Showing posts with label Heavenly Birthday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heavenly Birthday. Show all posts

Friday, March 16, 2018

Her 8th Birthday

It was 8 years ago today that I gave birth to my beautiful baby girl. 7 pounds 9 ounces and 21 inches.

I didn't give birth to life, but I did give birth to love. A lifetime of love overwhelmed my heart and oozed out in those few hours that I held the precious form that had held her life.


All the months of pregnancy are spent dreaming and planning, culminating in this magical moment of birth. This past Christmas, I read something I shared in my pregnancy journal on Christmas Day 2009. I wrote about the dreams I had for Lily's life... things like how I wanted her to learn to play an instrument from a young age and to love music. I talked about looking forward to being there to help her open her presents the following Christmas. I was thinking about how when you lose a baby, you lose all the hopes and dreams for their life too... even things like the dream of her playing an instrument or the thought of what these simple moments might be like.

But since I read what I wrote again all these years later, I have been thinking about what a GIFT it was to have been able to dream for my baby. The dreams I held for her life have at times felt like they'd crush me because they will never be fulfilled. But I am so thankful for a change of perspective in the years since. Having had the gift of Lily for the months I had her, having dreamed of and for her, loving her with uninhibited devotion, dreaming for her with unhindered delight and with the belief that she'd be coming home with me.... all of that was a GIFT.

And on this day of her birth, I celebrate all those dreams. I celebrate the months I had her. I celebrate the beauty of her and the joy of what her life brought mine.


Those who have not lost a baby might wonder why we would celebrate the day of birth for a baby who didn't live to see one birthday... not even her actual birth day. On Lily's day of birth each year, I am amazed as I recall the full and purposeful life she did indeed live.

A few years ago my aunt gave me a copy of a National Geographic documentary on development and life in the womb. This week I watched it again and it felt almost as if I was watching a home video of Lily's life unfolding. If you want to be astounded by the glory of God and how He intricately knits together baby's in their mother's wombs and if you want a fresh appreciation for the miracle and sanctity of life, then I recommend watching this documentary.


According to what I learned in the documentary, in the 250+ days of pregnancy, Lily could taste, hear, smell, touch, and learn. She was made up of trillions of cells. She could smile, recognize my voice, and even dream! At the moment of conception, her individual unique set of DNA was created, a human signature that never existed before and will never be repeated. Did you know it takes 20-25,000 genes to make a human?! The genes she inherited already predetermined her looks and much of her character, whether she'd be stubborn, intelligent, a thrill seeker, or good at music. She got hiccups and grew dainty eyelashes and tiny fingernails. She heard the competing sounds of our heartbeats, her constant companions. She heard conversations, loud noises, and music. Her brain began creating memories, with her absorbing my voice and recognizing and responding to it. Newborn baby cries apparently already contain some of the rhythms and patterns of their mother's speech! The music she heard over and over (like the Jewel "Lullaby" CD) could even be remembered by her. Her mouth was full of tastebuds and she could already taste and smell the foods I ate through tasting the amniotic fluid surrounding her.

Is there any way to describe the preciousness? The intricacy. The purpose. The beautiful existence of Lily's life in the womb and the lives of all children.


This is a poem I wrote about Lily's full life:

Her secret world
In mama's womb
Safe and sheltered

Sacred, beautiful, awe
Formed by the Almighty
Hidden from all eyes

Though unseen -
Sounds heard...
Music that brings dance...
Voices familiar...
Mama's heart thumping...
Food tasted...
Dreaming...
Kicking...
Punching...
Yawning...
Hiccups...
Smiling...
Love felt...

Not a breath
Yet an intricate, extravagant
Purposeful life

Days don't equal worth
Nor accomplishment
But the fingerprint of God


The documentary shares how mothers made the eggs that would one day become their babies when they themselves were nestled in the womb! They are kept in storage through childhood, adolescence and into adulthood, ready to one day burst into life. I have heard this before and it leaves me astounded and amazed each time I do, but this time I was overwhelmed with the beauty of the thought that I have literally carried Lily with me in some way or another for my entire life. As I was growing in my mother's womb, my eggs developed, the eggs that would one day become Lily. And then when she was growing in my womb. After that, some of her cells have literally remained in my body and will forever! Now her heart still beats with each beat of my own and her legacy resides somewhere inside of my own, with our stories and purposes so closely woven together. So as you can see, Lily has always been with me and she always will be.


When you lose a baby, you don't just lose an idea of a person or a potential possibility of a future. You lose a very real would-have-been life and future, full of all the many small and large things that comprise a life. You lose knowing what their hobbies and interests would be, the things that would make them laugh, what college they would have attended, who they would have married, who their children would have been... these things just scratch the surface. The person who is lost before birth is the same person at the core of their being who would've been in 5, 10, 20, 50+ years. All that was needed was time, development, nurturing, and love. Of course we as humans are shaped by our experiences too, yet a massive part of who we are is determined and crafted by our Creator before we are even born. The way we will look as we age is already determined, our personalities, the things we will enjoy and prefer... all of these things are wrapped up in the tiny precious package that is a newborn baby. When this precious life is lost, it's not just an idea that is lost, but the package that was ready to be opened, that suddenly never will be. The contents that were already there are somehow lost, leaving the family with an empty feeling of being somehow gipped and deprived. This package was in your lap ready to be finally opened after shaking it and longing to discover it for 9 months in eager anticipation, then suddenly death steals it back. That's a little bit of what losing a baby feels like.


