Nobody Knew but Me

Told by: Brionne

I was 21 when I had my son. The getting pregnant part was easy (and accidental), but the being pregnant part was really hard.

I was horribly sick with morning sickness then when I finally got over that I developed pre-eclampsia and was put on bed rest. My son was born at exactly 37 weeks, all 8lbs 9oz of him. He was/is absolutely beautiful. Even when I was pregnant and miserable, I loved it.

I loved him moving and hiccuping and kicking.. I loved seeing my belly grow. I knew that I wanted more kids. I knew that I wanted my kids to be close in age, just like I was with my brothers. So when my husband and I divorced, I was heartbroken for my son for a lot of reasons.. one of them being that I knew he might not ever get the siblings I always so wanted for him.

Fast forward to 7 years later… I waited until I was a week late with my period before I took a home pregnancy test and “Pregnant” popped up immediately. A surprise pregnancy. But an oh so happy pregnancy because I already knew that this baby would be 8 years younger than my son, but my son LOVES babies and younger kids. He always has. As soon as I found out, I wanted to tell him. I wanted him to be excited and I wanted him to know that he had someone coming for him.. but I decided to wait until after my 8 week check-up at the doctor’s when they did the sonogram so I could show him the picture. I decided to wait to tell the rest of my family as well. I told a few friends and that was it.

One of my best friends told me to take another test about 6 weeks, so I did. The plus, again, popped up immediately, confirming the original test. A few days after this, at 6 weeks, I started spotting after a pap smear, so I called the doctor in panic. She told me everything was fine and that it was normal. They said they would see me in a couple weeks. They said don’t worry. So I didn’t worry. I kept taking my prenatal vitamins, kept rubbing my belly while imagining this little boy or girl growing in there, kept picturing the future of my family with two kids, kept picturing my son as an older brother.. such a wonderful, loving older brother.

At my 8 week check-up my doctor did a sonogram. She searched and searched and searched. She said maybe she just wasn’t getting a good picture. She said maybe I wasn’t as far along as we thought. Then she sent me across the street to an imaging place. The lady there was very gentle. She did an internal ultrasound and an external. She said everything looked great as far as my body, but she said there was no heartbeat.

As she walked me out she said maybe I got a false positive on my home pregnancy test. My doctor called me as soon as I got out to my car and told me to go have my blood drawn to check my hormone levels. By this time I had been bounced around everywhere and it was 5pm. I went just next door to the lab, but they were closed. I cried the whole way home. I had one last pregnancy test, and I wanted to know. So I peed on the stick and waited… and waited…. and waited. Until “Not Pregnant” popped up.

And my heart broke into a million pieces, just shattered on the floor. This baby, this little boy or girl that I had waited for and wanted so badly for so long, this precious little being, this amazing little baby that I loved from the second I knew, that I wanted from before I knew… was gone. Not just gone, but gone before I even knew. When the doctor told me everything was okay, it wasn’t. And I still believed for two weeks that this miracle was coming when it was gone already. Because I hadn’t told my son, my family, my boss, or anybody else, nobody knew why I was crying.

Nobody knew why I couldn’t get out of bed. Nobody knew why I couldn’t function. And I felt like I couldn’t tell them because he or she was gone. Was I having a boy or a girl? Maybe was I having twins? Was he going to be tall like his father? Was she going to have red hair and green eyes like me? Would he look just like his brother? Would she like sports? Would he like games? What would have happened? All of these questions that I imagined that I will never know the answer to. Cause they were taken before I ever had the chance.

And, honestly, sometimes I feel like I don’t have a right to mourn. Nobody knew but me. My belly didn’t grow big. I didn’t hear his or her heartbeat. I didn’t have to give birth. But my heart knows that’s wrong. My heart knows I lost something so tiny but so monumental. Now I find myself just trying to find a way to honor him or her in my way, without making things awkward for everyone around me who just wants me to move on or get over it or whatever else they say. Now I find myself just trying to be okay, to get from day to day.. I just don’t know how.

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Miscarriage: Blessing in Disguise?

Told by: Amanda

Since the birth of my son, I have yet to have a successful pregnancy. I felt it appropriate to share some of my thoughts on my three early-term miscarriages. I want to put this experience out there for anyone who might be going through the same thing.

In October, 2008, I conceived the most perfect and amazing little boy possible.  His name is Allen.  I loved and continue to love him with all of my heart.  My husband and I wanted him and were actively trying to have a child.  That was my first pregnancy and it was textbook perfect.  We knew within days of conception that I was pregnant and saw his beautiful beating heart at only four and a half weeks. We never returned to any form of contraceptive because we knew that we wanted to continue growing our family to include at least one, but maybe two more children.
In August, 2010, I conceived for the second time. We were elated!  I carried this fetus for nine and a half weeks. Unfortunately, the baby stopped growing at around four.  Because my pregnancy with Allen was so perfect and easy, miscarriage did not occur to me. Then the bleeding began…  When I went to the doctor, they told me that miscarriage was imminent and that the child was no longer growing and had no heartbeat. I was sad, but what upset me the most was how quickly they offered to “fix” it by doing a D&C or giving me induction medicine.  My thoughts were this- even if this child is passing away, it is my job to mother it by letting it die gently and not having them scrape it out.  It was a horrible thought to me! The baby was made in love and I was determined to let my body naturally do what it was made to do.  The response that I got from hospital staff was annoyance and repeated questioning as of whether I understood what was happening or not.  I maintained my answer- yes I understand and obviously my body understands how to handle it! The entire “labor” included real contractions and took around five hard hours.  The rest was a week of normal menstruation.  An artistic rendition of this child can be seen on my portfolios:
sleep well little one

photo source

The following year I had two other pregnancies which resulted in miscarriage at four weeks.  The hardest one of the three occurred right before my husband’s deployment.  We spent a lot of time together in the month prior in preparation for his departure.  We were elated to learn the day of the deployment that I had conceived. Within two weeks the child was lost. The hardest part was the realization that my husband was in a war-zone and that he could die and I would never again carry a child of his.  I was devastated and fell into a crying mess.  I can say that I was depressed for a while over this one.  That was the last time I have conceived to date, and was over two years ago.  At that time I was tested in every way possible and found that I am perfectly normal and that the fetus, along with the other two, likely was simply not viable.

