Thursday, January 31, 2013

The Lord Giveth and He Taketh Away…


I’m not exactly sure how to put Kris’s and my experience of the past few hours into words… but I’m gonna do my best because I feel it is a story that needs to be shared.

About noon Kris and I were busy doing some repairs on the Semesche water system, fully absorbed in our work (in more ways than one, since it was raining on us, of course), when Mark arrived in the car in the Semesche market, traveling at an alerting speed.  My first thought was, “Something has happened to one of the kids,” or, “Someone must have passed back in the States.”   I must admit I was extremely relieved to hear the real reason for the rush and to think, “Oh, it’s just another pregnant woman needing to get to the hospital… we can get her there… no prob.”  Kris and I had carried a pregnant woman to the health center in Carcha back last summer, and everything went smoothly… the woman seemed very calm and composed… and we got her safely to her destination, only to find out that there was no real emergency because the baby had turned on his own.

Today, when we arrived back in Benitzul with Mark, they had not yet returned with the pregnant woman, and we began to question whether it was a hoax and if they were really coming after all.  Then I heard the moaning and saw the stretcher coming down the road followed by a crowd of people.  “Wow, this must be pretty serious,” I thought, as the groans got closer.  I ran to get a blanket and some pillows to help make her as comfortable as possible.  I also remember thinking to myself with a bit of fear and excitement, “Am I gonna see my first live birth?!”  Once she was in, we squeezed in five others, including a health promoter and a midwife.  Kris did his very best to rush and be cautious at the same time, so as not to make the ride too bumpy.  I asked some questions to the one passenger that spoke some Spanish, finding out that the mother’s name was Rosaria, that she was eighteen (actually a pretty old age by Valley standards for her to be having her first), that the baby was turned cross-ways, and that the father was up north working on a farm in the Peten (migrant work: a very common practice of the men around here).   Kris and I tried to count the time between Rosaria’s cries, and found them to be about 3 minutes apart… everything to be okay at least temporarily.

Then the groans got louder and longer.  We kept looking back at the poor girl and trying our best to communicate with the midwife to see if we needed to stop or keep going or do something different altogether.  I think it was about this point that when I looked back, the midwife had the girl’s skirt up to check on her, and I saw the baby’s feet… very small, white feet.  That’s when everyone in the car finally said in either Spanish or Q’eqchi’ (I don’t really remember which), “Hurry Up!”  At that point, Kris put the pedal to the medal, and we were extremely thankful for the newly leveled roads at Semesche and beyond. 
About five or ten minutes later, we could tell that Rosaria’s pain and discomfort had increased significantly, and we were told that we were going to have to pull over to the side of the road.  I called Christian, the director of CAFNIMA who is also a doctor and has attended many births.  I told him what was happening, and he calmly walked us through all of the options of what could happen with a baby being born feet-first and what our responses could be.  We were very thankful that the midwife was there to attend to the actual birth, as we saw legs follow feet, and then the sternum, and then maybe a minute or two later (between Christian telling us different techniques and us trying to communicate them to the midwife) the head made its way out on its own. 

He was so beautiful.  Such a tiny little human being with a full head of dark hair. The time after his birth was a blur as we realized that the midwife and health promoter weren’t really jumping to do anything, so Kris (as led by Christian) tried to spank his bottom, then blow into his little lungs, then massage his heart, then check for a pulse, then try again.  I kept repeating to Christian, trying to keep my emotions at bay, “There’s no response…. There’s no response… He’s still not responding.”

The midwife just kept shaking her head.  And at some point we realized that all our efforts weren’t going to work.  And so we stopped.   And one of the older men with us cradled the sweet, lifeless form in his hands, saying, “Ahh, Dios,” over and over again.

At that point the tears were free to flow.  We gave the mom and all of her supporters some room.   And we went through all of the normal emotions of grief… from sadness to anger to questioning God or ourselves and back to sadness again.  We did our best to communicate our grief to Rosaria and those present with her… and for once I was almost thankful for the language barrier because we didn’t have to look for the most eloquent words…  “We’re sorry… our hearts hurt for you,” was about the extent of what we knew to say to a young girl who had just had her first child taken from her.  And as they were ready, at their request, we headed back to Benitzul… this time without quite the rush, with a deep sadness weighing us down. 
When we returned to Benitzul, many of our neighbors and community leaders that we know so well were all waiting.  They loaded Rosaria back on the stretcher to carry her back home.  We said our last words of sorrow and blessing over the stillborn child.  And we made our way back to the houses, allowing the tears to flow freely once again as we recounted to story to our friends.

As I have reflected on the experience even more so over the past few hours, I have realized that this was no abnormal or shocking experience for the other 6 people traveling with us in our car.  Child mortality rates are high in this part of the world… today those statistics that had been floating around in our support letters really hit home… poor or limited prenatal care is a reality for those we live with here in the Valley and for the majority of the world.  Death is much more real to these people, much more expected, and maybe even more so accepted.

As we were on the road back from Benitzul, I was thinking, “Okay God, what do you have to say about this?” or “So how do I understand or respond to this?”  I believe he placed two different scriptures on my heart that both helped to comfort me and helped me realize that we don’t have to answer all of the questions of, “Why?” and, “What if?”  And so I leave you, whoever might be reading this blog, with these words, as well:

“There is a time for everything… a time to be born and a time to die.”

“The Lords gives and the Lord takes away; Blessed be the name of the Lord!”