I don’t think I am ever going to be able to find the exact words I want to entirely explain how miscarriage and baby loss makes you feel. It’s unique. Only those who suffer miscarriage and baby loss can truly understand the boundless heartache and emptiness it brings, along with the silence that surrounds it.
By writing about it, I’m aiming to break some of that silence and help others to gain a little more knowledge as to how someone might feel. I am also hopeful that this might provide a little comfort to others, going through similar, knowing that they are not alone.
14th February 2016.
27th April 2016.
27th July 2016.
25th August 2017.
Four dates that are etched in my mind. The days we lost our babies.
We live in a society where everyone is comfortable sharing just about everything. Sadly, miscarriage still appears to be the anomaly and is seen, by some, as a ‘taboo’. This was, and still is, a real problem for me to accept. I discovered firsthand that some people don’t know what to do or how to acknowledge it in the ‘right’ way.
Baby loss leaves behind parents who are fragile – who are desolate.
The truth is, there is no ‘right’ way to face it. Miscarriage is inexplicably painful. Sadly, it’s a distinctive type of pain which can make it somewhat uncomfortable to know how to react and support those living through it. That said, I don’t believe there is any reasonable excuse for those who love you not to support you in the best way that they can – we were lucky that we had many people who did. Some people, however, did not.
After my first miscarriage, I remember someone saying to me, ‘At least you know you can get pregnant.’ That was true. I frantically clung on to this very fact. On the outside, I mustered a positive expression and said something like, ‘yes, that’s right,’ whilst inside, I wanted to curl up into a ball and sob for the loss of our baby – a baby who we would never meet – a baby who was an abstract. That person was correct; it was the furthest we had got in our journey to start a family. My mind was filled with ‘at leasts’. It didn’t remove the turmoil however that there was a baby one day and it was gone the next.
Nothing prepares you for miscarriage. We had been so focused on trying to get pregnant that I hadn’t even considered losing a baby.
Living through three miscarriages before we embarked upon our IVF journey was exceptionally traumatic. The emotions and feelings we had ranged the whole spectrum. We felt like we were losing control and it was unbearable. We didn’t know what to do. We would obviously be distraught; on top of this would come a whole heap of other emotions too – anger, confusion, fear, exhaustion, jealously, guilt, hopelessness, to name a few.
After each miscarriage we had, in amongst my grief, I also had the horrific task of photographing each one; we were asked to do this by the consultant so that it could try to help them determine what was happening. It was dreadfully disturbing and terribly upsetting yet, each time, I forced myself to do it, knowing that it could help the doctors provide us with answers and solutions in the future. This didn’t make it any easier and the images will never leave me.
Whilst at my most vulnerable, someone told me that I didn’t know what it felt like to be a mother. Those words still ring in my ears; they knocked me to my knees when I was already too weak to stand and pummelled what was left of an already broken heart. I wanted to scream.
I was already a mother – a mother to the babies we had lost.
We weren’t ready to give up even though on many occasions we felt like it was our only option. It felt like we were climbing a mountain and we knew we had to reach the top.
Those who did support us will never understand the full extent of their kindness. They let us be however we needed to be – day by day – never taking things personally and recognising that we were walking a tight rope. They lifted us up and carried us when we wanted to do nothing more than hide under the duvet and pretend it wasn’t happening. They were patient with us and let us take things at our own pace. Small gestures were monumental to us – a text showing love, a warm smile, a hug with no words, an invitation to dinner, really listening and letting us talk – just a few of the things that kept us going. Those people championed us. They believed in us. They were always there. They never gave up on us and they never judged our behaviour or our feelings.
My dear friend, who has become Mum to me and Nanny to our daughter, appeared on our doorstep the evening after our second miscarriage, armed with meals for the next few days. She would say that it was nothing but to us it was everything. I was slumped at the kitchen table, in my pyjamas, with no make-up, red, puffy eyes from crying and my hair pulled back off my face. I didn’t even know why I was there; I wasn’t doing anything – just staring – my mind numb. Craig opened the door and she walked in. She didn’t say anything. She just came towards me, took me in her arms and held me. I didn’t ever want to let her go because, when I did, I knew I would have to keep going and I didn’t think I had the strength left in me.
