God Encounter with NICU Nurse
These days,
my most repeated prayer requests are that God would use Isabella's life and
death for his glory and that I would catch glimpses of him working. Yesterday,
his answer to this prayer encouraged and humbled me.
As I was
walking to our group’s room for Bible study last night, I saw a woman ahead of
me wearing a NICU sweatshirt from the hospital Isabella was in. I was jolted by
the image and did a double take, wondering if I just imagined the hospital
name. No. I walked into the room, somewhat distracted.
After
discussion, I walked into the sanctuary for lecture with a friend and told her
about the sweatshirt. I looked around the large room and did not see the grey NICU
clothing. I prayed, “Lord, if you want me to talk to her, have her sit directly
in front of me. Otherwise, I won’t.”
A couple
minutes later, the woman wearing the NICU sweater sat directly in front of me
and was joined by a friend.
“Please turn
and greet your neighbor.”
Deep breath.
“Are you a
NICU nurse at ___ hospital?”
“Yes.”
“Thank you. My
daughter was – .“
“I was there.
I was your daughter’s nurse. I prayed for her several times that morning.”
We both
immediately started to cry and my friend encouraged us to hug. Meeting this
nurse, understanding she was present for the hardest and most sacred part of
our story, and seeing the love she has for my daughter, filled me with peace
and gratitude. Gratitude that she shared her part of our story, gratitude that
I could thank her in person, and gratitude for a renewed humility that God is
more powerful than my fear.
NICU nurses in Montana following the death of a baby. |
All through
the lecture, I kept thinking about the fact that she was Isabella’s nurse and
that God orchestrated this meeting. The woman looked vaguely familiar, but much
of the day Isabella went to heaven is a blur.
After the
lecture, the four of us spoke together – the nurse, her friend, my friend, and
me. We talked about God. How big he is. How God is good, even when our hearts
break. How little we understand life and death.
She mentioned that NICU deaths are always tough, but some stick with you more than others. When she was with Isabella, she felt God’s presence in the room. She also thought that Isabella would be called home that day and prayed for her throughout the morning.
When my
husband and I were called downstairs while the staff was doing chest
compressions, she was the one charting. When we told the staff to stop
resuscitation efforts and we held our daughter for the first time, she watched
Isabella take her final, gasping breaths in our arms. She was in the room with
us when Christ took Isabella’s spirit home to heaven.
Later, she
encouraged us to have the photos taken and walked us to the room when the
photographer arrived. When we were asked if we wanted to bathe Isabella and
said we could not, she and my father gave Isabella her first, and only, bath.
My dad had cut some of Isabella’s hair that we received along with her
handprints and footprints. The nurse and I laughed that my dad had cut Isabella’s
hair front and center.
As the four
of us sat there, her friend told us about how God was using Isabella’s life and
death before she even knew it was us. Several hours before Isabella died, she
had heard about Isabella through a co-worker we know from church and prayed for
us. She later received a prayer request about our daughter and learned from her
friend that she had had a horrible day at work (but did not hear anything
beyond that). She put things together and quickly realized the tough work
situation was directly related to our daughter. And she had prayed for us, not
knowing it was us, throughout the day.
The NICU nurse
told me she still thinks about us. Our daughter is not forgotten. The note and photos
of Isabella we took by the hospital were encouraging to the staff. I truly
cannot imagine the heartbreak that NICU nurses experience frequently.
Unfortunately, there have been more losses at the hospital since June.
She also told
us Isabella was beautiful. As her mom and since very few people saw our
daughter in person, these were precious words to hear.
The nurse
told us she rarely wears her NICU sweatshirt but needed to do laundry. Praise
God for using even the timing of laundry for his glory and our comfort.
Comments
Much love,
Susan
Love you, Elizabeth