silent lullabies.

editor’s note: i started writing this blog in 2018, excited to share the news of our very wanted pregnancy…(that pregnancy did not result in a baby and this blog remained in my drafts. now in 2023, i’m ready to talk about the losses)

let me set the scene: my dad had just died, my boyfriend and i had broken up, and i learned that the last time we were intimate (while we were still together, for the record) resulted in a pregnancy.

as an unwed mother, somehow my loss mattered less. somehow the fact that it was my best friend at my side instead of the baby’s father, it became a “blessing” that the baby had no heartbeat.

it took me years to come to terms with my miscarriage, and i think the silence was part of the problem.

it was only after i commiserated with another woman for the first time when a friend miscarried, that i began to feel like i was finally processing my emotions instead of just shoving them down to wherever you shove feelings you’re avoiding.

if it weren’t so typical to keep quiet about a pregnancy until after the risk of losing it has passed (but really, isn’t there always a risk? not just in the first 12 weeks), maybe my first miscarriage, in particular, wouldn’t have been such an exquisitely painful introduction to how statistically common pregnancy loss is.

at the time, i literally knew no one who’d had a miscarriage — none that they’d ever talked about, anyway.

i’m encouraged by the openness i’ve been seeing about pregnancy loss lately. i hope the stigma is disappearing. it’s okay that some women prefer to keep their miscarriages private — but it’s a problem when they feel like they have to.

my husband and i struggled to conceive and turned to IVF, hoping that would be the answer to our problems. we were elated to find that our first embryo transfer worked and seeing the baby’s heartbeat at 6 weeks, and then again at 8 weeks gave me a false sense of confidence.

by the time we went to my OB’s office at the end of the first trimester, we learned the embryo had stopped growing and there was no heartbeat. my doctor teared up telling me the news as i sat in shock. i was devastated.

i had already picked a name.

i thought we were in the clear.

i would never get this naïveté back.

the days following this were dark. i unfriended everyone on social media who had the audacity to post about their pregnancies. i still get a pang when i see these announcements, if i’m being honest. it’s why i never posted anything about my own pregnancy. there isn’t a single pregnant photo of me that exists on the internet (your loss, really. i was adorable). i couldn’t wrap my head around causing another woman that same pain.

for months i cried about how my body kept failing me. cancer. infertility. miscarriages.

my husband wanted to fix it. he couldn’t.

i was so broken, i couldn’t even write about it. it was too raw. too painful.

the low point was a visit to the grocery store when a man outside requested a donation for children who needed meals…i burst into tears at the cruelty of this. i was grieving not one, but two pregnant losses and desperate to have a child of my own. i think i scared that stranger and my husband that night.

when i made up my mind to stop trying with my own eggs (after 4 retrievals – 2 completely unsuccessful ones, i was done) i had friends say things like “you can’t give up, you need to have YOUR baby.” that hurt. my child is very much my baby. perhaps the path was less conventional than hers, but he is very much mine.

on this note, let’s not give women struggling with infertility unsolicited advice.

nobody told me to “just relax” when i had cancer as if that would be the cure, so why is this different? anyway, i digress.

in the end, we did get our happy ending – thanks to a lovely egg donor, for whom i will remain forever grateful. the road was long and frustrating and unfair and full of tears.

“hell was the journey, but it brought me heaven.”

there were times when i wasn’t sure it would happen for us. i spent so much time in despair and was lucky to have friends who held hope for me when i couldn’t. thankfully, hope is always the last friend to leave.

and i almost always get what i want.

she would’ve made such a lovely bride…

let me tell you a story…

i was 22 and we had been dating for 2 months when he surprised me with a trip to nyc for new year’s eve. unfortunately, his plans for the night were standing in the freezing cold, where i couldn’t eat (or pee), to watch the ball drop in times square. (honestly, i’m still mad about this and text him from time to time demanding an apology. what’s even weirder is he had just done this a year or two before and i cannot understand why anyone would want to do this once, let alone twice. it’s miserable.) as a general rule, i want to be warm and i want to be fed.

anyway, right at midnight i turned to give him the obligatory midnight kiss to find that he was holding out a ring. i was in complete shock (there’s a photo of this moment – that i won’t share because he deserves his anonymity – where i’m standing there slack-jawed and completely dumbfounded). the truth is, i didn’t want to say yes…i also didn’t want to embarrass him. so, i said nothing. eventually, he put the ring on my finger…

and there started my year long attempt to extricate myself from the situation. i was 22, i had no business getting married, and my heart was not clear of the one who came before.