8 years have now passed since Lily was born and with each year grows the fear of her being forgotten. I have been feeling it especially this birthday. I was reminded of an article I read a few months ago on the Revive Our Hearts blog:

"God has cared for us meticulously from before birth. Psalm 139:13 says, "For You formed my inward parts; You knitted me together in my mother's womb." While our mothers slept, God knit together the intricate patterns of our eyes, ears, noses, mouths, and skin..."

While I was reading an article that had nothing to do with baby loss, these words caused tears to well up in my eyes thinking deeply of my sweet baby girl. Pondering how God created her every perfectly formed detail. Remembering that it is He who crafted her life and legacy. While I slept, He knit her together. Those precious little eyelashes and nails growing out were made by His fingerprint. My body was but a vessel used to house His masterpiece. While I was sleeping... unaware and uninvolved. He showed me that I am to rest in knowing her legacy is the same as her very form... crafted by Him, even while I am unaware and uninvolved. It's not up to me to knit together her legacy any more than it was up to me to knit her together within me. I am merely the vessel. My body was what He used to bring forth her body and now my heart and words are the vessel to bring forth her legacy... even while I sleep... even while she sleeps.


In 8 years of missing and loving Lily I have learned that here's a certain kind of exquisite beauty in enduring love. Love that can't see or touch, yet not only remains, but deepens. Deepens despite the separation of time and even death. When others judge and see someone "not moving on," I see a mother's lasting, enduring, abiding, persisting, continuing, permanent devotion and eternal LOVE. She didn't disappear. She isn't erased. She's just there and I'm here. But I love her just the same and anticipate the time I'll see her again. What kind of mother forgets? What kind of mother has a love that grows cold? Remember that next time judgement crosses your heart towards a bereaved mother and ask yourself not to speak the message that life isn't valuable anymore after death. Allow mothers to treasure life even in death, in many ways even more because of death. God speaks so much about dignity through love after death. Absence is felt because value is first recognized.


A friend of mine said something so beautiful to me recently and I wish I could remember exactly how he phrased it, but it stood out to me and brought me much comfort. He said when I get to Heaven, my tears will dry up and Lily and I will no longer be separated. Not only that, but I will no longer even remember the separation! The pain that the remembrance of these years without her would bring will even be forgotten and washed away.

Revelation 21:4 strengthens the Christian's heart in saying, "He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away."



This month I have been a part of a special grief project an art student is doing. One of the questions she asked me is if me/my family holds and perceptions, ideas or imaginations of Lily's personality and what she would've been like.

Lily Katherine is a beautiful mystery. There is so much about her that I wonder... Who would she be? What/who would she look like? What interests would she have? What would her voice sound like? And her laugh? What color would her eyes be? Blue I think. That question haunts me. At times, these things can hurt to think about. If she were here, if I'd delivered her shortly before she was born, before her little heart stopped for no apparent reason, there wouldn't be this giant question-mark on everything her life could have held.

Lily was my little mini-me, strikingly resembling her mommy at birth. At each age she'd be, I am comforted by picturing her looking and acting like I did at that very age. I picture her as the perfect blend of girly-girl and tomboy, seeking adventure and heartily playing outdoors, while also loving to twirl around the living room like a ballet dancer and endlessly playing with her American Girl dolls. I picture her as sweet and gentle as the flower she's named after, while at the same time feisty and courageous. I picture her as hilarious and full of exuberant laughter. I picture her as a lover of babies and cats, and with a soft heart for Jesus, who I'd pray would be her first love always.

My family pictures her this way: "Wild, tough, with a loud voice, a girl who loves to run around barefoot outside and beat up boys, curly hair, hobbit feet (she had big hands and feet like her daddy lol), a button nose, sweet, very compassionate, opinionated, sassy, ambitious, a leader, a southern girl, motherly to her younger siblings and cousins, nurturing."

In many ways, I think we picture Lily in many ways like I was as a girl/still am. After all, she looked so much like me and was the same length and only one ounce less than me at birth! However, she would have also been very different from me... and it's those questions that haunt and hurt. She also would have had many faults, as all humans do, and since she's not here, it's easy to picture her as this perfect and idealized child. In reality, she would have driven us nuts sometimes, but even that is a gift because it indicates life. Even the whiny and bratty sides of kiddos are a treasure when viewed through the right lenses.


Our hearts know each other, reaching across realms, unaltered by the separation of the grave. We are tied together in Christ and nothing separates those found in His love. We may have never locked eyes, never had a conversation back and forth, but our mother-daughter connection is so much more than that. How could it not be? Her bones and flesh grew inside the form that is my bones and flesh. I felt her life. With each gentle or not-so-gentle movement inside of me, with each sound of her heartbeat of dance on the ultrasound machine, it was as if she was telling me all the words she'd never get to say.

