Instead of letting their wedding dresses gather dust for decades, some brides are donating them to the Angel Gown Program, where seamstresses will turn them into gowns for babies in the NICU who have died.
Holly D. Gray / Via nicuhelpinghands.org
“NICU Helping Hands started offering
bereavement gowns to families on a very small scale in the fall of 2013
after we saw this need in hospitals where we were running our other
support programs for NICU families,” Lisa R. Grubbs, President of NICU Helping Hands,
told BuzzFeed Life. “Our program is an acknowledgement that their child
mattered even in death — that the life had been meaningful regardless
of how long the child lived.”
Grubbs said the garment itself is symbolic.
Holly D. Gray / Via nicuhelpinghands.org
“A wedding gown donated by a bride
from the happiest day of her life, sewn by a volunteer into a one of a
kind custom gown for a baby that has died or will die… importance,
honor, respect, caring, and love are embodied in this gift that is
freely given to anyone that needs it,” she said.
In 2014, the organization received more than 8000 wedding gowns.
Holly D. Gray / Via nicuhelpinghands.org
After a wedding gown is donated, one of 700 volunteer seamstresses across the United States will spend hours re-fashioning it.
The gowns are always provided at no cost to the families, and NICU Helping Hands relies on donations to cover packaging and mailing costs. (If you’re interested in donating, you can find more information here.)
The stories Grubbs shared about the Angel Gown Program are incredibly moving.
Holly D. Gray / Via nicuhelpinghands.org
“We have had the honor of custom
designing a garment for conjoined infants — a garment for this situation
is not available anywhere, but where there is a need we seek to fill
it,” she said. “We have worked with individual families who knew they
were going to lose their baby as soon as the baby was born and we used
their personal wedding gown to create the garment that their precious
child would be clothed in. So many stories but each has a common thread:
it’s about recognizing a need for compassion and saying ‘yes we will
help you.’”
Grubbs said the program gives parents permission to grieve openly and honor the life of their child.
Holly D. Gray / Via nicuhelpinghands.org
“Grief is not a moment or an event —
it is a process, and a long, difficult one,” she said. “Grief is always
difficult, but when someone feels that nobody understands or cares or
values the reason for their grief, the process can be complicated with
feelings of anger, frustration, loneliness.”
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