GREAT READS → LIFETAKES Issue 866 · June 23, 2021

NICU Reality Check

“You’ll see,” she said in a soft, melodic voice. “This will be motherhood, just a different kind"

NICU Reality Check

 

I would hold him for a while, our tiny boy who arrived two months early, schmooze with the other mothers, check if the vending machine was stocked with cinnamon Danishes, pump again, and then it was time to head home to face the rest of the gang.

The baby had suffered brain damage in utero, and combined with his prematurity, his medical and developmental progress didn’t pose a pretty picture. He suffered from seizures which eventually got under control even after stopping medication, but he displayed no ability to eat, needed suctioning for excess oral secretions, had very high muscle tone, and often appeared sluggish or was sleeping.

While we initially hoped his issues wouldn’t be too severe, as time passed and his medical precariousness and developmental limitations became more and more apparent, I became more and more discouraged. Sitting in the NICU watching the other babies get stronger, move into the intermediate section, and transition from nasogastric feeding tubes to bottles, led to a certain feeling of isolation. I was the mother of the baby who returned to Intensive Care twice after leaving (and indeed was discharged from there!), who needed a G-tube put in to enable long-term tube feeding.

There were a few other weather-beaten mothers with whom I felt a strong sense of solidarity, but with many of the others, I felt a distance because of our disparate experiences.

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Next installment → From Sea to Shining Sea