BY MIA FREEDMAN
To my darling girl,
Today should have been your 12th birthday. I wonder what we would have been doing today had I ever got to meet you? Probably discussing The Hunger Games at length but who knows?
I think that’s one of the toughest parts of losing a baby during pregnancy or shortly afterwards.
You never know who you’re grieving for. So when I think of you, there’s….a blank. A sad black hole in my heart. Nothing for my mind to latch onto for solace or comfort. I do have two memories actually. There’s the way my body looked when you were nestled safely inside it.
And the image of you on the ultrasound screen. Frozen. No heartbeat. Just floating. Inside my body and out of my life.
It’s always a funny day, the anniversary of the day you were meant to be born. Those first few years were very raw although I had so many different significant days, it was ameliorated a bit between them in a sort of confusing spread of grief.
There was the day I found out you’d died, about halfway through my pregnancy.
Then there was the day you left my body, at the hospital.
And your ‘birth’ day. The day you were never born. The day I didn’t get to hold you, to look into your little face and make that connection between the baby I’d felt moving inside me and the little person whose life would unfold before me. With me.
I can’t get a handle on what you would have been like, what you would have looked like and that breaks my heart in a way that’s really hard to explain. It’s a very strange grief, grieving for someone you never knew. I have no memories of our times together, no images of your smile or your smell or all the precious details you keep locked tightly in your heart after someone has gone.
For a while there, I thought I’d reached ‘closure’. What an absurd word that is. As if grief was a door that opens for a time and then shuts. The intensity may subside but so many things remain and morph into less extreme but still achingly potent emotions. Like dust settling. It’s no longer flying around in the air but it’s still there, lightly coating your life.
I was so busy in the years after I lost you. Busy blaming myself for not being able to keep you alive. Busy trying to get pregnant again, to fill the space in my life and my body where you were meant to be. Busy welcoming two more children who I love with all my heart. Busy watching all three of my children grow and growing with them. Busy growing away from you.
Because even though that intense period of grief is one I was relieved to leave behind, it was also a way to be close to you in the only way that was left for us, as mother and daughter who never got to meet.
Shifting from that dark dark place and coming back into the light felt like a betrayal.
You know, as I’ve watched my dear friend Bec – your Godmother – grapple with the pain of losing her daughter Georgie 18 months ago, I’ve felt so calm in my relationship with you – if I can call it that. While she continues to ride the rawness of the rollercoaster, I’ve been able to contemplate how far I am from that place. Although I must confess to feeling a flash of envy when she’s able to burst into tears and cry for her daughter. Because I haven’t cried for you for a long time and sometimes I want to.
Sometimes I feel like I can’t get to you. That you’re locked too deeply inside me.
Bec has certainly caused a shift in me. Our friendship was built on a shared understanding of loss and some very intense, unexpectedly funny conversations about our lost daughters. There’s nobody else who understands like her and we have decided you and Georgie are hanging out together somewhere which makes us smile. Bec and I give each other little things to commemorate you both and that has helped more than I can explain to unlock my connection to you.
I’ve certainly come to a place of understanding about why you weren’t born. A very wise woman once told me to stop blaming myself, stop making it about me because it’s not. It was about you and your journey, short as it was. That’s why I never got to hold you or tell you I loved you except in my head and through my tears after you’d gone.
I understand that had you been born, your younger brother and sister wouldn’t have been. I may have gone on to have other children but it wouldn’t have been them. That makes some small sense to me, gives me some small solace.
But I always find myself unexpectedly melancholy at this time of year. And like the goldfish I am, it rarely occurs to me that I’m missing you. Your father always has to gently remind me that it would have been your birthday and then it make sense.
So happy birthday little girl. I feel particularly close to you this year, particularly connected. I hope you are somewhere hanging out with Georgie, your god-mother’s daughter, discussing who is your favourite member of One Direction (I think it would be Harry or maybe I’m projecting) and rolling your eyes at your embarrassing parents.
