fostering the humanistic practice of medicine publishing personal accounts of illness and healing encouraging health care advocacy

fostering the humanistic practice of medicine publishing personal accounts of illness and healing encouraging health care advocacy

Lost Memories

Throughout my pregnancy, I didn’t know if I was having a boy or a girl–I wanted to be surprised. When my baby was delivered, the doctor yelled, “It’s a girl!” A daughter–what I’d hoped for! Although I would have loved a son equally, in all honesty I’d hoped for a daughter. I thought long and hard about her name, wanting something significant, and chose Olivia, which means peace, and Rose, because I had a passion for roses. Olivia Rose.

What do I do with that name now?

 

My sister made a beautiful painting to commemorate Olivia’s birth–a watercolor of a quilt. Each square symbolizes something unique about me or Olivia or her father. For Olivia, one square has a dove with an olive branch, another square has tiny roses. For us all, there’s a square for Michigan, another with acorns for her birth month. And in the center are Olivia’s full name, birth date, and weight.

What do I do with this painting now?

In our family room, rows of pictures line the window ledges. In one, Olivia and I are at a restaurant. A friend caught us with our foreheads together, both laughing heartily. Olivia has her hand to her mouth, as if there were a secret between us. Her long, curly hair is pulled back, and she’s wearing a flowery blue dress. I look on down the row of pictures: Olivia in a tutu, Olivia and her sister wearing matching dresses….

What do I do with these pictures now?

Eli has been going by “Eli” for the past four years. “Olivia” feels foreign on my tongue now, and some days I don’t even register “Olivia” as anyone I know. But when Eli talks about legally changing his name, literally wiping out any trace of Olivia, a deep sadness fills my heart.

What do I do with the birth certificate then?

I have been with my child every step of the way exploring his gender. I have found him help. I have driven him to countless appointments. I have stood unwavering as he faltered and then regained his grounding. I have researched–for myself, for him–transgender issues, transitioning, and supportive places. When he had his top surgery, I nursed him through his recovery, changing his bandages, helping him bathe.

But where in all this is space for me to mourn the girl I birthed? How do I keep my “daughter’s” memories while also welcoming a “son”?

Andrea Eisenberg
Bloomfield Hill, Michigan

 

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1 thought on “Lost Memories”

  1. I have a trans grandson and still grieve the loss of the slim young girl I knew for eighteen years as Zoey.

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