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Bec pregnant with Georgie Lindy Chamberlain grieved the wrong way

Bec with her daughter Ava and 30 weeks pregnant with Georgie

By REBECCA SPARROW

 

It was 1980, I was eight years old and sitting on the lounge room floor leaning back onto my mum’s lean tanned legs when I heard someone – I’m not sure who – say it.

“Look at her. She hardly looks like a mother whose baby has just died.”

I looked up at the TV screen.

Looking back at me was Lindy Chamberlain with her Beatles haircut and her saucer sized sunglasses. Her face stony, her manner matter-of-fact as she spoke to a heaving, jostling mob of journalists about the disappearance of her newborn daughter Azaria at Uluru.

She blamed a dingo.

The entire nation blamed her.

Lindy Chamberlain, you see, didn’t grieve the way we wanted her to. She was too serious. Too stoic. Heartless. Where were her tears? Where was her grief? How could she be so together? She was the mother for gods sake.

Thirty years later and the exact same sentiments were being whispered about British backpacker Joanne Lees whose failure to publicly emote over the disappearance of her boyfriend Peter Falconio led the public to mistrust her. She looks cold and distant, we murmured from our lounge room chairs. I bet she was involved.

In a roundabout way I was reminded of those two women following a recent Mamamia post (which you can read here). Three months ago Janelle Moran lost her unborn baby son at 24 weeks. No doubt as a way of working through her anguish, Janelle chose to write an incredibly brave piece on some of the darker moments of her despair. The bits of grief that nobody talks about. The bitterness, the fleeting hateful feelings. The moments that go from ‘Why Me?’ to “Why not her?” Oh yes, that deep-seated wish that what had happened to you had actually happened to someone else.

To say she was criticised is an understatement. Many readers didn’t like the way Janelle was grieving. Like Lindy, she wasn’t grieving the way she was supposed to.

But the truth is unless you have experienced the loss of a loved one – especially a child – it’s hard to understand that grief isn’t always as tidy and polite and pretty as it is when played out on A Very Special Episode of Home and Away. What I know from personal experience is that when a parent loses a child the grief is often raw. Ugly. Messy. Dark.

When my daughter Georgie was stillborn 18months ago I behaved in ways I never would have expected.

On a Monday night in September 2010, I held my perfectly healthy, 36 week old dead daughter in my arms and kissed her forehead and sang to her a song I had long ago made up about how very much her mummy loved her. One week later Brad and I had people to our house to watch the NRL grand final. Is that jarring? It jars me, even now. I mean who does that? All I remember is that I wanted Brad to be with his mates for a few hours. And that when they came over I smiled. And passed around bowls of pretzels. And sat outside with my friend Kyley and drank wine and even laughed at some jokes. And then when everyone went home, and the last plate was stacked in the dishwasher I collapsed in the shower and became hysterical screaming for my daughter. Brad had to put me to bed.

From hospital I typed long, calm emails to my friends about my feelings about Georgie’s death and yet refused to take many of their calls. Or see them in person. For the most part, I had no desire to be around people. To hear how sorry or sad they were. Instead I ate their doorstep lasagnes and spent hours making a tribute video on my laptop of a little girl who died before I ever got to see her smile. Or for her to see mine.

I made small pledges to Georgie. Became anchored by tiny rituals that connected me to her. I wouldn’t hold another baby until I had another one of my own. I had to say bless you whenever Ava sneezed. I couldn’t go to bed at night until I had kissed Ava’s forehead and told her Georgie was watching over her.

And I spent those early days, or was it months?, on this very site. It became my salvation. Filled in my hours. Filled up my headspace as I tried to find ways to not think about the nightmare I was living. I read every post and left comments on stories like a normal person, like someone whose much-cherished second daughter hadn’t just died.

I filled in a gratitude journal. I thought about getting a tattoo. Or shaving my head. I craved to look different so that I could wordlessly say to the world, “I am forever altered”.

