Skip to content

“This doesn’t have anything to do with you.”

Posted in Uncategorized

CW: Infant loss, parent estrangement, grief, self-pity

The holidays are hard for a lot of people. I recognize that I don’t have the patent on that. I also recognize that not everyone feels the need to state that fact, almost as an apology for daring to have their own bad feelings about the holiday season, but I have been trained by determined child therapists to always remember that the feelings of others are bigger, deeper, more real than what I experience and therefore I should always acknowledge those (neurotypical) feelings first so as not to make everything about myself.

That’s a huge theme in this story.

This year, I’m dreading Christmas at my Grandma Z’s house. I’ve dreaded Christmas (and almost every single holiday that requires family togetherness) ever since my mother shacked up with my future stepfather two months after my high school graduation–three desperate, pick-me months after she met the man and reshaped her entire personality and worldview to fit his. I am the classic failed baby trap, the one that backfired on the woman who set it. Freed from her Jenny-shaped shackles by the arrival of my adulthood, my mother set about building the life that she always longed for, the one in which she had a husband to care for her and legitimate children. Almost overnight, I went from believing I had a mother who loved me, that we were sold only as a pair, that she would always have my back.

In her eyes, it seemed, I was the only thing still standing in the way of her do-over, something that became abundantly clear as the years went on and I was slowly but surely phased out through devious moves like “accidentally” forgetting to tell me that the entire family was meeting for my grandparents’ 50th-anniversary group photo. The photo is still on display at my grandmother’s house. There are all my aunts and uncles, my cousins, their spouses and children, and of course, my mother and stepfather, Donna and Gary, with my little half-siblings. Notably absent are me, my husband, and our son. I was devasted and angry, but determined not to make it “all about myself,” as my tiresome emotional outbursts often did.

Recently, I absolved Donna of her duty to keep pretending that she’s my mother. It’s not much of a difference, to be honest; ever since she moved in with Gary, even just a phone call with her was intensely one-sided. Most of her responses were, “mm-hm,” and “oh?” in a bored, almost annoyed tone. How dare I break the bubble of the pristine, Bible-correct family life she’d wanted for so long with a call about something good that had happened to me or, even worse, because something had reminded me of some joke between just the two of us? With the advent of cellphones, things improved, a little. She would call me from the car–only the car, never from home–and tell me about what was happening at work. Eventually, she would ask something about me or the kids, but without fail, the call would drop or Gary would be trying to reach her on the other line or she would pull into the driveway. Once in that driveway, her obligation was to her new life only, and she was finished with me.

Ultimately, our phone conversations became less frequent. In recent years, our contact was limited to seeing each other at Christmas and possibly getting a phone call on my birthday as she, you guessed it, drove home from work. Occasionally, I would see her Facebook posts as they devolved into QAnon conspiracy madness. Like everything else she believes in, I knew they weren’t her original thoughts but the thoughts Gary and their church wanted her to think. After all, she’d gone from picking up guys in bars on Friday night and leaving me with a babysitter until morning to hardcore Evangelical Christianity that dictated outing a trans woman at her church and participating in the shunning of a single teen mom (despite having been one herself). I’d already given up on ever having the close, loving relationship with my mom that I’d mistakenly believed we’d had when I was a child, so trying to change her mind when her political views became more like symptoms of long-term lead exposure wasn’t something I had the time, energy, or, frankly, the responsibility for.

If you ask members of my family why I put my foot down and made it clear to my mother that we are estranged, that I don’t want contact from her, that her number has been blocked from my phone, they would say, “Oh, you know Jenny. Crazy liberal.” Or simply, “politics, she’ll get over it.” And they’re right, it was a political post that caused me to finally unload on her (a post in which Donna lamented the denial of her “religious exemption” to the vaccine and announced that she was poised to lose the career to which I’d often taken a backseat throughout my childhood). What they won’t tell you is that they’ve sat by for the past twenty or so years watching my mother discard me without a single word to comfort me or to acknowledge openly that Donna’s abandonment might have had a lasting impact on me.

And the worst example of this involved the death of my little brother, Samuel.