i will spare you (and him) the details of the relationship. i held off on writing this blog for so long because i didn’t want to hurt him. 20 years later, we finally had a debrief on the dissolution of our union.

about 10 years ago, i heard that he was telling people he ended our relationship. untrue, but i didn’t care enough to correct it. i thought it was funny and moved on with my life. in fact, he flew across the country to show up at my front door months after our breakup to celebrate my birthday with me and since i already had plans with a friend, we proceeded to have the most awkward dinner in the history of ever, especially after he learned that i had been seeing someone new…and we had even kissed, once. (broken up for months, guys. i refused to feel badly about this.)

a family member insisted upon correcting the story.

family member: but it’s a lie! he shouldn’t lie.

me: let him lie. it doesn’t hurt me.

family member: but it’s not right!

me: it makes no difference in my life.

for me, the high road is typically the one not taken (i’m not proud of this, it’s just a fact. the truth is more important than the consequences in most circumstances).

anyway, during my debrief with this ex i finally asked him about telling everyone he had dumped me. his response was “well, i was responsible for the actions that led to you ending the relationship so in my mind, i was the one that ended things.” HUH?!

i love this junior high logic so much. and boy am i glad i didn’t ever marry him.

genuinely not a joy.

it’s not all about dead dads and heartbreak; there is the thing i don’t talk about: the time my boss at work exposed himself after locking me in his office.

i tried to go to HR, but the woman running it was a good friend of his and made it clear that my complaint would get no traction. unbeknownst to me, he had been telling people that we had been dating for months. we hadn’t. we weren’t.

i never hashtagged #metoo, i never told my boyfriend, i never told my friends, i never knew it wasn’t my fault.

i’m mouthy.

i’m difficult.

i have big boobs.

i’m not a perfect victim.

the harassment went on for far too long, culminating in him barging into my dad’s hospital room, after a major surgery, to get my attention because i refused to speak to him after he wouldn’t take “no” for an answer.

the situation was complicated, uncomfortable, and not okay. in the end, i left the job and after showing up at my home unexpectedly a few times, he finally left me alone. it was, at the least, sexual harassment. at the most, it was something far more sinister. i have a lot of guilt and angst about not being able to stop him and wondering if he went on to continue this behavior with other women.

the things we don’t talk about weigh heavy on my heart. i never talked about it because the thought of reliving it strangled my throat.

so, here we are…me too, friends.

it happened to me too.

wrong place at the right time.

i was recently on a picturesque trip with my family including my mother-in-law and one of my best friends flew out to meet us. this bestie was talking about an upcoming trip to nyc and i exclaimed “oh, i love nyc! i got engaged there” and then realized the company i was in and clarified to my mother-in-law that it wasn’t to her son. she responded “but it was just for a night, right?” confused, i asked her what she meant. she brought up the failed attempt by a former suitor to impulsively fly me out and woo me, that has since become a standing joke in my family (if you haven’t heard the story before, don’t worry, i’ll be putting it back up).

me: no, that was a different guy.

mother-in-law: oh, was it the guy who was messaging you last time i visited?

me: nooo, that was a different guy…

mother-in-law: oh. so, i guess i don’t know about who you’re talking about.

…and here we are.

the lost years…

we have so much to cover. i will be bringing back the old entries…should i scrub the offensive stuff or not? i said some wild things, i stand by most of them…and also, i’m a person, i’ve changed, i’ve grown (not vertically).

it’s hard to believe this started 14 years ago, when i was in my 20s. it felt right to bring it back today, on my 43rd birthday. so much has happened and i’m a completely different me than the girl who first sat down at her laptop to write about love and boys, and share her thoughts with her friends (and a few strangers). and yet, i’m still sitting here writing about love…and boys (maybe a couple exclusively now). full circle, i suppose. it feels like me. it feels right.

if you are an ex, this is your warning to STOP READING now. i will be detailing your bad behavior and if you’ve gotten a pass till now, i hope you enjoyed your peace. (i can anticipate the messages coming and let’s save ourselves the time. the terrible thing you’re thinking of, yes – i will be mentioning it.)

let’s talk about the breakups.

let’s talk about the miscarriages.

let’s talk about the wedding.

let’s talk about cancer.

let’s talk about how i’ve never met a bridge i didn’t want to burn.

let’s talk about the boy.

let’s talk about his baba.

let’s talk about my baba.

let’s talk about how i finally get to do what i’ve always wanted.