Written by Theresa Maria Eugenia Lang-Bruno (6/3/2018, update
9/23/2018)
The wound is the place where the light enters you. - Rumi
About 6 years ago I went through a painful awakening. I had
lost one of my very best friends. In turn I was lost. I couldn’t be myself. I
couldn’t function. My sweet little boys comforted me as best they could, but my
husband seemed to vanish. He worked earlier AND later – I scared him. He didn’t
know how to help me, he didn’t recognize me, so instead he avoided me. As one
can imagine, that made it worse. As this was happening, I felt abandoned. My
loss of one best friend, became the loss of two. Unfortunately, these terrible
years were a necessary part of my awakening.
Looking back, I am grateful for these years. Seeds get
planted in the dark, cold dirt, only to bloom – magnificent; coal becomes a
diamond due to great pressure – sparkling. I became who I was meant to be
through my own core struggles. I had lessons to learn, it wasn’t until I
acknowledged that this was a teacher, that I was able to be free of the pain
and loss. You see, it was when I learned to internalize and accept the pain
instead of blaming an outside source and denying it that changes to began to
happen. It was when I realized that I was the master of my fate. No one else
had the power to control me. I couldn’t base who, or how I was as a person on
what anyone else did or didn’t do to, or
for me. I had to be ME. I had to let things go that didn’t matter and focus on
what did matter. I had to find joy in my daily life and “kill” each negative
thought with AT LEAST 3 positives. I’m not going to lie – it wasn’t easy – BUT
I was capable. It wasn’t just me that deserved this wonderful, beautiful life,
my sweet boys deserved it too.
So one night I broke. I let myself feel it all, holding back
nothing – the pain, the abandonment, soul-sucking and terrible, but beautifully
glorious and then I ROSE UP. Better. Prouder. More. I became who I was meant to
be all along. The ironic truth of it all, I couldn’t have gotten here without
the losses.
I awoke the next morning free. Free of the baggage. Free of constant
gloom. Twinges would shake me occasionally, but I now have the knowledge to
overcome them. To make them fade and disappear, because negativity has no place
near me. I am a source of strength, there will be no more weakness. When I was
able to release all that harmful, damaging energy, I was able to view things
through different eyes and focus on being the best I could be. Life-changing.
The above is relevant, because without it, I wouldn’t have
been open to what came next. The wound was necessary. I share this because
others need to know there is always hope, even when it seems like “the end” –
it is not.
Fast-forward a couple years. I am in one of the best places
I have ever been in. My husband came back to me – or rather, we came back to
each other. We found a better love than we ever had. My boys are amazing and so
good and kind. We’re almost done building our dream home – projecting my very
dreams into a shared reality. Mind you, it’s not perfect. It’s not just mine,
and I am more than happy to share it.
In December a friend of mine gave me a book. She had been at
a bookstore, this book was on the wrong shelf, for some reason she was drawn to
it, and knew it was meant for me. Her note told me to open to a certain page.
It was an “ah-ha” moment. The reassurance that I was meant to move forward.
That I was ready.
In January we meet with a fertility clinic to discuss
options available to add to our family, many know that we made a “permanent” decision
after our youngest son, that there would be no more. (Yes, that’s the kind of
amazing love story I’m talking about.) Long story short, we started the process
in March. (I’m not going to go into many details here, though I have no secrets
so I’m happy to discuss in more detail with anyone interested.) In early April I had a dream that we would
receive a positive pregnancy test on my birthday (5/16), but I woke up knowing
that was unlikely with everything I would have to do to prepare. The next
morning, I spoke with my Dr on the phone. She gave me the details and then
said, if all goes well we’ll expect to see a positive test right around 5/16. I
got off the phone in a slight shock.
