Dear Shorty,
The past 12 days have been difficult. I know we expected that the
road to having kids wouldn’t be an easy one for us, but I’m sure neither
of us imagined we would be tested so hard. I have a confession though
and since I’m to embarrassed to tell you myself, maybe I’ll just write
you.
You see while the past 12 days have been difficult, the past 24 hours
had been one of the toughest for me. I knew that from the moment you
told us you had vaginal bleeding that it wasn’t going to be an easy
night but I was prepared. Every day I remind myself how difficult this
must be to you and so I push myself to be that rock of support that you
need.
So when there was blood, I stayed calm and called the nurses in. When
they tested you and found out that you were in labour, I told you not
to worry because there will be ways to slow it down. When you were
worried that there won’t be enough time to administer the steroids to
accelerate the development of Fighter’s lungs, I confidently brushed it
off and said there will be. And when they finally gave you the
injection, I squeezed both your hands with mine so that you would know
I’m with you.
By the time I reached home that night I was so tired I was walking
into walls. I couldn’t sleep though. I was up for a long time, eager for
tomorrow to come so I could go to see our Doctor and ask her what was
going on.
The next morning when I walked into your room you were fast asleep.
The nurse had told me they had sedated you to bring down the
contractions and you would be asleep until noon. I saw an eyelid of
yours move when I came in so I knew you were awake, You then mumbled,
telling me that you had been sedated. I sat around for a while then I
decided that since you were asleep I would go to work first and come
back 6 hours later when you were awake. But before I left I had to see
our Doctor.
So while you were asleep I walked across to our Doctor’s clinic. I
will always remember the look she had on her face when I walked in. It
was a look of worry. For the first time throughout this episode she
looked worried. She went on to tell me how the bleeding was from a part
of your placenta and that’s what caused your body to go into labour.
That she had managed to slow it down so we have time for the steroid
injections to take effect but the situation was unpredictable. She was
sure we wouldn’t last another 4 weeks as we had planned and even at 30
weeks, Fighter is way too premature but at least we managed to hold it
off for two weeks. The only thing we could do… was pray. I thanked her…
grateful that we had such a good caring Doctor during this difficult
time and left her clinic.
It had began to drizzle when I started walking to my car in the
open-air car park. I knew I was supposed to go to the office but my mind
was all over the place. For the first time throughout this episode I
felt like there was nothing I could do to make this better. No amount of
money, no amount of time I spent with you, no amount of research and no
amount of medical care could make this situation any better.
Then as I sat in my car my Father called. He asked me what was wrong
with you and in my car in that open-air car park I broke down and cried.
For the first time in many many years I cried, not just man tears or
anything but the faggoty “uhuk uhuk” crying you hate seeing other guys
do (Fuckin pussy… I hate myself for that). I didn’t know what else to do
and how else to help you. I spent the next 10 minutes in the car trying
to compose myself.
After I pulled myself together I decided that I didn’t want to go
anywhere else. I didn’t want to run away from the problem. So I got out
my car and walked back into the hospital. I’m glad I did, because when I
got to your bedside again you whispered that you were hungry but was
too weak to eat or call for help. So I had the chance to help you up and
feed you.
When I think back now I realize now why I had that moment of
weakness. As much as you often tell me how I am a rock to you, the truth
is… even in this difficult time you are a rock to me too. And this
morning when you were sedated I felt like I had lost you. That I was all
alone.
If there is one thing good that I feel this experience has brought us
is that it has tested our relationship and got me to understand how we
depend on each other in so many ways. How I rely on your strengths just
as much as you rely on mine.
I told Dad and Mum today over dinner…. that somehow, after going through this experience… I feel that I love you even more.
Sincerely,
Skinny (Or Fatty…. poh-tay-toh poh-tah-toh what’s the difference?)
source:http://fourfeetnine.com/2013/08/05/how-shortys-been-doing/
In case if you wandering what was happening, she had deliver a premature baby on 12th August 2013.
source:http://timothytiah.com/2013/08/04/a-letter-to-my-future-son/
Dear Fighter,
By the time you’re old enough to read this, you’ll know that your
name isn’t really “Fighter”. You now go by a different name with the
initials J M Tiah. Fighter is a nickname your mother and I gave you ever
since she discovered she was pregnant with you. You see mom has a
medical condition called Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome. I’ll let you read
up about it on your own but in short it’s the most common reason for
infertility in a woman and even once a woman gets pregnant, there is a
45% chance that a woman with PCOS has a miscarriage. That’s 3 times
higher than a regular pregnancy.
