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.

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.

why didn’t i meet you sooner?

today while going through some old writing, i discovered that i had jotted down a little snippet of conversation that occurred several years ago while out at dinner with an old flame.

like most things i find amusing, i decided to share this tidbit with my current boyfriend:

waiter: how is everything?

me: my dad died.

(dirty look from my old flame.)

me: he said “everything!” not just the food.

naturally this facilitated a chuckle from my (real-time) boyfriend (he’s as funny as i am).

which prompted the subject question thought…

love has no limits.

i don’t think it’s a conincidence that i found this on the day after father’s day. during my dad’s first long stint in the hospital, we started a tradition of me reading to him while he was bedridden – something that happened far too often in the years following. we started with one of his favorite scholars: einstein. and so in honor of his favorite..and mine (read: baba), i share this letter that einstein wrote to his daughter. it reminds me so much of my own baba: part mad scientist, part adoring father, and all love… it is nothing short of genius.

When I proposed the theory of relativity, very few understood me, and what I will reveal now to transmit to mankind will also collide with the misunderstanding and prejudice in the world.

I ask you to guard the letters as long as necessary, years, decades, until society is advanced enough to accept what I will explain below.

There is an extremely powerful force that, so far, science has not found a formal explanation to. It is a force that includes and governs all others, and is even behind any phenomenon operating in the universe and has not yet been identified by us. This universal force is LOVE.

When scientists looked for a unified theory of the universe they forgot the most powerful unseen force. Love is Light, that enlightens those who give and receive it. Love is gravity, because it makes some people feel attracted to others. Love is power, because it multiplies the best we have, and allows humanity not to be extinguished in their blind selfishness. Love unfolds and reveals. For love we live and die. Love is God and God is Love.

This force explains everything and gives meaning to life. This is the variable that we have ignored for too long, maybe because we are afraid of love because it is the only energy in the universe that man has not learned to drive at will.

To give visibility to love, I made a simple substitution in my most famous equation. If instead of E = mc2, we accept that the energy to heal the world can be obtained through love multiplied by the speed of light squared, we arrive at the conclusion that love is the most powerful force there is, because it has no limits.

After the failure of humanity in the use and control of the other forces of the universe that have turned against us, it is urgent that we nourish ourselves with another kind of energy…

If we want our species to survive, if we are to find meaning in life, if we want to save the world and every sentient being that inhabits it, love is the one and only answer.

Perhaps we are not yet ready to make a bomb of love, a device powerful enough to entirely destroy the hate, selfishness and greed that devastate the planet.

However, each individual carries within them a small but powerful generator of love whose energy is waiting to be released.

When we learn to give and receive this universal energy, dear Lieserl, we will have affirmed that love conquers all, is able to transcend everything and anything, because love is the quintessence of life.

I deeply regret not having been able to express what is in my heart, which has quietly beaten for you all my life. Maybe it’s too late to apologize, but as time is relative, I need to tell you that I love you and thanks to you I have reached the ultimate answer!

Your father,
Albert Einstein

nothing good gets away.

i’ve come across this letter from john steinbeck to his son so many times.
and i love it a bit more each time…
maybe it’s because i miss my own dad?
and maybe it’s because it’s bursting with brilliance…
or maybe it’s because it’s about my favorite topic ever?

in any case, here it is in all it’s glory:
New York
November 10, 1958

Dear Thom:

We had your letter this morning. I will answer it from my point of view and of course Elaine will from hers.

First—if you are in love—that’s a good thing—that’s about the best thing that can happen to anyone. Don’t let anyone make it small or light to you.

Second—There are several kinds of love. One is a selfish, mean, grasping, egotistical thing which uses love for self-importance. This is the ugly and crippling kind. The other is an outpouring of everything good in you—of kindness and consideration and respect—not only the social respect of manners but the greater respect which is recognition of another person as unique and valuable. The first kind can make you sick and small and weak but the second can release in you strength, and courage and goodness and even wisdom you didn’t know you had.

You say this is not puppy love. If you feel so deeply—of course it isn’t puppy love.

But I don’t think you were asking me what you feel. You know better than anyone. What you wanted me to help you with is what to do about it—and that I can tell you.

Glory in it for one thing and be very glad and grateful for it.

The object of love is the best and most beautiful. Try to live up to it.

If you love someone—there is no possible harm in saying so—only you must remember that some people are very shy and sometimes the saying must take that shyness into consideration.

Girls have a way of knowing or feeling what you feel, but they usually like to hear it also.

It sometimes happens that what you feel is not returned for one reason or another—but that does not make your feeling less valuable and good.

Lastly, I know your feeling because I have it and I’m glad you have it.

We will be glad to meet Susan. She will be very welcome. But Elaine will make all such arrangements because that is her province and she will be very glad to. She knows about love too and maybe she can give you more help than I can.

And don’t worry about losing. If it is right, it happens—The main thing is not to hurry. Nothing good gets away.

Love,

Fa