Happy 8th Birthday Hazel

by tarastar on July 24, 2010

Hazel on the beach in Half Moon Bay, Fall 2009

I began trying to get pregnant shortly after getting married in 1999.  I assumed it would be easy; it was not. After two years of failed fertility treatments, my then husband and I decided on one last IVF cycle.  This time we would go to St. Barnabas in New Jersey, home to a well known fertility clinic.  I was, to put it mildly, desperate to be pregnant.  The culmination of failed attempts, of squandered savings, of the hope/failure roller coaster, had left me exhausted.  My husband at the time, was traveling two weeks out of the month.  I needed to be at the clinic for close to two weeks while they monitored my blood work and waited for everything to align before they took my eggs.  My sister Bridget came with me for support.  We holed up in a musty long stay hotel in Morris Plains, New Jersey. It was the end of October – cold, piles of leaves on the ground.  In the mornings, my sister and I would drive to the clinic where they’d take blood and scan me via ultrasound, to see the progress of my eggs.  There were always dead deer on the road I remember.  My sister gave me the injections at night.  It was a process of icing and warming and then injecting and wincing.  She got good at giving the injections and I got good at tolerating them.   In fact, soon enough I was doing my own injections.  When we returned from New Jersey the injections had to continue and so I did them myself.  Once I injected Progesterone in a cramped batroom stall in San Francisco State, where I was getting my master’s degree.  My teacher saw me emerge from the bathroom with my needle and vial, and I remember wondering if I should explain to her that I was not a junkie.

Oh 22 gauge, 1.5 inch needles, how I hated you.

At the long stay hotel in New Jersey, there was a video rental libaray in the lobby, full of dated 80s and 90s movies that I’d never bothered to see in the theatres.  I don’t remember what we watched anymore, but they were all romantic comedies.  There was one with Alicia Silverstone and Benicio Del Toro I think.  I remember one night there was an argument in the next room, one sided, with a man on a phone shouting at whoever was on the other end of the line.  Another time Bridget and I watched from our window as a man berated his wife in the car down below.  She sat in the passenger seat looking ahead.  He was shouting so loudly we could hear some of it even from way up on the 4th floor.  I don’t know why I still remember that, but I do.

I had been to an acupuncturist before we left for New Jersey.  Desperation and hope made me cast a wide net for solutions:  I looked to acupuncture, diet, standing on my head after sex, yoga, herbal remedies, vitamins.  I had been diagnosed with “unexplained infertility” which meant simply I should be able to have a baby and they just didn’t know why it wasn’t happening.  The acupuncturist had put me on a special diet.  I could have no sugar, which was torture for someone with a sweet tooth.  At night she had instructed me to submerge my feet in a very hot bucket of water, up to my calves.  It had something to do with circulation.  It made only partial sense, but every night I did it anyway, as Bridget and I sat in front of the television.

When it was finally was time for the eggs to be harvested, my husband flew to New Jersey.  A day later the eggs were fertilized.  There were eight total.   They put two back and froze the remainders.  These are the two in the picture below. They are both eight celled, day three embryos.  Though they put back two, only one implanted.  There’s a common misconception, bolstered by media reporting, that you can implant embryos. You can’t.  You can simply transfer them to a uterous.  After that, the implanting that does or does not happen is a crap shoot, one not even doctors fully understand.  I don’t know which embryo is Hazel.  But one of these is her first baby picture.  The doctor showed them to me, under a higly magnified camera in the operating room where they did the embryo transfer.  They looked just like the picture – blobish, like amoebas and nothing like a baby.   I remember she said to me “There they are.  Aren’t they cute?”  Though it was a ludicrous thing to say, I cried.  They were cute.

The bottom embryo shows less fragmentation which generally means better quality. I suspect this is Hazel. The other one did not implant.

We retuned to the Bay Area.  Two weeks of agonizing wait went by.  I took a pregnancy test.  It was positive and I immediately assumed it was broken, or expired or otherwise part of a cruel trick.  I called my sister and said: “Something weird has happened.  Come over.” We went to get more pregnancy tests.  On the radio, Led Zeppelin’s Kashmir was playing.  The lyrics I heard when we backed out of the driveway were “I am a traveller of both time and space.” Bridget looked at me and said “This is a good sign.  Your traveller of time and space has arrived.  You have a baby in there.” Eleven more pregnancy tests agreed and when the doctor’s office called confirming my postitve blood work, I almost felt myself levitating with joy.  I have not known happiness like that before or since.  Sometimes I think that I willed her into existance, by sheer force of wishing on stars and candles and eyelashes.  She came to me through medicine and the manipulations of science and (if you believe) God too.  But I can’t help thinking that force of will, love and blind, rampant hope, played a part as well.