It’s hard for me to type his name because I don’t feel like I’m allowed to. I’ve never felt like I was allowed to mourn him, to feel grief, to even tell people “my brother died” for a number of factors. Chiefly, the fact that I was told, very sternly, by Gary, that my brother’s existence and death had “nothing to do with you.”

At Donna and Gary’s wedding, I gave a (non-alcoholic, good, Christian) toast in which I mentioned my new stepbrother and stepsister and shared that I had always wanted a sibling. It was true; all my cousins had brothers or sisters growing up and I’d go to their houses, consumed with envy at how lively everything was, how they had people to talk to and play with and even fight with. I was the child of a single mom who worked nights, so I spent a lot of time by myself. Though I had just turned twenty when Donna announced she was pregnant for the second time, that childish hope sparked back up in me. Sure, my little brother or sister had missed the window for being my playmate or thunderstorm comfort buddy. There would be no epic fights over toys or who changed the unwritten rules of a complicated game of pretend, but I would finally have a sibling.

Even though the baby wasn’t born yet, Christmas was coming up and I wanted to get Donna and Gary something to celebrate the arrival of the baby, whom we already knew would be assigned male from the sonogram printout I’d framed and hung up in my apartment. Every time I’d look at it, I’d think about how in twenty years, my brother would come to visit me and I’d point to the wall of photos I’d have curated over the years and say, “look, I still have your first baby picture.”

I’d just bought the present the night Gary called me.

“Baby’s dead.”

That’s how he broke the news to me.

“Baby’s dead.”

I have children. I know the grief he must have been feeling. At the same time, I’d like to think that even in my darkest hour, I would find a less callous way of stating it.

My crying audibly annoyed him. “Don’t come down here,” he warned me. “This doesn’t have anything to do with you. You’ll just upset everyone and your mom doesn’t need that.”

Shame overwhelmed me. By crying at the news, I was making my brother’s death about me. I was already upsetting everyone and nobody wanted to see me because they had already predicted the erratic, selfish, overdramatic, focus-stealing behavior I was exhibiting from the moment I heard, “Baby’s dead.”

I said, “Tell mom I love her?”

Gary said, “Yup.” Maybe he did tell her I said that. Maybe he didn’t, because he didn’t want to upset her.

I didn’t speak to my mom on the phone that night. I don’t think anybody in my family bothered to call me. And that’s okay. Because I wasn’t the woman delivering a stillborn baby at the hospital. Every tear I shed made me feel more and more guilty, like my emotions were victimizing Donna even though I stayed in my apartment just fifteen minutes away from the hospital.

The next day, I spoke to my grandmother. She’d gone to the hospital. She and my grandfather had both held my brother in their arms. They saw what his face looked like. They said he was perfect.

They said my stepsister was there.

Her presence wasn’t upsetting. She got to hold my brother. I was furiously jealous. I’ve never really been able to like my stepsister as a result. It’s not her fault but it is what it is.

But at that moment, my irrational jealousy made me even more ashamed of my own grief. How dare I presume I should be included. How dare I have tears or feelings at all. No one said these things, but the message of “This doesn’t have anything to do with you,” had been crystal clear over the phone. And here I was, barging in, trying to be a part of something that I wasn’t included in.

“I just want to know what he looked like!” I sobbed.

“They took pictures,” My grandma assured me. “You’ll get to see him.”

The morning of the funeral, I was in a panic. I was running late. Something in me, some stupid thing in me, had convinced me that if I just got to the funeral early, if I just got there on time, if I got there before he went into the ground, maybe they would open his casket and I could see him. Maybe, after all the hope and the entire lifetime of longing, I would at least get to see what he looked like.

But I knew that it wouldn’t happen. I just needed that hope to get me there when I wasn’t sure my presence was even wanted. I didn’t ask them to open the casket, obviously, but it was hard to walk away from the graveside knowing that my chance was gone, that I was as close to my brother as I would ever be, and still I would never see his face.

A few weeks later, after the holidays, I mentioned to Donna that I knew there were photos. I asked if I could see them.

“No.”

I thought I heard wrong.

“Do you think I can’t handle it or something?” I asked because surely that’s what was going on. She was my mother, after all. She was trying to protect me.

