It’s no secret that many marriages fall apart after the death of a child. I completely understand why.
The death of a child completely shatters you. You’re the same people, but at the same time, you’re really not. Everyone changes throughout the course of a marriage but it’s rarely so sudden and complete. So you have to get to know each other again under one of the most harrowing circumstances imaginable.
No two people grieve the same, even when you’re grieving the same loss. One partner might be very vocal about how they’re feeling, while the other is quiet. One might express grief in “traditional” ways (crying, etc) while the other does things their partner finds odd. You’re also rarely grieving on the same “cycles,” so to speak. Sometimes you resent your partner for bringing you down when you’re having a good day. Sometimes, you feel guilty for bringing your partner down.
There are times in grieving where you want to be – need to be – selfish. You don’t want to consider somebody else’s feelings, only your own. You want to be taken care of, and you want to believe what you’re going through is the worst and no one can possibly understand how much you hurt. But you do have someone who understands, and it’s both a blessing and a curse. A blessing to not have to walk the path alone. A curse because some days it’s all you can do to help yourself survive, let alone someone else. Shutting down and shutting out becomes a defense mechanism.
You’re also forced to address difficult situations and emotions that you might otherwise be able to ignore. It would be easy to ignore the complicated things if you were grieving solo – you can just say that no one understands, and leave it at that. But with a partner in grief, you’re really forced to examine painful concepts and memories if you ever want to possibly rebuild your life. Sometimes you have to do that at someone else’s pace, and it’s frustrating.
I asked Mike why he thought our marriage survived and he paused and then said, “I don’t know.” I don’t either. We didn’t love each other more or better than couples whose marriages ended. I think it helped that on the days we couldn’t bear to speak to each other, we could write how we were feeling and decide if we wanted the other to read it. In the beginning we realized that the best way to take care of us, the couple, was to take care of us, individually. We allowed each other to be selfish, but we worked on keeping our communication open and honest. When one of us needed more, we tried not to let it fester. We still work on that.
For us, we give each other space when we need it and we hold each other when we need that. We went to therapy together, but we’ve mostly gone separately because we preferred it that way. We’ve had to figure out our comfort zones and what works for us, and that’s constantly changing. We rely on the “drowning” analogy a lot – that a drowning person will sometimes pull their rescuer under. When one of us is having a bad time, we’ll say, “I’m drowning,” and we’ll tell each other what we need to feel “rescued” that day without pulling the other person down.
Losing a child is the hardest thing a couple can go through. We still have our struggles and, as anyone who’s suffered loss can tell you, you never know what life is going to throw at you. We try to focus on our kids, each other, and ourselves, and not on what could have been or might be coming. And it’s hard. So hard.
Auntie_M says:
Thank you for sharing this Heather…I’ve always wondering and been grateful that you have been those freakin’ “odds.”
My brother and SIL lost their first born on his due date; he was born the next day. They went on to have another son a couple years later. But their marriage imploded and they’ve been separated for 18 months now and are just starting divorce proceedings. It sucks. It’s one more loss; one more death. I think, in part, it was because neither reached out for counseling. But who is to judge, right? And perhaps the marriage already had its weak points. But it’s hard as we all rally to make things as normal as possible for my nephew, because we all know he can’t be any part of further damage.
But I’ve been so grateful over the years to see that you and Mike have clung to each other (even during those hard times when you needed to drown alone…I sort of picture you as both clinging to the same tree for support and strength and, therefore, still clinging together, if that makes sense?).
I often keep your marriage in my thoughts and prayers.
Once again, I’m just so grateful that you are so free in sharing the hard stuff, like this, because (sadly) I’ve often looked to you as a bit of a road map–as in “this new normal ain’t all that strange, someone has blazed a similar trail before.” and for that, I truly (and sorrowfully) thank you.
amourningmom says:
You are so right Heather. It is so very hard. Sometimes I wonder what marriage is like without living in a world without your child/children. It is probably difficult at times as well.
I think that sometimes our marriage is surviving because neither of us can bear to go through another loss. After Jake died we seemed to cling together. We went to couples therapy. After Sawyer died couples therapy was not enough. Our grief was driving us apart. I cried all the time and he became angry (at the fact that another one of our children died and he could not “fix” it).
Sending hope and hugs.