Because we’re thinking of you. Today and always.
xxxxxxxxxxxxx







Comments
189 Comments so far
Mia, your story touched me in ways i can’t explain, my best friend lost her daughter at 37 and half weeks a month ago… words tears can not explain the pain she is going thru, the pain i feel and the way i feel completely useless to her. I am hoping that one day she will be able to read your story and that she will be able to smile and try again. Thankyou so much and Happy Birthday to your beautiful girl.
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Thankyou for this beautiful letter. I am 23 weeks pregnant & have to go into hospital tomorrow to give birth to my precious daughter Harmony who has not made it & my husband & I are devastated. Words can’t describe the pain of knowing that us & her older sister will never get to know her. You think this sort of thing will never happen to you but I’m finding there are a lot of women & families that have experienced this pain. I know I will get through this somehow but just want to wake up from this nightmare..
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Wishing you only strength and love
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Mia, that is so beautifully written and expressive. I cannot begin to understand your grief, but thank you so much for sharing.
I read a book a little while ago that made my heart sing. It’s about a little boy who went to Heaven, and one of the things that happened there was that he met his sister (I think she was stillborn). It is such a beautiful book and so hopeful. It’s called “Heaven is for Real”, written by Todd Burpo. I really do recommend it.
Thank you again for writing this xxx
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Thank you so much for sharing your story, it couldn’t of been easy but I’m sure it gives all of those others who have been through similar situations a small amount of comfort and it also helps those of us who haven’t some insight into the feelings involved so maybe we can be better equipped to help. Thankyou x
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Oh Mia xxxx
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THANK YOU!
For the past 6 weeks I have been sad, emotional and depressed and I just couldn’t put my finger on it. After reading this article I realised, 6 weeks ago my little Marc would have turned 7 if he had been born.
This article made me realise why I had been feeling that way. My husband and I had a really good talk about him and everything we feel and miss and I have been soooo much better for the past 2 days.
Thank you for writing this, it was perfectly timed for me and though there were tears when I read and reread it, it has been such a help for me.
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Thank you for sharing your beautiful story. Your description of grief being like dust is so apt. I’ve never lost a child but I’ve experienced grief in other ways and it’s the best I’ve ever heard it described.
I have one beautiful, perfect little angel. And I often wonder how mothers who have lost babies find the strength to try again. I think I could understand if you have no other children, but I’m interested in what drives people to face up to the anxiety and worry again – I hope I don’t sound insensitive. It’s a genuine question.
My girl is 15 months and I sometimes consider not having any more children. I feel so blessed already and the grief I have endured in other ways in life sometimes makes me anxious … Do I need to put myself at risk of more grief by trying for another child? Do I really need more than one? Would my daughter be stigmatized for being an only child? And maybe I’ll feel differently when she’s older and desperately want another. Right now I feel like I’be won lotto already … Huge respect for anyone who endures grief and picks themselves up and tries again.
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Wonderfully written Mia and know that by writing as sensitively and openly as you do that you provide the words for those of us that have also lost babies like you but don’t get the chance to express it.
As a father who has walked the same path your words help more than you can know.
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Oh Mia
I truly, truly believes her spirit knows how much you love her. May one day, her birthday bring you thoughts of joy, when you think of how her short life was spent living, breathing & growing inside of you. Only knowing love & comfort & passing from this world in complete safety & peace x
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I remember this day twelve years ago. I remember how it broke my heart. I remember your Mothers incredible strength. And your Dad’s. I remember how I felt so lucky to just to be here.
You’re an eternal, beautiful reminder of that gift.
xxxxxxx
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Thank you Mia. That was so beautifully written, I’m sitting here in tears! I’m going to forward this to a friend who also recently lost a son during pregnancy; I’m sure she’ll be deeply touched. Hugs xo.
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What a beautiful piece of writing Mia, & particularly timely for me also as our first son was stillborn 7 years ago this month, at 26 weeks.
The month of May is a poignant time for so many Mothers of Angel babies. While the rest of the world celebrates Mother’s Day, so many of us are forced put on our brave face, whilst we ache inside for the child, or children, that are no longer there.
Thank you for sharing your precious daughter May with us. Thank you.
