Monday, January 17, 2011

A missed opportunity... or a chance to save a life..?

This is your only warning. This story is about as hard to read as my last post in my blog, it's not a good story in the slightest. It is nowhere near as hard to tell as the story of Chris but its hard to imagine things turning out the way they did if you weren't there to witness it.

I apologize for all of the sadness that has past and is to come in this blog, there are some stories I've been carrying around for years that need to be told. The stories are hard to write but they get that bit of a weight off my chest as well.


The wife (to keep some anonymity referred to as “the wife”) and I have been happily married for 5 years now as you know and up until she became pregnant we were missing something. The little thunder of a child scampering through the house. It was to the point where the wife wasn't as happy for her pregnant friends as she once was, she'd never admit to it but she was starting to get disappointed that she was left behind all of her friends as they started their families.

Lets set the scene: In September of 2009 we were driving back from a visit to Cape Breton when my wife received a phone call. From a friend and she gets really excited. All I hear from my seat is "Yes. Yes. Yes. Say Yes." And begins texting like a maniac on her phone. A couple of minutes pass without much clarification from her when I ask what the deal was.

"Do you remember the girl I worked with, her name was A (referred to from this point forward as “baby mama” [BM]), she was really loud, obnoxious and I had her fired not that long ago? Well, apparently she's now pregnant from a one night fling and is looking to put up the baby for adoption but wants to give it to a family she can meet and not loose the baby in the system doing it through the government."

Thinking about it for a few minutes I think, being the rational one in our marriage, that we should meet up with her so I can get to know her before actually agreeing to this whole thing. Since we don't know what her family is like or what her medical history is like either. the wife agreed to this, all the while texting BM telling her that we're adopting the baby. (I found this out later, the wife knew we were saying 'Yes', she just had to make me realize that it was my idea.)

As time went on, we got to know her and everything that she has done for the past while. She was the type of person who liked to talk. A lot. It was hard getting her to shut up most of the time now that I think about it. Before she had gotten pregnant she was living with a few friends in an apartment that was too small, drinking most nights after work and generally having a reckless disregard for her well being.

We were there when she lost her job at subway, again. We were with her as she moved out of her apartment, she was 4 months pregnant sleeping on the couch because that was where her bedroom was. And as she was having issues with her parents, where she moved back. Her family was understanding of her desire to put the child up for adoption as she is from a broken home and did not want to be a single mom with no job and no place to live.

We started to bring her to our family doctor for her prenatal visits since she didn't have one. All of the visits to the doctors were usually entertaining since she didn't have an inside voice. I stopped going in after the day she blurted out in the waiting room, "Holy fuck my tits hurt today." With a room full of kids present. I would begin to wait in the car to have a nap as I never really felt connected to the baby, after all, she could have changed her mind at any time.

On the first trip to our doctor, was the first real opportunity that I had to meet DM and get to know her. On the trip there she told me how excited she was make us parents and that this baby was ours and there was nothing that we could do to change it. As soon as she was out of the hospital after giving birth, she was going to the bar to do a couple of shots then enrolling in school to do bartending and photography. That's all she talked about for weeks after. The baby was ours.

Things with BM started to get strained around late November. She would call 5 or 6 times a day to talk to the wife because she couldn't stand to be around her mom and her relationship with her seemed to be getting worse by the day. Her mom, by this point, had started letting her share a bed with her, since she was relegated to the couch again. They had a 3 bedroom house: mom had a room, dad had a room and so did her brother. Her brother owned his own house in Hanwell, but she couldn't sleep in his room.

With all that in mind we began the process of adoption, went to meet with a lawyer and put down our $1000 deposit for their services in completing the adoption when the baby was born. Our lawyer seemed awesome, was really enthusiastic about it as they do not get a chance to do many private adoptions. The only problem: he would not be our lawyer, in 3 weeks he was going on paternal leave for 6 months to be with his own child. Looking back now, I could begin to see the signs.

Once we finished with the lawyer we began to finalize the name for our baby. Since we knew it was going to be a girl, we decided her name was going to be Zoe.

The first of December she started calling at the strangest times. I received a telephone call from her at 5am because she couldn't sleep. Not realizing that other people would be sleeping. It took me 45 minutes to interrupt her enough for me to say anything to get her off the phone.

It was shortly after this that the wife and I began to find ways of not talking with her as often. We were slowly becoming the replacements for her current family and we didn't want her to be our 2nd child. Sadly, the only way we could cut communications was to stop answering the phone when she called. Not the best solution in the world, but it was the only way for our marriage to survive.

We began to talk to our doctor about these things, when we mentioned the 5am phone call the look of terror on her face worried me. She began to explain the problems we were going to have separating BM from our lives after we had the baby. She was concerned that she would become obsessed with us and we would never be able to have a life without her.

We talked to BM about what was going to happen after the baby, about visitation, visits, family, names, etc. She seemed to be accepting of it and started backing off on calling 20x a day.

Shortly before this, the wife was able to get her her job back at Subway as a favour from her best friend and manager. This gave her something to do with her time and got her out of the house.

Little did we know, that this would help us see the issue first hand.

First week of December: BM went to get a mani & pedi from the salon next to Subway. She was there for about 5 hours, she spent a good amount of time in the backroom closet on the phone writing the name of the baby over and over and over again on a piece of paper. the wife and her boss went to collect her from the store around 930 as they were receiving complaints from customers. When they found her she was asleep in the chair after her pedi. They brought her home and had a discussion with her mom about keeping an eye on her because something wasn't clicking. A few days earlier she was screwing up orders and giving away food because she thought she was the assistant manager.