And like Janelle I struggled with feelings of envy and, yes, at times resentment towards others. Friends who were pregnant. Friends who had had healthy babies at the same time Georgie died. Friends who announced their second pregnancies. The feelings never lasted long. They came and went like a shiver but they were there nonetheless. Because inside me I couldn’t understand how this had happened to us. To me. To her. And now I was behind. Had to start from scratch. Like a game of Snakes and Ladders, I’d been so close to holding a second baby in my arms and suddenly found myself sliding down to the start. Back to the beginning while I watched everyone else move on with their families.

Would I ever, ever wish that someone else’s baby had died rather than Georgie. No. Because having lived through the grief of a stillbirth, I can honestly say I wouldn’t wish it on anyone.

But that doesn’t make it easy.

On her website, Lindy writes “She grew within my body and when she died, part of me died, and nothing will ever alter that fact.”

We all sort of forgot that Lindy Chamberlain lost her baby.  Her daughter. She still misses her little girl. Just the same way I miss mine.

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125 Comments so far

  1. AmyL

    Beautiful. Thank you.

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  2. Perthite

    Bec, so moving. I have no word that can do your piece justice.

    My brother died In a car accident I was 10 and he was 16. The grief was (and remains) unspeakable, but It wasn’t until I’d had my own children did the realization of my parent’s loss dawn on me.

    I still struggle to believe the baby lindy was holding on the rock is azaria. She just doesnt look like a nine week old baby. My mother planted that seed when I too was eight years old.

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    • Jane

      I was looking at that photo yesterday and all i could think was… They must have it wrong and meant to have said nine months…… I cant see that child as nine weeks…..

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      • kiwichick

        Azaria Chamberlain

        11 June 1980 — 17 August 1980

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  3. Anne

    I was 7 years old. I remember feeling very uncomfortable about the way this woman on the TV was portrayed… she had just lost her child, and she was being ripped to shreds by a nation that was looking for someone to blame. Closer to home, there were one or two members of my family that also believed she was guilty (and were vocal about it). I never believed she was. And I am so thankful that she has finally been vindicated.

    Regarding the grieving process: If I was thrust into the national spotlight after loosing my child, I would probably shut down, too. I believe she was in a no win situation. If she had blubbered the way that we expected her to, would we not have accused her of putting on airs and acting??

    Looking back at Mamamia’s other article, ‘Breaking: A dingo killed Azaria’, I find it very telling that the initial findings of the first investigation were that a dingo did indeed take and kill Azaria. Why were we so determined to blame Lindy??

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    • Anon76

      I agree Anne, why did we decide it couldn’t have been a dingo but must’ve been the baby’s mother? We found Lindy Chamberlain guilty without any solid evidence that she actually was. We decided through our judgemental attitudes and ignorance that the Chamberlain family were to be further ripped apart by jailing Lindy instead of allowing her to grieve for her baby and see her other children grow up, to be supported by her husband and for her family to get through such a harrowing ordeal together. But no, that was not to be. I am so sad for the Chamberlains. I am so sad for Lindy. I think of that poor little baby girl and tears pour down my face. To be taken like that, She must’ve been so scared. To die like that, it doesn’t do thinking about because it’s such a horrible fate, one that a baby didn’t deserve. I hope that Lindy and her family are able to move on now. To be able to grieve for that beautiful little girl that way they were denied by the Australian public and judical system. I think we all need to take a long hard look at ourselves and ask why were we so quick to condem her? Who made us the judge and jury? What right do we have to decide how people grieve and show their grief? R.I.P. Azaria Chamberlain

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      • kiwichick

        talking about it today it reminded me of the “Jaws” movie

        ie when the mayor of the beach resort/town didn’t want the beach shut down because they would lose business

        always follow the money

        kiwi’s have their own “murder mystery” where the police were later shown to have deliberately planted false evidence

        (The Crewe Murders)

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    • String

      Yeah – me too. Even as a child, I honestly never thought Lindy Chamberlain killed baby Azaria. And I really couldn’t understand why people seemed to think she did. I only ever felt desperately sorry for her and confused by people’s reactions. In fact, it’s only in reading about it now that I’ve realised why people thought she killed Azaria and that it was such a widespread opinion.

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  4. amber

    Very brave article.