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I think I might show my partner this. We lost our baby a few months ago and I don’t think he understands how I feel- he wants to, but he doesn’t. Your article sums it up perfectly. We lost our little one early on, and I’ve since thrown myself into work so I don’t dwell on it too much, but it does come out at times, no matter how I try to supress it. I guess I feel guilty about showing my sadness because I have friends who had stillbirths, who have lost children shortly after birth, and one family who lost a toddler. I can’t possibly compare my pain to theirs, but its still there. On the other side I have several friends who are pregnant or have newborns, and I am joyous for them, but its a constant reminder as well. And I don’t feel like I can tell them, so it can be a bit lonely
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Deeply touching Mia. I have not experienced such a loss but like many women here have commented also have tears falling from my eyes reading your post. As a mother (my 8 month old son is now sleeping by my side) and as a woman I feel utterly touched by the strength and beauty of your femininity. Thank you for sharing the depths of your feelings. Your wisdom is inspiring and we women are lucky to have such access to you.
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Mia, thank you for sharing. You words are so touching.
My baby boy would have been 22 this May Day, which blows me away. Half a lifetime ago I almost had a baby of my own.
I too, find myself missing something around this time of year & then I realise it’s almost May, that is why. It’s something that never quite leaves you, that pain & loss, particularly in my case as there were never any other babies that even made it as fa
r as my boy & that was just over half a pregnancy.
I have been blessed though. Special children I have cared for & loved. This year, amazingly, I married that baby’s father, 22 years later, & i have his wonderful children to share. And that’s a blessing, because if we had stayed together back then they would never have existed.
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Bless you and your extraordinarily beautiful words Mia.
This weekend will be my daughter’s 8th birthday. The next day would be the birthday of the little girl I lost years ago. To have the two birthdays so linked is at once both a pleasure and a pain and your words provide significant comfort this week of all weeks…
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Mia,
I have tears rolling down my cheeks, your words were so beautiful. Your story made me realize how much I have not stopped grieveing for my angel babies, how time has flown, and how much I want to tell them I love them.
And when I look at my daughter, who was born after I lost my babies, I cannot imagine life without her, she is sooooo precious!
I know I am so blessed, Thankyou xx
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Oh Mia, what a way you have with words. Happy birthday to your daughter….you have been a beautiful mother to her. I have “special” birthday(s) to remember as well, but have always kept them painfully and quietly to myself. You have inspired me to maybe share them now.
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Mia, such beautiful words for May. You have a little guardian angel watching over you and your family forever.
After my younger brother, Michael, passed away when I was five I used to look in the sky at night and try and find a blue star. He had such beautiful blue eyes and it used to make me feel closer to him
She’s not as far away as she sometimes might feel I promise you that
xxxxx
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Big love to you and Georgie Mia, Im sure there are 2 cheeky grins smiling on you both.
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Oh Mia, what a beautiful letter. I don’t often cry but I did reading this. Your analogy of grief as dust coating a life is so very true. And the grief is a way of staying close to them, as hard as that is for others to understand.Thank you for sharing this and I am sorry for your loss.
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Can’t help but to shed tears for you Mia, thank you for sharing. Even though you didn’t get to see your daughter grow, it sounds like you did share some special moments with her while she was inside you during the first half of your pregnancy..<3
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So glad I didn’t read this yesterday or I would have looked at you last night and burst into tears…
Love and hugs to you and Jase
N xxxxxxxxx
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Oh Mia, this made me cry so much. My sister lost her baby girl at 26 weeks and still misses her. My daughter was born a few months later and I often think about the cousin she never got to meet or play with.
I think your attitude is great – you recognize your loss but have moved on and can see the positive side – your 2 other children.
They are what mean the most to you now – as they should. X
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I’m sitting at my desk with tears in my eyes from reading that.
It’s so bittersweet to read today. My sister is giving birth today to a little girl and the joy its bringing to our family is unbelievable.
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I am sitting at work, crying after reading that. Mia, I don’t even have the words to convey how very sorry I am for your loss.
Thankfully you have found a fantastic support in Bec and you have found the courage and strength to write so beautifully what so many others must experience when this tragedy occurs.