As time passes after a miscarriage, the pain doesn’t leave you – you just learn to live with it a little better each day.
You learn how to function, to put one foot in front of the other and make your body move. I had many days where I couldn’t leave the house or get myself to work. Other days, I would make it out, breakdown and have to come home. I felt safe in my home. I could react and behave in whatever way I needed to in the moment. Some days, I would manage. People would see me and think I was alright. Those who know me best, knew I wasn’t. One minute I could be laughing and the next I would be in floods of tears. Anything could be a trigger. Small triggers – an advert for nappies or a mother at the till in the supermarket with her newborn – would pass relatively quickly. Large triggers – a pregnancy announcement or an insensitive comment – would take much longer to get over, most often resulting in a panic attack where I would be doubled up in a very real physical pain. Mostly, I managed to confine these moments to the privacy of home. Sometimes I didn’t. I had no control over it.
Every day was a challenge. Every day there was a dark cloud looming over us. Every day, for me, was another day done, where I could go to bed, shut my eyes and not have to face a world that, to me, was miserable, unfair and cruel.
In addition to our recurrent miscarriages, on 25th August 2017, the consultant at our clinic told us that one of our precious twins had stopped growing. He told us that the baby would very likely have had something genetically wrong with it and that it was nature’s way of stopping that.
It was different to the miscarriages as the baby was still there – in my womb. I had to carry this baby around inside me, whilst I watched my body change and grow with our healthy twin.
We looked at this baby on every scan we had for our daughter until the twin was eventually reabsorbed and disappeared on the scan images after about 20 weeks of pregnancy. Watching our daughter grow bigger and stronger at each scan whilst seeing our tiny twin lying there, peacefully sleeping, the same size each time, was bitter-sweet. We loved our babies – both of them.
The consultant assured me that it was nothing I had done. It wasn’t my fault. In amongst the fog in my head, I heard him but I still felt wracked with guilt and I was infinitely ashamed that my body had failed me yet again – and Craig too.
We had been so excited for our 9-week scan and, after our previous one where we had been elated (and a bit shocked) that we were expecting twins, we couldn’t wait to see them again. I had actually started to relax a little. It had been a rollercoaster of emotions. Our second round of IVF had worked and then we had to process the prospect of being parents to not one baby, but two! I remember Craig saying to me that we had skipped being a family of three and were going straight to being a family of four. We felt incredibly lucky and blessed. It finally felt as if we were getting through the darkness and embarking upon our new adventure.
I even allowed myself to make our first ‘baby’ purchase – a book for Craig called ‘Dad’s guide to twins.’
We couldn’t help but tell people about the twins – it just felt different.
When the consultant looked at the screen and paused, I knew there was bad news. I asked him what was wrong and, before he could say anything, I whispered, ‘Has the baby died?’ Part of me thought that if I voiced my worst fear then it wouldn’t be true but it was. He said ‘yes’ and that he was extremely sorry.
My heart stopped and then shattered.
I don’t even know what went through my mind – I just crumbled into pieces. Even when he checked the other baby and said that it was doing really well, I almost didn’t hear him. Bravely, Craig squeezed my hand and reassured me that one of our babies was ok but I just couldn’t focus. I felt sick.
We left the clinic and I fell to my knees on the steps in the street and sobbed. I didn’t care who saw. In my eyes, London had paused. The whole world had. It was the first time I had ever seen Craig cry and it killed me.
I often think that fathers can be overlooked when the tragedy of a miscarriage happens. Physically, the loss has happened to the mother yet both parents have lost their child. Fathers are robbed of their hopes and dreams of a family too. Men are expected to be the ‘strong’ ones – to support their partner and console them. This is exactly what Craig did but I often wonder how he really grieved. He grieved with me, of course, but I know he was keeping himself together to protect me from further pain. I admire him …
By, Kristy