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Our Kylee
By Traci Lillich
>> Read the
update to this story here
Our story is unbelievable still to me, 23 months
later. We tried to get pregnant for three years, finally I went
to a reproductive endocrinologist after I found out my tubes were
blocked. After three IVF tries, we were finally pregnant, with twins.
Boy/girl--we had hit the jackpot. We were so excited, we went to
multiple birthing classes, infant CPR/safety classes, we were so
happy to be parents we wanted to do everything we needed to. I felt
confident about carrying them, my aunts are twins, my grandmother
was a twin, but I did have a hard time carrying them. I had gestational
diabetes, was in a car accident at 30 weeks--a speeding pastor hit
us and I went into labor but it was stopped, then I had high blood
pressure spikes and lost my vision, but amazingly, I went to 37
weeks--they induced me since I lost my vision again.
Kylee
and Kevin were born 2 hours and 2 minutes apart on 2-12-98. Kylee
was 6 lbs. 8 oz. and Kevin was 5 lbs. 4 oz. They were healthy and
I felt I had just been given the greatest blessing in the whole
world. We came home from the hospital on Valentine's Day. Life was
crazy--my mom came from California to stay with me for three weeks,
my husband John had to start traveling for his job (we live in Cincinnati,
Ohio) and after long deliberation, it was apparent I needed some
help. My whole family lives in California. I found a 40 year-old
grandma nanny with foster care, twin, nanny experience. She was
a godsend to us. I went back to work after 4 months. Pam, the nanny,
brought Kylee and Kevin to meet me for lunch, she took them to the
park, she came to their doctor appointments with me, she told me
when I needed to do what, she was just like their grandmother and
K&K loved her. They never cried once when I went to work in
the mornings.
So, I worked four short days a week. I tried to
go down to three days when I saw signs from Kylee she was needing
me more, but Pam's husband had to have part of his foot amputated
and we were their only source of income so I put it off for a few
more months. Pam and her husband loved K&K like they were their
own. They read them books all the time. That was one of Ky's favorite
things to do, sit in your lap and have you read to her. She liked
Barbies, puzzles, kitties, animals of all kinds. She was the greatest
eater and she talked so well, saying MaMa at 8 months! She was sugar
and spice rolled into one. Kylee and Kevin were the funniest, adorable
children, very well behaved. They got noticed every where we went,
they got their feelings hurt when they said Hi to people in the
grocery store and people didn't respond back to them. Kylee was
the leader at home, Kevin the leader in public, he's a ham. He adored
her. He got up every morning and had to give Kylee her sippy cup.
They traded food off each other's plates. He climbed out of his
crib and into hers at 15 months. They talked in twin talk. Kevin's
first sentence was, "I want some more too please Mommy!".
Kylee asked for everything for both of them. They were the gift
of my lifetime. They were beautiful.
We took them so many places and experienced so
many things with them. I can say we truly lived. Kylee and Kevin
went to California four times to see my family, to Michigan to see
John's parents, to Chicago and Philadelphia to see friends, to Mexico
for a family vacation, camping with my family, a lot in 23 months.
My friends told me I was overprotective of them (I kept them on
a schedule, I spent every minute I wasn't at work with them, I read
every book on safety and followed all the "rules"). We
laughed every day. We played on the floor and had so much fun. I
figured I had worked so hard at trying to have them this was my
only chance and I needed to make sure I was the best parent possible.
I even tried to start a little Pampered Chef business so I could
quit my job to stay home with them--it didn't work out for me--not
my forte...but they were doing so well and I was so proud of them
and life was hectic but it was all ok in my heart.
On January 19, 2000, I came home from work to
take Kevin up the street to my dentist. The night before he was
twirling around the living room and my husband was sitting on the
floor and he fell into the coffee table right next to him--blood
starting coming out of his mouth. So, I wanted to have his teeth
checked since his gum was bruised. That was the worst thing that
had ever happened to either of them. Kylee was hysterical when she
saw the blood, it took longer to calm her down than Kevin. She was
angry with me that she couldn't go to the dentist with us. But I
came home (he was fine) and I read her some books (her favorite
thing to do) and then I told Pam I didn't want to go back to work,
but she said, "I am going to take them to Arby's" (Kylee's
favorite was a roast beef sandwich) "and then go get some crafts
for my Sunday School class and then come home and put them down
for their nap", she said, "you won't miss anything."
I went back to work around 11 a.m. I called my mom in California
to tell her about Kevin and she freaked out, was hysterical and
I thought, Mom, it's ok, he's ok. And right after, my husband called
me at 12:50 or so and said a policeman just called him, Kylee wasn't
breathing and they were aircaring her to the hospital, he told me
to come now. I couldn't understand. I called home and demanded to
talk to Pam, since I didn't know if they were in a car accident
or where Kevin was. Pam was hysterical but she told me she was alive.
I called my mom on the way to the hospital to tell her about Kylee
and just so I could talk to someone so I could get myself there
somehow. Kevin was sent across the street to the neighbor (who worked
at Children's Hospital).
What happened was that Pam came home with them.
They didn't fall asleep like normal in the car on the way home from
lunch. So she let me them play with Legos right outside the bathroom
door while she went to the bathroom. Kylee got up and went into
the playroom (the next room over) and we had a table and three chairs
in there so we had someplace to sit while we were in there with
them--they were never left alone except for the few minutes it did
take you to go to the bathroom--a table and chair you would find
in a small office--the kind of chairs you find in doctors' waiting
rooms sometimes, with a wooden arm rest and a wooden part of the
bottom. The chairs were pushed underneath the table (which they
usually weren't) and she somehow got her head and neck underneath
the underside of the table and in between the armrest. Her feet
slipped out from underneath her and she caught her carotid artery
on the armrest, she couldn't cry or scream. They told me she passed
out in a matter of seconds and died in as quick as one minute since
she had no blood supply to her brain. Pam only had 10-15 seconds
to find her to keep her alive (that is what the fire captain told
me later and forensic pathologist confirmed--that once they compress
the artery in the neck, even CPR doesn't usually bring them back.)