After this, she lost her job again as she started to become unreliable and was no longer doing her job. She began to call us at random hours again, but only a few times a week.

Sometime around the 15th of December (could have been a little later), I answered the phone at 3am and discovered, with no surprise that it was her. She was on the phone for less than 30 seconds.

"I'm cold. And I there's some guy looking at me from the closet." Then she hung up.

Around 4pm in the afternoon. the wife received a phone call on her way home from work. From the hospital. The Psyche Ward.

Around 310am, BM was picked up walking on the New Maryland Highway walking into town. She told the paramedics that she got a 'phonecall' from her grandmother and that she was going to Boom! to go dancing before they went on a vacation together. Her grandmother is in her early 70s. When they found her it was shortly after she called us and the person in the closet was someone in their living room window watching her walk down the road.

I'm not sure if they called an ambulance or not, but when they picked her up she was wearing the following:

  • Winter boots.
  • A scarf
  • A sundress

Did I mention that it was THIRTY DEGREES BELOW ZERO!?

That's what she had been walking to town in. She lives out of town, somewhere near Beaver Dam. Which for those needing a point of reference is about a 20-30 minute drive downtown, so it would be about a 3 hour walk.

The wife rushed over to the hospital and went to the Psyche ward. They had called the wife because it was the only number she would give them and because she kept telling the nurses about the baby we were adopting. When she arrived the wife discovered BM was in isolation, being very despondent and restrained. She could not go in to see her, she could only watch her from a monitor in the control room. She had gotten a little violent when she first arrived. (I picture her that day much like my father the last time I saw him in the hospital). Nothing BM was saying was making any sense according to the doctors.

The pregnancy had caused her hormones to become completely unbalanced causing her to have delusions and visions, which caused her episode. This had been happening for a couple of months according to the doctors at the hospital. She had never mentioned anything to us before that day.

That day was the only day they'd share information with the wife, it was 3 days later before her mother bothered to check up and find out where she was. THREE FUCKING DAYS. How does one go about not wondering where their pregnant single daughter is for THREE FUCKING DAYS!?. In those 3 days, her coworker had called the hospital posing as her mother to get some updates. After a while they stopped giving updates over the phone as well.

She spent the better part of the month in the psyche ward. She was on some pretty heavy meds to get her mental condition back in balance. After talking to the nurse we were told that the mother's health was more important than the baby at this point. After a while she came back around and was a bit more like herself. We went to visit her a few times, spoke to her parents a bit as well. Things in her life began to turn around, her parents began to care about her and spent time with her.

The first part of 2010 we had our first visit with our social worker who would be working with us during the adoptive process. She had gotten the report from BM's social worker who had visited her at home before the incident. We went over that report and a number of things began to stand out at us:

  • she was diagnosed as bi-polar with a mild case of schizophrenia. Which is hereditary.
  • she mentioned that her mom and maternal grand mother were as well (truth? We don't know)
  • she had severe learning disabilities growing up to the point that she had her own TA
  • she was held back several times in elementary school
  • she knew nothing about the father of the baby, she only knew his first name and that he was from PEI. So, the father's side of the family was a total mystery.
  • the adoption couldn't go through until the social workers had found or tried to find the father for a period of 6 months.
  • she mentioned to us she wanted to find him and sue him for child support for us. (which doesn't work)

All of this compounded on the incident made us decide to walk away from the adoption. She gave birth the end of February and this was the middle of January. Her deal the entire time after we said yes, was that if the baby wasn't ours she was keeping it until we changed our minds. She even told that to her social worker.

When we told her no she was understanding, might have been the meds though.

That day she said something that sticks out in my mind. She said to us: “I'm going to keep the baby then, I've gone through the pregnancy this far knowing the baby is yours. This baby inside of me is meant for you and when you change your mind she'll be right here waiting.”

Summary of everything since:

  • She got out of the hospital after the baby was born.
  • Her mother (the grandmother) was made the legal guardian until her mental health returned to normal.
  • Her mother named the baby Rihanna (yes, her mother named her after the singer.)
  • BM was not allowed to be alone with the baby for 6 months. If the baby cried she had to have someone else go with her while she picked up the baby.
  • The day we told her no, her dad brought home a crib.
  • She's now off of all her medication and is alone with the baby 3 days a week when her mom is at work.

Her life has been turned upside down and thrown sideways through the grinder, and in a way I think its turned out for the best. Having been diagnosed with a mental condition isn't the upside but taking your life around and out of the destructive path it was on is what I keep focusing on. That little girl is loved and is well taken care of.


That about summarized the baby story. The end of the adoption process is a total blur to me so I hope what I wrote makes sense and I didn't leave out any important parts, again.

With the birth of our own baby girl upcoming I was really partial to the name of Chloe, but this was too similar to Zoe and the heart ache was still too fresh in my heart. We have picked another name for our girl, which in no way reminds of the girl that was going to be ours last winter.

We are both really happy that mother and baby are doing well. Before BM had gotten pregnant she had a drinking problem, like to swear, smoke weed and be your typical out of control teenager. This child has taught her a lot about her life and where her priorities are in life. We couldn't be happier to have helped her.

Now that I'm sitting looking back on the entire experience, I never felt like I was a part of the pregnancy. Don't get me wrong, I was there for the ultrasound, doctors appointments but I never felt a strong attachment to the baby. Was that just my way of preparing myself incase the worst would have happened?

1 comment:

cuddles said...

Don't apologize for sad posts. You're sharing part of who you are with us, and you're also using this space to work through things. Use it however you want. :)

You already know my thoughts on this story, so I'll just send big huggs to you and "the wife" for the baby that wasn't to be yours and the baby that already is.