Legally She Didn’t Exist

In the eyes of the law my daughter didn’t exist.
There is no birth certificate, no death certificate, no pieces of paper to say that I gave birth to a little human and that she had been on this earth for 21 weeks filling her parents and our families with hope and excitement. If she had held on for another 3 weeks she would have been classed as stillborn meaning that she was a viable baby, but my little girl was, in the eyes of the law, a foetus.

When I have doctors appointments now, my daughter, those 21 weeks, that hope, those dreams, is ‘my last pregnancy’ or IUD (intrauterine death) never a name. Occasionally the doctor will ask if she was a girl or boy, but that is as close as they come to acknowledging that she was a tiny human. She has been lumped into my old medical records and that’s where she will stay forever. She is part of my past, but to them she wasn’t her own person. The fact that her brief appearance in this world has changed my life forever is nothing. I cannot believe that doctors who have seen babies miscarried late can still class them as foetuses. They look like tiny humans, with hands and feet and fingers and toes and even a tiny nose. Just because if she had been born alive she wouldn’t have survived in the world doesn’t mean she didn’t exist.

I sit in a dilemma when a form or questionnaire asks if this pregnancy is my first. The logical part of my brain says that it is – I never got to buy baby food for her, there isn’t another child running around my house, and if I answer with no, they will probably ask about her, ask how old she is and what nappies I buy for her, ask me questions I cannot answer, but the defiant part of my brain says that no he isn’t my first child. She is and always will have that title, and he will always have a big sister. Maybe I’d feel better about answering yes if I had been able to register her as having existed. Maybe if the law acknowledged her existence I could then be more defiant about it. As it goes I say he isn’t my first, unless that changes the next question to be about her, then I go back and change my answer.

I’m in no way saying that the pain would have been any less if I had a piece of paper to say she existed, but I have a box of memories, and a heart full of love for my daughter who no family tree will know existed, who, if someone in the future looks up their ancestors, she won’t be there. I will, of course, keep her memory alive. Her little brother will know all about her, will visit her grave with us, she will become part of him as much as she is part of us. She is his big sister and I will never let anyone forget about her, but after I’m gone who’s to say my children will keep her memory alive? Will she just fade into the past? A part of his childhood that didn’t really exist? She will have a gravestone, her name hewn into granite, and that will last, but people won’t know who she was, that she was loved so deeply. They can’t trace her anywhere, her gravestone will be a dead end, not a key to her life. That thought terrifies me, but I don’t know how to stop her memory fading away from the world.

I feel like screaming to the world “HER NAME WAS EFFY-MAE, SHE WAS MY BEAUTIFUL DAUGHTER AND SHE DID EXIST.”

Bump Photos

I think that there is a definite increase between these two photos – the more recent one looking generally more rounded.

I weighed myself the other day and I have gained over a stone since the beginning of this pregnancy (2 stone if you go from my lowest weight that I reached at 10 weeks pregnant!) I’m not sure how much weight I should be gaining but I have a feeling baby shouldn’t have made me gain a stone so maybe I need to re-look at how much I need to be consuming!

I’m still loving my bump and am slowly moving to only wearing maternity clothes, jogging bottoms or jeans with a hair band extending the waist!

Jackson is really lively in the evenings, really perking up at bedtime, I love laying there feeling him playing around in my tummy.

11/04/14
23 weeks

 

06/04/14
22 weeks 2 days

Bump Photos

Growth has been slow and steady for a while now, no sudden spurts, but I’m getting more comments on the fact I’m properly showing in whatever I wear now.

I mentioned to my consultant the other week about how I was initially bruising quite a lot with each injection, but how it is really rare now, and she told me that my body is adapting, suppose that answers that then!

I’m still constantly amazed that there is a little human inside my slightly swollen tummy, though Jackson keeps reminding me he is there by kicking – lots!

02/04/14
21 weeks 4 days

 

28/03/14
21 weeks

 

