In this three part series guest blogger Christine Lester describes how her thinking about the newborn scars on her firstborn son have changed as he's grown.

Yesterday, guest blogger Christine Lester wrote about her emotions upon seeing newborn scars on her son’s body. Today, she writes about how she responded when it was finally time to take her baby, newborn scars and all, home.

Newborn Scars, Part 2: Coming Home

The next few days as I held my bedside vigil I see the incisions bandaged up. I helped to quickly change his dressings, but I didn’t really LOOK at them. Somehow my eyes only focus on the nurses hands or pretend that the dressing we are changing is not on MY child.

When it’s finally time to leave the NICU and take him home it’s one more quick peek and quick instructions on how to care for it. Then off to the next item on the discharge nurse’s check list. When we leave I have a few pages printed off the internet that describe the birth defects my child has. 9 years ago it wasn’t much. I had a list of care instructions for the wounds, and signs watch out for.  Symptoms to be aware of, when he needed to be brought back.  Essentially they were saying “Here is your medically fragile child, and by the way, here is some stuff we found off the internet. Good luck!” It doesn’t offer me any comfort.

New mothers birth babies and then they pour over every detail of that child. They count fingers and toes. Search for birthmarks.  Take it all in. My turn never came at delivery. My time didn’t come in the NICU either. It came here at home. When we unlocked the door that night, that is when the magnitude of the newborn scars hit me. I remember the relief of being home and being so happy to be free of the wires and the tubes. To nurse without an audience.  To change a diaper without having to weigh it. Place him in his nursery, take him out of NICU clothes. To be free of the nurse’s shadow hovering in case some lead, wire or tube came undone, or worse. I needed desperately to be away from the monitors, the alarms, the grief that permeated the walls when another angel was called back to soon.

When life resumed the next morning I laid  this little sleepy caterpillar on my lap and undressed him. The hubby had gone back to work and the in-laws were running some errand and it was just me and this precious baby. I remember weeping taking in every piece of him. His scent. His long fingers. I was hoping he would peek at  me so I could try to determine his eye color in natural light. Yet, no matter what I did, I couldn’t stop looking at the newborn scars across his back. I was becoming a pro at picking him up and not pulling out stitches, burping him without patting one whole side of his back. Still it bothered me immensely that he had these scars that the healthy bouncing boy we had pictured would have to endure more bumps in the road as he grew.

At first I blamed the hormones. The doctors warned me that once I went home it would all hit me, and it did.  I wondered what our life and future would be like. We were all in shock. We were blindsided by birth defects that were not determined in utreo, and upset that the ones that were discovered were pushed aside as “no biggies.”

Simple things like how to feed this child was something no one could tell me. Uncharted territory. It was all too much sensory overload. I felt I was in over my head.

 Nothing prepared me for what I would face.  It seemed the scars and what it triggered in me was much more than hormones. The scar was a reminder to me and to others that he wasn’t like all of us. Here across his back was a road sign that our life had turned a different direction. That our anticipated path was blocked. The haunting scar made me rethink every choice I made. The gravity of his surgery at birth became more real. We knew all the internal struggles he was having and that incision was proof that it was not imagined. You couldn’t look at that scar and forget all the medical chaos that was going on inside him, no matter how ‘normal’ he appeared on the outside.

“Anyone can give up; it’s the easiest thing in the world to do. But to hold together when everyone else would understand if you fell apart, that’s true strength.” ~Christopher Reeves

How About You?

How did you feel when you finally took your NICU or PICU child home from the hospital? Did the emotions come crashing down on you as they did for Christine? Were you overwhelmed with a similar feeling of injustice, that this shouldn’t be happening to your child? If you’d like to leave a comment, please do. This is a safe place with readers who understand.

Part One
Part Two
Part Three

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