“No. We just don’t want you to see them.”

“Does he look bad or–”

“He looks perfect. You’re just never going to see them.”

I went home that night and looked on the internet for photos of pre-term stillborns. This was the early days of the internet, before beautiful memorial photos. All I got were the photos I’d already seen from a million and one anti-abortion protests. It didn’t make me feel better or make my grief easier. All I could think about was that my brother was dead and gone, that my stepsister was worthy of seeing him and holding him, that nothing about his death or any part of my mom’s new life had “anything to do with” me.

To this day, I’ve never asked about the photos again. I don’t want to make it all about me. I don’t want to upset everyone. But there are times I want to drop to my knees and beg and offer them anything I have for just a two-second glimpse. Just so I can know what he looked like. I just want to know what my brother looked like.

Twenty-one years on, I still have uncontrollable crying jags when I remember all of this. It comes up more often than you’d think. And still, even here, on my blog, in my own space that I’ve created and carved out for myself, I’m embarrassed to share this story. I’m embarrassed to make it all about myself, to not respect the decisions Donna made in her very private grief and to hang all this dirty laundry out. I’m ashamed that I still cry about it because crying and emotions, particularly my crying and my emotion, “upsets everyone” and this “doesn’t have anything to do with” me. It feels selfish to share this part of my life because over two decades ago a woman who was already done with me had a stillborn baby and it had nothing to do with me.

It doesn’t matter that it was my brother. I was twenty, not six. I was grown up. I didn’t have to be included. I fully understand that I don’t have a right to be upset about something that happened to someone else and that I’m making it all about me, all over again. I understand this and I accept this but that doesn’t make it hurt less. It just compounds the shame over the grief I have no business feeling.

I have siblings now, as I mentioned above. I didn’t see them much when they were kids because I assumed that they, like the rest of Donna’s life, didn’t have anything to do with me. Now that they’re nearing adulthood, I like to think that I know them a little better and that they’re aware that I, absolutely, have to do with them. I don’t ever want them to think that I stayed away because I didn’t care or don’t love them. But there are no walls covered in pictures. No reminders of them around the house. Because I’ve never been sure that their existence was supposed to include me. And if I got too attached and something happened to them, my grief would be dramatic, overblown, silly, a performance to get attention.

I wouldn’t survive that again. One can only take so much self-hatred over things other people seem to be allowed to freely express.

This Christmas, I will go to my grandmother’s house. I will see Samuel’s stocking hung up with the collection of other “dead grandbaby” stockings that make up a macabre display intended to keep them in our memories. But this will be the first time that I don’t have to pretend that I’m a part of my mother’s new family.

She and her husband don’t have anything to do with me. I wish I would have gotten the hint twenty years ago.

Did you enjoy this post?

Trout Nation content is always free, but you can help keep things going by making a small donation via Ko-fi!

Or, consider becoming a Patreon patron!

Here for the first time because you’re in quarantine and someone on Reddit recommended my Fifty Shades of Grey recaps? Welcome! Consider checking out my own take on the Billionaire BDSM genre, The Boss. Find it on AmazonB&NSmashwords, iBooks, and Radish!

18 Comments

  1. Esk
    Esk

    You have every right to grieve a family member. You have every right to be upset when you are treated badly. I’m so sorry you’ve been made to feel otherwise.
    Gatekeeping grief is an utterly bizarre thing for those people to do. Death impacts everyone who knew the deceased, and that’s who all is allowed to have feelings about it. *Everyone.*
    I can’t even fathom the absurdity of, like, drawing a circle around specific family members and stating “this is who’s allowed to be upset.” It’s unfathomable.

    December 11, 2021
    |Reply
  2. Terri
    Terri

    Jenny,
    I can offer only this: I get it and you are entitled to every feeling you feel.

    Sending you a virtual hug. I know nothing any of us say can evaporate your pain but please remember how many folks think you are awesome.