25/03/14
20 weeks 4 days

Dreaming

Since I became pregnant I have been having dreams. I know they say you always dream but some people just don’t remember them, well I never remember them. I could probably list the amount of dreams I’ve remembered in my life, but since becoming pregnant I regularly remember them, though details slip away soon after I wake up.
The majority of them have been ridiculous and really random – school trips with people I didn’t like, or monsters attacking me, I can normally link them to something that’s triggered it for example a TV show or talking about something the previous day, but the other night I had a dream that shook me to the core – I dreamt I lost Jackson.
I know what brought it on, this week my fear and expectation of losing him has been heightened, and obviously it has spread to my subconscious. Unfortunately I didn’t wake up until the dream had finished, however when I did wake up I refused to open my eyes believing if I did I would find that it had all really happened. I lay there refusing to wake up properly for ages, until I felt him kicking away inside me and I breathed a sigh of relief when I realised it wasn’t real. Only at that point did I start to deconstruct the dream and realise that the nurses wouldn’t treat me in my own bedroom, and a few other random things that you just accept in dreams, but at the time it seemed so real that although I didn’t wake up, I was exhausted the next day, clearly having used up my energy already!
The dream, however awful and genuinely traumatic even though it wasn’t real, did make me realise how much I love this little man. I’ve been wondering if the fact I haven’t been bonding in the same way I did last time will have affected how I love him, but I realise now that I would do anything for him already. His strong kicks make me feel closer to him each time I feel them, and I am so grateful to him for giving me that amazing reassurance every day that he is still there and fighting.

So from now on I think I’m going to have to start relaxing and clearing my mind before bedtime to stop myself dreaming of things that have been worrying me, as obviously if it is something that’s worrying me anyway, it’s so much worse to then go through it, even if it is all in my head!

Mother’s Day

Tomorrow is my first Mother’s Day as a member of the mummy’s club. The fact I won’t be spending the day with my daughter doesn’t make it any less of an important day for me.

My fiancé bought me a bunch of flowers for the day – I can’t help thinking that had my daughter been here that would have been a box of chocolates or a necklace that he would have presented to me on Sunday morning with my 6 month old smiling daughter there, on my bed opening the present with me, along with breakfast in bed.
Instead I am going to take the roses out of the bunch of flowers I was given and take them down to the graveyard for her, something I always do when there are pink roses in a bunch of flowers I am given.

  

Mother’s Day isn’t going to be a sad day for me though, it will be hard going to the graveyard, but I will spend the rest of the day with my own mum, Effy-Mae’s grandmother, spoiling her and making her feel as special as I should be feeling – as I am feeling, with my son in my belly kicking away I feel like every day he kicks is Mother’s Day.

We didn’t celebrate Mother’s Day last year when I was pregnant with Effy-Mae, we figured we would have plenty of time for that in the years to come, and to keep it fair we won’t celebrate it for Jackson until next year, when he is in my arms and can celebrate it with me, but I know in my heart I’m already a mum to two children.

Just because my daughter isn’t here to celebrate the day with me doesn’t make me any less of a mother, and that makes tomorrow just as much about me as it is about those lucky mums who get to kiss their children goodnight.

21 weeks

So today I turned 21 weeks pregnant.
21 weeks is the stage in my pregnancy I lost my little girl. Could this week end the same as last time?
I’m not sure how I’m supposed to deal with this week. Every time I stop feeling Jackson move I know I’ll panic, every evening I sit down and he doesn’t start kicking straight away I’ll freak out.
Jacksons kicks are already stronger than Effys-Maes ever were – big butch boy I have here! I know that’ll mean that it won’t take me three days to notice I haven’t felt him moving, infact I’m so hyper aware of his movements that I know within a few minutes if he hasn’t started kicking when he normally would. So does this mean I will be spending my week constantly at the midwife unnecessarily? Or do I ignore the rising panic in my throat everytime I don’t feel him and just believe that everything will be fine.
It’s hard to keep faith in that fact. I worried right up to the 20 week scan last time, then when I heard everything was perfect I relaxed. I ended up relaxing for less than a week before I found out I’d lost her – I had faith everything would remain fine and my world tipped upside down. So I’m not sure how I will cope with this week, or any week after this week if truth be told. I think even if we get through this one I will spend the next week, and the next, waiting for things to catch up with me.
The midwife told me at my 8 week appointment that I wouldn’t relax until I got past this point in the pregnancy – I told her I wouldn’t relax until I had given birth, and I’m pretty sure I was right.
I still haven’t imagined a future with this baby. I’m not sure if that’s a success on my brains part of blocking out all images of baby, or a massive failing in my role as mum. I haven’t given myself a chance to bond with this baby in the same way I did in my first pregnancy. I haven’t imagined my baby past the stage they are now. Right now I know exactly what he would look like if I delivered him, and that’s all I dare imagine, I’m not hoping it will happen, just mentally preparing myself for if it does.
However, I haven’t actually told myself I’m having a baby. I know that if I get to full term and deliver a baby I will have 9 months of bonding to do in about a second, and that it will be a total shock to me. I think I am going to have to start letting this guard down a bit when I start shopping. I think at the point that I go shopping, I’m thinking about 36weeks, I will need to have some belief I will be bringing a baby home to look after, to feed and to sing to.  I’ve been denying myself that for months and it will be hard to suddenly convince myself that’s the case.
I am sure that this week will pass, as all the other before it have, with no dramas and no excitement, but I think that knowing what happened last time I will be spending this week on edge, waiting for something to go wrong, while hoping nothing does.

