In 1993 Gisele was 28 years old,
married, and expecting a baby. Following a miscarriage with her first
pregnancy, this baby was perhaps even more precious. She was elated with
the anticipation of motherhood and the thought of building a family
with her husband. Having children was all Gisele had ever wanted; it was
the reason she believed she was here on this earth.
Motherhood was within reach.
Since the day she went into labor, Gisele’s life has been shaped by shoulds. She should have delivered normally. When she did not, she should have had emergency obstetric care. Perhaps she should have had a C-section. She should have become a mom. Today, she should be a mother to a 21-year-old son and his assortment of younger brothers and sisters.
But twenty years later, Gisele is 48, divorced, and childless.
During a prolonged obstructed labor
in her Congolese village in 1993, Gisele lost her baby. Due to the
trauma of the delivery, she developed a condition called obstetric
fistula, also called vesicovaginal fistula (VVF). VVF is a childbirth
injury that creates a hole between the birth canal and urinary tract,
leaving the mother incontinent. For 20 years, Gisele has lived with a
steady stream of urine trickling down her legs.
Managing her incontinence was
difficult because she could not escape the odor. Her damp skirt and wet
legs reminded her of the child she lost and of the children she would
never have. In the night, she had to wake up hourly to change out of her
wet clothes. Gisele’s husband, realizing that she would probably never
have children, decided to leave. He still wanted a family, he told her,
adding bluntly, “And, with you, I am wasting my time.”
While the nature of Gisele’s
condition was terrible, her physical pain was now nothing compared to
the emotional burden that came with her husband’s public rejection. In
her failed attempts at motherhood, she grieved her life’s purpose. In
her failed marriage, her fear was confirmed – to be a woman unable to
have children was to have no value. Since 1993, Gisele says she has not
lived a life – but that she has lived somewhere between life and death,
waiting for the day her life would end.
Due to her odor and the stigma
around her condition, Gisele withdrew into a life of solitude. In
reality, she was far from alone. There are over 2 million women in
sub-Saharan Africa and Asia who live with VVF, according to the World
Health Organization. In much of the developing world, basic obstetric
care is inaccessible. Women must live with, or die from, the
consequences of unattended childbirth. For women who endure
complications during delivery, too many are left burying their stillborn
children and lamenting a long list of shoulds.
Gisele wanted to take her life, and
she knew the way she would do it – with poison. What would it be like to
drink that last glass of liquid, knowing that she would not live to
feel it dampen her skirt? But something kept her going, kept her alive.
With surgery, obstetric fistula is
often repairable. As news spread around The Republic of Congo that Mercy
Ships was coming, Gisele began to hope. But she tried not to get her
hopes up; she had been let down too many times before. It was not until
she found herself sitting on a hospital bed in the port of Pointe Noire
waiting for surgery that she allowed herself to believe that she might
be healed.
Since her surgery, Gisele is all
smiles. Graceful and bird-like, she knits with perfect posture and hums
between conversations with the women on either side of her. A nurse
makes the rounds to check Gisele’s catheter bag, which is full, and she
asks if Gisele’s bed is dry. It is. These signs indicate that the
surgery was a success. Gisele is glowing.
While surgery fixed Gisele physically, it cannot make her a mother. However, she has found something else onboard the Africa Mercy.
She has found emotional restoration in the attentive way the doctors
and nurses check on her and care for her, and in the relationships she
has built with the other patients, most of whom are not mothers either.
Obstetric fistula is typically a
condition of isolation. Confined in solitude, Gisele was poisoned by her
belief that her life had no value. Now, in a room full of women who
share similar painful journeys, they have healed through their
sisterhood. When the women are restless, they walk the hallways –
singing and holding hands. They are united, strengthened, and healed.
When it comes time to discharge
fistula patients, the hospital throws a going-away party called a Dress
Ceremony. Each patient is presented with a new dress, which she will
wear as she goes home. On the morning of Gisele’s celebration, the women
gathered in the ward to do their make-up and fasten their head wraps.
The room filled with chatter, smiles, and with an energy like that of a
bridal party. Gisele surveyed the room of women getting ready and said ‘Aujord’hui c’est bon.’
Today is good. After the celebration was over, Gisele walked out of the
hospital, down the dock, and took her first step back into society.
Gisele should have had this surgery long ago. She should have re-entered society with all the fanfare of a Dress Ceremony years before now, but Gisele did not have access to shoulds.
Gisele may always carry with her the
grief of the child she lost and the pain of the years of suffering, but
she will carry it with her head held high, because she knows the truth.
She knows her worth. For too many years she suffered with what should have been, but now it is. Now she can.
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