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Stacey Forman

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What is Perfection?

Posted: 08/28/2012 3:40 pm

There is something amazing about seeing your baby on an ultrasound... whether it's the first, second or tenth time. Just over a year ago, my husband Lew and I excitedly walked into the doctor's office, ready for our 18-week fetal survey, where they check every single organ to ensure that they're developing correctly. We'd already had one ultrasound where we found out it was a girl. And, we'd already named her -- Pamela "Ella" Catherine.

Over the course of that hour, our sonographer Colleen showed us each organ -- helping us to discern them since most looked like indistinguishable blobs. But, she told us they looked perfect and were developing correctly, so we breathed a collective sigh of relief. Colleen scanned around the rest of Ella's body -- first confirming that yes, she was still a girl. She then scanned quickly over each foot and each of her arms. We saw her wiggle all of her toes and wave her fingers. Something looked a little off to me because I thought we could only see one set of fingers. But, I shook off that feeling because we had a hard time telling which side of the body we were looking at, plus she could have just been making a fist or maybe we were catching it at a weird angle. But, at the end of the ultrasound, Colleen left for a few minutes, saying that she would be right back. At that time, Lew and I looked at each other and I said, "Something's wrong."

2012-07-24-ultrasound_arm.jpeg

Maybe it was because the sonographer didn't leave at the end of our previous ultrasound. Maybe it was because there was a sign directly in front of me that said something to the effect of "Sonographer cannot divulge any information on your ultrasound. This information must be provided by the radiologist or your ob/gyn." I just knew there was cause for concern, and I immediately looked at Lew and guessed.

"I think it's that arm," I said. "Something wasn't right. I couldn't see any fingers... Could you?"

Lew just slowly shook his head. He then held my hand while we waited, and prayed that we wouldn't hear terrible news.

Three-hundred minutes later (or maybe just five) Colleen came back in with the radiologist. Now, we loved our hospital. We loved our doctors. Our nurses. Our sonographer. We even loved the food service people. But, you want to know who we didn't love? Our radiologist.

This guy walked in, looked at us and said "OOH... no one likes to see me! Hold on one second" and then proceeded to spend five minutes examining the ultrasounds. Meanwhile, I'm looking at Lew mouthing, "Are you kidding me?" while Lew was staring back at the radiologist, stunned.

Finally, the radiologist moved away from the computer screen and said, "I'm not happy with something I'm seeing on your ultrasound. In looking at it, your baby is missing all of her left hand. So, we're going to get you set up with the high-risk specialist and they'll go over all of the possibilities with you. Sorry." And then he left while we stared at Colleen with our jaws dropped, my fingers turning white from the grip that Lew had on my hand.

Colleen sat with us for a few minutes, gave us her sincere condolences and handed over a pile of ultrasound photos. She then went out and told our nurse practitioner what the radiologist had said. The NP wanted to see us before we left, but Colleen said we could take as much time as we needed.

I slowly got dressed and we ambled down the hall. Our NP was there within two minutes and gave me the biggest hug. She then asked me the question that still appalls me: "Now that you have found this out... is there any chance you wouldn't want to go through with this pregnancy?" Without any discussion or hesitation, both of us vehemently yelled "NO." She smiled and said, "I absolutely figured that knowing the two of you -- but I had to ask."

She had gotten to know us pretty well at this point, and gave it to us straight: "Well, out of all of the scary developments that could have come out of an ultrasound, this is one of the best." We nodded, because honestly, that was exactly what we were thinking as well. She then paused and smiled sadly at us and said, "It still sucks though." Yup, that about summed it up.

We talked a little bit as we left the hospital, but mostly we sat in silence as we each slowly processed the information. Occasionally, one of us would voice a concern -- mine typically consisted of "how will she wear a wedding ring?" (On her right hand, of course.) And, "how will she put her hair in a ponytail?" (With help -- though that may never be an issue if this kid, who is now 10-months-old, doesn't grow some hair.)

We made it about 10 minutes down the highway when I started smiling.

"I know what she's going to be for Halloween this year," I said.

"What?" my husband asked, looking at me like I was nuts.

"NEMO! With her little fin"

At that point, we both started laughing. Our little Nemo was going to be just fine. She wouldn't have a hand, but we've got a roster of family and friends missing limbs, not to mention family that had much scarier complications at birth. If the worst thing to happen over the course of this pregnancy and birth was a missing hand, we could handle that.

