We did not go on the tour.
It never really stops, the trauma of living after the death of your baby. It just goes quiet for stretches of time.
Have I ever mentioned that when we were initially in the hospital with George a few rooms down from us a certain B list actor, who has been arrested for drugs and for abusing his (many) wives on multiple different occasions, was there with his girlfriend (25 years his junior) who had just delivered their healthy son? Leif walked back into my room after getting me more ice chips, since at the time I was pretty much vomiting everything but ice chips up, and told me about seeing this guy obviously pretty excited while talking on the phone out in the hall. I think I said something along the lines of how completely unfair it was that some fuckhead who drives drunk, has been in and out of rehab, who has been married quite a few times to women much younger than he, and who just generally seems to be a douchebag, gets a healthy baby while we get a dying one.
It wasn't fair.
Driving home from the class I kept thinking about that particular actor, his now 15 month old son, and the unfairness of George's short life and -eternal- death. I came to the following conclusion.
It isn't fair. But life isn't fair. It never has been. I had just been lucky up until that point to have escaped rather unscathed from the unfairness of the world. People worse than that particular actor have healthy babies all the time. Murderers get away with murder all the time. Thieves call themselves business men, robbing from the poor while stuffing their own off-shore accounts, all the time. Good people don't have enough to eat all the time.
It isn't fair.
But neither is it fair that I have a wonderful relationship with my husband while some women are in abusive ones. It is not fair that I have a good job while there are others who have worked equally as hard as I have, if not harder, who are jobless. It is not fair that I live in a country where I am, as a woman, completely free to wear what I want and to go where I want, why others live under the thumb of oppressive religious patriarchies.
It isn't fair that George died. But it would not have been somehow more fair if my son had lived and the son of that stupid shit actor had died. Neither child deserved life more than the other. George just happened to get the short end of the stick.
What is fair and what is not fair have no bearing in this world. Fairness is the exception while unfairness is the rule. We are surrounded by what is unfair and it is miraculous that there is any fair at all. This is a concept that I have just now, just today, really begun to understand.
George died and it isn't fair. George died and while I can never accept it is as OK that he died, I can accept it is as OK that it isn't fair that he died. I don't feel like I need to rail against that concept anymore and believe it or not, that kind of helps.