Lilian says:
I found this post particularly interesting, but from a whole other perspective. My ex-husband and I have been divorced for over 20 years. During that time, he didn’t really have much contact or relationship with our daughter who passed away in January, and he and I didn’t have much contact through the years except sporadically, but of course, he was involved with her memorial and the time leading up to it. It was a strange situation to find myself in. I couldn’t grieve with him, as that just felt alien, but at the same time, she was OUR daughter, and I could see his pain, albeit very different from mine. The daughter he was grieving was the young child/teenager that he knew when we still lived together, and I was grieving not only the girl/teenager, but the fully grown adult she became. I remember thinking at the memorial, when he was speaking about her, he only talked about the younger girl who he knew, and I talked about the girl who grew into a wonderful young lady who he didn’t really know. Very surreal. The most significant thought that I had (which relates to your post), is that I remember thinking that it was probably a good thing that we were divorced, because I knew instinctively that had we still been married, her death would have torn us apart, without a doubt. We would not have been remotely stable enough to survive such a tragedy. Funny how life turns out.
Susan says:
Lillian, you speak so eloquently here and the story you tell is so difficult. Your ex’s grieving more than likely includes guilt of having not known her as an adult or time missed. I am so sorry for your loss. Sometimes we can get so wrapped up in our own and we don’t stop and realize the hurt that surrounds us every day. Best to you.
Lilian says:
Susan, thank you so much for your response. It means so much to mean to hear from someone who ‘get’s it’ !!! I appreciate that so much. Thanks once again. You may never know what your words mean to me, although my instincts tell me that you do. Much love, Lilian xxxx
Emily P says:
I used to be one of those people who’d say, “Lean on each other!”, never realizing that when one half of the couple is sinking, it may be really hard to reach out when you yourself may be having a good day for once. Thank you for educating us, I’ve never said it again.
Jessica says:
My cousin and his wife lost a daughter at the Sandy Hook shooting and I often wonder how things will be for them. I’m not going to assume that their marriage is falling apart or that they are doing okay because that’s their personal business. But I am going to forward this post to them in hopes it will help them. Thanks for sharing this, Heather. I’ve been thinking a lot about them lately and this post could not have come at a better time.
Hugs to you and Mike!!
tania says:
What a great post Heather!!! My marriage fell apart after we lost our son, it was on both parts, but I will never forget being told by my ex husband “just get over it” I know people grieve differently, especialy men and women, but that was the day I sat and thought to myself do I want to be with someone who would say that? We had a few other issues nothing that couldn’t have been sorted out but that one statement really hit me hard. We do have a wonderful almost 12 year old together and are still friends, so at least that is something!!!
Melissa says:
Thank you so much for this. My husband and I suffered a miscarriage this week after trying for a year to get pregnant (our first). We’ve known things weren’t right for a while but it was still devastating when it actually happened. I’ve ranged from being happy (no one could tell us what was wrong, if anything, so I’m glad we finally KNOW) to crying my eyes out and wailing. My husband is completely stoic and doesn’t want to talk about it with anyone (including me). And he keeps telling me to “relax” which drives me insane. I am relaxed I’m just upset that we lost our baby that we waited for for so long and wanted so badly! I realize this is his way of grieving and I need to support him the best I can even if I don’t understand it.
Molly says:
I suffered a miscarriage of my first pregnancy recently too, and was thinking back to that experience. At first we grieved together, and it was horrible but we were locked in this land of broken dreams together, but then we were in very different places with it, and that left me (probably both of us) feeling very alone. And that’s a breeding ground of resentment. But we just keep talking about it, trying to be honest about where we are. Most of the time I still feel like we’re in this together, even if not in the same exact grieving place.
Melissa says:
Hugs to you and your husband Molly. As my Dr. told me, it’s not the same as losing a living breathing child but it’s still hard. Harder when it’s your first. Even harder when you have been trying for a while. I’m having a difficult time because we didn’t tell many people in real life that we were expecting because of all the problems. The people that do know I feel like are sick of listening. I’m writing in my journal and talking about it with my husband when he has the moments he does actually want to talk about it. I’m determined to make it through this as a better wife and hopefully one day, Mom. I hope the same for you.
Jessica says:
Hugs to you and Mike. You are both clearly very strong people and are so lucky that you have each other!
