Grief Journal : I Will Always Wonder Who You Would Have Been: Pregnancy, Infant, Baby, and Child Loss ~ 6x9 College Ruled Notebook

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Grief Journal : I Will Always Wonder Who You Would Have Been: Pregnancy, Infant, Baby, and Child Loss ~ 6x9 College Ruled Notebook

Grief Journal : I Will Always Wonder Who You Would Have Been: Pregnancy, Infant, Baby, and Child Loss ~ 6x9 College Ruled Notebook

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My best friend always tells me when you get brought up in a conversation that she thinks it was true love. She thinks you're the only person I've ever loved in my life. And to tell you the truth, I think she is right. No one makes me feel how you made me feel, babe. No one has made me smile like you did. No one makes me giggle after crying like you did. No one can ever kiss me the way you did, and always catch me off guard. And fight me when I didn't kiss you in front of my friends, which I warmed up too after a while. You were a jerk to me at times, but I was also a witch to you. So I guess you could say it evens out, right? Todd, P., & Rabern, B. (2021). Future contingents and the logic of temporal omniscience. Noûs, 55(1), 102–127. J. (1930). Philosophical remarks on many-valued systems of propositional logic. In S. McCall (Ed.), Polish logic 1920–1939 (1967, pp. 40–65). Oxford: Clarendon Press. Part of me will always wonder what would have happened if I hadn’t said too much too soon, if I’d played it cool for a little longer, if I’d controlled my emotions the way you did, if I had just waited a few weeks before telling you how I felt. Maybe I could’ve made you stay. I went into a deep depression. I know I was no good to anyone in those early days. Not my daughter or my husband. The next several months were filled with so many ups and downs, I couldn’t fit them into a blog. But somehow, through the grace of God, the support of my husband, and knowing I needed to be there for the child I had left, I found myself again.

I’ve heard many say that the chances a pregnancy can threaten the life of the mother are so very slim, practically unheard of, but that was me. RELATED: A Mother’s Love Can’t Be Measured In Weeks I never could’ve imagined having to join the ranks of warrior women who have survived crisis, life-threatening pregnancies against all odds. Truly the strongest of the female race. Also, some of the most questioned, silenced, and misunderstood. I never thought I’d have to decide between death or death. Like I've told you before; I missed you while you were here. I'll miss you when you're gone. I'll miss you when I'm standing with you. But most of all, I miss, us. I can't sit here and name all the things we've done together. You know that it'd take way too long to do. I never sit here and cry about what we used to be. I sit here and laugh about what we could be in the future. You make me laugh even when I'm not talking to you. There is something about you that I just can't get over. The fact that you do look like a girl still gets me every time. I'm just playing with ya, I love you. You know that. We may have questioned it and had some pretty rough times. But we made it through. And in the end, I think you could say we were the best couple we could be. We lasted and didn't break up for stupid reasons. I'm stretching out of reach, but you're just out too far. I've got my arms wide open, waiting for that hug you promised me before you'd leave. I'm still waiting for Friday to happen, the day you were supposed to see me before you moved. I'll always be waiting for more memories to make. As the name suggests, a future contingent statement is a statement that expresses a contingent proposition about the future. Discussions of future contingents and the open future tend to focus on a certain sub-set of contingent statements about the future: those considered to be presently unsettled. Typically, these are statements that involve a purportedly free action like: (EGGS):Part of the seriousness related to a molar pregnancy is that traces can cause a cancerous threat to the body, and certain hormone levels would need to be monitored closely as well. Complete molar pregnancies run the risks (many of which I personally endured) of life-threatening hypertension, hyperthyroidism, anemia, hemorrhage, hysterectomy, risk of cancer, and maternal death. MacFarlane, J. (2008). Truth in the garden of forking paths. In M. Garcia-Carpintero & M. Kolbel (Eds.), Relative truth (pp. 81–102). Oxford University Press. I’ll always wonder what we could have been. I’ll wonder if you could have been the one to make me fall in love again. I’ll always wonder if you’d be the one to help me complete the endless list of projects and ideas I have churning in my head. I’ll always wonder if you’d be the one who could make me appreciate how sentimental and important love is. I can assume without contradiction that my presence in Warsaw at a certain moment of next year, e.g. at noon on 21 December, is at the present time determined neither positively or negatively. Hence it is possible, but not necessary, that I shall be present in Warsaw at the given time. On this assumption the proposition I shall be in Warsaw at noon on 21 December of next year can at the present time be neither true nor false. For if it were true now, my future presence in Warsaw would have to be necessary, which is contradictory to the assumption. If it were false now, on the other hand, my future presence in Warsaw would have to be impossible, which is also contradictory to the assumption. Therefore the proposition considered is at the moment neither true nor false ... (Łukasiewicz 1930, 53). Field, H. (2015). Mathematical undecidables, metaphysical realism, and equivalent descriptions. In R. E. Auxier, D. R. Anderson, & L. E. Hahn (Eds.), The philosophy of Hilary Putnam (pp. 145–172). Open Court.