Your children are very lucky to have you as their mother.
xo
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I saw you last night at Kerry Sackville’s book launch. I wanted to come up to you and say wow you really have not idea do you. Your daughter wouldn’t be rolling her eyes, but rather would have a smile ear to ear. She’d know that her mummy is changing the landscape for women by providing a essential platform for women to share their experiences. No doubt she’s beaming with joy and admiration.
Sending you a hug and love to your little one upstairs… and thank you for this place.
xxx
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Oh Mia. How very beautiful and terribly painful. So pleased you have found a special person who can travel with you, and you with her, on this journey.xx
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Mia what a beautiful post. Thank you. Thoughts with you at this time. xxx
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Sitting at my desk at work crying into my soy latte.
What a beautifully written tribute.
Thank you so much for sharing that with us Mia.
Sending you all the love that is possible.
x
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I would go and give my girls a little hug now if it wasn’t for the fact that I’m now crying so much I don’t want them to see me.
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Mia, you write so beautifully, I have tears in my eyes. Thank you for sharing this with us xx
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Thank you for sharing that Mia. x
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So beautifully put… *hugs*
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That was very beautiful Mia, hugs to you and your family today x
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That was beautifully written, Mia. You really summed up my thoughts and feelings. Thank you. Thinking of you and your family xx
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I want to ‘like’ all of the comments just so I can acknowledge to those who have written them that the brave stories they shared have been heard and have truly touched me. But it seems so wrong to just click a little thumbs up symbol about something so profound that has resonated and hit me deeply.
My child was born – now very healthy, no developmental problems, etc (yes, him and I won the lotto when I didn’t even realise I’d bought a ticket) – around the same gestation that several of you have spoken about your babies being born sleeping, and I can’t reconcile in my head the wretched guilt I feel right now because I can almost touch your pain through my screen as if you were all close friends. The whole thing just doesn’t seem fair. And really rather messed up if I analyse it too much.
So I’ll just say to all of you who have shared your stories and to those who have provided such eloquent words of support in return: Thank you. I’m blown away by the amount of love and compassion in this thread. Such remarkable, diverse people hang out at mamamia – which says a lot about the special woman who decided to kick this off with her own story. I remember reading about Mia’s loss in her book way back when and my heart hurt just as much reading this again now. I feel privileged to have read all of the insights each of you gave into your own lives. Truly, it was an honour and thank you for trusting us all with your words.
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Mia, THANK YOU. I thought I had cried all my tears for my lost babies, but you gave words to feelings Ive never been able to articulate . xo
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It is so lovely to hear this story – I feel so sorry for your loss Mia, and so grateful that you are able to show so many others that in time life can be good again.
Reading with my hands on my tummy, checking on the little person inside. I am high risk for a premie delivery but at 27 weeks tomorrow and officially “viable” tomorrow. Every week now is a bonus.
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Mia, I am so very sorry for your loss. What a beautifully written piece.
xx
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What a beautiful piece of writing Mia. I am reading with tears rolling down my face. Can I just ask of those who have lost babies how you get over the fear of trying again? As I’ve written in other posts, I have a four year old daughter but have had three miscarriages in the past year (the last one about 6 weeks ago). I just don’t know if I’ve got the emotional fortitude to try again. I went to the fertility clinic a few weeks ago to have a multitude of blood tests to maybe find out if there is a reason and am waiting impatiently for the results. I feel like my life has been in stasis trying and failing to keep babies for the past year. Crazily my first bub i lost was due on the same day as a mother in my mother’s group had her third bub and my second baby was due the same day another mum in my group also had her third. I in no way begrudge these beautiful ladies their babies (i didnt tell either of them about my due dates) but it just felt a bit cruel emotionally.
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Gnat, I think I remember reading another of your posts, and my heart goes out to you. I had four miscarriages before I gave birth 2 years ago to my youngest daughter. I can totally appreciate what you said about your due dates being shared by others and the pain it brings. The pregnancy milestones, the birth, the birthdays, all bring a reminder of what could have been and that empty heart feeling.
After four miscarriages to be pregnant again was unexpected (long story) and horrifying to me. In retrospect I am so glad it happened this way because I dont think I could have tried again intentionally. Through the whole pregnancy I couldnt bring myself to tell people I was pregnant because I was still so fearful. They joy my daughter has bought me I cant even put in words.