    December 11, 2021
    |Reply
  3. taylor
    taylor

    I’m grieving a dude I only knew over the Internet right now (we were Tumblr buds, he took a bad fall but thankfully ended up in the good hospital, seemed to be getting better, and it was pretty much a shock to his family/clan/friends/etc. including me), so what f*cking right do your maternal DNA contributor and legal stepfather have to judge you grieving your brother?

    I wish you peace and comfort and if I could (and you’re not allergic) I’d air-mail 20 pounds of house panther purrmonster lap cat who’s good at emotional support and therapy according to his human mama. Also, yeah, being careful isn’t a bad idea imo, but it’d be nice to think that it’s possible to establish at least some kind of positive relationship with at least some of the folks who make up your extended DNA/in-law family. (For what it’s worth, I’m tighter with my bff than I am with a lot of my blood kin, so….)

    December 11, 2021
    |Reply
  4. Katy
    Katy

    I am glad you have set the boundary with Donna. That sounds far healthier than what was happening before.
    It is beyond fucked up and cruel the way you were treated. It was wrong.
    You have every right to grieve and feel for a sibling you never got to meet. You have every right to *still* grieve. It is not selfish or bad,and you are not undeserving of those emotions.
    (And what the fuck is it with that “other people feel things in more important, deep, or real ways than you do, so always think of them first” message that gets forced on so many kids? What a terrible thing to lead a child to believe.)

    December 11, 2021
    |Reply
  5. Avery Knight
    Avery Knight

    Your little brother has EVERYTHING to do with you. It was unbelievably cruel and selfish for your mother and stepfather to make you feel guilty for caring. Your feelings are not an inconvenience or a burden, and that you were treated like they were over and over is frankly nothing short of vicious enotional abuse. Nobody EVER has the right to dictate how you should feel about something.
    And Donna had a responsibility to you as your parent. This was something you should have gone through TOGETHER. My grandmother died back in March, just ten days after the birth of my daughter. Even with me living out of state, my mom and I talked often, cried together on the phone, reminisced about her, comforted each other. We grieve her together. You deserved that, Jenny. You deserved to support and be supported by your own literal goddamn mother in this unimaginable heartbreak. And if she won’t be there for you, won’t even let you be there for her, she absolutely does not deserve you.
    Your feelings matter, Jenny. They are real and valid and important and you are not burdening anyone by having them or sometimes needing support with them and anyone who tells you you’re a burden or makes you feel like one does not deserve to have you in their lives. Because when you love somebody, you help each other carry the heavy weights of life.
    Take care of yourself, Jen. And don’t be afraid to ask the people you know really care about you for support during this time. You do deserve it, I promise.

    December 11, 2021
    |Reply
  6. Clara
    Clara

    I lost a sibling too, at a time I wasn’t really allowed to care.

    Context: my father left before I was born, and in my mid teens my mother tracked him down and told him I wanted to meet him. He agreed. I found out I had a baby brother, and two more on the way. To my father’s credit, when it happened he did call and tell me that one of my twin brothers only survived a few days. Too small. Fit in the palm of your hand, apparently. I never got to see him, or tell him I loved him. His mother wanted nothing to do with me, and I wasn’t allowed to tell my living brothers I was their sister until my father split up with her, five years later.

    One day I’m going to be brave enough to get a tattoo, and it’s just gonna be a bumblebee, for the tiny brother I never got to know. Because it’s my loss too, and your brother is your loss too, Jenny. Our shit families don’t get to tell us how to feel, or who to love. I’m sorry for your loss.