            Shortly after this miscarriage I completely stopped menstruating. When my husband came home, I finally cried to him and as un-feminist as this is I broke down to him about how I felt I was not able to bear his children the way I wanted to.  I told him that I felt like this was the biological function of a wife and I was sorry for letting him down.  He told me that Allen was a handful and he could be perfectly happy if we never had another child. He assured me that Allen is enough and I am enough. I realized he was right.  Saying that we have “only Allen” would be understating the incredible joy that we get from his smile each day.  There is no saying that we only have Allen, but that we are lucky to have him.  As we talked about it we decided that he can be and is more than enough.  We are lucky to somehow deserve such a perfectly healthy little guy. My husband does not wish to adopt nor have any type of fertility treatment.  I obviously respect his wishes.
            Walking away from the experience I realize that I am blessed to be able to devote my time and attention to one incredible little boy.  Seeing friends and colleagues who have never birthed a child makes me realize that I am blessed to have the one that I do.  Knowing some of my family history makes me realize that I am blessed to have one healthy child rather than a herd of children with disabilities. Obviously I would love any child of mine with all of their accompanying needs, but I have a husband with PTSD who needs the quieter home with which we have been blessed. His PTSD comes with special needs and demands which make our smaller family a blessing so that I can manage all of the needs of my husband and my son.
I have also had the privilege of knowing strong, amazing women who have had to put their child up for adoption, raise a child who resulted from rape or to endure the incredible pain of a stillbirth.  Having been through three miscarriages I can say that nothing that I went through has been that painful.  I am blessed.  I am blessed with the most incredible little boy I could have ever dreamed of. I am blessed with devout appreciation of him and never taking him for granted. I am blessed to not be diagnosed with PCOS, cancer or infertility.  I am blessed to have hope that one day we could conceive again. I am blessed to have what my family needs at the moment, rather than what we want down the road.  I am blessed with my upcoming graduate degree and bright career path at a younger age.  I am blessed to live in a country where I could one day adopt a daughter if none is born to me.  I am blessed to have never had to bury a child. I am blessed to never have labored a child who was not alive. I can say in so many ways that miscarriage is a blessing.  There might be a plan from a higher power, and people say what is meant to be is meant to be.  For me, in this life, miscarriage has happened and it would seem that it was meant to happen for the better of my family.
            Blessed be all.  I am sorry again to write on such a darker topic, but not enough people share these kinds of stories so I wanted to be sure to share mine with anyone who might need to read it.  Shared with permission.

My Baby Deserves My Heart

Told by: Andie

I’m a mother, been a mother since I was 17 years old.

I have four amazing children…three boys and a girl; ranging from 15 to 19 months.

I’m still nursing my littlest guy. I haven’t had a period in a long time- since I got pregnant with my last baby actually. I have however in the past few months experienced other signs of ovulation. I’ve kept track because we were wanting to try for another baby. I hadn’t had of those signs in the past few weeks…on the contrary, I’ve felt “different”. I considered the possibility of a pregnancy. I tried not to get excited, yet, and didn’t take a test. I wanted to wait a few more weeks before I jumped the gun. Well last night, as I got in the tub with my baby, I noticed a few bright red clots. Which is weird for me in a cycle. I’ve continued to have bright red bleeding, clots, and a general sense of being un-whole.

Now I’ve spent the night and day wondering and thinking if this is a period or an early miscarriage. It makes me feel blue- because if it is, I may never know on paper. I didn’t get to celebrate someone that was and is no more.

That probably doesn’t make much sense.

I am a registered nurse, and a student midwife, so I have this curse of knowledge. I’m trying to overlook some of the tale tell signs because I don’t want it to be so.

I’ve never had a loss and I don’t know how to process it or communicate it. My entire being is saying I’m losing something important and special and unique and worthy and meant to be. I’m confused. I’m feeling emotional and regretful…guilty and sad….uncertain and quite alone.

Because I never had a pregnancy test or an ultrasound that gave me the scientific yes- I am taking on this societal NO, giving me a weight of NO:

No Andie, you don’t have a reason to celebrate, and no you don’t have a reason to mourn because there’s no certainty.

I can’t live with that. I just feel…I don’t have a good word for it…but something.

There was something and now I feel empty. My body is going through a new experience, I know my body well and this is foreign. I would have been due in February. I wanted to share mostly because I had an inner voice telling me not to, and that’s not right.

This is happening and why should it be a secret that lives only in me. I don’t want to ask permission to be sad over this, I’m giving myself that privilege.

I deserve to have my feelings and my baby deserves my heart.

Its strange how a mother can love a being she didn’t even know existed, but I do. I’m in love with the tiny babe my husband and I made, I’m in love with God’s creation, I’m in love with knowing Jesus is rocking the baby I can’t and that one day he will return that babe to my aching arms.

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