We called you Fighter, because we believed that you will go against
all odds and make it through to be a healthy baby. That you will fight
for your life as hard as your Dad and Mom fought for yours… because you
are a Fighter.
As I write this, the date is the 4th of August 2013. I am at your
mother’s bedside in the hospital. She has been here for 10 days and is
expected to be here for the next few weeks. You see 10 days ago when
your mother came for a regular checkup on you, the Doctor found out that
she had preeclampsia. It’s a medical condition where the placenta is a
little faulty and so the mother’s body works harder to pump more blood
to the baby. As a result of that, the mother’s blood pressure goes up
and if that goes out of control, your mother could get a stroke, lose
her eyesight or have some other serious consequences.
The only cure for preeclampsia is to deliver the baby which is why it
isn’t too bad a condition if the mother who has preeclampsia is 34
weeks pregnant or more. But your mother was only 28 weeks when she found
out she had preeclampsia, way too premature to deliver you. So what the
Doctor has to do is give your mother medication and monitor her closely
for the next few weeks to keep you in her womb as long as possible so
that you have enough time to grow. If too much medication is given and
your mother’s blood pressure goes too low, it could affect your growth.
That’s why your mom is in a very difficult situation right now.
Your mother spent most of the past 10 days on the hospital bed. To
pass time, she reads a lot, watches some TV shows off her Microsoft
Surface tablet and occasionally updates her blog.
Her feet have swollen because of the severe water retention
aggravated by this condition, so much that she is unable to fully fit
into some shoes I bought her last week.
She often gets headaches, partly from the high blood pressure but
also partly from the medicine she takes. She gets tired very very
quickly and suddenly falls into spontaneous sleep.
The hardest part about watching your mother go through this isn’t the
physical pain she goes through but the emotional grief. In the first
few nights, I recall your mother laying back stiff as they tested her
blood pressure. When the results came back to be at a dangerous level,
she looked away from the nurse and waited for the nurse to leave. Once
the nurse left she broke into tears, worried about what too high a blood
pressure could do to you.
Yes, like I mentioned earlier, too high a blood pressure could cause a
stroke on your mother but that’s not what she seemed worried about. She
was worried about what the Doctor said could happen to you. That too
high a blood pressure could cause the placenta to detach and endanger
your life. Your mother wasn’t worried about herself. She was worried
about you. And she was worried about me, about the medical bills that I
will have to pay since our insurance doesn’t cover this medical
condition. I won’t go into the exact amount but lets just say that we’re
expecting that the medical bills for both you and your mother at the
end of this episode will be enough to buy a brand new mid-range car.
Fortunately though, I have always assured your mother that we will be
able to afford the bills and give you and her the best medical care
money can buy.
On the brighter side, your mother is really popular.
For the past ten days she has had friends visit her every single day.
Her room is full of flowers and fruit baskets and things that people
have sent over the past few days.
So many that we ran out of space and I had to bring some back home on some of the days.
Your mother and I are counting the days till when it is safe for you
to be born. Each day longer her body is able to support you is a day
crucial to your development. Just today we were reading up about the
development of fetuses in their 30th week vs their 34th week and trying
to decide when would it be safe for you. With this condition, we don’t
have the luxury of waiting till you’re a full term baby. The Doctor
tells us that this is a ticking time bomb. We can only fight this as
long as we can and then … it will all be up to you Fighter. I pray you
will have the strength you need to be the healthy baby you’re meant to
be.
I feel the need to write this to you because I fear that one day the
details of what your mother had to go through would be forgotten. I also
pray that you will remember the difficult time your mother and father
had to go through to bring you into this world.
One day when you are older….
I hope that whenever you get angry at your mother, you remember the
patience she had in trying to keep you in her womb as long as she can.
I hope that whenever you get upset because your mother sends you to
your room, you remember the weeks she had to spend in a hospital room
for you.
I hope that whenever you think your parents don’t buy you the
extravagant material things that your friends may have, you remember the
even more extravagant bills we had to pay to bring you into this world
safely.
I hope that whenever you have to care for your mother, you remember
how she cared for your wellbeing more than hers even before you were
born.
I hope that whenever you feel that you’re not strong enough to face
adversity, you think of the strength your mother had throughout the
whole time you were in her womb.
But amongst all… I hope that you will grow to be a healthy child who will love your parents as much as we love you.
Sincerely,
Daddy
PS: Your mother and I talked about the reaction you would
probably have when you did read this when you’re older. We decided that
you’ll probably be like “So annoying this Dad, before I’m born already
want to lecture me.”. I hope that won’t be your reaction. Don’t be notty
ah!
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