I cherish you, my sweet daughter of Heaven... I cherish all you were to me while your heart beat here and all you are to me still.


Here is Lily's song

Thank you to everyone who still cares to read and hear about my baby...

Here are the blog posts I've written over the years, both on Lily's birthdays, as well as the posts about how we've celebrated her birthdays:

Thursday, March 16, 2017

Her 7th Birthday ~ Her Story Isn't Over

Another March 16th. Another would-be year older. Another year of Lily remaining my forever baby. Another year of cherishing her life and mothering her legacy.

It's been 7 years of her name being written in the sand, the snow, and just about any way you could imagine. 7 years of Lily leaving her mark on thousands of hearts. Each birthday makes me smile with the knowledge that more people know her name and story than did last March 16th. ðŸ’•




With this time of year, there is a unique sadness that creeps its way into the depths of my being... but with that said, there is also a unique strength. There is a tangible realness to the grace of God that is mine for the grasping hold of. The sorrow of March is written all over my heart, something I've grown rather accustomed to experiencing each year at this time, now expecting it. But Jesus is ever-faithful, ever-present, ever-upholding me, ever reminding me of His love for both me and my girl.

My Lily Katherine is a beautiful mystery. There is so much about her that I wonder... Who would she be? What/who would she look like? What interests would she have? What would her voice sound like? And her laugh? What color would her eyes be? Blue I think. At times, these things can hurt to think about. If she were here, if I'd delivered her shortly before she was born, before her little heart stopped for no apparent reason, there wouldn't be this giant question-mark on everything her life might have held.

Lily was my little mini-me, strikingly resembling her mommy at birth. At each age she'd be, I am comforted by picturing her looking and acting like I did at that very age. I picture her as the perfect blend of girly-girl and tomboy, seeking adventure and heartily playing outdoors, while also loving to twirl around the living room like a ballet dancer and endlessly playing with her American Girl dolls. I picture her as sweet and gentle as the flower she's named after, while at the same time feisty and courageous. I picture her as hilarious and full of exuberant laughter. I picture her as a lover of babies and cats, and with a soft heart for Jesus, who I'd pray would be her first love always.

I picture this abundant life here on Earth and I ache because when you lose your child, you lose a lifetime of maybes. I think of all my own life held up until age 7 and it highlights all that I'm missing with my own little girl. One life holds so much and I won't know any of what Lily's would have held beyond the womb.

The thing is, though, deep in my heart, I know that she was never meant to be a little girl of this world. She was always meant to be my daughter of Heaven. The Lord numbered her days (Psalm 139:16) and chose for each of those days to be lived within her mommy's womb.

Instead of thinking too much about who she could have been on Earth, I imagine who she is in Heaven! Because she is alive and I am so excited I will get to know her there. The Lord has been so good to give me glimpses into her life there, through dreams I've had as well as friends have had.

I want to share part of what my friend Kate wrote about a dream she had a few years back: "It was short, and was one of those dreams that truly feel like a dream because it was so peaceful and beautiful. You and I were just sitting in chairs next to each other in a living room somewhere. And Lily was there. I don't remember you or I saying a word to each other, we just smiled and laughed and watched Lily. She wasn't a baby, she actually looked like the just barely two-year-old that she should be. All I remember is that she had really sweet wispy blonde hair, and gorgeous blue eyes. And I knew she was Lily; she truly did look just like a little mini you. It seemed so completely natural that she was there with you, as she would run playfully around the room, and then straight back to you again. That was pretty much all, except that right before I woke up, she looked up at me and smiled, and from that moment I knew that I was supposed to remember this dream and share it with you. It made something I had remembered reading on your blog very real - that while she only got to be a little Lily-bud here, she is most definitely blooming with life in Jesus. That even when little heats seem to stop on Earth, they never miss a beat in the Heavenly realm. What I feel most strongly when I think of it is that - Lily is alive. Vibrantly alive. And that you are mother to an adorable, blonde-haired, blue-eyed, Lily, and you always will be. Even though you're missing her now, Eternity awaits."

I cannot describe how much hope and anticipation these beautiful words give me for the future to come with my blue-eyed girl.

That is my future, but I still have a life to live presently on this Earth. Each breath God gives me is one full of purpose and meaning. It's not by chance.

After 7 years, I know my story isn't over yet, and Lily's isn't either. Her heart beats with every beat of mine and her story is lived through me.

