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My saddest experience I have ever had By: Tamra Scott-Hunt



Way back in 1996 I married a wonderful man named Michael. It was a first marriage for both of us, and we felt as if we’d been waiting for each other our whole lives.

We’d been trying to conceive, with no luck, ever since our engagement. In the fall of 1997 I underwent an exploratory laparoscopic surgery where it was discovered I had endometriosis. During the surgery they were able to do a procedure that temporarily opened a short window of fertility. My doctor told us this window would last approximately 3 months, afterwhich I’d most likely become infertile again, so we were thrilled when we conceived just three weeks later. It was the day before Thanksgiving that we discovered I was pregnant, and I felt very thankful. Michael caressed and kissed my belly, and we called this our “miracle baby”.

Everything seemed fine. I wasn’t suffering with morning sickness or other early pregnancy symptoms, but at 13 weeks I had some bad bleeding. Michael rushed home from work while I frantically called my doctor. She told me not to come in, and said lying down and staying horizontal would be the best thing to prevent a miscarriage. It took three days for the bleeding to stop. Michael took time off from work to take care of me.

A few weeks later my doctor assured me it was only some minor bleeding and I shouldn’t worry about it. “Nothing to be concerned about” she said. I tried to tell her how much blood there was but she brushed it off. At 16 weeks I had my amnio and ultrasound. We found out we were going to have a boy, and the genetic tests all came back normal. However, because there was so much blood in the amniotic fluid the doctor who did the ultrasound said, “Did you know that you almost lost him?” He checked the attachment to my uterine wall and told us everything seemed okay now.

My doctor never followed up on this at our next appointment. When I asked her about it she assured me again that it was just some minor bleeding, nothing to worry about. Much later I learned I’d had a partial placental abruption which made my pregnancy high risk.

Just a few weeks later, at 20 weeks pregnant, we got what I thought would be the worst news of my life. My husband was diagnosed with stage IV non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), the most common form of lung cancer for non-smokers. It was a devastating shock for both of us.

After a few months of unsuccessful chemo and radiation they told us there was nothing more they could do, that we should go home and prepare ourselves. The stress of caring for my dear husband as he endured the chemo was more than I could bear. At 5 months into my pregnancy I weighed 125 lbs, four pounds less than before I’d gotten pregnant.

I took care of my husband as best I could, but one night, at six and a half months along I sat down on our bed and my water broke. I knew it was too early. I also began bleeding. I lay awake all night having back labor in the hospital, trying to prepare myself for the c-section in the morning. After Sam was born they let me see him for just a second before placing him on the respirator and putting him inside an incubator. I remember hearing him cry out to me as we looked at each other for that brief moment. It would be the only time I would hear his voice.

His lungs were undeveloped. Maybe it was the stress Sam and I had both endured throughout the second trimester that added to the difficulty of being born early, I will never know….. Each day my husband and I stood by his incubator stroking his face and arms, holding his tiny hands, and talking to him, telling him how much we loved him and praying that he would live. But Sam lived for only six days.

The morning they came to tell us he was gone I had just awoken from a horrible nightmare of a demon breaking into my house and destroying everything I loved. When I saw the doctor’s face, he didn’t have to say anything. I looked at him and said, “My baby’s gone…” and he nodded.

I slipped into a deep, dark depression, but I had no choice but to go on caring for my dying husband. Six weeks later I sat in the hospital holding Michael’s hand, telling him how much I loved him as I watched him take his last breath. Our eyes were locked together till the end.

I was 37 years old when I lost my family, and I knew with my history of infertility my chances of having another baby were slim at best. I lost my faith completely, and my heart vacillated between indifference and a seething hatred for God and life. Everywhere I went I saw pregnant women, smiling and happy, oblivious to what had happened in my world. Friends didn’t invite me to baby showers, and people kept making well-meaning but in my opinion, ridiculous remarks to me; “You know Jesus needed Michael and Sam more than you did”, “God measures us for a cross before we’re born”, and my favorite “You know right now they’re running through fields of clover”. Really? Clover? Are they running in circles, figure eights, or just one continuous line that goes for an eternity? I was so bitter, so hopeless, and it was a dark, cold winter that year.

Seven months later I put my profile on an online dating service. I didn’t feel ready to date, but I thought it would be a good idea to at least start talking to men, and the internet seemed like a good buffer between me and the real world for the time being. I met a lot of men online, but only one became special to me. This man had lost his wife two months after my husband had died. He was sensitive, intelligent and interesting. He could relate to my loss in a way no one else could. We were married in Maui four years later.

I was determined, but not overly optimistic about getting pregnant at the ripe old age of 42. We’d been to a fertility specialist at Stanford Hospital and she’d told me that our chances of conceiving a child were not good. Still, she said she’d do whatever she could to help us. Two months later, and ten days before my scheduled laparoscopy, I found out I was pregnant. With no help from the medical community I had somehow overcome all the odds. Making the call to cancel my surgery and tell the Stanford fertility specialist that I was pregnant was the happiest call of my life. She was thrilled for us. “I don’t get many phone calls like this”, she said.

Now we are the happy, and somewhat tired, mid-life parents of a beautiful girl. She means the world to us, and she’s a miracle to me. And every day I’m thankful I got another chance to be a mother.

Time does heal, and it’s not as painful as it was, but I’ll never forget them. And each year on Sam’s birthday and the anniversary of his death, I sit with his picture and remember the way it felt to touch his skin, and the color of his eyes, and his newborn smell, and I pray that some day when my time is over I’ll finally get to hold him in my arms. Till then I can only hold him in my dreams.






I wrote this poem on Sam’s 10th birthday.

The Closet Box

Copyright: Tamra Scott-Hunt, June 20, 2008

There’s a box inside my closet

where half my heart belongs.

It’s filled with clothes you never wore,

with lullabies and songs.

You were just around the corner,

I’m a half a second late,

Still trying to win a race against

this unforgiving fate.

Last night we lit ten candles,

imagined what you’d wish,

Then blew out each blue candle,

and set an extra dish.

You were just around the corner,

I’m a half a step away,

Held fast within a memory

of that long-remembered day.

Are you sleeping in the garden?

Are you safe beyond the storm?

Are you cradled in your father’s arms

where nights are always warm?

You were just around the corner,

just beyond my reach,

walking on the gentle sand

of heaven’s golden beach.

In my dreams you’re in the courtyard,

or climbing in the tree,

dancing in the shadows

past where mortal eyes can see.

You were just around the corner.

I run to catch your face,

then wake to find my empty arms.

You’re gone…. without a trace.




Artwork by: Thomas Wilmer

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