After twenty hours of labour, through
natural birth, a beautiful baby boy was born.
Imagine it. Have you been there? The
birthing suite with the soft pastel walls, dim lighting, the soft hushed
tones of the midwives, and the posters depicting tiny babies in their mothers
arms, promoting "breast is best".
That final push before your baby will be in
your arms at last!
Only there is no sound.
Only silence.
Silence broken by the hushed voice of the
doctor, “I’m so sorry for your loss”.
I still cry when I think about it.
I remember it like it was yesterday. My
husband and I were out shopping. Our son Max, just three weeks old, lay
sleeping in his pram, wrapped in layers of muslin, the labour still fresh in
our memory.
My husband received the call. Our friend’s
baby had died.
After twelve hours of excruciating labour,
the baby’s heartbeat had stopped. It was unexplainable. The doctors declared
that her baby had died “in-utero”.
Can you imagine how that must have felt?
There was no time to process it. The contractions were still coming thick and fast. A
baby needed to be born.
It was eight heart-wrenching hours after
the shattering revelation, through harrowing contractions, when their son was
finally born. He was gently wrapped in a hospital blanket, and placed upon her
chest.
They never tell you how the feather light weight
of a tiny newborn baby can crush your heart and soul.
Isn’t it every parents dream to take that
first trip in the car with their baby, a trip home from hospital to their
beautifully decorated nursery, where furniture, linen and toys have been chosen
with thoughtful love and care.
What happens now?
A drive home in silence? A closed door at
the end of the hall where dreams lay shattered behind it?
And then like a twisting knife in the chest, a cruel
reminder that mother nature lays upon you, the milk that was intended for your
baby arrives.
The sadness and grief my husband and I felt
for our devastated friends poured over us like acid rain. We stood in David
Jones, the sobs erupting from us both, causing shoppers to stop and stare. We didn’t
care. At that moment we were overwhelmed with gratitude that our son had
arrived safely and was alive and healthy.
As friends' of someone who has
devastatingly dealt with the death of her baby, here are some reminders that may help to lessen the inevitable sadness that follows such a tragedy.
- Cry, as often and as long as you need to.
- Denial, isolation, anger and depression are all normal steps in the grieving process
- Fathers grieve too.
- We don’t have to face the world alone.
- Know that no one who hasn’t lost a baby can understand what it feels like.
The wonderful book What to Expect When You're Expecting has a really helpful chapter dedicated to the loss of a baby.
Like a gift from the angels, our friend is
pregnant again with her second child. We know that this baby can never take the
place of the one that was lost, but it will be just as loved and just as adored. By all.
Your comments below are always gratefully received.
Oh... oh God, that is so, so awful. I am honestly in tears reading that. I can - and cannot - imagine it.
ReplyDeleteBest best wishes to your friends.
A beautiful (sad) post - with much helpful insight for anyone who reads it.
I'm sorry to make you sad Jackie. Perhaps I should have emphasised the fact that she is feeling wonderful with pregnancy glow!
ReplyDeleteIt's just that you never really hear about these stories (well I don't) and it's one that will live with me forever.
Next post will be fun! I promise!
Glad that there was sunshine at the end of that post, but I could hardly read it through my tears.
ReplyDeleteI can't even begin to imagine. I was told at 13 weeks (first pregnancy) that I needed to terminate the pregnancy due to fatal complications.
I was so grateful that I'd pushed at 12 weeks to have an ultrasound, had I not I would have gone through still birth. Whilst I was heartbroken at the time, I always think about the extreme sadness that would have laid in my heart long term had the situation been different.
Sorry to have made you cry Mandy! And I'm sorry to hear of your experience, but you are right when you say things would have been much different.
ReplyDeleteI tossed and turned about whether or not to write this post, but I am glad I did. I don't want stillbirth to have a stigma attached to it, and for those experiences to be swept under the carpet.
Thank you so much for sharing, and aren't we lucky to have beautiful healthy children?!
Hi Melissa,
ReplyDeleteHeartbreaking. 'I am blessed to have not experienced this situation, I have my own losses which are not for sharing now, but thankyou for stating what is so often ignored. Grief is undefined and needs to be experienced as fully and for as long as needed. There is no correct way to grieve or to move on.
I would also add that even someone else who has lost a child does not know your unique sense of loss. No pregnancy, no dreams, no losses are exactly the same. My heart-felt message to everyone is, never say "I know how YOU feel". Say you are sad, say you are broken, say you have experienced a similar thing, say you have no idea what to say. But don't presume to know another persons grief.
Thankyou for writing such a beautiful tribute to your friend. Love and prayers for a joyous arrival.
xx Lisa
A beautiful post that I am so glad you wrote. I can understand your husband's hesitation.
ReplyDeleteThe stigma of loss is one that follows me around like a black umbrella, although it's not nearly so obvious now because I am out of the "baby limelight" and not actively trying any longer.
May your friends be blessed with the love and support and strength of those around them. They will need it after the birth of this most precious babe. Good luck to all concerned xox
Thank you so much for writing your comment. I was about to remove it when I read your message. I don't want to make people sad, but I guess I just want people to know that they are not alone.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry for your experience, and I hope you have wonderful friends around you to lift you up when needed.
XXX
Feeling sad is part and parcel of learning of the experience - without it, how can we hope to grow compassion for the many parents who live the rest of their days without their lost love/s? Thank you so much for keeping it on your blog. Good on you xx
Delete(Btw, I didn't have too many wonderful friends around at the time - 8 years ago now, and our daughter lived for a month, so slightly different circumstances but still... the same end result - however, through expressing myself online and being open, I have gained new dear friends, deeper friendships and ones that I never imagined could happen out of something so tragic. It's been a blessing in itself!)
Can I ask for clarification?
ReplyDeleteKnow that no one who hasn’t lost a baby can understand what it feels like
Do you mean one cannot understand unless they have lost a child?
Thank you, yes that is what I mean. I really must double check my grammar sometimes.
ReplyDeleteI must beg to differ then. I think anyone who has lost a loved one can understand, even more so if they have children of their own.
ReplyDeleteThe pain is indescribable to anyone who has not suffered loss, but not only of a child, of anyone they have loved.
To say otherwise is doing so many people an injustice.
Beautifully written in every other part.
Thanks Madmother. I agree, we can understand if we have lost someone close to us. I must say though, I don't think personally I could REALLY understand losing a child of my own. I don't think I would want to.
ReplyDeleteLet's hope we will NEVER have to go through that experience.
Thank you so much for the compliment!