    I’ve never understood why people judge others who are publicly stoic when experiencing grief. Personally, I’m an overemotional person. I wear my heart on my sleeve and there have been many times I have wept loudly and openly in public over something that grieved me. I’ve been judged for that, too. I find it acutely embarrassing; it’s also scary to make yourself that vulnerable, especially if it happens in front of people with whom you haven’t yet established trust.

    Even though I’m on the opposite end of the spectrum from people like Lindy Chamberlain and Joanne Lees, I don’t find it too difficult to understand what they’re experiencing. It’s actually a normal phase of grief: locking all the emotion away so you can walk through the must-dos that accompany a death or tragedy. I’m sure legal questions and widespread public/media attention increase the world of must-dos exponentially. And why would anyone CHOOSE to share their grief with so many strangers who are judging them if they can possibly avoid it? What gives anyone the right to look in from the outside and decide how much grief a situation warrants and whether a person is showing too much or too little? It’s an emotional violation beyond description to look around in the midst of so much pain and find you are laid bare to judgment and contempt from people who know no more about you than your name. My public situations pale in comparison to those who have to answer to the entire world. I imagine locking up tight is the only way they survive it, and certainly not without immense emotional scarring.

    I’m not Australian. I’m young enough that I was unaware of the situation when it occurred. I never saw the Meryl Streep movie. I didn’t know anything about this until I saw a Seinfeld rerun where Elaine jokes, “A dingo’s got my baby.” I didn’t get it, so I looked it up. My only reaction was to imagine how anyone who loved that child would feel if they saw the episode, watched their devastating loss mocked and ridiculed for the amusement of people who don’t even know them, knowing people are laughing over the death of a child. It’s a shocking side of humanity that we feel it’s perfectly OK to steal the pain of strangers and turn it into a joke.

    When I look at Lindy Chamberlain’s face holding up the recent Cause of Death ruling, it’s the saddest form of satisfaction I’ve ever seen. There is a lot of pain in that face. It’s the face of someone whose baby is still dead. Frankly, I wouldn’t be surprised if she did it more to honor her baby’s memory than to prove anything to the public. I hope she knows she owes the public nothing.

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    • Salbelle

      What a great comment… Very well written.

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      • Anonymous

        Agreed! Beautiful, thank you

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  5. Siobhan

    Such a beautiful and perfectly worded piece, Bec. Everything you’ve said is so true.

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  6. Colin

    I dont want to detract from the worthwhile essence of the article, but the idea that “the entire nation blamed her” isn’t a fair or reasonable statement.

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    • sam

      Yes it is. That is exactly wha happened. When were you born? Don’t you remember it?

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      • Colin

        Yes I remember it. The ‘entire’ comment is a generalisation on the part of the author. 70, 80, 90% (or whatever) does not equal ‘entire’ and shouldn’t be stated as such. As with your comment that “this is exactly” what happened – you can’t vouch for every individual person and tell us ‘exactly’ what happened regarding people’s reaction to the case. Generalisations can be unfair and dangerous.

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    • Sarah W

      I don’t mean to be rude but were you alive in 1980? Because while Bec is speaking in generalisations (obviously not every single person thought Lindy was guilty) — the majority of the public thought she did it. Worse, the media went after her in a big way. She was vilified. I think Bec is referring to that sentiment and feeling at the time.

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      • Colin

        I just believe it’s more helpful, especially in such an emotion-charged case, to avoid the generalisations – majority or not, the ‘entire’ population did not believe Lindy was guilty as charged. Also, there were some in the media who were objective and even took up Lindy’s cause – so again it’s just wrong to generalise on this issue.

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    • Leesa

      Bec, an amazingly sad and beautiful piece about the grief of a mother who has lost her baby. True ly touching!

      @Colin, If you think Bec’s comment that ‘the entire nation blamed her’ is not ‘fair or reasonable’, I’d recommend reading Wendy Harmer’s Apology to the Chamberlins: http://thehoopla.com.au/azaria-thinking

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      • Colin

        Regardless of Wendy Harmer’s piece on this subject, you cannot lump every single person into the same category – words like ‘entire’ and ‘all’ and ‘everyone’ cannot be used to sum up people’s reactions, when it wasn’t the ‘entire’ population – it wasn’t ‘everyone’. I’m not saying any of it was fair on Lindy, but I think generalisations need to be avoided. Not everyone joked and sniped, not everyone believed she was guilty. The generalisation that it was everyone alters the picture, unfairly against those who never doubted Lindy’s situation.

