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By Traci Lillich
September 17, 2004
It is now September 17, 2004, and many things
have changed in our lives since our twin daughter Kylee (at 23 months
old) died on January 19, 2000 and since I wrote our
story for the Center for Loss in Multiple Birth (CLIMB)
bulletin. One of the biggest things that happened was that we moved
from Cincinnati, Ohio where we lived with Kylee and Kevin (her twin
brother - now 6 and in first grade) to Sacramento, CA to be near
my family. It was very hard leaving our friends and life in Cincinnati
two years after the anniversary of Kylee's death. But, my mother,
two sisters, brother, aunt, dad and stepmother all live here and
it has been a huge blessing to be near them and be part of their
daily lives. My mother and sisters have helped me tremendously with
Kevin.
The second thing we have done is officially form
our own non-profit organization in Kylee's memory, it is called
The Kylee Lillich Charitable Giving Tree, Inc.
We help needy, grieving, and hospitalized children year round with
new toys and new clothes and we have an annual holiday giving tree.
In 2002 we helped over 375 kids and in 2003 we helped over 345 children
as well. It is an all-volunteer organization, we have toy drives
or people pick wishes off of our trees and fill that child's wishes
and we receive monetary donations to help fulfill children's wishes.
All of the children we help are referred by nurses, school administrators
or social workers. It has been a tremendous healing experience for
us to give back to our community in Kylee's name and to "do
things" for her in this way. Kevin asked me one day when he
was four, "Why are you giving out papers with Kylee's picture
on it?" They were the Giving Tree brochures.
And the best thing that has happened to us is
that we have another set of twins! After an 8th round of in vitro
with a new infertility clinic out here in California, we got pregnant
on December 18th, 2002. In the middle of sorting toys for the Giving
Tree, Kevin came and told me, "Mommy, you have a baby in your
tummy!" I was in absolute shock that it worked. Soon after
we found out it was twins.
I had gone to work at Casual Corner and was able
to get some infertility medical insurance but I had to go out on
disability when at 17 weeks I began having contractions. I was put
on strict bed-rest for 7 weeks. Baby A's placenta was low lying
and finally it moved up on its own but for the duration of the pregnancy
I was mostly in bed or resting. I had gestational diabetes again
and was monitored very frequently. We were told that twin B had
a two-vessel umbilical cord (instead of three vessel) and were told
that he would have a 25% chance of birth defects. We knew he was
not growing at the rate of twin A but the perinatologists kept saying
twin B was growing. Needless to say, it was an agonizing, difficult
pregnancy. I was absolutely scared to death to have these babies,
knowing I could not take it if something happened to one of them.
But, finally at 38 weeks, I had a C-Section and my two new miracles
arrived. Cooper John was a whooping 8 lbs 4 oz and my little Cole
Patrick weighed in at 4 lbs 7 oz., he was fine but he had no body
fat on him and he was sent immediately to the NICU. Cole struggled
to keep his body temperature and could not eat on his own and had
to be tube fed. But he was a fighter. I know that Kylee was perched
on his isolette the whole time he was in the NICU helping him. The
doctors and nurses told us it would probably be a few weeks before
he came home but Cole came home after 7 days. Cooper and I came
home after 5 days because I had complications (excessive bleeding
and my intestines stopped working). The hospital staff were just
wonderful to us. One of the things that I did was ask that the hospital
put a copy of my CLIMB story in my file, so that anyone who looked
after us knew our story. I have also given it to new doctors and
teachers. It is so much easier for them to read about what happened
to us than to have to explain it to everyone.
The boys are now over a year old and amazing.
Cooper looks and laughs just like Kevin. Cole looks and has many
of Kylee's personality traits. Mostly, he is the most determined
child! It is just a gift to have them. Kevin loves his brothers
and is so very proud of them. The babies were born one week after
Kevin began kindergarten and I was able to volunteer in his class
and bring the babies once they were around 5 months old. Kevin was
the only one that knew and kept saying he was having two brothers.
Cooper and Cole see Kylee's picture around our house and tries to
say her name, Cole points at it and then touches his heart.
Grieving wise, I still have a heavy heart. But,
I have mostly all good days now. Certain days are hard, all holidays,
Mother's Day, 1st day of school, last day of school, birthdays and
anniversaries are all hard. But we always do something to include
Kylee. We go to the cemetery; we call it Kylee's place. We were
able to move Kylee out here and she is buried at a beautiful cemetery
in rural farm country (20 minutes from our house). Moving her was
extremely hard, like burying her all over again. But we have a family
plot where we have planted trees, roses, and flowers near her grave.
We can sit at her grave and see 3 mountain ranges. Foxes, bunnies,
birds and squirrels surround her there and Kevin gets a tractor
ride from Mr. Miguel the groundskeeper whenever we are there.
Some days are still hard and I cry terribly for
her. Some days I remember that awful day she died and it is unbearable.
But then, I am called by one of the boys and I keep going for them.
I know she would want me to be a good mommy for them. I am writing
a children's grief book about our experience and hope maybe some
day that will be helpful for other families that have experienced
this awful pain.
It is almost 5 years (on January 19, 2005) now
that Kylee died. It has been hell, a lot of counseling and hard
work to climb out of hell and a lot of love from people that care
about us to help us find our new life that is full of blessings.
People who meet me for this first time think I am so lucky, and
I say, "No, not lucky but blessed." It is still very hard
to explain to people about what happened but we do, Kylee is always
our child. I miss being the mom to a little girl, no barretts (hers
sit by my computer), no Barbies, fill our house. I still hope for
another little girl someday maybe via adoption.
My heart still physically aches that Kylee is
not here and not playing with Kevin. He asked me recently if it
was his fault Kylee died, Pam's fault (the babysitter) or Kylee's
fault that she died. His questions come out of no where and I had
to explain to him that is was no one's fault, don't ever think it
was yours, unfortunately Kylee died in an accident. Those things
still take your breath away, but we get through them one day at
a time. I still get frustrated when people say stupid things like,
"I could never live if my child died," and I have learned
to say, "well you don't have a choice!" I can't stop living,
I have to be here for Kevin, Cooper, Cole, my husband John, my family.
Life goes on and the best thing I can do is honor her life, her
memory, and be a good mommy, a good person and fill this world with
joy and hopefully laughter, just as it would have been for Kylee
if she were here with me.
Please feel free to contact
us if you have any questions about our family or our non-profit
organization, The Kylee Lillich Charitable Giving Tree, Inc.
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