‘This is my baby now. ‘Mountain View Crematory 31934,’ it reads. It’s been 15 months since I held him as a body, and not as ashes in a bag.’: Mom emotionally explains life after losing baby son suddenly

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“It’s been 15 months since my baby died. 15 months since the last time I held him as a body, and not as ashes in a bag. It’s been 15 months since the worst day of my life.

When I need to feel my child, I cannot hold him or kiss him. My time with my baby is now spent rifling through his old things, smelling the bits of his beloved grey blanket where his scent still lingers, touching the tiny locks of hair the funeral home cut from his head and tied neatly with a string. Holding the castings of his hands and feet, that had been pruned from being kept cold a few extra days just so they could get us the best molds. Opening the small box the bag of his ashes rest in, running my fingertips over the charred metal tag attached to it.

‘Mountain View Crematory 31934’ it reads

This is my baby now.

Courtesy of Jordan Peterson-DeRosier
Courtesy of Jordan Peterson-DeRosier

I can look through photos and videos of him, but they all end, because his life did. I have 7 months of tangible memories with him, and the rest is ‘life after loss.’

Courtesy of Jordan Peterson-DeRosier

As they grow, my other children will tell his story.

‘I had a brother,’ they’ll say. Rowan will talk about playing peek a boo, holding him for the first time, making him laugh. Perhaps he’ll tell people about that morning, watching us screaming over his brother’s body. Or maybe he’ll hold that in his memories quietly, to spare others that sadness.

Courtesy of Jordan Peterson-DeRosier

Phoenix won’t have memories of our Sloan. She will tell people about the baby her parents lost before her, repeating what she’s been told of him, how her life has probably felt defined by his death.

As Justin and I age, every day will start and end the same, with one of our children missing. We will silently ache every time someone asks how many children we have. Carefully working through how to explain in our head, before we answer.

Courtesy of Jordan Peterson-DeRosier

Rowan and Phoenix’s milestones will forever be a reminder of those Sloan will never meet. It’s not to say we won’t celebrate every one of them, but they will be bittersweet.

This is what it is to be, without your child.”

Courtesy of Jordan Peterson-DeRosier

This story was submitted to Love What Matters by Jordan Peterson-DeRosier. You can follow her journey on Instagram and her blogDo you have a similar experience? We’d like to hear your important journey. Submit your own story here, and be sure to subscribe to our free email newsletter for our best stories.

Read Jordan’s powerful backstory of her baby boy’s sudden death:

‘I went into my son’s room to wake him. I could sense something wasn’t right. I remember the pallor of his face as I turned him over. Grey. Porcelain.’

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