Tami says:
I have to agree you both are very strong people .I never lost a child so I cant imagine the pain. But I had to help my husband get threw cancer and that was the most stressing draining thing I’ve ever had to deal with .The what ifs. Thank God he is a survivor ..If you Love each other that bond will hold you together no matter what.
Giselle says:
I think you’re right. You and Mike made it because you figured out how to change without growing apart.
I know this is completely different, but I think you’ll understand what I mean. My bf, Nathan, and I have been together since we were 17, with the first five and a half years as long distance. We are now 33 and been together sixteen and a half years. The odds of us staying together were slim given the statistics out there. And like you said, I don’t think we loved each other more than other people necessarily. I think the reason ‘we’ survived is that we learned to grow and change together. Everyone goes through pretty radical transformations from being a teenager in high school to a college student to mid twenties to early thirties. And we have given each other space and flexibility and time through these changes.
I won’t pretend it has been an easy fairy tale. The truth is that there have been times when it’s been really, really hard. We have had peaks and valleys, where we are more in love with each other and less in love, where we have liked each other more and less, where we have spent the majority of our time together and where we’ve needed space to be independent.
The few things we have been insistent and constant about are that
– we don’t go to bed angry, ever (at times that has meant not going to bed that night),
– we do NOT threaten to leave or talk about breaking up when we’re angry (which means we never talk about it) bc we both agree that we should not open that can of worms unless we REALLY mean it (and luckily, neither of us ever has),and
– we talk everyday. Even when we travel for work or go on separate trips with friends, whatever. We always touch base at least once a day, usually more than once.
We are very lucky that we have been able to make it. And I think you and Mike are also lucky. But it’s not just luck, you’ve also put in the effort, on easy days and more importantly, on hard days. Keep telling each other how much you love each other everyday and I think you’ll beat all the odds!
Sorry this got so long. Hope I didn’t bore you or offend you with my comparison. I was just trying to relate your situation to what I know. I would never trivialize what you’ve been through or pretend to understand. And definitely, I was not saying what I’ve experienced could ever compare to what you’ve been through. You’re both incredibly strong and we all admire your courage and strength. ????????????????
Giselle says:
Those were hearts not ?.
Glenda says:
I don’t think it’s luck… I think that you are both mature enough to know that you are both different and grieve differently but love each other and want to be together and will make the best of the worse situation.
My brother and SIL lost their one year old 31 yrs ago. After my niece passed away they divorced 2 yrs later bc they each went their own separate ways and instead of grieving together they leaned on other family members / friends to grieve with. Sad…
Hugs to you and Mike!
Molly says:
You are brave. Brave for writing this, brave for facing this road of grief, brave for facing it together.
Kelly says:
I am always so grateful for your honesty Heather and Mike. I know that sharing your lives through the devastation of Madeline’s loss must be at time harrowing. I am sure that your openness helps many others. That honest sharing of experience is a beautiful legacy for your firstborn and I believe it is the foundation of integrity that has helped your beautiful family to not only hang together but to grow in love and strength. Thank you for your courage, strength, tenderness, and honesty. You are all so amazing.
gwendomama says:
Heather – brave and insightful post, my dear. When we lost our 1 yo, Elijah, we did indeed implode. We tried to stay together for our daughter, went on to have another son together. Our grieving was so different. I remember crying in the hot tub one evening, and he walked by and spat out, “You CHOOSE to hold on to your grief! That’s a Buddhist teaching.” It was the most un Buddhist like moment. I knew then it wouldn’t last, but I didn’t want to become another statistic. He continued to slide down the emotional cliff and eventually attacked me in a fit of rage. Sadly, I ended up becoming another kind of statistic. Domestic Violence. Sadly, I know my story isn’t even that unique. You forge on, you Spohrs! I’m truly glad you shared this.
Stacy Y. says:
This is a wonderful article. We also lost our daughter, she was born at 23 wk 1 dy (they won’t try to save babies under 23 wks). She lived 2 wks, it was the most difficult time of our lives. We already had 2 healthy daughters, so this was a complete surprise. Needless to say, looking back, I don’t know how we survived either. But, I do believe that we are stronger because of it, not just as a couple, but as a family. Our other two daughters were 4 and 2. I enjoy reading your blog, so thank you for sharing.
Tina says:
Thankfully you and Mike have managed to work it out. Annie and James are a beautiful reminder of the love you share and the incredible partnership that you’ve built. xoxo
Brandon says:
Heather,
Thank you so much for sharing this. I’m sorry for your loss. You and your husband are amazing. Not many marriages survive after the loss of a child.