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  7. Naomi

    Just like other readers I was moved by this piece, read most of it with blurry eyes.

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  8. Anonymous

    “We all sort of forgot that Lindy Chamberlain lost her baby.  Her daughter.”
    This quote from Bec really resonated with me. I really think most people have forgotten this. Azaria, and the catch cry “a dingo took my baby” just seems like a part of Australian history, yet this is a real family dealing with the loss of their daughter.

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  9. marijana

    Very nicely and openly written.
    I am a palliative care nurse and see grief and bereavement almost every day. And something that I can completely confirm is that grief is very individual, no person griefs the same. There are no rules no boundaries no dos and don’ts, apart from those around the grieving person and that is to support and offer them help.
    I was watching the judges verdict this morning and felt kind of relieved for the Chamberlains, even though I didn’t know their case very well. It was nice to see the judge so emotional and clear about their case, and that the Chamberlains can finally have closure.

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  10. Cathy

    I love reading your pieces, and ones on this topic even more so. Am I morbid? No, I dont think so. Like you, a part of me is empty. It is now over six years since we lost our little one (born early and then in neo-natal ICU for 5 months) – and it is articles like this that take me back. ‘They’ say time heals (whoever ‘they’are). And it numbs and you forget and life goes on and then an article like this brings it back. Because I dont want to forget, but sadly the whirlwind that is life with 3 young children doesnt seem to ‘allow’me time to grieve. So thank you Bec for giving me a few precious uninterrupted moments to remember my little angel. Bless you xxx

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    • amber

      For you and anyone else who feels they have a loss they haven’t truly grieved, I recommend the book “Seven Choices: Finding Daylight After Loss Shatters Your World” by Elizabeth Harper Neeld. It’s a guide to active grieving, and it helped me a great deal in processing my unresolved grief. I knew there were things still affecting me to great detriment, but didn’t know how to change it. I kept trying to ignore that well of sadness because I didn’t know how to even begin “resolving” it (what did that even MEAN?), but it bled over into everything. This book gave me a lot of answers.

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      • Zed30

        Thank you for this recommendation, Amber.

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        • amber

          took me forever to realize this was here, but you’re very welcome :) i hope it helps (helped?)

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  11. marimba

    THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!!!!
    I lost ‘my little multiples’ at 20 weeks last year and even the dr looked at me like I was a heartless cow when upon being told that there was nothing they could do, my answer was to look straight at him and say ‘Ok’. I didn’t fall apart, I didn’t scream, I didn’t wail…that all happened,much much later and in the safety of my own bedroom or bathroom…
    When I got home, I was the one consoling others who had fallen apart…and writing emails, and ‘getting things done’..
    Everything you’ve written, echoes so so strongly through every nerve and inch of my body, it’s hard to type.
    The grief, not just for what happened and the 6 angels my daughter has taking care of her…. but also for the person I was before – 10 years ago, before the miscarriages at 20 weeks, before the one pregnancy that ‘lasted’ and the lengths that doctors and I went through … I still today marvel at its miraculous nature…and yes, my grief is partly for the person I was, the one that didn’t know yet what was going to hit her…..
    but when something goes wrong, I think I come across as a cold heartless cow….
    mega mega mega big hugs Bec!!!

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  12. Sarah in Sydney

    Oh Bec, what a privilege that you have shared such a deeply personal time. A stunning piece of writing. Thank you.

    There never has been a right or a wrong way to grieve and none of us know how we will react until we are there and even then our reactions will change from moment to moment. The ebs and flows of grief are what they are. Whether they be private or public, quiet or screamed from the roof top, an individuals grief reaction is never an indication of their depth of loss or in the Chamberlins’s case an indication of guilt or innocence.

    Thank you for sharing this beuatiful piece and for helping to normalise (for want of a better word) such a deeply personal and painful experience.

