articlecavern.com articlecavern.com
Search:    Main Page :> About Us :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Add Url :> Add Article   
Get 3 way links
 

Medical Care

Culture & Art

Government & Politics

Internet & Computers

People & Communities

Technology & Science

Games & Play

Business & Services

Children

Eating & Drinking

Relationship & Lifestyle

Outdoor & Sports

Garden & Home

Shopping & Auction

Recreation & Entertainment

Issues & News

Hotels & Travel

Finance & Investment

Fitness & Health

Academics & Education

Jobs & Careers

Self Healing

Vehicles & Automotive

Estate & Realty


 

  Main Page › Self Healing › Coping With Loss
   
 

Silent Tears - from a Norwegian Hospital

   

Author: Haakon Rian Ueland

Silent tears hit hospital-white sheets. The young Pakistani mother holds the mask that brings moisture, oxygen and medicine to her babygirls lungs as she struggles against the slime that threatens to suffocate her.

On the walls of the childrens wing in the Akershus Universityhospital near Oslo, bright art shines. Highly skilled and trained personell runs and bikes through the corridors, figures in strongly colored paper tremble in the wake of their passage.

This place should be cheerful.

A doctor makes her second attempt at finding a vein in the arm of my 14 days old girl. No luck. The veins in her head are easier to locate.

Anna cries at every touch. Breastfeeding, the favorite activity in her short life, seems without interest. Sometimes she forgets to breathe, and we must stroke her chest to remind her.

Four days ago I slept fitfully at the same place with another child. Aleksander, my oldest, came to me after bedtime, crying. Every breath hurt.

At the hospital, every conceivable test was taken. X-rays, ultrasound, EKG, CRP, culture growth, urinesamples - nothing was found. Aleksander, who without flinching gets tackled on the soccerfield, cried. The next morning he was fine.

The Pakistani girl keeps struggling. Anna turns grey. Her CRP indicates an infection; a tube in her nose brings breastmilk to her stomach while the IV in her head provides antibiotics and saline.

In a quiet room of the hospital, my body clenches. Tears flood my eyes.

I take two deep breaths. No time for tears. Not yet.

Back in 1997, my wife woke me in the middle of the night. Something was wrong with the five-month old fetus inside her.

A few hours later she miscarried in this hospital.

I wrote a song to the little girl that left us.

Never fly H.R.Ueland 2003

There are still flowers in the gutter
There is still beauty in the world
I'm sure that butterflies will some day flutter
Even though this baby's cries will not be heard

The sun will rise again tomorrow
The moon will silver from the sky
And my neck will still be bent with sorrow
For the tiny child whose thoughts will never fly

I hope you're safe from grief and sorrow
I hope you're comfortable and warm
I hope that in a distant, far tomorrow
I will meet this child and hold her in my arm

This song might be up at http://www.haakon.nu when you read this.

Be well, all. Take care of yourself and each other.

[My Anna got home from the hospital after a week. Her condition steadily improved. She was probably infected with the Coxsackie-virus - google it, esp. if you've got kids. You do NOT want your kid to get this without knowing the symptoms - it can seriously damage the heart and the brain unless treatments starts very early. And not only can it be fatal - it is a highly contagious condition, infecting through air/surfaces.]

Author Bio:
Haakon Rian Ueland is a noted author. Haakon likes to create articles about this area.
You can also reach this article by using: coping with loss, coping with grief, coping with grief & sorrow, overcoming grief, grief & loss
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Choose To Be Happy - NOW!
 
Live to 100 - 3 Secrets of Thinking Young
 
Creativity Management and Good Ideas
 
Finding A Cure for "I" Disease
 
Peace of Mind - Your Birth Right
 
Energy Enhancement Just Ground It!!
 
Controlling Time Management
 
The Reactive Mind
 
Getting Organized For A Clutter Free Life
 
Tarot Spreads: The Planetary Spread, for Insights into a Personality
 
 
 
 
 

Multi-dimensional Being is What You Are

In reality there is just one human being on the whole planet: our minds are all a part of the univer ... - George Lockett
 

Positive Thinking - It's Not in the Self-Help Section

Have you really tried everything to become a positive thinker? Clearing the Barnes and Noble's books ... - Nancy Mure
 

Time To Clear The Decks!

Do you feel positive and keen to make changes in your life? Are you fired up and ready to address th ... - Kate Harper
 
 

Time To Give Up Resentment

Resentment isn't a spectacular emotion, but it is long-lasting and it easily becomes a way of life. ... - Adrian Savage
 

Addiction Has A Root Cause Which Will Soon Be Common Knowledge To All, As Humanity Evolves

Addiction has a root cause common to all addicts. Phsycology is on the breaking piont to proving thi ... - Monique Louise Hill
 
 
Main Page :> Security & Privacy :> Terms of Use
© 2008 www.articlecavern.com All Rights Reserved.