My wife and I had a miscarriage, although it was early on in the pregnancy. That was hard enough. I can’t ever imagine losing a child at a later age.
It sounds like you and your husband have survived due to your communication. You two seem to know each other’s needs and when to back off and when to comfort each other. That is rare in a marriage. You all should be proud of that!
I love the communication that you all use too, like the “drowning.” My wife and I could communicate better.
Writing stuff down like you two do would help us a lot I think.
Thanks again for sharing.
Brandon
Hope says:
After we lost our almost 2 year old precious daughter, I’ve become very unsocial and isolated from friends, neighbours, families, or just the rest of the world. The only ones I talk to are my husband and my parents, which does bring my husband and I closer and I feel he is the only one suffering the exact same loss/tragedy as I do and understand my loss completely.
Michelle says:
I get this question all the time and I honestly don’t know how we have remained married . I think it has to do with the fact that we lost our son so early in our marriage that we don’t really have a time during our marriage that we weren’t grieving.
Susan says:
I so appreciate your writings on grief and all that it entails. Grief is such a wild card and it is not talked about enough. No matter who you have said goodbye to. When you stop and look at marriage just in our country, it doesn’t give you warm fuzzy feelings…I mean you hear people divorcing over inconvenience and such silly matters that how in the world do we tackle the big issues in life like what you have been through?! Your reads are raw and real. I agree, hugs to you both.
Mary says:
Thank you, as always, for your honesty and humility.
Jess says:
My parents lost my older brother. He was a day old. 4 years later they had me, 3.5 years later my younger brother. Did theirs triage survive? Yes. Is there problems? Yes. I don’t know how they survived. I know my grandma Barb, my dad’s mom, helped tremendously. But you’re right. It’s a process.
V says:
Just keep swimming. Right? Love you guys. XOXO
Jenny says:
Thank you for sharing. I wish that you, and other grieving parents, didn’t even know these odds.. I’m still shocked by the number of people I know who have lost a child or are battling major medical issues with their children.
Your posts about living with loss have helped me be a better friend. Dear friends of ours lost their daughter at 4, just over 6 years ago. We have remained close, even though we now live several hundred miles apart. Several times, your posts have encouraged me to reach out, share memories or generated good conversations. Thank you.
Sue says:
I admire that in your grief and through your grief you can help others. I think that you both share a purpose through Maddie; Do you think that has helped your marriage as well?
Heather says:
Yes, I think that has helped us both tremendously!
Michigan reader says:
Thank you for this post. I will say, I do academic research on this topic. Unfortunately, there is a statistic out there that “70%” of couples who have a child die, get divorced. But the reality is, when you get into the details of the literature, as I have, you learn that someone just made up that number and it unfortunately perpetuated in the literature. The best study that has been done that I have seen suggests a 20% risk increased risk (over baseline) for married couples who lose a child.
In my research, it’s about 20% increased risk for couples with miscarriage and 40% for couples with stillbirth. It appears that the same people who are at risk for breakup before a loss are likely the same ones at even higher risk after a loss…cohabitating instead of married, SES risk factors. It also seems that having a lot of struggles BEFORE a loss may be one of the strongest predictors, and that makes sense. If you were having problems before you had a loss or your child got sick, it makes sense that your relationship might not survive such a devastating blow to your life. But clinically, we also see that many couples who are doing well before, continue to do well (and often become even closer) after loss for exactly the reasons many of the commentors here have described.
I think the message that we need to send to bereaved families is that yes, you are at slightly higher risk, partners grieve differently, men and women grieve differently…so DO get help if you need it. But the research does not say that you are doomed to break up, which I think is a very positive message we can share.
Andra says:
I cannot begin to imagine the loss of a child. I have kept up with you guys, since…. oh geeze …. Before Maddie was gone. However, recently, a dear friend lost her 5 month old little girl. To a respiratory illness. It came, it stole a life, and they were there to try to go on. And, when thinking of them, and how they were coping… I thought of you and Mike. And of Annie. When you were pregnant with Annie. All of the little moments and feelings you shared. I encourage her to go back, and read your posts, back to front. You, Heather, are an amazing woman.
Heather says:
Oh Andra, my heart goes out to your friend. Please let her know that if she needs anything, I am here for her. xoxo