away my guilt.  I didn’t realize the answer would bring me a peaceful understanding.

I don’t understand why my baby wasn’t created to live a long life on this earth,
but I do understand why I didn’t know he was going to leave
…and why I had to wait 10 months to conceive him.

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I now know I wasn’t meant to see everything was going to go so terribly wrong.
I was meant to love and cherish every minute with my baby boy…
and I did…
with all my heart.

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As I shared at his funeral, from the beginning of my pregnancy, every time I started to worry that something could go wrong, I was given peace and the thought to enjoy my time with my baby. I did my best as a mother and I left the rest to God. Little did I know that the One who holds tomorrow was giving me such an amazing gift.

He knew my time with Silas would be short.
He knew it was inevitable.
He knew, and He encouraged me to enjoy EVERY.SINGLE.MOMENT.

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I prayed for a perfect little baby with dimples, and that was what I was given. His body wasn’t perfect, but his spirit was, and our time with Silas was perfect.

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I had never been able to understand why it took 10 long months to conceive Silas until the day we met with the doctor. During those 10 months, I was so confused and frustrated. Were we able to have another child? Was I incapable of being a good mother to three children? What was God’s plan for our family? But, I knew I desired another child…two more to be exact…and I continued to hand my doubts back to the Lord.

Even though I have been blessed with an abundance of peace and understanding during an incomprehensible time of grief, I still mourn deeply.  I am grateful for the blessings, and even more grateful that my heart has been able to understand these blessings, for they bring me comfort, but at times that comfort is fleeting.  People may try to comfort me with the knowledge that his death was unavoidable in order to try to ease my pain, but the inevitability of his death doesn’t make it any less tragic or make it hurt any less.  I know it hurts my loved ones to see me hurt so much, but there is no way around this path.  It is the one I must walk, and I am okay with that, for a mother will do anything she must for her child.

Looking back at the timelineIMG_0339, I see how our journey prepared my heart for what was to come. Since I waited so long for Silas to come into my life, I was extremely grateful once I found out I was expecting. I didn’t mind the aches and pains of pregnancy, though the morning sickness was so bad at times it had me second guessing my choice, but that all faded long before he was born. That ten month wait showed me that we are not guaranteed to have children in this life. I never took my pregnancy for granted. Waiting for a baby, my baby, had prepared my heart, and my heart embraced my Silas, and I soaked up every precious moment with my baby boy.

Now I carry him in my heart…