Baci Abroad Blog

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Writing from the Messy Middle

I slept terribly last night. I, usually, sleep facing the door to our bedroom with Dae-Han behind me. I am one of those sleepers who loves to be touching at least her partner’s feet all night long, maintaining a physical connection that somehow grounds me through the strange dreams I have most nights.

Last night, I was sleeping alone. To be clear, this is not about writing in the messy middle of a fight with my husband. I will get into the messy middle soon enough. For now, I am telling you about how my husband went to Okinawa for a peace march and I had to sleep alone. I tossed and turned, trying to figure out which side of the room to turn my back to. I felt exposed and unsettled. Scared, even, in my safe apartment in this safe country.

“Ufff. That’s vulnerability,” I told my therapist, in my head, where she lives on the days in between our weekly sessions. “I used to sleep alone every night in my single life, and now sleeping alone for a weekend is excruciating.”

As I write from the quiet couch tonight, I wonder how my husband had the gall to leave me by my lonesome self for a whole three days. I find it acceptable to whisk myself off to Hong Kong for birthday weekends to shop and dine, but somehow I find it wholly unfair for DH to go to march for peace if it means I will miss him so much. I suppose there may come a day when I relish a night or two alone. I am not there right now.

Two weeks ago Dae-Han and I were together in Japan. We took a long weekend to visit Osaka and Kyoto. This post isn’t really about that whole trip, but both places were beautiful and we took some great photos and they are worth sharing.

An honorable mention goes to this moment from the Imperial Palace in Kyoto:

In my hands I am holding a $20 ice cream cone. I wanted ice cream. I didn’t actually think the gold was real. It was too late to take back the order.

My husband’s face says it all. But babe, you’ll always be my Sugar Daddy now. #winning

(You can’t digest gold, by the way…)

A shoutout to the owner of Cafe Seberg, a cool little joint down the block from our teahouse abode in Kyoto.

This cool cat is a movie aficionado and he will set you down with a menu and a list of movies to watch.

Additionally, he’ll bring your coffee with a little slip of paper with Kansai (regional) phrases to use around town.

Here are spots in Osaka and Kyoto that come with high endorsements from Dae-Han and me:

Osaka CastleMoegi RestaurantDoki Sushi

Fushimi Inari ShrineKyoto Imperial PalaceArashiyama Bamboo GroveKiyomizu-dera Temple

At Kiyomizu-dera Temple we met the Goddess of Mercy, at least this is who I believe her to be, keeper of the babies that never came to be.

In Japan, there are cultural ways to process and grieve unborn babies. I learned this while reading Jessica Zucker’s memoir, I had a Miscarriage. It was in the days that I would walk my favorite trails with Zucker’s voice coming through Audible that I learned that I was pregnant for a second time.

When a pregnancy stick turned positive the day before my parents were arriving to Korea, I was in disbelief. I guess the first pregnancy wasn’t just a fluke, I thought to myself. Dae-Han and I (and the whole family) were happy. I was also full of angst and worry as this second pregnancy was coming directly on the heals of a miscarriage.

I continued to listen to Zucker’s memoir, still healing from the first miscarriage, working to feel connected to a second pregnancy.

“This is the post-traumatic experience—our past remains ever present. Encumbered by the weight of our traumas, we feel the sting of every terrifying possibility,” spoke Zucker into my ear as I walked past budding cherry blossom trees on a day in early April. I held the weight of trauma, but I also felt hope as flowers were blooming. New life outside and inside of me, I marveled. My pregnancy app told me that the due date for this little bean would be the day before Thanksgiving. So perfect and poetic.

A few days later, I began spotting and spotting turned to a second pregnancy loss.