The 20 week ultrasound. I took this from her baby book. I'd kept that fortune in my wallet for years.

Hazel was born on a Tuesday night at the close of July in 2002.  I’d been laboring since the evening before – back labor it was called, which meant I mostly felt the contractions in my lower back.  I’d heard that first time mothers are often sent home from the hospital because they come in too soon, but by the time I went in, I was nearly hobbling with pain.  They wheeled me into a delivery room and asked what took so long.  She was born at 9:37 pm.  She came out laughing – a small, stiffled giggle.  It was not a cry.  I told this to my sister and she said it was because of all those comedies we watched in that hotel room in Morris Plains, New Jersey.  Hazel had been holding that giggle for months.

Hazel’s first word was “woof woof,” for dog.  Her second was “cock,” which was for cars.  This was awkward when we were in public and she’d shriek “COCK!” when a car drove by.  If people were around I’d say loudly “Yes that’s right Hazel, it’s a CAR.”  After a while it seemed kind of pointless.  All my correcting her did no good and she continued shouting the obscenity gleefully, sometimes accompanied by frantic pointing, any time a car went by, which was a lot.  So I stopped correcting her and would instead say “That’s right sweetie, good job, it’s a cock.”

She is not like me.  She is not socially awkward or even remotely shy.  She is outgoing and likes to sing and dance.  For an entire year when she was 3, she wore princess dresses and high heeled slip-on dress-up shoes.  When we had her first parent-teacher conference in nursery school, the first thing the teacher said to me when I sat down in one of those tiny chairs was: “I have never seen a child climb trees so well in high heels.  So now we just let her.” Clappy shoes, Hazel called them, shoes that made a clap-clap noise to announce her presence, to make people turn and look.

She has a temper.  She is small for her age.  She makes a clicking sound with her tongue when she is in a deep sleep.  She is a night owl and even as a baby, stayed up late and slept until nine or ten o’clock in the morning.  No one believed a baby would sleep so late, but she did.  On her cheek are three freckles, that’s it, just three.  If you connected them it would make a perfect triangle.  Hazel was going to be called Simone, because I thought she’d be darker, more earthy looking, with black eyes like her father.  But she arrived a redhead, with pale mottled skin.  And so we switched it.  Her favorite song when she was little, was Modest Mouse’s “Float On.” She called this song “Cop Car” for the line: “I backed my car into a cop car the other day.  Well he just drove off, sometime life’s ok.”  She’d request the song again and again in the car.

I wonder if Hazel herself will ever read these words.  If, when she is older and turning eight is a distant memory and she is 18 or 28 or 38 or 78, she will read these words and know the full force of my love for her.  If you find yourself reading this one day Hazel, then this is for you:  My sweet Hazel, no one loves you more than me.  Whatever you have done, whatever you do in your life, I will love you the same amount.  You used to ask me how much I loved you and I’d say: so much.  But what you wanted was something measurable. “Do you love me to the moon and back?” you’d press me.  Yes “And all around the world?”  Yes. Hazel, wherever you are when you are reading this, you should know that I am desperately glad you are mine.  I am sorry your father and I are not together.  I will likely never get over the idea that I gave you a home with parents who can’t be together.  Your sweetness, your cutting remarks, your temper, your heartfelt expressions of love, your need to still be cuddled at times, your anxieties, your distaste for sensible shoes, your laughter, your unadulterated joy upon seeing me after being with your dad – all of it slays me.

I love you to the moon and back.  And all around the world.

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{ 35 comments }

1 Cassondra July 24, 2010 at 2:10 pm

Wow, this is such a lovely expression of what you go through with the infertility (what I’m going through now), and what the end result can be. So wonderful! It gives me hope.

2 françoise July 24, 2010 at 2:32 pm

Beautiful little girl, you are so lucky to have such a mom.