2012-07-24-m4.jpg

As an added benefit, thinking about her as our little Nemo led me to start Googling a good picture of Nemo for my desktop. In the process, I stumbled upon the Lucky Fin Project -- a non-profit dedicated to raising awareness and support for kids with limb differences -- and it's founder, Molly. Within a few minutes, I had ordered Lucky Fin bracelets for both of us and within a short time, I realized that I had also found an incredible limb difference community -- which has been so helpful for both advice and sanity checks.

In the weeks after that, we had regular follow-ups and ultrasounds with the high-risk doctors well as consults at Children's Hospital. They all confirmed what we already knew: Ella was missing her left hand from just past her wrist, but that everything else looked awesome. What I loved about our entire support team -- including family, friends and our medical team -- is that they all talked about how Ella was perfect. Not that she was perfect except for her hand. She was just perfect. And you know what? It's 100 percent true. Perfection isn't about the number of fingers or toes you have. Perfection means something different to everyone. And to me, there is nothing more perfect than this:

2012-07-24-DSC_7187.jpg
 
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There is something amazing about seeing your baby on an ultrasound... whether it's the first, second or tenth time. Just over a year ago, my husband Lew and I excitedly walked into the doctor's office...
There is something amazing about seeing your baby on an ultrasound... whether it's the first, second or tenth time. Just over a year ago, my husband Lew and I excitedly walked into the doctor's office...
 
 
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06:15 PM on 10/24/2012
She's beautiful!
06:43 AM on 10/24/2012
Omigoodness - she is the sweetest and cutest!
This whole thing brought tears to my eyes. My daughter was born with an arm injury, which could mean so many different things for her future... but every time I look at her, and every time anyone else looks at her, they don't see that - they see a happy perfect baby. Just like Ella :)
04:15 PM on 10/23/2012
she's a beautiful little girl :) and I love that you called her your little Nemo.
05:22 AM on 09/05/2012
That is so much like our experience when our son (now 20 months) was diagnosed with spina bifida at 21 weeks gestation. He is not perfect, but I have yet to meet anyone who is! He is my gorgeous boy, though. :)
11:41 PM on 09/04/2012
She is beautiful!
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globaltrekkie
We are all bacon grease....
11:40 PM on 09/03/2012
:)
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sdx203
11:23 PM on 09/03/2012
You go baby Ella!
10:59 PM on 09/03/2012
She is beyond beautiful and I just love that big grin on her face. It goes all the way up to her eyes and that definitely shows her personality. May God bless you all and keep your hearts safe from those that will be harsh or rude. She has a purpose and a plan and with you as parents and God in her corner, she will prove all those doubters wrong.
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sabra505
Ever victorious in spite of liberals....
09:50 PM on 09/03/2012
What a DARLING BABY!

She is just yummy delicious.

Wow.
08:53 PM on 09/03/2012
thank you so much for the article it was very inspiring! I have a sister she is five years younger then me and she has her left hand exactly like that too, but that doesnt stop her from doing her usal daily actvites. shes a blessing to me and my parents. How old is Ella?
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Stacey Forman
09:15 PM on 09/04/2012
She is 10 1/2 months old!
08:41 PM on 09/03/2012
i went through something similar with my baby girl. We were in germany with a very cold neonatal specialist who didn't speak much english. He told us that our baby had a severe heart defect, a chromosomal defect and was not growing. He said think about wether you want to continue with the pregnancy, even if you do she probably won't make it to birth. We cried and prepped for the worst, but a year and a half later we have a beautiful little miracle.
11:01 PM on 09/03/2012
Praise God for your little baby girl!! Thank you for sharing :)
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kag18
08:24 PM on 09/03/2012
she is beautiful :-) she will be an amazing joy to you
06:35 PM on 09/03/2012
Your baby is adorable. Some people are not cut out for service occupations. Nobody but a doctor should tell anyone what was caught on a sonogram, x-ray, pt scan, MRI, etc.. I've met a lot of uncaring people involved with health care.
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lsdblbe
10:42 PM on 09/03/2012
my husb is a cardiologist and I work with him ...years ago did radiology and a lot of radiologists go into the field because there is very little patient contact. Not a bad thing they know their limitations'
sorry for the experience but that said your baby is PUUUURRRFCT
mom of 5
Ebeneezer Frib
Conservatism: Ideology divorced from practicality
09:01 PM on 10/23/2012
A radiologist is a doctor.
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blkgoddess06
03:19 PM on 09/03/2012
my heart started beating very fast as i was reading this and im not the one who went through it....i could just imagine how you guys must have felt ...but she is so adorable i actually tried to pinch her cheeks through the computer screen..lol...god bless her always
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emann38123
03:06 PM on 09/03/2012
Your baby is absolutely beautiful!