It seems God reserves special blessings for March, blessings that remind me that Lily's story isn't over, that she is still remembered and loved by others, that she will never not matter anymore. These little blessings come in the form of a gift, or a text, or some flowers, or emails such as this one, from people who have followed my blog for years and I had no idea (this lady works at the hospital where Lily was born, though I've not met her yet):

"I wanted to write you at this sacred time for you to let you know that Lily's legacy extends to people you don't even know. Lily reminds me that life is fleeting and precious, and the moments when my youngest doesn't let me cook dinner without screaming, or my blossoming preteen huffs and rolls her eyes at me, are moments to cherish. Just last Summer my husband ran over the lilies we have in the yard and I panicked because I thought of Lily when I looked at them, 'til I remembered lilies come back. And I thought how symbolic. :) and I also wanted to tell you for every person that may tell you you should be over your sadness, there are many more who understand that grief doesn't work that way, and we want to hear you talk about your baby. And I know your sharing helps many people who walk the same path you have. I pray for your strength in the next few days, that you find strength in God, your family, and the legacy that is your daughter."
Or messages like this one:
"I am so sorry you have had to face so much heartbreak. I hate that you aren't planning a beautiful 7th birthday party. But I also want to thank you for the way you carry yourself with such eloquence and grace. The way you write about Lily is breathtaking; I often find myself writing out a sentence of two from your statuses so that I can remember them. The hope you provide to other grieving mothers is such a legacy for Lily. I have felt so, so blessed by your support and friendship. Lily is blessed with one special mother."

I share these things to say wow, look how God is still using the life of a little girl who never spoke a word or took a breath. Look how God can use a yielded life, even when we wonder.

My friend Karen wrote me recently and said: "You and Lily are making an impact. You are a "wounded healer" helping those who are experiencing similar wounds." I thought that was so beautiful. Sometimes we think our wounds will keep us from being able to minister to others when many times it is because of and through our own wounds that we can most effectively empathize with and serve others.

Just because I'm wounded doesn't mean I can't dance. I might dance with a limp, but that limp makes me more thankful that I can still stand. It makes the dance that much more beautiful, even if it doesn't always look graceful.

When I was at a local infant loss support group a couple months ago, a lady was saying how much it lifted her spirits that I wrote her son's names in the snow and it was such a blessing knowing how much this simple act of kindness meant to her. And then my friend Bonnie was saying something too and then said, "this is Lily's gift to all of us, through you." And that made me cry and I realized this time is a gift and I am able to serve others in a unique way with my time as a single woman. This is my time "with" Lily, for Lily.

As I was awake late a couple night ago, I was thinking how unbelievable it is that 7 years have passed now since Lily's birth and going to Heaven. To a lot of people, that should be plenty enough time to stop talking about her/missing her/thinking about her. But part of the beauty in Lily's legacy and my love for her is that it has endured for 7 years. All these years it has strengthened with time. There is beauty in the endurance of a forever love, a love that equates to a forever missing. The beauty is in the testimony to how radically this cold and hardened hard was softened and molded in such a way as to cherish the life of a sweet and delicate flower so immensely. A life that might have ended before blooming fully in the womb, but God kept that from happening. And He has used these 7 years of enduring love to teach me more things than I could ever count... more things than I could finish blogging about in 7 years time.

After 7 years, I still miss Lily like I did the day I lost her. After 7 years, there is the temptation to grow bitter. I refuse to allow the pain to get infected and to fester. I am reminded of an interview that musician Kari Jobe did last year sometime, in which she spoke a few times about her sister and her baby niece who was stillborn like Lily. And she said something so beautiful that has been on my heart ever since... she said, "I refuse to allow the enemy to steal my worship." Because that is just what he wants to do. But as Kari went on to say, we have to want Jesus more than we want answers. We have to trust His goodness above our lack of answers and understanding.

Kari has a beautiful album called "The Garden" that recently came out and many of the songs flowed out of the loss of her darling niece. One in particular reminded me of that interview and it is what I will be singing over and over again on this March 16th...



"I Will Sing"
by Kari Jobe


I need to see You here
I need to know You're in control
Though my heart is torn wide open

I will trust, I will remember

I need to hear Your voice
Speaking to silence all my doubts
Your word won't return empty
You will break through every darkness

Even when my breath is weak
I will sing, I will sing
Even in my suffering
I will sing, I will sing

I need to feel Your hope
Rising above my greatest fears
Even death has been defeated
I will trust, I will remember

Even when the shadows fall
I will sing, I will sing
Even when the night is long
I will sing, I will sing

Hallelujah
I surrender all to You
Hallelujah
You are God, You won't be shaken
Hallelujah
I surrender all to You
Hallelujah
You are God, You won't be shaken

I need to see You here
I need to know You're in control
Though my heart is torn wide open
I will trust, I will remember












Here is Lily's song.

And here is Lily's tribute video.


Thank you to everyone who still cares to read and hear about my baby...

Here are the blog posts I've written over the years, both on Lily's birthdays, as well as the posts about how we've celebrated her birthdays:

Photobucket

Friday, March 20, 2015

Lily's 5th Birthday Celebration!

