Posted on 06/08/2011 11:28:14 AM PDT by frogjerk
The wound comes from well-meaning people. Well, it wasnt that far along. You can always have another child. Lots of people go through this.
Miscarriage is a tragedy that so many people misunderstand. They are not quite sure how to console a friend or relative who has suffered this loss.
While there are no magic formulas, there is one fundamental truth that needs to stay front and center: a miscarriage is the loss of a child who is just as real and has just as much value as any other child of any age. A woman who has a miscarriage is a parent who has lost a child, as is the father of the child as well.
In a society which continues to have a legal and cultural blind spot for the unborn, many suffer from the illusion that miscarriage doesnt grieve a parent as much as the loss of, well, a real child, and that is precisely what hurts so much. We can never console someone in grief if we imply, even remotely, that the person they lost wasnt real.
Dr. Byron Calhoun, President of the American Association of Pro-life Ob-Gyns, has observed that prior to 1970, the loss of a child before or during birth was often treated in medical literature as a non-event, but that now there is a growing awareness of the grief associated with such loss. In fact, Dr. Calhoun has developed a hospice program for unborn children.
As the medical community advances in sensitivity and understanding of these points, so must we all. Our love, our compassion, our sharing in the grief of such losses, can bring healing to the parents who have suffered miscarriage. The naming of these children who have died is one significant way of acknowledging their reality. The counting of these children matters too, so that if a parent is asked how many children he/she has, the child who died before birth is counted as one of them.
I recall the first pro-life billboard that we set up in 1990 here in our community of Staten Island, New York. It depicted a developing unborn child. One of the first phone calls I received about it was from a woman who had lost a child by miscarriage. I cant tell you how consoling your billboard is to me. Thank you. That was all she said.
Perhaps the reason it was consoling was that someone was saying publicly what she knew privately: that was a real child. The life of that child matters, no matter how short it was. The death of that child matters, no matter how many may not cry. And the love I have for that child matters, even if nobody else knows.
Lord, comfort all parents who grieve the loss of their children of any age. Take them into Your loving arms, and give us strength until the day You give them back to us in heaven. Amen.
Her boss (my peer) said to her, "I don't know why you're so upset about this. It's not like you lost a baby or anything." I could not believe the coldness in that statement.
Fortunately, our boss didn't keep her (my peer) around long after that.
TY, I appreciate it.
G-d bless all mothers who have lost a baby. We lost two, some years back.
The hospital was so unbelievably insensitive — they took me, sobbing, past all the NEWBORNS, through the birth department with all the joyous balloons and flowers and photos of happy chubby babies on the walls...
Great article.
My husband used to give me cards ‘from my dogs’ on Mother’s Day.
After two failed early-term pregnancies, 12 years apart, [never used birth control] the dogs are all I’ve got because I’m just too old now.
I had him stop with the dog cards when perimenopause hit because it caused more pain than comfort, knowing the chances were all gone, now.
I always wonder if they’ll know me or I’ll know them when I see them on the other side.
I don’t even know if they were boys or girls...it was too early to tell.
Jesus wept as well.
I’m sorry for your loss and your terrible experience in the hospital. May God comfort you.
We lost our last one at 16w6d in Jan 2010. I was making breakfast when my water broke. It was awful, devastating. Would’ve been our 10th child, I am thankful my youngest was happy to still be “the baby”.
That was a really awful thing to say to her! That must have cut your friend like a knife. At least the baby had those 5 months with her and her family. And at least she got to hold the little one close to her for that time as well.
May God comfort you and dry your tears.
That is horrible. When I lost my first, they took me out of the ER and gave the ‘room’ to an illegal alien with a cold. I miscarried my baby in a hallway and a public toilet. Then when I asked for the baby, I was told it was ‘bio-hazard material’ and I they would have to see if they could release it.
I know we have our differences, but I do understand. HUGS
What are our differences? I am sad for you. Losing a baby is becoming a member of a sad club that no one wants to be in. My heart breaks for every one.
I am sad for you and for all other mothers who never got to raise their babies that they loved from the moment they found out they were pregnant.
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