And two weeks later, Dae-Han and I stood in front of the Goddess of Mercy at a shrine in Kyoto. I was not quite sure what to do. Do I pray? I wondered. I stand in front of her as she held a tiny baby in her arms. We softly gazed at one another. And I just breathed, slowly and steadily. I did not feel a great rush of emotions in this moment. But, I felt grateful for the Goddess of Mercy. And the moment. For the minutes we stood to honor two sweet embryos that came and passed. I was thankful to be with my husband and this deity, standing together in the Messy Middle (a term coined by Glennon Doyle).

There have been times since my second miscarriage where I have felt so strong. One day walking to yoga a thought materialized. You got this, came a message from the Great Beyond. Yes, I thought back. I do. Whatever “this” is, I got it. We got it. Dae-Han and I, we got this.

There have been times since my second miscarriage where I have felt heavy and angry and anxious. I did not anticipate that Mother’s Day this year would be any different from any other. And then it was. I carried anger and grief from that day into the days that followed. I was finally able to start to sort through these emotions openly in a session with our therapist.

(I love therapy. I seem to have become a collector of wonderful therapists. I liken therapeutic spaces to the gym. In therapy you get coaching on how to do emotional push-ups. Dae-Han and I chose to start therapy together not because anything was wrong but because we wanted to keep us — our communication, our shared vision — feeling right. We go to the gym together to stay physically fit and we go to therapy together to be emotionally fit.)

Today? Today is neither particularly light nor dark. It just is.

I have been listening to Anne Lamott’s latest work entitled Somehow: Thoughts on Love. In the Overture, she shares with her readers something her husband says: “Eighty percent of everything that is true and beautiful can be experienced on any 10‑minute walk.” This morning I went on a run and 10 minutes into it, I ran into the truth and beauty of this scene:

I stopped and I appreciated just how glorious life can still be, even when you are inhabiting a Messy Middle. I suppose I am trying to build my capacity right now for, rather than squirming out of a Messy Middle, standing in it with strength. A Messy Middle will be a Messy Middle for as long as it needs to be and we are not privy to knowing that timeline.

It’s a little daunting, having to face again and again how little control we have. As I work towards accepting that truth, I plan to keep taking walks to keep finding more beauty around me. Send me the truth and beauty that you find on your walks.

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Jamie Bacigalupo Jamie Bacigalupo

To have and to hold: a story of loss and love

Dae-Han and I had returned from a doctor appointment on the afternoon of Tuesday, February 13th, when I decided to go for a run to try and process the news the doctor had given us.

I was just steps into the uphill battle that is the path we take in World Cup Park when I began to sob. I was confused and angry. So angry. I was grieving, but it was also a stuck grief. A grief held in “maternal purgatory,” stuck in a broken elevator that might take you up to the maternity ward or, sooner, down to the morgue.

My face twisted, tears pooling, I called Ceci. She answered from her red Ikea chair in Ho Chi Minh City.

“Hey babe,” she said softly. I had already texted her that at my eight-week appointment, the doctor had not found a heartbeat for our little Poppy.

Four weeks prior, I had boarded a plane to spend my birthday in Hong Kong with Ceci and another friend, Allison. On the plane, I wrote in a journal, just for Poppy and me.

Poppy, it’s your very first trip! As a tiny poppy seed inside my belly ♡. We are heading to Hong Kong for my birthday weekend with Auntie Ceci — what a delight that it was this morning just before noon when 아빠 called to confirm “Poppy is here!” We really already knew this but the doctor’s call gave us the 1,000,000% verification.”

On my birthday, little Poppy’s implantation was confirmed, a process that miraculously hadn’t needed any scientific intervention. Now, the day before Valentine’s Day, my heart was cracking in half.

As I held the phone with Ceci on the other end, my words were stolen by more sobs. In an act of grace, sisterhood, and bearing witness, Ceci held her soft gaze on me, her hand on her heart.

For the next two days, Dae-Han and I tried to out-math math, to recalibrate the timeline and come up with a way that I could (as the doctor offered) be too early in the pregnancy to hear a heartbeat. But intuition is a way of knowing far more truthful than numbers for me, and each time I tried to hang on to Hope, she slipped like grains of sand through my fingers. I knew.

