The path that moves me.

by Kyeli on January 19th, 2009 @ 4:15 pm in How To Be Awesome
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This is hard to share, but important.

In November of 2002, I found out I was pregnant. I was elated – I’d been wanting another baby for some time, and had pretty much realized it wasn’t going to happen, but the appearance of that double pink line changed everything. It was four months before my 25th birthday, two before Dru’s 5th birthday; we were living in Rochester, NY (upstate on the lake). We were all thrilled and excited. I knew immediately she would be a girl. I told everyone; family, friends, co-workers, strangers, everyone.

We named her Caelia Faith.

9 weeks later, I lost her.

This story does end well.

When I lost her, I lost more than just a baby. I lost my hopes and dreams. I lost my faith in my gods and in the universe. I lost touch with my friends, my partner, and my little boy.

I closed my heart. I lost myself.

I spent a year in that place, dark and cold. Alone even when surrounded by loved ones. I pushed us to move away from Rochester before we were financially capable. I desperately needed to get away from that room, that house, that street, that city… those memories. That sense of lost.

We moved, life moved.

We moved to Chicago. I got a job, life moved on. Eventually, my heart-sick eased, faded. I was lonely, so I joined a tarot class. I’ve long loved tarot, and it felt like an easy way to make friends – and it worked. The teacher was a Reclaiming witch, and she drew a bunch of us into the tradition. I wound up being an integral part of the Chicago Reclaiming community. My friendships deepened, my self-work adventure started, and I came out of my shell.

I reopened my heart and deepened my connections.

Then I lost my job.

My job-hunting skills were sadly lacking. Since we’d moved before we were financially able to support such a loss, we were immediately in serious trouble. After several months without work, we began to realize that we were going to lose our apartment. I tried my best, but my best wasn’t enough, and eventually we couldn’t pay our bills anymore. We moved back to Texas, moving in with my then mother-in-law. I lost my friends, my beautiful apartment, the city I loved more than any other. Here we go again.

My partner, my son, two cats, and myself – and enough stuff to fill a two bedroom apartment – moved in to one tiny room in a house with a crazy woman. After only a few months, the crazy woman met an even crazier man. Things got worse – and far more surreal. I was depressed, despondent, bored, unhappy, lonely.

Around this time, Pace entered my life. During our first conversation ever, she said, “I really like you, Kyeli, but your life really sucks.”

My life really sucked.

I protested. I got off the phone immediately. I cried. I hemmed and hollered, whined, complained, and cried some more.

Then I realized Pace was right. My life really sucked.

Time for change!

I started evaluating myself and my life. What sucked? What didn’t? Why? What could I change, what could I work on, what needed to go? What was wrong, what was right? What really mattered – and what didn’t matter at all?

In answering those questions, I turned my life around. I severed some really intense bonds, I gained self-knowledge, I grew and learned and changed. In the past four years, I went from someone full of self-hate and despair to someone I respect, admire, and love.

Sometimes the really, really bad things are secret good things in disguise.

Now, my days are full of love and light. I spend my days surrounded by people I want to spend time with, talking to people I want to talk to. I have several hours a day to spend with my son, nearly all of which is high quality. Pace and I spend several hours a day doing what we love, making the Usual Error Project grow, touching people, blogging, talking, connecting. I have good friends, good connections, and lots of hope and faith and love.

I’m strong. I’m fierce. I’m powerful. My life is awesome.

This is the path that moves me.

This path started the day I lost my baby girl. It’s never been easy, but every step – every single step – has been worth it. Without her sacrifice, I never would have become who I am today. The lessons I’ve learned have been immeasurably important, and the life I’m living honors her memory. Every day.

Thank you, Caelia. I couldn’t have done this without you.


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10 Comments!

#1 Posted by bonnieL on January 19th, 2009 4:28 pm | link

Kyeli, you are an incredibly talented writer and a beautiful person. Just
wanted you to know.

bonnieL
triibe on!

#2 Posted by Pam on January 19th, 2009 4:37 pm | link

Thank you Caelia. Without you I wouldn’t have met your mom.

#3 Posted by Betsy on January 19th, 2009 7:51 pm | link

As a mother who had to give her newborn back to God, I appreciate your sharing this beautiful tribute to your baby girl and the person you are being.

#4 Posted by Oliver Danni on January 20th, 2009 2:52 am | link

I love you. :)

#5 Posted by Joely Black on January 20th, 2009 6:50 am | link

That is so true. Thank you for writing such a wonderful post.

#6 Posted by peggy on January 20th, 2009 9:01 am | link

Beautiful post. I think your path began not with the loss but with the double-pink line. Mad love and all that. You ARE fierce, Kyeli. And awesome.

#7 Posted by Naomi Dunford on January 20th, 2009 9:24 am | link

First, thank you. I’d love to label what I felt while reading that but I’ve only recently discovered that fear isn’t the only negative emotion, so I kind of suck at labeling. I will say that it was an incredible thing to read.

And, as Peggy said, you’re fierce. I just read about the fierceness thing in your book, and yeah, that resonates really well. Way to be fierce, sweet pea. And thanks for sending the email. I’m glad I read this.

#8 Posted by Goddess Leonie I Creative Goddess on January 20th, 2009 5:32 pm | link

Oh bless.
I have tears in my eyes reading this.
It sounds like Caelia was such a deep gift to your spirit, your journey and your faith.
Even when it didn’t feel like it at the time.
And that’s just the most beautiful example of life, really.
Big Things Happen.
And they can be incredibly painful. And we say WHY?
And years later, we understand.
My eldest brother passed away in an accident when I was 14. Twelve years on, his life and his death has been one of the greatest gifts in my life. I’ve learned so much about love and spirit across walls, boundaries, beginnings and endings because of this ever-growing, inspiring, deeply loving relationship I have with him still.
Love,
Leonie

#9 Posted by Nathalie Lussier on August 8th, 2009 7:26 pm | link

Wow, what a profound life changing experience in more than one way. I guess there is some truth to the silver lining after all. Sometimes the scariest most sad things turn into life transforming situations.

It was really touching to read about your Caelia. What a gift, and a beautiful name too. She gave you much, and you give us much also. For that, thank you. Thank you also for your honesty in sharing such a touching story.

Lots of love,
Nathalie

#10 Posted by Pam Belding on August 8th, 2009 8:46 pm | link

Thank you for sharing that! You are an inspiration for sharing your story and I wanted you to know that you deeply touched me. Again, Thanks.

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