It was July 25th, 2015 when I came home to take a
pregnancy test and I learned we would be adding a sweet angel to our family! We
scheduled a doctor appointment to make sure everything was ship shape;
thereafter we would let our family know for sure of our wonderful news! Our
doctor told us our little darling would come January 19, 2016. He told us I was
far enough along that he was about 80% sure it would be a little girl! A little
girl! A tiny human to dress like me, put bows on, put in dance class or cheerleading
and love forever! I couldn’t be happier. We had an ultrasound scheduled at
20 weeks, on Sept 15th, to know the gender for certainty.
After what seemed like eternity, September 15, 2015 finally came! We were so eager to find out the gender and this day couldn’t come fast enough. We were beyond excited! I remember it in detail: It was a Tuesday. I was teaching dance in the morning until noon then I had a gap until about 4:30pm before I had to go back and teach a couple of night classes. Our appointment was scheduled in between my gap so I would have time to drive to the hospital and back and still be on time to my class. My sweet husband, Joseph, met me at the hospital. The ultrasound went like any ultrasound (I’m assuming). The tech listened for a heartbeat, measured the head, the arms, legs, torso. She told us we were indeed having a girl! A GIRL. Sweet music to my ears.
We made silly jokes about baby’s movements. Joseph held my
hand and we smiled at each other. We laughed out of joy and watched very
carefully as the tech kept measuring and writing things down. She kept going
back and forth over my belly, back and forth, back and forth. After a while, I
thought 'these ultrasounds sure take forever…' I had never had one before, so I
wasn’t quite sure what to compare it to. Then, I noticed that our sweet tech
wasn’t talking much. It was almost as if I had to pry information out of her to
see exactly what else she was looking at and what the pictures were. I had so
many questions of what exactly she was looking at, but I wanted to let her do
her job without interrupting her. The mood was kind of quiet. I had been lying
on the bed for a quite a while but didn’t care because I was happy! How amazing was it
to look at my sweet unborn child! I felt so blessed.
She asked me to lift up my shirt one more time. She put the
gel on again and began going back and forth, back and forth. She began talking
to us. She showed us the head, the spine, the arms, the fingers, the upper
body. She moved down to the lower body. Joseph and I were still holding hands
with a smile on our faces. She showed us the legs. She told us there are two
bones in the lower legs, the tibia and fibula. She told us the tibias are
measuring very short and there doesn’t seem to be any fibulas present. She
showed us the right foot then she said that there doesn’t seem to be a left
foot present.
My smile vanished. In that very moment, time had stopped.
You know that part in a movie where time stops and people are talking but you
can’t hear them. Everything around you seems to be going in slow motion. That’s
what this moment felt like. It felt like a dream. I just lay there blinking my
eyes staring at the monitor but not seeing anything.
I don’t understand.
What do you mean she’s missing a foot.
Where is it?
Why are the tibias short? Where are the fibulas? Maybe the
tibias will eventually catch up, but why doesn’t she have a foot. I don’t
understand. I didn’t say much of anything. My eyes became wet and tears were
silently dripping down my face. The tech quietly gave me a tissue. Joseph began
talking to her and asking questions. She told us that she didn’t have any
answers to our questions. She said she was on the phone with my OB/GYN and he
wanted to see us immediately. We tried to arrange our work schedules so we
could see my doctor tomorrow afternoon.
We left the office and walked down to the parking lot and
sat in Joseph’s car, and I completely lost it. I started crying so hard, I
couldn’t talk and I felt like I couldn’t breathe. Joseph told me some
comforting words and I realized how truly lucky and blessed I am to have him
in my life.
How was I supposed to tell my family that we were having
little baby girl with a missing foot? With missing fibulas? With deformed tibias? I had planned to do a super cute gender
reveal but none of that mattered anymore.
Joseph and I talked in the car for a long time. Eventually I
had to get back to reality so I got out of his car and into mine, then I drove
home 20 minutes, crying the whole way.
After coming home, I changed and got my things ready to go
teach my hip hop classes. It was a solid 30 minute drive to my class so I
called my mom, but no answer. I called my sister, but no answer.
They were both working but I had hoped that by some miracle, they would answer.
After teaching both my hip hop classes I drove home and my sister called me
back. She asked how everything went at the doctor and I told her everything and
I started to ugly cry once more and she cried with me.
There was nothing I needed more than to have someone just
cry with me. I didn’t understand why this had to happen in my life. In fact to
this day I’m still not exactly sure. I know my sweet darling will teach me
something very important. The more she grows, the more I will learn from her. I
believe in the power of the Atonement. I believe that everything will
eventually be made fair, right and just. One day Eleanor’s little legs and feet
will be perfect because of something beautiful called the Resurrection. Even though
I probably grieved longer than I should I have, toward the end of my pregnancy,
I felt relief and peace about my sweet daughter. She is the most beautiful baby
I’ve ever seen. She makes me want to be a better person. She makes me want to
work harder, love harder, and give more.
I was blessed with an amazing pregnancy. I had no
complications, and I hardly ever felt sick. I think God blessed me with
physical health so that I could work on my emotional state of mind. We had
countless doctors visits with Maternal Fetal Medicine, OB/GYN, Geneticists, and
our pediatrician. We had so many questions that needed answers. We had several
tests done to see if we could have any of those answers. How was this going to
affect her neurologically? Will it just be physical or should we prepare for
more? Will the rest of my future children have the same physical disabilities?
Can she walk? Will she be in a wheelchair her whole life? Will she need
prosthetics?
Luckily,
we eventually had answers to all those questions.