Pam came out of the bathroom and Kevie said, "Kylee bye byeÈ.
She saw her after frantically searching and saw her lips were blue
and started CPR, the paramedics came, she was aircared, we got to
the hospital and they told us that they couldn't do any more for
her but they were still doing CPR. I told her mommy and daddy were
here, please come back, we loved her, but she was cold. I knew she
had died. She was declared dead at 1:40 p.m. in the afternoon. My
world crashed that day. We were able to stay and hold her for several
hours at the hospital but I don't remember much of that. I know
I sang her songs like I did every night before they went to bed.
I sang her "Silent Night" and "Twinkle Twinkle"
and "You are My Sunshine". The hardest thing I have ever
done in my entire life was leave her at that hospital. Life has
been horrific ever since. She was 23 months old, she died three
weeks before their second birthday.
I don't really remember the funeral. My family
all came from California, they arrived the next morning, January
20. I am still horrified that they had to do an autopsy, they found
nothing but they still carved her body up to pieces and that makes
me sick, like they killed her all over again. They lost her clothes
and her little pony tail holders I never got them back. When we
left the cemetery, Kevin screamed at the top of his lungs, "I
WANT KYLEE" and moaned the whole way home. It was unbearable
and after that I pretty much checked out of life for several weeks.
We had people stay with us to help with him. John and I started
counseling together. We went to Compassionate Friends.
Kevin didn't sleep through the night for 6 months
after she died. He would wake up whimpering, crying, screaming,
"I want my Kylee". I would tell him his Kylee loves him
and we are glad he is with us and everything is going to be OK that
we were not going to go to heaven to be with Kylee we were going
to stay with him. He still is taking it hard but says he wants two
babies. Most of his friends are twins. He knows and can say that
Kylee got stuck on the chair, the ambulance/firemen came to help
her, she went to the hospital, her body stopped working, she died,
and she lives in heaven with Jesus. He asks, "Why do some sisters
have to die?" "How did Kylee get to the church?"
"When did Kylee go to heaven?" We answer him the best
we can. We explain to him that when we are sad and missing Kylee,
we cry to let the sadness out of our hearts.
Kevin, now 23 months later (Kylee will have been
dead now the same amount of time as she lived this Christmas Day
2001 at 2 p.m.) is what has kept us going. He is a wonderful outgoing
little boy. He is all boy, with no fear, loves to ride his training
wheels bike. He says he wants to be a shepherd, a fireman, a policeman
and GI Joe man when he grows up. He likes to go to Fernside, the
Children's Grieving Center here in Cincinnati, OH, he calls it the
pizza church!
I have heard from other mothers that having more
children helps. We all know it will never replace the baby/child
we lost but it gives us hope for the future. We have tried in-vitro
four more times in the last 23 months with no luck. I am 36. I am
doing better than I was a few months ago, but I still have some
very hard days. I just do one day at a time. I am having a hard
time remembering things about her, I still feel guilty, like if
I would have made a different decision that day, maybe she wouldn't
have died. But, I know it was a freak accident, it is impossible
to understand or comprehend. The paramedics couldn't believe how
childproofed our house was and everyone told us we were the best
parents and how wonderful Pam was with them. It has ruined her life
and her family's as well. It has been so hard for me going from
the "MOM of those beautiful twins" to "the lady whose
little girl died"...
Several things have come as a result of her life
and memory. The Cincinnati Zoo gave us a bench for Kylee that sits
near the Elephant House. Last year my sister Tara Keegan and her
former school, Woodland, California--Lee Jr. High--named their Christmas
Giving Tree THE KYLEE L. GIVING TREE and 425 very needy children
from 0 to 18 years old received a new article of clothing and a
new toy for Christmas. It warms my heart to know that Kylee's spirit
and love belong in those gifts and that those children will be delighted
to receive them. It also is a great gift that so many people are
so generous to sponsor all of those children. The tradition of Kylee's
giving tree continues this year. With some of Kylee's memorial fund
money, we have given funding to our church, Epiphany United Methodist
Church, to support the church ladies' program and are funding some
children's books that Kylee loved for the new preschool program
to start there. We also hope to start a program at church and in
Sacramento to help with outreach for grieving families.
Last year we received many angel ornaments from
friends and family and every year we will treasure them and remember
her and hang up her beautiful ornaments. We are traveling down a
long road that takes so much time to heal. Kevin is doing better,
he misses Kylee so much, but includes her all the time. Recently
someone gave him a balloon (one of Kylee's favorite things) and
he said, "Mommy, this is for Kylee, OK!" He is constant
delight and we thank God for him and for the time we had with Kylee
and for the double blessing we had the two of them for 23 months.
I did have some type of premonition that she would
die. A female voice came into my head two times the last week of
her life and said, "She won't be here much longer". It
was the strangest thing, but of course I dismissed it. I have gone
to Reiki therapy several times and that has helped me tremendously.
I miss her more than life itself. I still struggle with the WHY?
But I know there are no answers for me in this lifetime that I will
understand. It has been almost two years now. We are moving to Sacramento
to be near my family next month. My cousin wrote to me: "Come
home, dream your dreams under a different sky. Grow together tall
and strong and maybe then, I believe, Kylee will bring your dreams
to you." We are taking Kylee's casket and permanently burying
her out there near us. We have come a long way on our grief road.
I pray she will always be with John, Kevin, and me until we can
see her again in heaven.
Wishing you all peace and comfort this holiday
season, love,
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