    December 11, 2021
    |Reply
  7. My sister died when she was ten days old. I was six. She never came home from the hospital. I never saw her. A friend of my parents took a couple of pictures of her at the funeral because they didn’t have a camera. I saw the pictures once or twice, not because they were hidden away, or I didn’t deserve to see them, but because life went on, and you keep moving forward, no matter what.
    I don’t remember grieving. I was six. It was the 60s. I probably wasn’t told about the pregnancy because a) I was little and b) it’s bad luck to count your chickens (or babies) before they hatch.
    I was six. My brothers were five and eighteen months. My mother probably didn’t have time to grieve. But, we honored Beth’s short life. We visited her grave, we included her in our history. We didn’t banish her existence from our memories, even though we had precious few memories of her.
    You were robbed of the gift of honoring your brother. You still are.
    I don’t have words to describe the cruelty and injustice you suffered and suffer. Nothing I can say can give comfort or eclipse what you feel. Know this, though, your emotions are valid. Your grief counts. Your hurt is real. It shaped you into the woman you are, and that is your mother’s legacy to you.
    Healing, or dulling the pain, will be as long and arduous as grieving. And as never ending. But just as legitimate. Don’t let anyone’s psycho-babble convince you otherwise.
    They’re keeping him alive but denying you the same right. You need to find a way of your own to honor him. Make it a stick in their eye, and a sword against the darkness. Make it shine. Whether you keep the acknowledgement private or public doesn’t matter as long as you recognize it’s your right to feel what you do.
    I’m so, so sorry you have to deal with this.
    Love you.

    December 11, 2021
    |Reply
  8. Joy Boss
    Joy Boss

    As the mother of a stillborn daughter (and two living boys) I cannot imagine gatekeeping her existence from them. Or anyone. Saying her name and sharing her pictures keeps her memory alive, and makes her real to her brothers, who never got to meet her in person. Stillborn is still born, and she deserves that honor.

    I’m often told I post too many photos of my son born after Coraline. But I have 20 photos of her, and those are the ONLY photos I will EVER have of her, so I said eff the haters and share all the photos I can of my son(s). And my daughters photos, on her birthday – Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep is a nonprofit that does beautiful work and I’m happy to share them with anyone interested.

    The harsh truth – you don’t ‘jive’ with their new, misguided way of life so they’ve decided you don’t ‘deserve’ to share in their happiness OR misfortunes. They’re selfish, not just on this matter, but have proved it time and again by their words and deeds. The Donna doth protest too much, methinks – they accuse YOU of being selfish, but demonstrate that very trait in all they do. Classic narcissism. I genuinely hope you are able to honor Samuel and bring peace and healing to your own family from the hurt and neglect your mother has wrought.

    Regardless of them withholding Samuel’s photos from you, they DO NOT get to dictate how you grieve. Honor him in whatever way suits you, and know that non-narc parents who have experienced infant loss appreciate you keeping his memory in your heart and mind. ❤

    December 11, 2021
    |Reply
  9. Jenny (But not Jenny Trout)
    Jenny (But not Jenny Trout)

    I am so sorry this happened to you. Your feeling are your feelings and you are entitled to them. That was completely horrible and abusive of Donna to do that. What’s looking at a picture going to do? That’s unbelievable selfish. Seriously – I’ve taken my kids to the grave of a friend who died when I was 13, 15+ years before they were born. They’ve both seen pictures. This person and her death had a huge impact on my life and who I am. I’m not making it about me when I still cry about thirty years later – I’m expressing my grief. That’s such a horrible thing for someone to say.

    There isn’t a finite amount of love in the world. You don’t have to hoard it in case someone new comes into your life. Husband loves his sister and his step-sister. Loving his step-dad doesn’t mean he loves his dad less. (No one use the step part most of the time, I’m using it here for clarity). Me loving my younger child doesn’t take away from the love I feel for older child and loving them doesn’t take way from the love I have for my husband or other people in my life.

    I get that people can react to death badly. I certainly did at 13, but in my defense, I was a child and my mom’s “she’s with god now so you should pray for acceptance” wasn’t what I needed. I can’t imagine the grief of loosing a baby. Being upset about your brother’s death isn’t making it all about you. Wanting to say goodbye isn’t making it all about you. Wanting to see your brother or a picture isn’t making it all about you. Donna is being horrible and it’s ok if your still love her and it’s ok if you don’t. Sometimes Christian love is the worst kind of hate.

    I’m so sorry and I imagine this was hard to write. I hope you find some healing.

    December 11, 2021
    |Reply
  10. Pansy Petal
    Pansy Petal

    *Hugs very tightly* You/we are all entitled to every emotion we feel, always! I understand, more than you know. You have been my inspiration in hard times. I send to you now, my understanding, acceptance, and love. YOU ARE WORTHY!

