After Miscarriage
Emotional support can help transform grief into hope.
By Krissi Danielsson
I have a very clear memory of a time, about two weeks after
my second and hardest loss, of seeing a happy family walking together: a
two-year-old, a
baby, and a mother who looked about five months pregnant. Why, I wondered,
was she a “fertile Myrtle” when I couldn’t even have one
child? I wasn’t a bad person, was I? How was it that even drug users
and alcoholics could carry healthy babies to term but I couldn’t even
get out of the first trimester? I ate healthfully. I exercised. I took care
of myself while pregnant. It just wasn’t fair.
Two years later, having conquered the miscarriages, I was walking
on a trail near my home with my two-year-old in tow and my belly visibly
pregnant. I caught
the eye of a woman walking with her partner, and I recognized that look of
despair as we briefly made eye contact. She looked away with a steely face
and gripped her partner’s hand. That was me, once upon a time. I wanted
to grab her, give her a hug, and tell her it was going to be okay. I wanted
to tell her to keep trying and keep believing that she’d be holding her
child someday, too.
Keep in mind that the woman you’re so envious of, with the toddler and
the newborn baby, might have gone through hell to get them. The baby might
be adopted. The mother might have been through six rounds of in vitro fertilization
and spent $100,000 before she got her miracle.
The important thing is that the
other side of this tunnel looks the same to everyone, no matter what the journey
is like. Try to spin your thinking so that seeing babies everywhere you look
gives you hope. Odds are that one day you’ll be on the other side, too,
and, when you are, the women looking at you with envy and sadness won’t
be able to see all the hard work it will have taken you to get where you are.
When you wake up each morning in the aftermath of your loss, remember that
you are one day closer to the end of your struggle with miscarriages. Every
day you wake up is a day closer to the day you hold your baby. It may take
time, but time passes. On the day you first meet your baby, all of this waiting
and pain will be a memory. And it will have been worth it.
Excerpt from After Miscarriage, Medical
Facts and Emotional Support for Pregnancy Loss by Krissi Danielsson, © 2008. Used by permission
of The Harvard Common
Press. www.harvardcommonpress.com
About The Author
Krissi Danielsson and her husband experienced three consecutive miscarriages
before their daughter was born. She researched and wrote After Miscarriage
to provide the support that she and her partner had so desperately wanted
but could not readily find. She is also the miscarriage editor for About.com.
You’re
Not Alone
Sharing Parents is a local
non-profit support group, offering help and understanding after pregnancy
and
infant loss. There is no fee to attend meetings. General
meetings and Subsequent Pregnancy meetings are held at Mercy Women's
Center on Howe Avenue (Suite 530) in Sacramento. You can also call
their Listening
Line to connect with a volunteer who knows what you’re going through
and is there to care: 916-424-5150.
DailyStrength
is a free online support group lets you share stories with other women,
send e-Hugs to friends, learn the latest information and get inspired
daily.
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