3 Sian Cottrell Colman! July 24, 2010 at 4:34 pm

That is gorgeous Tara, I hope she does read it one day! I’ll try remember and remind her in the distant future!! Miss you x

4 punctured bicycle July 24, 2010 at 4:40 pm

Beautiful and moving.
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5 Varda (SquashedMom) July 24, 2010 at 6:41 pm

Oh, how lovely. I am icing my boys’ cakes tonight for their 8th birthday party tomorrow. It appears we were both doing IVF cycles at nearly the same time, just a few miles away from each other. I was in Manhattan at Cornell. Because I’m an old broad they put in all 5 that made it to day 3. My retrieval was 11/13 & my transfer was the 16th, less than 2 weeks after yours. All the women in the recovery room were naming their embryos. The woman before me had 4: John, Paul, George & Ringo. Then there was Mo, Larry & Curly. We pondered for a moment, then arrived at the Marx Brothers: Groucho, Harpo, Chico, Zeppo & Gummo. I’m pretty sure our twin boys were once Groucho and Harpo, fits their personalities. Thanks for writing such a beautiful post and bringing it all back.
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6 Michelle July 24, 2010 at 7:38 pm

Beautiful post.
Hazel is so lucky to have you as her mom.

7 Susan July 24, 2010 at 8:49 pm

As a mom I know exactly what you are talking about……….the way you just expressed your love for Hazel made me cry. You captured the love I have for my children. They are all unique and beautiful.

8 Marian Allen July 25, 2010 at 4:19 am

Susan’s right–that love that’s so intense it can hardly be contained is the best and the scariest part of being a mom. I feel sorry for the moms who can’t feel it. My youngest daughter has grown up to be my best friend.

Oh, and she could say car when she was little, but she wasn’t so good with “truck”. Or “fox”, which sounded like the plural of her word for truck.

9 Marian Allen July 25, 2010 at 4:21 am

p.s. HAPPY BIRTHDAY, HAZEL!!!!!

A word of advice–if you still love high heels when you grow up, as I do, make sure the man of your own height whom you marry is worth spending the rest of your life in flats. As mine is.

10 Steph July 25, 2010 at 4:43 am

Wow that was really beautiful Tara.

It’s so hard to put in to words how difficult it is to want a baby SO badly and not be able to have one. Then when you do end up with a baby whether via adoption or medical intervention it just seems like it was meant to be and the world is right again.

Many ((((HUGS)))) to you and happy birthday Hazel!!! (By the way I LOVE her name!! I love all of your kids’ names!!)
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11 Theresa Milstein July 25, 2010 at 5:40 am

What a touching post. Truly. I felt all your frustrations and fears. And your love for your daughter shone through. It brought tears to my eyes. Thank you for sharing it.

One day your daughter will read this post and be moved by it as well.

My daughter turned eight yesterday too. While I didn’t have a problem getting pregnant, I’d miscarried the year before after 11 weeks on July 15th. When I was at the hospital, the doctor said, “I’m sure you’ll be pregnant again this time next year.” I got pregnant again in October with a due date of July 16th, one day after my miscarriage anniversary. But she stayed in for another eight days, and was born on July 24th.

It’s strange because I mourn the one I lost, but I wouldn’t have my daughter had I not miscarried.
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12 Melanie July 25, 2010 at 9:47 am

This post was so beautiful. The last paragraph made me start to cry. Hazel is so lucky to have you as a mom.

13 Suburban Sweetheart July 25, 2010 at 1:48 pm

I read every word of this, something I rarely do. I paid attention, too. I read some of them again, just because they were wonderful.

Hazel is lucky & so are you. <3 Happy birthday to her.
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14 Tonya July 25, 2010 at 2:16 pm

I got goosebumps! Such a truly amazing post. Hazel is a very lucky girl!
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15 Superjules July 25, 2010 at 4:26 pm

Sniffle sniffle.

Happy Birthday sweet girl!!
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16 ohnoAMY July 25, 2010 at 5:18 pm

So sweet and beautiful. Happy Birthday to Hazel!

17 steff July 26, 2010 at 7:59 am

what a sweet story for a sweet-faced girl! glad you finally got your dearest wish…

18 emmysuh July 26, 2010 at 10:24 am

“Sometimes I think that I willed her into existance, by sheer force of wishing on stars and candles and eyelashes.”

LOVE THIS.

Happy Birthday, Hazel, you are a special girl with a special mama.

<3

19 Jam July 26, 2010 at 10:41 am

Thanks for making me cry at work, Tara.

What’s that? What am I doing reading your blog at work in the first place? Uh, slacking. Duh.

And happy birthday to Hazel too. As I recall, 8 was a pretty wicked year :)
Jam´s last blog ..Friday Quickie – Lefty Loosey My ComLuv Profile

20 Sarah July 26, 2010 at 11:49 am

That made me choke up. What a beautiful sentiment. My mom is my best friend, and I have often asked her “How much do you love me, Mama?” This brought me back to those days. Hell, I’m 26 and I still need a cuddle from my mom now and then.