A single embryo transfer was done 5/2. An approximate 30%
chance that this sweet little “potential” would implant. Nerve-wracking. The
next day I had the most shattering headache I have ever had, with mild
cramping. I knew without a doubt that this was implantation. Our 30% chance was
becoming a reality. Based on that, the estimated due date would be 1/17 – Our 21-year
anniversary. As I expected, we received a positive pregnancy test, with high
viable numbers on my birthday. An ultrasound was scheduled for June 1st,
approximately 7 weeks along. Okay – so here I am a newly pregnant mom, every
negative pregnancy story is popping up. No real symptoms besides pure
exhaustion. I have a sore shoulder. I’m thinking – prepare for the worst.
The night before the appointment I have another dream. In it this beautiful, strong, healthy girl
appears, she looks right at me, crazy familiarity, and says loudly “Stop
worrying, Mama! I’m staying!”. From behind her comes a second child, smaller,
but still healthy, and this child yells “WE’RE staying!”. I woke up with
goosebumps. The fear, disappeared, but despite how intuitive my dreams often
are, I never once thought “we’re having twins”. Maybe that’s part of the lesson
I’m supposed to be learning now. Trust yourself, Theresa. All the answers are
there just waiting for the right question.
Anyways, I’m the type of person that visualizes the worst
and the best with everything. It’s how I cope. It’s who I am. I put the dream
out of my mind, didn’t even think of it again or mention it to my husband. We nervously
head for our appointment. I’m feeling fine. The Dr gets me all set up for the
scan, starts the procedure AND – “Um, hold on a second, it looks like there’s a
surprise in here…” Zooms out a little,
there on the screen – TWO little ones, TWO hearts beating spectacularly. All I
could do was laugh incredulously. I look at my husband – his eyes bulging out,
deep breathing. We were not expecting this. We were not expecting this – but
what a miracle! We’re in the approximately 2% of 1 embryo transfers that split!
Wow! May the odds be ever in our favour. 😉
The Dr tells us that based on a 40wk pregnancy my estimated
due date is 1/18, BUT twins are usually delivered around week 37. Immediately
the conversation I had with my dad popped into my head. I had called on my
birthday to let them know that I was indeed pregnant with grandlove #13. His
response was “Awesome, Christmas babies!” I hastily corrected him; only ONE embryo
was transferred, and we’ll probably have a new baby in January. But, with delivery induced at 37 weeks it
would be right about Christmas time
(12/28 to be exact).
At my 16-week appointment on 8/2 I had my first extensive
ultrasound. After watching the screen with amazement, the tech asked, “So are
you ready to find out the gender?” GIRLS! Without thinking I immediately
started questioning her. “How long have you been doing this?” (Since the early
90s.) “How sure are you that they are girls?” (She kindly gave me a detailed
tour of my unborn daughter’s spread eagle stance, stating with a wink “If they
were boys there would be something here by now”.) Now at 23 weeks, I have had
the “girls” verified 5 times – I think it’s about time I start to believe we’re having our little bugga boo girls after
3 boys and 14 years.
So many coincidences, so many
dates that mean something, and all unplanned. To sum it up;
estimated due date of our ‘together’ anniversary (1/17), positive test on my
birthday (5/16), Dad’s little calculation mistake (babies AND around Christmas),
and my amazing dream with little girl twins. The very ones I've dreamt about dice my teens. And just to add to the
incredibleness of this all; I have a Christmas ornament, have had for probably
10 years, that I, for some reason, have been unable to part with. It’s an
ornament with 5 kids.
The story of us. So young when we fell in love. So much to
learn. So many growing pains. Our 3 boys all in their teens. The strong desire
to do it again, together. That 2 little souls would find us worthy. What a rise
from the ashes. What a joy. What a reason to be grateful for it all – because I
wouldn’t be here if I hadn’t gone through it all. If I hadn’t allowed myself to
learn those tough lessons and grown with the knowledge that there is always
more to learn. I am blessed with this magnificent opportunity to do this again.
I am in awe. There are no words to describe – I am overwhelmed with joy and
thankfulness. Blessed be. Amen.
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