Lily Katherine's birthday was absolutely precious! It is amazing to see how the Lord perfectly planned out every small detail to make it memorable and special for my family and I as we love and miss the little girl who would've been turning 5. *If you are reading this through email you will want to click HERE to view the post so you can see all the videos.*

This birthday was fulfilling for me in that I was able to do many things for Lily that I have wanted to do for literally nearly 5 years. There has been so much preparation over a long span of time. FYI, this is a very long post with lots of pictures. :)

Here is sweet Lily girl's special spot decorated for her birthday! I sent the items to my grandmother "Bumma" and she and my Aunt Ellie got everything ready and decorated for me to my specifications lol. I live 4 hours away from my hometown in Virginia where Lily is buried and it's hard not to be able to do it myself, but I'm thankful others are willing to help me. I am not this way about anything else in my life, but when it comes to Lily, I like things "just so." My grandmother knows and understands this, as she has lost a baby daughter herself, but we were joking about my "bossy instructions" haha.

Thanks to my friend Elise who took these lovely photos for me on the evening of Lily's day. Isn't the sunlight gorgeous? It's a balloon with a 5, a "you're so special" balloon, and a "birthday girl" balloon, all with colors and symbols that remind me of Lily. I also sent a little cupcake that looks real, a garden flag with butterflies and flowers, and I ordered a fresh bouquet of pink roses, white lilies, and baby's breath (some of them are still blooming). Someone else left the orange/pink lilies (I'm pretty sure I know who).



The weather on Lily's birthday was absolutely gorgeous! It was perfect, in my opinion - sunny with some clouds and in the mid 70s. I am thankful the Lord blessed us with lovely weather. It was also nice weather in Crozet where her stone is. Her day was on a Monday this year, so it felt like the 14th and 15th was her birthday weekend, since the 14th was her due date. :)

I actually wasn't too disappointed this year not being able to be at Lily's special spot because I was there last year and because I had things I wanted to do in Raleigh (where I live and where Lily was born) this year. Hopefully we can be at her spot again next year on her 6th birthday.

On Lily's day, we woke up and had coffee and breakfast and got her beautiful butterfly balloon blown up. Have you ever seen such an awesome balloon? I've been wanting to find one like it for a long time and finally did. The guy who blew it up and put the string on it acted as if it was his masterpiece to choose the prettiest string. :)


We (my mom Ginny, sister-in-law Kala, and I) completed the finishing touches for Lily's day and then left for the Rex Birth Center (we were scheduled to arrive at 11 a.m.), where Lily was born. After many years of wanting to go back there for multiple reasons, it finally happened. We were delivering our five comfort boxes (for Lily's 5th birthday), we made red-velvet cupcakes for the labor and delivery nurses, and I took gifts for the two wonderful nurses I had when I delivered Lily.

Here I am right outside the Birth Center with the boxes, cupcakes, and gifts. And I am wearing my shirt that I got specifically for Lily's day, with the brand name Lili Rose. Read more about that special story by clicking HERE.


My mom and I were nervous about how it was going to feel being back at the place where I had all my appointments and where Lily was born. It's a Birth Center that is connected to a hospital and has a medical plaza right next door, which is where I had my prenatal care. It was a strange feeling being back there, especially on the same date Lily was born.


This is the building where I had my prenatal care.


My sister-in-law and I making the red-velvet cupcakes for the nurses the night before. Red-velvet because of my Valentine's-themed baby shower and how we now have red-velvet cake each year on Lily's birthday.


The nurses said the cupcakes were delicious, which makes me happy they enjoyed. :)


So much thought went into every aspect of Lily's day... I chose colorful cupcake wrappers, found this box for the cupcakes, among other small details.


The comfort boxes that are to be given to other families walking through the loss of a precious baby. I will be sharing much more about these soon in another blog post. But I have been thinking about what to include and gathering a few items at a time over almost 5 years!


When we arrived at the Birth Center, we met the lovely nurse, Sandra, that I have been communicating with about the boxes and she took us up to a conference room where other nurses were waiting.


We passed by the waiting room where my family sat waiting for Lily to be born on March 16, 2010.


One of the most special parts of Lily's birthday was having a reunion with one of the nurses who cared for me on the day my baby girl was born. As soon as I saw Lanie, I couldn't keep from bursting into tears, seeing her familiar face and knowing she is one of the few people in this world who actually got to see and hold my beautiful girl. Lily is not just a story or a picture, but real to her, if that makes sense. She was there on the day that should have been one of the most beautiful in my life, but ended up also being one of the most painful.

For almost 5 years, I have wanted to see again the two nurses, Lanie and Shannon, that I had and thank them for their care. I guess I just wasn't emotionally prepared yet, wanted to wait until I took the boxes, and honestly had no idea how to go about it. I am thankful that after so many years, Lanie still works there, and even though Shannon no longer works there, I was able to send a gift along to be given to her as well (she wanted to make it on Lily's birthday, but unfortunately could not).

Seeing Lanie again brought me much healing and closure. In my mind, it's almost like she was stuck back in that hospital room on the day of Lily's birth. So I cannot even fully understand or describe what seeing her again did for me, but I know it was needed. It was like a release for me. She also said it was good for her to see me now and to see I'm doing "okay." They sometimes will hear from the families that they cared for who lost babies, but not all the time, and they like to know how they are. 