I too, felt like those years my life was on hold, I could think of almost nothing else, it was all consuming. I dont know what to say to you, except to follow your heart and dont let other people tell you what you should do because only you know what you can live with. A close friend of mine experienced 8 miscarriages before her now 5 year old daughter was born. I really dont know how she did it.
I would also say pick your support team if you do keep trying. I only had 2 friends and my sister who knew what I was going through because I found it too emotionally draining to have other people know. I also had an amazing GP who would send an sms at 10pm at night with my latest hormone levels, or phone me on her day off just to put me out of my agony of having to wait for results. I found on line forums like essential baby and bubhub great, its so good to have an anonymous chat with people who know what you are going through.
I hope that might help in some way
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Thankyou Hope for your kind words:) x
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Gnat, I am not sure you ever get over the fear of trying. But for me, all I want is to be pregnant again so I know that I can fall. Once I fall, then all the other panic moments start to set in.
I write a blog http://www.holmemade.com.au – if you want to have a read
Wishing you all the best
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I remember your post gnat. I hope you get some anawers.
To Mia, I cried reading your letter. My baby girl also passed away on the same day, a year ago. I know the pain will never go away but I hope it eases.
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It’s amazing how my so ‘alone’ story is repeated by so many others. I lost my first baby – a boy named Joshua – at 27 weeks. He was stillborn on Anzac Day 2006 and I was lucky enough to hold him for hours and say goodbye. He would have been 6 last week. And as fate would have it – today, 1 May, is my daughter’s 5th birthday. She would never have been born if I hadn’t lost Josh. Funny how things work out. I even came across a book in the library yesterday, “We were gonna have a baby but we had an angel instead” – pretty much summed everything up. I’m lucky to have 2 beautiful daughters now and boy am I thankful. But I do miss my Josh. Mia – my husband always hands me your columns because they make me laugh (they’re always so true!) – I guess we have more in common than I realised. x
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Beautiful piece of writing Mia. It brings tears to my eyes and makes me think of my own mum who lost two babies before me. Makes me sad for her loss and that I have never met my two older sisters and that I may not be here either if they were around. Thank you for sharing Mia. I am sure it was not easy to write and publish your feelings on here.
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To my beautiful god-daughter, you are the light, the sparkle, the colour that surrounds your beautiful mother. Angel, you will never be forgotten.
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Beautifully written Mia, really lovely. Well done x
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As I read the word frozen I started crying and I didn’t stop.
I have no words.
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Thank you Mia. I have had 4 miscarriages and one angel daughter (farewelled at 21.5weeks gestation 25Mar2011-but who I did give birth to and did get to meet, if only for an hour) and I thank you for sharing your thoughts with the world to remind others that this does go on and it does affect people. I, like you, am one of the lucky ones as pregnancy 4 gave me a gorgeous girl who is now 2 and the absolute light of my life. I hope I can add here that Bears of Hope and the Drop-In Support Centre at Sids&Kids Hunter Region have been a huge place of support for me in this past year.
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tomorrow is my first borns 10th brithday. My first baby would’ve been 11 at the end of July. I know, that had our first decided to join us in this world, we wouldn’t have our darling daughter. I can’t reconcile this fact, but there it is. Happy birthday sweetheart for tomorrow xxx
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Thank you for sharing this story Mia, thinking of you and your family today. It’s not easy to share something so personal and heartbreaking, but you do it beautifully.
I should have been holding a 5 wk old baby today, but at a 12 wk scan, we found out it wasn’t to be. I won’t say I celebrated (not the right word), but certainly thought about our little one and wished him/her a happy birthday on the due date in March, and I’ll continue to do so in the future.
On a happier note though, I’m 10 wks along with our second rainbow baby (fingers crossed!!), but I’ll always remember the ones that didn’t make it.
Sending hugs to all those with an angel.
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I am very thankful that I had my two beautiful kids without having to endure the pain of miscarriage, but it was touch and go with my second pregancy and I had to face the prospect that I might lose him.
When my mother told me that she miscarried two babies after she had my brother but before she had me, I felt an incredible sense of guilt. I felt that if either of my lost siblings had survived, my parents wouldn’t have had me.
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