Dear Beloved Baby Girl,
You are precious to us- you have been prayed over and cried over, we can hardly wait to finally meet you.
We found out news today that you're going to have some challenges-but in this world, everyone has them in some shape or form. This world is not our home. Still, you will face life differently and will have to overcome things that others don't have to struggle with.
It's not fair.
But you will be our brave little girl. And you will fight for it, and we will fight with you and love you.
Hard.
God entrusted us with your care for some reason, and I feel honored to be your mom.
Love,
Mommy
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It was my 11 week OB appointment.
One benefit to being “Advanced Maternal Age” this pregnancy is that Noninvasive Prenatal Testing (NIPT), which are cell-free DNA screens from a blood draw that can separate maternal DNA from fetal DNA, is covered by most insurance plans. What results is highly-accurate (>99%) screeners for chromosomal abnormalities as well as early detection of the sex of the baby.
So basically, that’s a long-winded explanation of why I was thrilled to be able to find out the sex of our baby at 11 weeks versus the typical wait of 20 weeks at an anatomy scan.
I recall being seated in the exam room, I’d just had my blood pressure taken and asked Nurse V whether my MaterniT21 test results had come back yet (that was my specific NIPT). She left to check my charts.
And then Dr. F came in. He sat down, opened up a plain manila file folder and said, “Well your test results came back in, and your baby tested positive for Trisomy 21, also known as Down syndrome.”
My eyes welled up with tears, but I was refusing to let any of them fall. I remember trying so hard to stay positive. After enduring a year’s worth of loss through the deaths of Scott’s Mom, his Gran, his sister, our pug…and after trying all year for a third child and suffering a miscarriage just 5 months prior to this. THIS was going to be okay. Right? The baby’s still alive and growing?
I mean I don’t even know exactly what else Dr. F said in those next few sentences, but I do remember his compassionate demeanor when he simply stated,
“I bet that’s not the news you were expecting.”
No, no it wasn’t. I remember still processing things, but making sure to ask, “What’s the gender?”
I was happily surprised to hear “Girl.”
Of course earlier in this pregnancy I’d read up on some Ramzi theory, that’s based off placental placement, and was so certain the baby was a boy. I was so sure I’d already bought boy things, five special occasion outfits to be exact and maybe a few blue and grey accessories (bibs, toys, pacifiers). Also, Scott and I had only discussed boy names as well, although I’d vetoed every single one of his crazy choices: Vladimir, Han Solo, Kaiser, Seamus…Yes, good grief- we were at a naming stalemate! Hearing news of a baby girl came as a small relief in the midst of everything else.
And then there was more scary news aside from the shock of just hearing the words: “Your baby has Down syndrome.” Dr. F was very frank with me about miscarriage and stillbirth statistics. He said in Down syndrome prenatal cases, 1/3 will miscarry, 1/3 will be stillborn. That sucks doesn’t it? Prior to that I’d just thought to myself and may have even said out loud, “Out of all chromosomal abnormalities, I’m glad Down syndrome is something more familiar and has better survival rates.” That morning was hazy but I’m fairy sure I did make that statement and it’s what prompted Dr. F to share those statistics.
Those tears fell. But I wiped them and knew I had to leave and call Scott and then Mom to let them know the news. They were both waiting to hear the baby’s gender after all.
I remember sympathy looks from the nurses upon exiting the exam room. I remember using every ounce of willpower within to not sob in front of other hospital patients and guests as I walked down the long corridors to the parking garage. I remember keeping composed, getting in my car and turning right out of the garage exit, and then left at the light.
And then I called my husband.
There was no soft-landing to this news. I began bawling as I immediately exploded, “I’m so, so sorry! The baby has Down syndrome! She only has about 1/3 chance of survival at birth!”
I was so scared. Scared for the survival of our child. Scared of how we were going to do this. Scared of my husband’s reaction to the news.
And he was okay. Maybe even fine about it. Scott told me that with my crying, he was worried something had happened to the baby. (ummm HELLO, she has Down syndrome) Bless that man! When I realized Scott was okay and still the same man I’d married. For better, for worse. He’s not going anywhere, not running away. And in fact, is taking the news better than I was. My panic level went down a couple of notches and I called my mom to tell her the news.
No surprise with Mom’s reaction. She was sympathetic to my tears and fears, and offered to share the news with the rest of the family, but she was also very positive and encouraging. I knew she’d bathe our family and this baby girl in prayer. I was blessed by this.
And by the time I got home, the tears weren’t as bad, although I’d still have moments of sobbing fits when I started to think about the frightening parts in the rawness of the news. We needed to tell the kids, but weren’t sure of how to tell them. I knew that no matter what, we had to stay positive about it and not add a burden, but express how this baby will be a blessing.
When I finally felt composed, the kids were playing in the kitchen. I walked in and mentioned “You’re going to have a baby sister! And she has something called Down syndrome, she’ll kind of stay little longer, but she will be awesome and full of happiness.” (in my few hours of consuming the news myself, and then attaining a PhD in Googling Down syndrome…this was the best explanation I had for them).
Dakota Kate (5.5yrs) was ecstatic that she was having a baby sister, and poor Mason (almost 8yrs) was mostly happy although I could tell he’d been expecting a baby brother. Sorry bud, I was wrong. And neither kid had a second thought about the words “Down syndrome.” I knew they didn’t really understand what that meant. Heck, I didn’t either!
This was just the start of our new adventure.