I honestly had no idea if Lanie and Shannon would even remember me, but it was so sweet to hear the nurses say that they never forget the families who have lost babies. And not only that, but I found out Lanie has been reading my blog some over the past couple years! That was so cool to hear! What happened was I met another nurse who works at Rex at a Remembrance Ceremony for Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness Month in October 2012, and she apparently passed on my blog information to some of the other nurses.

Here are Lanie and I hugging... after 5 long years.


The nurses were so sweet, asking about my necklace with Lily's handprint. I was also able to share with them her foot and handprint. Lanie was actually the person who took her lovely prints for me, my most treasured keepsake.


I didn't fully know what to expect at the hospital that day, but it was amazing! I was able to share my comfort boxes with several of the nurses. I explained each item and why I chose that item. I shared my experience, my suggestions, and answered their questions. They were so attentive and listened to what I had to say. They shared their own ideas for providing better care to the patients at the Birth Center experiencing loss. I enjoyed being able to have a conversation with them about it all. They asked me about Lily's birth story and it meant a lot to me because I always love talking about her. My mom and I might also be getting more involved with the bereavement aspect of things there, so that is so exciting! 



Here are my mom and I with our boxes given for our Lily girl with the lovely nurses. It is incredible to me to see how much they truly care! It takes a special person to have the heart of a nurse.


After presenting the boxes, I was able to give Lanie the gift I've wanted to give for a long time.


Lanie is such a dear woman (as are all the nurses we met)! I could tell she was truly touched by my gift and card.


I love Willow Trees, so I selected one for my nurses with a woman holding a little lamb. Lambs are special to me because they symbolize innocence and purity and that is what Lily Katherine's first and middle name means. Her stone has a lamb on top.


With the Willow Tree, I gave them a card that I have had waiting to give them since 2012. Someone designed this card specifically for me when I requested it.


On the inside of the cards, I wrote:

"Five years ago on March 16, 2010, you were there when I said both "hello" and "goodbye" to my beautiful daughter, Lily Katherine. I will always remember your compassionate care and the dignity you showed my baby girl. Thank you for caring for the little lambs, both those who stay on Earth and those who go before us to Heaven. With Love, Hannah Rose Allen" and then I shared my blog address. This explains why I chose the Willow Tree I did.

This picture makes me smile.


After we finished up in the conference room, Lanie and Sandra offered to show us the courtyard area where they will be making a new beautiful and peaceful garden for families to go to when they hear bad news. The view of the courtyard is actually right across from the room where I had Lily.


The view of the soon-to-be new garden behind us.


Speaking of the room where I had Lily, I have wanted to go back to that room for years. It's like I knew I needed to face the fear of being there again. I asked if there was any way I could see it, and they checked to see if anyone was in there. Apparently, they asked at the perfect time, in between one patient being in there and another who was about to be in there.

Here's the visitor pass from the day Lily was born, which is now in her scrapbook.


As we were walking through the L&D floor, I asked, "it's over there, isn't it?" And the nurse Sandra said it was. I remembered. Room 235. The sacred room where Heaven met Earth and my baby girl was peacefully and silently born into this world. I burst into tears when I went in there, at the familiarity of it, yet knowing how much has changed in the last 5 years. This room will forever hold a piece of my heart, when I heard those words that would mark the rest of my life, "I'm so sorry... her heart is no longer beating." This room is where I cried from the depths of my soul and labored for hours. It's where her body left mine and where I saw her face for the first time, after months of longing and anticipating. It's where we took her foot and handprints, dressed her, and kissed her. Oh room 235, you have haunted me for 5 years and now I have faced you again and realized you aren't as scary as I had feared. You are sacred. You are beautiful. Other happy mothers go through that room with joyous deliveries like I had expected. You will always be where Lily Katherine Allen-Ball, my daughter of Heaven, who was called to a Heavenly purpose, was born.




I remember watching this clock tick by, hour after hour, as I awaited her arrival.


Some of the furniture in the room is different now after all these years.


Lanie, my mom, Kala and I all outside room 235, holding Lily's prints, outside the very room where those prints were taken. We were all there that day. We all share those memories.


As we were leaving the hospital, the nurses pointed out this special tree that they light up in October for Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness month, in memory of all the babies in Heaven. Isn't that so sweet? I will have to go see it this October. 


"There is no foot too small that it cannot leave an imprint on this world."


We said goodbye to the nurses, though I hope to see them again sometime soon, and headed over to Cracker Barrel for lunch. It is my favorite restaurant and a tradition to eat there each year on Lily's birthday. :)


After lunch, I had a 2:30 p.m. appointment at....


Yes, you saw that right. A tattoo parlor! I got my first and only tattoo, a memorial tattoo in honor of both Lily and Luke. I have wanted to do this for nearly 5 years! I will be sharing more soon about my tattoo in another blog post. I loved writing Lily's birthday as the date. :)


Here I am nervously waiting haha.


Kala was in charge of taking photos and got this one of the pin the tattoo artist was wearing that says, "tattoo time" lol.


