Saturday, July 24, 2010

Give Sorrow Words: Reflections on Pregnancy Loss

      This post was written for inclusion in the Pregnancy Loss Week Blog Carnival . Please join us at Fertility Flower for the week of August 23-27, 2010 where we will be featuring articles, posts and artwork about pregnancy loss.

  Give sorrow words; the grief that does not speak whispers the o'er-fraught heart and bids it break.  
~William Shakespeare
  
      Pregnancy loss is real loss. Those who are here and those of us who have passed through have experienced death. It's not what society generally considers death, but that is only because society as a whole chooses to ignore pregnancy loss. It's uncomfortable, surreal, and scary for those who have not experienced it. There was no person, no life, no accomplishments to remember fondly and mourn. People do not ask about our babies. People often do not know about them. Society says things like "it wasn't the right time" or "it's better this way" or "God has a reason," and then they drop it and expect that it never has to be mentioned again.
        But these deaths for us are very real. As real as the loss of any grandparent, friend, or loved one. The baby that no one knew was known by its mother, even if only for a moment. We carried these lost children, and we loved them. We loved them with a fervor that is matched by the love of any parent. We wanted them. We wished for them. We prayed for them. Some of us waited days in limbo to find out the worst. For others a moment shattered everything.
        But for most of us, the mourning has been done alone. There is no funeral, no memorial to remember the life lost. Many of us experience postpartum depression in the cruelest of all tricks, because our pregnancies ended too. However, unlike those who society sees as having a "right" to postpartum depression, there is no baby to be the light at the end of the tunnel. And because this death was not acknowledged, people forget. They tell us about their pregnancies, they avoid us because we're still "not over it," they call us out for having sad days or bitter days as though we should have more control than others over the grieving process.
       I have the bittersweet experience of knowing all sides of the equation. I have been blessed with a child. I have lost pregnancies. I have been blessed again. I have known the sheer madness of grief, the pure joy of expectation, the momentary solace of hope in the face of uncertainty, and the crushing hopelessness of loss, and it is enough to drive one insane.
       May you never experience it. I truly hope you do not. I hope this is only something you can read and learn to sympathize with. That the next time you hear another woman say something bitter or roll your eyes at the woman with downcast eyes at your OB's office or lurk on a message board that you look closer and see the pain behind these simple, insignificant moments and sympathize instead of criticize or condescend or preach to them.

This piece was originally written as a post on a large message board and I reposted it to this blog.  It still most clearly expresses pregnancy loss to me, so I chose to reshare it as part of this call for posts.

4 comments:

Kimberly @ Fertility Flower said... [Reply to comment]

A beautiful post. Thank you. I love the point about pregnancy loss being a death that's not honored like other death (e.g., of family members, friends, etc.). That's a great point. I have only 1 living child but I am more definately a mother to 3. Thank you for this wonderful post.

Amy R said... [Reply to comment]

This is a beautiful post. In fact, because of an unfortunate inspiration, we too have opened up a pregnancy loss section within our site. Thank you for this posting.

Brooke said... [Reply to comment]

Beautiful. Thank you for sharing.

Anonymous said... [Reply to comment]

yes, the baby no one knew was known by its mother. so true, we envisage their futures, have hopes and dreams for them in the first instant we find out there is life within us, that can come crashing down around us in a matter of seconds. great post thankyou. janet

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