Hazel is a very lucky little girl. I hope her birthday brings her everything she wishes for!
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21 Sara July 26, 2010 at 6:58 pm

What a lucky girl. And I couldn’t think of a name more perfect than Hazel for that sweet face!
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22 Holly B July 26, 2010 at 10:25 pm

Beautifully, touching letter to your daughter.
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23 Sunny July 27, 2010 at 10:35 am

Thanks for reminding me how much I love my daughters, now 25 & 17. They seem to be adding more anquish at this stage than blissful memories so I sometimes forget. And I agree, I think 8 is a fabulous age for a girl. You can still play with girlie things, AND you can be interested in the electrical construction set. You can ride a bike, and not think of it as exercise. Cake doesn’t cause anxiety and Kool-Aid is the best thing ever made.

Now, I’m off to strangle my youngest because she got home over and hour after curfew last night, and move shit around in my house because the oldest is “temorarily” moving in, along with my 2 grandsons and ex-husband. *sigh

24 pablo July 28, 2010 at 7:16 am

Not many things have ever made me want to have kids, or even get what the fuss of having kids is all about. Your post was one of the exceptions. I hope this feelings passes quickly, though – I can’t afford’em.

25 Hao July 29, 2010 at 12:10 pm

Pregnant, hormonal woman + this blog post = embarrassing amount of tears.

26 Varda (SquashedMom) July 30, 2010 at 1:15 am

Hi, Tara,
Your post was so juicy, I’m back for a 2nd helping of comment! It actually inspired me to write my OWN birthday post for my boys. Not nearly as far ranging and elaborate as yours, mine focuses solely on the morning of day they were born, immediately pre- & post-birth (although I have a sketch for the conception story, also inspired by this post.) It’s so much sweeter and less heavy than my usual fare (I don’t even talk about Autism at all, and only mention my dead father once), it’s practically a lighthearted romp (hmmm, not quite, I do mention a new-found urge to kill to protect my young). So come stop by & see what I say to my guys, born 6 days after Hazel, conceived in the state next door, but born far across the continent. (And wouldn’t it be lovely for them to meet sometime?)
Varda (SquashedMom)´s last blog ..A Good Day to Be Born My ComLuv Profile

27 Anonymous Witch August 2, 2010 at 10:45 am

You are such a good mama. This was well written with love and made me cry into my textbook. What a lovely birthday tribute!
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28 Nadya August 3, 2010 at 3:44 am

What a beautiful post. And I am sure that even if Hazel never reads this, she will know (except for that period when she is about 14 to 18 and you know nothing and only want to ruin her life, of course – but as soon as she’s past that, the knowledge will return). Love like that does not go unregistered.
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29 alonewithcats August 4, 2010 at 8:26 pm

Was your goal to make me want to trade in my cats for a Hazel of my own? Because it worked.
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30 angelica August 5, 2010 at 10:39 am

lovely story, beautifully written.

I think more people should share their problems with fertility, it’s like a big black hole you only know about if you cross to the other side.

In a any case, you got your hazel nut, she got a loving momma. alls well that ends well.
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31 angelica August 5, 2010 at 11:33 am

BTW, I also cried, and added you to my blog roll
angelica´s last blog ..Shoot the messenger wait thats me! Ironies &amp contradictions of Aid Work My ComLuv Profile

32 Claire Gutschow August 5, 2010 at 12:05 pm

Hazel is so lucky to have a mom like you. All she can ask for is to be loved to the moon and back. And back again. And beautiful dress-up shoes. It won’t be long before she’s driving a cock of her own. Time flies.
Claire Gutschow´s last blog ..We are the world We are the children My ComLuv Profile

33 melanie August 11, 2010 at 9:06 am

Beautiful post. You have a gift with narative. Where are you? I keep checking, but no new posts. Sad, I need to read about your Target emergencies.

34 Wupppy August 15, 2010 at 3:38 am

“unexplained infertility”, i have been there. now, just after my second miscarriage, i’m praying for a Hazel of my own. I look at my 7YO and i wonder if he was my ” shot in a million”. The note to your daughter, so powerful.

What a heart-warming post, thank you for sharing.
Wupppy´s last blog ..The Good- The Bad- The Ugly- Part 5 My ComLuv Profile

35 mrs.notouching August 21, 2010 at 12:15 pm

Loved every word. Loved it all. Glad you are writing again. Oh and I hope she reads it even sooner. You should even read this to her – kids love hearing how much we waited for them.

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