Here is my tattoo artist, Nate, making suggestions to me and giving me his opinion on where exactly my tattoo should go. He prepared a stencil to go on before the permanent tattoo.


This must have been right when he started (look at my nervous face ha). I was scared about how it was going to feel and was really worked up. Thankfully, my artist was patient and kind but did tell me I needed to calm down lol.


Holding my mom's hand during my tattoo because you're never too old to want your mom.


After I realized the pain wasn't as bad as I had feared, I actually enjoyed the experience. Don't get me wrong, it did hurt, but he took breaks and it was over within 10-15 minutes. The experience was emotional for me, thinking about permanently making Lily (and Luke) a part of me. I said to him while he was doing my tattoo, "this hurts, but it's nothing like the pain of living without her for 5 years." He was a really kind and sensitive person and said he couldn't imagine and that he has friends who have lost children. It was special to be able to share about who Lily is and what the date means to me.

As you can tell by my face in this picture, I wasn't so scared anymore. He told me I did a great job staying still and calm. I was even talking during it, but squeezing my mom's hand.


I noticed right away that his hat said "Memorial Tattoo." I thought that was cool since that's what I was getting. He also started tattooing just a couple months before Lily was born.


Almost ready!


Seeing my new ink for the first time!

Thanks for my tattoo, Nate! I've been joking with some friends how funny I look in my pink lacy shirt getting my elegant Lily tattoo by this big, burly tattoo man. I am going to give him a thank you note and take the opportunity to share my blog with him... wonder how often that happens? lol


I got my beautiful baby girl's name permanently written on my wrist, as a reflection of the forever mark she's made on my life. The heart as the dot on the "i" is in honor of the first child of my heart, Luke Shiloh. Lily and Luke's stories are so intertwined, so it's only appropriate they are honored together in the same tattoo. I went from not wanting anyone to know about them to now wanting the world to know they are my children and I am their mother. Lily's name was one of the only things I could ever give her, one of the only things that's hers. It speaks of her existence and value. Whenever I glance down, I am reminded of my love for her and the work God has done in me and so many others through her life. Her name is right above my pulse, which reminds me of something my best friend once said to me, "Her heart beats with every beat of your own." Yes. In a letter to Lily that I wrote and read to her at her Celebration of Life Service, I said, "Sometimes it feels like people are already forgetting you, but I won't forget. So don't feel like you're missing out on all the fun, because wherever I go, there you'll be too." This is just another way for me to keep that promise to her. I'll live my life for the both of us. I have thought long and hard about this and decided that her 5th birthday would be a special milestone day to get it. I wanted my tattoo to be tasteful, simple, and elegant. It's a "conversation starter" and I look forward to people asking me about it and being able to share her legacy and the love and hope of Jesus Christ. I am SO pleased with how it turned out and had quite a pleasant experience at the tattoo parlor. The tattoo is actually in my own handwriting, which makes it even more special! Hopefully, if I have more children in the future, they will be raised on Earth and will always be with me, but this is a way for me to have my first two precious babies forever with me! Side note: I am wearing the sparkly pink nail polish that my friend Tracey gave to me called "I Lily Love You."


After we finished at the tattoo parlor, we went to Whole Foods to get coffee. I saw these roses and lilies in a bouquet there and had to take a picture.


We took our coffee over to the WRAL Azalea Gardens, one of my favorite places in Raleigh. 



We were there at 4:24 p.m., Lily's birth minute. I started crying thinking about how 5 years ago at that very moment, Lily was in my arms.


At around 4:30, we left to pick up Lily's birthday cake at 5! The place was in a really neat building that reminds me of Williamsburg, Virginia.


Here is Lily's 5th birthday cake! It is red-velvet of course, a tradition each year on her birthday, first started because of my Valentine's-themed baby shower. My friend Sarah recommended this lady who makes cakes in my area and when I wrote her to tell her what I had in mind and what the cake was for, she was so touched by Lily's story that she offered to make the cake for a greatly reduced price. What a blessing! There are 5 butterflies for 5 years of her life with Jesus (butterflies are edible). Pink for my baby girl and white for purity and innocence. My pure butterfly who flew away to Heaven and Eternal LIFE. It's hard to know what to write on the birthday cake of a child whose in Heaven, but I thought this would be perfect. Her life and her birthday still deserve to be celebrated! The cake was so moist and delicious! 



I waited to have cake with my sister, brothers, and dad too. Here is my family singing "happy birthday" to Lily before eating her cake. It was very sweet... Though, after we sang and the room grew silent with only the flicker of the number 5 candle, it was then my heart ached for the little girl who will never be that age who should have been there to blow out her own birthday candle. 




God painted the most beautiful of sunsets for us on Lily's birthday!


March 16 was free cone day at Dairy Queen. I said it felt like the entire country (and other countries too) was celebrating Lily with us. My brothers, sister-in-law, mom and I went to get our free cones in Lily's honor. I got swirl. :) A lot of other people have told me they had a cone for Lily on her day.