Hospital Heartache

Last night on channel 4 there was a half hour Dispatches program that sent my twitter feed into a frenzy. Admittedly my twitter feed is made up of an equal split between pregnant people and people who have experienced pregnancy loss, therefore both have been or could be affected by the issues raised, so it was likely to cause quite a stir.
The program was presented by Amanda Holden and looked at the way that babies bodies were dealt with following miscarriage. They discovered that, before 13weeks especially, many hospitals found it acceptable to have the babies incinerated with the days waste, without giving the parents any other options. A practice that, because of the program, is not happening any more. They also touched upon hospital organised burials and how the plots can be shared, and removal of tissues for postmortem, and how some hospitals keep these without parents permission.

This program however, got me thinking about my own experience, and how although those areas of my care was dealt with better, there were other parts of my care that left a lot to be desired.

When I lost my little girl I was 21 weeks along, by which point I think they realise that incineration isn’t an option. I was given a few options, which were discussed with me by a very flustered hospital chaplain who, after making us wait for her all day and being chased up by the nurses multiple times, burst in at 5pm announcing she had had a busy day and hadn’t had a chance to look at my notes yet so if I could just tell her why I was there… After I’d explained, feeling incredibly awkward and not sure how much she needed to know, she started to fill in the paperwork, asking me whether I’d like a communal burial or cremation, where you never get told when or where your baby is buried apart from that it would be in this one burial woodland, an individual burial or cremation where you don’t want to know when it is, or where you want to know the time and place but not come, or finally, the option I went for, attending. We chose a burial. We then asked where there are cemeterys, not having had anyone die and need to be buried, grandparents not living this way and all being cremated. She then told us she didn’t live in the area but travelled a long way to the hospital for work so she basically told us she didn’t know. She told us that most people go for the big city centre one, but then she promptly told us that the children’s area is “tacky” with lots of wind chimes and pinwheels and that she would recommend us going and having a look first. That left us with the woodland burial which we had already looked round and discounted as it was all a bit too natural, plots weren’t permanently marked, or even in rows, so I have no idea how they keep exact track of the plots. She looked at us a bit blankly at this point, clearly she didn’t have a clue what to say about where we should try, until thankfully mum remembered our local parish cemetery, the chaplain didn’t look sure at all, filling me with so much confidence that I went online and looked up the phone number for the parish myself once she’d gone, writing it down for the nurses to pass on to her.
When I was being discharged a nurse asked if we had sorted everything to do with the funeral and we explained we were less than impressed with the chaplains conduct and professionalism, and the nurse did infact switch our care to a different chaplain, who atleast when I talked to her on the phone started with I’m sorry for your loss. Words the other chaplain never even uttered. However, it wasn’t until I met a third chaplain, when I turned up to pick up the footprints and photos the hospital had taken, that he mentioned the baby remembrance book that is at the back of the hospital chapel, he also told us about remembrance services they hold there for babies who are lost, facts that although entirely relevant, were not even touched upon by the previous two chaplains.
Having said all this I was incredibly grateful for what the hospital did sort out. They organised for my daughter to be taken to a funeral director and the funeral director, completely funded by the hospital, organised the funeral that we wanted in the cemetery we wanted and the lady, again, was very sympathetic.
On the whole, though they clearly have things in place, I didn’t feel like anyone was aware of everything, I think I may have finally got to the bottom of what was available to me, but on the day I needed things spelt out simply and I needed words of sympathy, I got a bumbling chaplain who didn’t fill me with any confidence that I would be able to get what I wanted for my daughter.