MacFarlane, J. (2003). Future contingents and relative truth. The Philosophical Quarterly, 53(212), 321–336. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9213.00315I usually don’t answer, because I assume the one posting the question is looking for guidance from someone older and wiser who can tell her how to know she should prevent further pregnancies, and I don’t have the answer to that. Plus, those are two different questions. On August 24, I was 16 weeks pregnant with our daughter Maya. Our lives were changed forever that day when we had to face the most unimaginable decision . . . death or death. That’s the part of me that wishes, the part that romanticizes the past, the part that will recreate scenes from a romantic movie with you, the part of me that dreams, the part that sometimes goes against all logic and believes in the impossible, the part that will always believe in mad love. Three days prior to that life-altering decision, I was admitted to the hospital with stroke-level blood pressures that sent everyone into action and panic immediately. My condition was a mystery to the doctors for a few days while I underwent every scan, test, and lab under the sun to figure out why I was so ill. After days of this, my incredible maternal-fetal medicine doctor came to me with her theory, but it took a little more time for everything to unfold because what she told us was so unfathomable, rare, and heartbreaking. I was essentially carrying an undetected twin pregnancy with a complete molar pregnancy alongside our growing Maya.

The sentence structure I wonder [X] is declarative. The X is usually a noun clause that is the object of the verb wonder. In this section I consider the psychological attitude of wondering whether, for example, wondering whether John Glenn flew in the Apollo 11 mission, wondering whether it is currently raining in Glasgow, or wondering whether there will be a sea battle tomorrow. Footnote 15 I draw heavily on Jane Friedman’s recent work on interrogative attitudes. I also outline some norms for wondering whether that follow on from her account. The problem of future contingents arises from considering whether they are true or false. Taking future contingents to be true or false raises the specter of fatalism. Consider the following representative argument that derives a fatalist conclusion from premises about whether a future contingent is true or false: I am not looking for a pity party. I am doing ok. But I do want to break the silence, I want to speak for those women that are experiencing this pain right now. They should not have to feel alone or unjustified in their sadness. Elbourne, P. (2010). The existence entailments of definite descriptions. Linguistics and Philosophy, 33(1), 1–10.My heart is fully pro-life, and that has always included and extended beyond unborn life. There is so much value in having a heart that is intentional and reflects being pro-woman and pro-family, every person, womb to tomb. To start, there are some cases in which suspension of judgment becomes epistemically inappropriate exactly when further inquiry does. The view being proposed here can give a straightforward explanation of those cases. For instance, say that at w, the world of inquiry, S realizes that Q has some false presupposition or is similarly unsound, e.g., Q = What colour was Thomas Jefferson’s Ferrari? (and w is the actual world). When S discovers that Q is faulty in this way, it looks as though further inquiry into Q would be irrational or otherwise epistemically inappropriate. But in this sort of case continuing to suspend about Q seems to be inappropriate as well, and in much the same way. If you know that Jefferson didn’t have a Ferrari then suspending judgment about what colour his Ferrari was looks inappropriate (Friedman, 2017, 315–316). Bourne, C. (2004). Future contingents, non-contradiction, and the law of excluded middle muddle. Analysis, 64(2), 122–128.



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