My good friend Amanda and her daughter Gracelyn also went to Dairy Queen on Lily's birthday/free cone day and had ice cream in her honor. This little video is Gracelyn singing "happy birthday" to Lily. Makes my heart melt to know Lily was honored and remembered on her special day by so many people. It brought tears to my eyes to see her little girl wish mine a happy birthday. Could Gracelyn be any cuter?

Amanda wrote: "For you and sweet Lily! Celebrating a very special birthday today! Happy 5th Heavenly Birthday Lily! Love Gracelyn and Amanda... We had a lot of fun celebrating Lily's birthday. Lily is definitely remembered and thought of by so many. One special little girl!"



This is my cousin Daniel's son Owen wishing Lily a happy 5th birthday in Heaven. Daniel is 4 months younger than me and Lily was born 3 months after Owen. Boy and girl cousins almost the same age apart! Oh how we dreamed they'd grow up close buddies like Daniel and I were. Each year on Lily's birthday, Owen takes a photo like this. It is bittersweet to see him growing up through the years and to know Lily would be the same age, but she'll never grow up. I am thankful for these photos on her birthdays - such a bittersweet way to have Owen and Lily in photos "together." Owen's mom is so kind to remember to do this for me and Lily Kat.

Rachel wrote, "Thinking of a sweet baby girl celebrating her 5th birthday in Heaven! We think of you and Lily often, especially today! ((Hugs))"


My sweet friend Chloé in New Zealand (she drew Lily's gorgeous memorial portraits) surprised me with a beautiful video of people around the world wishing Lily Katherine a happy birthday. I was so touched that she would be so thoughtful and definitely cried watching the video. 

She wrote, "For me, one of my biggest fears is that I'll be the only one who remembers that Hope and Poppy ever existed. With Lily's 5th birthday, I wanted to try and do something for your mama's heart to ease that fear and let you know that even though no one knew her like you, or could ever love her like her mama, she is being remembered and thought about all across the world. She's not forgotten."

One of my biggest fears also is that Lily will be forgotten and the more time passes, the more I feel that way. I am thankful for friends who assure me she won't be. Friends like this help take a little of the bitter our of the bittersweet of Lily's birthday.

Chloé's video description: "It is my friend Hannah's baby girl's 5th birthday this March 16th, and 5 years since she was welcomed into the arms of Jesus. This year I put out a request to people I know to take a photo wherever they are in the world to celebrate Lily Katherine's life and legacy so her mama could see how far her little girl's life has reached."


My brother and sister-in-law were so thoughtful in giving a contribution to an organization close to my my heart called He Knows Your Name in honor of Lily on her birthday. Loved how they did that! Her life is impacting people in so many different ways.

"He Knows Your Name Ministry exists to honor every child with a name in life and dignity and honor in death." Check them out on Facebook or their website!

Oh, and also, Joseph and Kala treated my family to Papa John's Pizza for dinner on Lily's birthday, like they did last year. I used to enjoy that pizza once a week before my classes at the LifeCare Pregnancy Center, so it reminds me of Lily. :)


The letters, cards, stickers, etc. I received from friends and family. Kala and Joseph gave me the most perfect card ever. On the outside, it says, "Fallen flowers are flowers still." And Kala wrote something beautiful on the inside: "I thought this card was made for Lily when I saw it. Though she may be fallen here on Earth, she is alive and clothed with her dwelling from Heaven. Ever our flower, ever His bloom. Love, Auntie Kala." I love how she called herself that! She always takes the time to pick out the best cards and write the most touching things!


My sweet friend Bonnie sent me this lovely bookmark for Lily's birthday, along with an encouraging letter (like she sends every month). It matches the folder she sent me for my speaking notes. She knows I love the color purple and butterflies. "I believe" that Lily girl's life has purpose. "I believe" He's working all this out for our good and His glory.


Lily's birthday celebration began on Thursday evening, March 12, when we had our annual party with our good friend and neighbor and her two kids. Her daughter, who is turning 12, shares a birthday with Lily and was born at the same hospital. We've become good friends with them over the last few years and I'm thankful they want to celebrate Lily's life as well. My sister-in-law and I made red-velvet cupcakes for the celebration and as we do each year, we gave "A" a gift in honor of our girl. She loved it. Each year, as she grows older, she likes different things and it makes me wonder what Lily would like as she'd grow up. When "A" says her birthday is March 16, it makes my heart sink a little to know I'll never hear those words come from the lips of my daughter. I took Lily's prints to have her a part of the evening.


My friend Lisa shared this lovely photo with me and wrote: "Celebrating the life of sweet Lily. Happy birthday!! Thinking of you today Hannah."


My friend Naomi shared this photo and Facebook and wrote: "Thinking of you today and remembering your precious daughter, Lily"


My dear friend Hannah shared this video with me for Lily's birthday.


Thank you to everyone who thought of Lily and I on her special day. Every card, letter, gift, call, text, email, comment, etc. was much appreciated!

Read the birthday blog post I wrote this year: Her 5th Birthday ~ My Heart Will Choose

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