The embrace that my womb had been holding Poppy in began to release on February 15th. Cramps, first trimester contractions, were my womb’s way of telling me the time of letting go had begun. Beyond logic and reason, I wanted to feel the physical pain. And it came, for three days.

On the second day, I sat in a circle of dear friends. My friend Jason, our inquiry group facilitator, had finished guiding us through a meditation. The pace of my heart quickened as she began contractions. I was sobbing once again. My friend Caroline was the only one in the room who knew that I had begun to lose Poppy, but soon the room was filled with the sobs of others, these five friends whose hearts could feel my pain without yet an explanation.

To be held in a space like this is spiritual. To so viscerally feel the connection between us is to grieve and heal collectively, is to know the foundation of our purpose on Earth.

If grief is collective, it is also solitary.

To have and to hold

In an alone moment, I slide my hands into the water, searching for you, Poppy. The size of a blueberry or maybe a kidney bean. Blue, the color of my heart as I push around so much red in the water to try and find you. To hold you. All the blood, yours and mine that was now flushed from my body, the blood that had been building a heart for you, a heart that did not beat in my womb but now flutters in the arms of Grandpa Art and Grandpa Red and NieNie.

In so short a time, you taught us so much, our tiny Poppy. How to nurture more, my body, and each other. You taught us how to marvel at a miracle, how to open to Joy, how to communicate with each other about priorities. You reminded us to hold tenderly to Hope. And we hold you and your lessons, Sweet Poppy.

On loss and love

We honored you and our time with you with petals down the Han River. Petals for Poppy. Your 아빠 read these words:

It is our suffering that brings us together. It is not love. Love does not obey the mind, and turns to hate when forced. The bond that binds us is beyond choice. We are brothers [and sisters] in what we share ... We know that there is no help for us but from one another, and that no hand will save us if we do not reach out our hand ... You own nothing. You are free. All you have is what you are, and what you give.
— Ursula K. Le Guin

You have given us the chance to just begin to touch the love of being an 아빠 and a mama. This was the gift of so much Joy, and we know that Joy will expand and increase when you send a little brother or sister to be with us.

As I watched the rose and tulip petals softly drift down the river on this foggy day in Seoul, I felt like plunging into the water to gather them up again, to have them back, to hold them and rewind time. To knock on Universe’s grand door and demand a different destiny for you.

As I felt the pain of letting you go, I reminded myself of the words of Thích Nhất Hạnh, my Poppy. “Peace is every step.”

Your 아빠 and I walked the path together after watching your petals. We held hands and we acknowledged the peace of this soft, foggy day. In your short time with us, you have woven 아빠 and I even closer together.

I love you so much, our sweet, sweet Poppy. Peace is every step.

Love always,

Your mommy

End note: We often say or think that we cannot begin to really feel another’s grief. And, yes, there is truth to this. Any Grief is unique and takes her own shape in how she is held by her owner. And yet, this week, my grief has been held and shared by so many others and this has mattered very much to me. My husband’s, mom’s, dad’s, sisters’, grandma’s, aunties’, friends’ and colleagues’ words have landed softly on my heart, warming it where it hurt so much. Food from friends, a comedy show shared, phone calls, Marco Polo prayers, and just there-ness has mattered, has made a difference.

Sometimes we are afraid to say or do anything when someone is grieving, fearing it will be the wrong thing, but what has mattered most is that people showed up. I am not surprised by this — I know how wonderful my people are. Every word and deed has helped me to know that, in this moment, I am not alone.

My school, as well, allows for up to 5 paid days of leave for miscarriage. This is attuned to what many women may need following a miscarriage. Perhaps there are those of us who want the distraction of work right away, but for me, my body and spirit were not ready. I am advocating that anyone who has the power to make changes — and essentially, don’t we all — look at policy to see how it honors and protects women’s health and wellbeing.

Peace be every step.

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