My experience of labour was just as confusing and isolating. I was told they always induce patients at the weekend, I found out I’d lost the baby on the Wednesday and was given a tablet and told to come back on the Saturday, by which point, she had been dead inside me for a week. I can understand that that was how they guarantee a room is available on the gynaecology ward, however, there are less staff at the weekend, leading, as I found out, to care that was pretty much non existant. I turned up on the Saturday and was greeted by a lovely nurse who, though clearly didn’t know what to say, put an arm around me and explained what would happen. She then put a tablet inside me and left. Apart from the nurses occasionally popping their heads round the door to see if my waters had broken yet, or coming in every 6 hours to give me another tablet, I didn’t see anyone all day.
Baring in mind that at 21weeks, with my first child I had never been to an antenatal class in my life, I had no idea about breathing through contractions, apart from what I’d watched on One Born Every Minute, which honestly just sounds like a lot of mooing to me. I had been told to hold off painkillers until I really needed them as the pain would get a lot worse, I have a relatively high pain threshold so waited until past midnight when the contractions were really bad, and I was throwing myself around the room not knowing what to do, the pain was so bad, we asked for something for the pain and were told they’d get a doctor to come and give me an injection. No doctor showed up. We asked again and the doctor had been called to an emergency and there was only one doctor on that night. So I was left, on my own, in agony. I tried to walk to the toilet, my fiancé supported my entire body weight the entire way and I passed out on the bathroom floor from the pain. The crash button was pressed and they got me back on my bed, a nurse talked me through the next contraction, which was better, then she left. The next contraction was just as bad, then the gas and air turned up, after 3 breaths on it I passed out and within seconds of coming round I told them baby was coming. No one had even thought to check. I had been in labour for over 12hours and apart from putting the tablet in once in that time, no one was checking what was happening down there. I delivered her in her sack and she was instantly taken away to be cleaned up and she was brought back. At which time everyone left and no one came back until 9am the next morning. The whole experience was so traumatic and it was like I was renting a room from the hospital. When you go into labour with a live baby they will keep an eye on you, but to me atleast, it seemed like they just wanted me to deliver and leave, as if it wasn’t a birth, as if it wasn’t painful, as if I didn’t have all the maternal hormones running around me and no baby to take home, as if I didn’t need more emotional support than a mother with a happy ending.

The nurse came in to discharge me within half an hour of taking my daughter away. She gave me a weeks worth of tablets to stop infection, and told me not to have sex for four weeks and to avoid swimming pools. I was then sent on my merry way. In the weeks that followed I picked up on a few things I reckon she should have warned me about, that the bleeding didn’t stop any time soon, that it was heavy for weeks, then got lighter to only get heavier again. I didn’t return to normal for months. Then there was the fact I started lactating. Obviously my body had been pumped full of labour hormones and my body thought I had a baby to feed. It all made sense, but being only halfway through my pregnancy I didn’t even consider it. When my boobs started to leak, and hurt like bees were constantly stinging them I worked out for myself what was happening, but I had had no warning. Surely these simple things should be mentioned before a patient leaves?

When I left the hospital having delivered my daughter and had to let a nurse take her away from me, for me to never hold again, I was given nothing about what to do now. I had noticed when I read the leaflet about post-mortems that there were support numbers in the back, but the leaflet was taken away with my forms, never to be seen again. I left that hospital with empty arms and no one told me there was anywhere for me to turn. I spent weeks and months getting through it slowly, feeling completely on my own. Hating everyone who was pregnant, turning the radio and TV off when the royal babies birth was mentioned and still to this day I cannot watch One Born Every Minute. I felt like an awful person for feeling like that. I spent months not knowing where to talk to people or where to find others. I didn’t want to google it incase something I didn’t want to read popped up. I didn’t want to have to search for help. All I wanted was a list of safe places that I could turn to. It wasn’t until I was pregnant with my rainbow baby that the answer popped up on my Facebook news feed. A group called “Sweet Dreams Our Angels” a group for mothers like me. A group where everyone understood, where they shared their stories and where people admitted they were jealous of pregnant people too. Suddenly, after six months of feeling completely isolated, I knew I was normal, that I was hurting, but that it was NORMAL. I don’t know if it is hospital policy to give leaflets and they forgot or maybe ran out when it came to me, but it’s a dangerous place to leave someone. Grieving like they’ve never grieved before and completely isolated. If I hadn’t had my family around me I wouldn’t have got through it.

IT’S A BOY!

Today I went for my anomaly scan. I was half dreading it, half incredibly excited. I was counting down the time until I got to see little Shrimp on the screen again, but at the same time I was terrified about what they may find.

The scan wasn’t until the afternoon, which was probably good as I take ages to wake up properly in the morning nowadays, but when I realised I only had an hour to get ready I realised how quickly it had crept up on me. I booked it 2 months ago, and it had seemed forever away then, even a week to go seemed ages, but suddenly it was here and I was so not ready!
We were the first appointments after lunch, I chose them because I figured they couldn’t start to run behind so soon, SURELY! On the whole I was right, however they didn’t open reception until it was time for my appointment and the two people before me both took FOREVER, but after I had booked in we didn’t have long to wait until I was called in for my scan. She checked at the beginning if we would like a photo and whether or not we wanted to find out gender. We answered yes to both.
She started at the head, showing us the nose and eyes and lip and then she made her way down the body, looking at the skull circumference and measuring bits within the brain, checking the heart was ok, both kidneys were there, stomach, which she noted was full, and baby had clearly just had a drink, measuring the abdominal circumference, checking both legs were there and measuring the femur length. She then checked the spine and I think she could tell we were waiting with bated breath as she quickly reassured us everything was ok.
She then went inbetween the legs and quickly and very definitively told us it was a boy, pointing out the penis and scrotum! With both of us grinning like loons she checked a few other bits, took some lovely snap shots and sent us back to wait in the waiting room.
As soon as we got into the waiting room we were both instantly on our phones texting friends and family to let them know everything was ok and that we were having a little boy. We had decided on our boy name back at the beginning of our last pregnancy, so there was no doubt that he was going to be called Jackson Theo.