    December 11, 2021
    |Reply
  11. Bookjunk
    Bookjunk

    You are absolutely entitled to your feelings, Jenny. I’m really glad that you’ve decided to cut off contact with your mother, because that relationship was clearly causing you nothing but grief. At least now you can be yourself and feel your feelings without them making you feel bad about it.

    December 12, 2021
    |Reply
  12. Danielle Charron
    Danielle Charron

    I don’t know what to say except I’m so sorry. You deserve to be treated so much better.

    December 13, 2021
    |Reply
  13. You have every right to be upset. I have no words for how cruel your family was to you. *offers virtual hug*

    December 14, 2021
    |Reply
  14. Karin from NLD
    Karin from NLD

    I’m so sorry about how Donna treated you. And I think I understand your reasoning, that you’re not entitled to anything. People are allowed to chose who they want to hold their stillborn child.
    But in a fair and just world, you would have been included. Because you came from such a beautiful place of love and care and warmth, and they regarded that with disdain and decided they wanted nothing to do with you.

    Which is so very unfair. You deserved better. And I want you to know: you don’t have to go to your grandma’s house on Christmas. I feel like you don’t want to, and that’s okay. Use covid as an excuse if you must. Just stay in with your own family in your PJ’s, watch cheesy holiday classics and order pizza.

    You matter. Your grief matters. Maybe they didn’t want you around, and while it’s a dick move, they are allowed to pick their own company. And so are you.

    I applaud your courage of absolving Donna. I can imagine it’s a hard thing to do, because every child longs for their parents love and approval. And sometimes people hold on to the relationship because they’re not able to say goodbye to the hope and dream that someday, their parent will be proud and loving and caring and all the things a child needs their parent to give. And you broke with that hope, and that takes strength.

    You deserved so much better. I’m sorry you didn’t have a mother who loves you unconditionally and who cherishes the mother-daughter bond you had. We all deserve a parent like that. So you too, deserve a parent like that.

    Please, mourn your baby brother. You would have been an awesome big sister had you had the chance. Your (step)siblings deserved that too, and that’s also something Donna and Gary chose to deny them.
    Please, mourn him. You are allowed to. Your feelings are valid.

    I’m so sorry. You deserved so much better.

    December 14, 2021
    |Reply
  15. Alisha
    Alisha

    Donna is trash. I’m so sorry. And you being upset about your brother is NOT making her situation about you – it’s making YOUR GRIEF about you. It didn’t just “happen to somebody else” – you experienced different aspects of it, is all. Don’t let anyone guilt you about having feelings. That’s such a fucked up and abusive worldview that was pushed on you.

    December 16, 2021
    |Reply
  16. Jane Doe
    Jane Doe

    Wow, just wow. It amazes me that some people have kids then discard them when it is no longer convenient. I will never be able to understand that. I mean, I definitely know I do not want kids, I don’t like them and nothing I’ve ever heard about motherhood has made me want to become one, so I don’t get women (and men) who have kids and don’t love them. Why even bother then?
    On the topic of “being all about you’ for crying over a dead sibling. What f-ing planet are those people from? Since when has crying in mourning selfish? And what kind of backwards bible are they reading?!
    I am not religious at all, but even I know the basic teachings of Jesus, and it was not “be a selfish, self-centered b*tch”.
    I am lucky to have grown up with loving, understanding parents, so I don’t really understand that feeling of rejection.
    Unless you were crying or mourning to elicit sympathy from others, then no, crying and mourning are very much your business.
    Heck, people cry and mourn celebrities when they die, and let’s be honest, how many of those people mourning Michael Jackson, Whitney Huston, or Maradona actually knew them personally?
    It’s just sentient creature’s nature to grieve.
    So you can grieve however you want, ultimately you are in a much better place than those “good Christians” that cut you out of their lives, because those types of miserable people act that way because they are not happy and will never be so.
    BTW, therapy is a life changer (at least to me.)

    December 22, 2021
    |Reply
  17. Al
    Al

    That’s incredibly messed up and I’m sorry. You have every right to feel whatever feelings you want, and you had every right to grieve your brother and see a picture of him, and I cannot fathom how cruel someone would have to be to deny you that.

    December 25, 2021
    |Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *