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Cassie

Everyone deals with grief differently. Losing a loved one can leave an empty space or it can completely change your life's course. When my now Husband and I lost our first son, it didn't change the course of my life. I knew I still wanted to have more children. I knew I still wanted to marry my husband. I knew I still wanted a house by the lake with a back porch. My path I hoped for myself was unchanged. What did change however, showed with every pregnancy. I was terrified. I had 4 more successful pregnancies after our first son, Austyn Wayne Cole. Every time, I was robbed of the enjoyment. I was so afraid we would end up losing another baby. After the absolute horror I went through with our first, I just couldn't enjoy anything about the pregnancy. I didn't want to get attached. I didn't trust the doctors because I should have been on an OB floor with a fetal monitor. I just didn't want to go home again to a half set up nursery that will never have a baby in it. The fear took over every time. I had Austyn 3 days after my appendix had burst. Both of us miraculously pulled through the emergency surgery. I wasn't on an OB floor after surgery, although I was 23 wks pregnant. I was on heavy medications. When I woke up with pain overpowering my pain meds, it was too late. I was too far along in my labor to stop it. I had Austyn at 4:43 Am on January 7th, 2004, and he passed away at 5:30 AM. I held him for a little bit, then we had to say goodbye. That was one of the darkest times in my life and I am still grieving. There is no timeline on grief. No one grieves the same way and it's a very personal experience. Do not let anyone tell you how long to grieve. Give yourself some grace and take a break. Reach out to someone if needed. You will find some kind of normalcy again. God bless!

John Paul Valdez

There is a specific kind of exhaustion that comes from living a life where your physical body and your mental presence are never in the same place. For me, it feels like a perpetual haunting. When I am standing in the wide, sun-scorched expanse of Texas, my mind is often wandering through the mist-heavy treelines of Oregon. Then, when I finally find myself in the Pacific Northwest, the phantom heat and specific gravity of the south pull me back. It is a restless internal migration that never truly ends, leaving me feeling like a stranger in both places. This disconnection extends into the very fabric of my daily rhythm. At work, I am mentally already at home, seeking the sanctuary of my private thoughts and the peace of my own space. Yet, the moment I cross my own threshold, the weight of professional responsibilities and the unfinished business of the day follow me in, looming like shadows in the corner of the room. I am never fully "there" because I am always mourning where I just was or bracing for where I have to go next. I have been cast to and fro through the storms of change and expectation. These aren't just geographic shifts; they are the spiritual and emotional gales that refuse to let me anchor. This constant displacement creates "images of depletion," where the energy required to simply exist in the present is swallowed by the winds of elsewhere. I am learning that the struggle is to find a way to quiet the storm from within—to stop being a passenger to the wind and start becoming the center of the calm. My goal now is to bridge that gap, to stop the "to and fro" and finally allow my spirit to catch up to my skin.

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