After a while I was called into the antenatal clinic by the maternal medicine consultant who told me I’d be seen separately by an endocrinology consultant but that she knew I was on Asprin to thin my blood, but she would like to start me on injections… I quickly pointed out I was already on the injections and had been for 2 months, she looked a bit abashed and said it wasn’t in my notes, but when I told her the date I had started on them she checked my notes again and realised it was there! I swear they don’t read anything before seeing me!
She then sent me back out to the waiting room to wait to see the endocrinology consultant. I didn’t have to wait too long and I was called back in. He told me my thyroid function results had come back normal and he was tempted to take me off Carbimazole completely. I must have looked really worried as he told me he would play it safe and leave me on them for two weeks, but he wanted to see me back in two weeks after another blood test. I’m also booked in to see maternal medicine in two weeks, not that I’m sure why! After that appointment I will be allowed to book my 24week scan, why I couldn’t book it today I am not sure as it’s not going to change!

On the way home I decided that I wanted to buy a cute blue baby grow to help with my Facebook announcement that I am having a boy, but after browsing both Asda and Tesco I have deduced that baby boy clothes suck! I ended up just using one of the pairs of booties I already had and had used for my pregnancy announcement. I’m not complaining though, it made a cute photo of the two scan photos we got today and the booties.
I shall really have to shop around for some cute boy clothes though. BUT NOT YET.
It’s really hard now I know what I’m having, what he’s called and what colour I should start buying, not to get excited. I know I can’t, atleast not for a little while. I want to hold off buying stuff for as long as possible, but knitting I can do! If I put off knitting I will never get the time to do it, so I suppose I shall have to head out and buy myself some blue wool! I am yet to decide what pattern to do. I think I may do some booties to start with, then maybe a hat, then we shall see where the blue takes me!

Everyone is excited, I can see that it has all become more real for my mum and she is literally bouncing off the walls! We know there is still a long way to go, but we are halfway there, so that has to be a little celebration!

Bump Photos

Over the last few days I have been able to see Shrimp kicking and my tummy moving, it is the most bizarre, yet amazing thing to see, to watch my belly moving of its own accord!

I haven’t noticed any major growth in my bump recently, but slow and steady. I’m making sure I moisturise though to minimise any possible stretch marks!

19/03/14
19 weeks 5 days

 

12/03/14
18 weeks 5 days

Looming 20 week Scan and Seeing Movement

So as I am nearing my 20 week scan, I am filled with both fear and excitement.
It’s only 2 days to go until I get to see my little Shrimp on the screen again, until they give my little one a thorough inspection and potentially tell me something has gone wrong, or that something hasn’t developed properly, maybe that there is a clot forming, but hopefully that everything is perfect and whether I’m having a little girl or boy.
All these things are in the back of my mind, but also the fact that it might be the last time I see my little one moving around on the screen. I lost my little girl less than a week after they told me everything was perfect at my 20 week scan. What if history repeats itself. I’m not sure I could cope.

Straight after my 20 week scan I am having another meeting with my consultant, looking at my blood results to see how my Carbimazole is working and checking the growth measured from the scan to check baby is growing at the right speed. Hopefully everything will be developing ok and the meeting will be positive.

But keeping thinking positively, for the last couple of days I have been able to see Shrimp kicking me. It’s incredible seeing my stomach moving of its own accord! I’m only 19 weeks along, at 21 weeks last time I was only feeling slight movement, but to be feeling such defined movement is amazing. I have a proper little kicker in there! I need to start counting the kicks so I can notice any changes in movement.

You are looking to the right of my tummy, above my hip bone. There are 2 kicks in this short clip one at 00.02 and one at 00.06.
Sorry about the quality of the clip – everytime I turned flash on to get a clearer video Shrimp stopped kicking, clearly doesn’t like the light!

  • An 'Angel Baby' is a baby lost during pregnancy or early childhood, who sleeps in the clouds instead of our arms.

    A 'Rainbow Baby' is a baby born following the loss of an 'Angel Baby', a beacon of hope after a storm, while not denying the storm happened.

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