    Sending you so much love Bec.
    S xx

    PS I am missing Adelaide so much! :(

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  13. Michelle

    Thankyou Bec xx

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  14. Sarah

    Tears are flowing as I read this, my heart aching for all the mums (and dads) who have lost a child so tragically. I too know the pain of losing a child and know that it is no ones place to comment on how individuals grieve. Rebecca as always you have written this piece with beautiful sensitivity xx

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  15. Maria

    God I love and appreciate the way you write about Georgie. I know that it provides words, comfort and support to so many people who have experienced that sort of love.

    The last word in that sentence was meant to be loss, but I typed love. I just went to delete it, but realised love is actually more appropriate.

    Thank you thank you thank you,
    xxx

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  16. Lindy

    What a beautiful piece of writing Bec. X x Hugs.

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  17. Deni

    Thank you for sharing Rebecca. What a beautiful and moving post. Xx

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  18. Haven Maven

    Bec – I always adore your words. You are so bang on the money – how we judge people for not being ‘sad enough’ publicly. I’m so glad Lindy has been vindicated. And so sorry for those who have lost. xx

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  19. GO Mum

    Bec I tip my hat to you, what an amazingly beautifully written piece. My brother’s little boy died from SIDS at 20 months old, my god I am still haunted by that time…One of the over-riding memories is of my sister and I taking in turns spending the night with my brother and sister-in-law at their home in those days/months after….we would cook, watch – believe it or not – repeats of Two and A Half Men and Bear Grylls to keep their spirits up, and when it was time for bed I would hear them both howling like animals for their lost only child. Shit, I’m crying again now. But thank you for your compassion.

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  20. B

    Beautifully written Bec, as always.
    Grief is a strange thing, and always shockingly personal when you experience it. I admire your honesty in writing this.

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  21. KatieG

    I’m breathless Sparrow. This piece is phenomenally courageous and moving. May it influence the thinking of all who read it xx

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  22. Fiona Hogan

    Oh gosh tears for you Bec. Sorry that doesn’t sound sincere but it is, I am sorry for your loss.
    As for Lindy Chamberlain, I was 7 and I remember every dinner party my parents ever had, my mum claimed that she was innocent. My mum was so confident about a woman never lying about her baby being taken, my mum was the only one in her circle, of the men and women of her peers proclaiming that she believed Lindy. Thirty two years later I hope the Chamberlains have found peace. I now have children of my own and I can’t even imagine -’what if no one believed me’ and also how does one deal with the loss, the speculation, the accusation, the sentence.
    RIP Azaria.

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  23. fm

    “They came and went like a shiver but they were there nonetheless.”

    wow… that describes so many of those fleeting moments when you get that stab of pain inside while trying to be brave at the same time

    Beautifully written Bec

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  24. Megan@OrdinaryWomanPress

    I haven’t lost a child, but when I was 13 my next-door neighbour’s 3-month-old daughter died of cot death. I was there when the mother found the body and I watched a distraught ambo carry the tiny body out of the house. I grieved for that baby for years, which made me watch over each of my two babies obsessively, but even so, I cannot imagine what Lindy and Michael went through. I hope they get some closure from this ruling because they deserve it.

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  25. J

    I didn’t think I would cry when I read this story but I did. Anybody who has lost someone close knows that grief. I lost someone and I talked about it in a matter of fact way and had people say “I couldn’t cope if my _____ died, I wouldn’t be able to go on like you do”. Nobody really knows how they will react when someone dies, you can’t curl up and stop existing so you go on. Over ten years later and I am still grieving. I don’t cry everyday but I do still cry over my loss and people wouldn’t know that about me because I keep that side of me private for my own grief. I am so glad Lindy has been exonerated but I’m sure she too still cries for Azaria as do you for your daughter Bec. I can’t say that grief ever stops hurting but nobody can judge people from the outside because we all react very differently to our emotions. I hope all the people who judged Lindy learn something from this.

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  26. seraphimsp

    Beautiful writing Bec. I ached for the Chamberlain family tonight. They were all irrevocably altered back on Uluru all those years ago. Just as you have been. Just as my family was only a couple of years after Azaria died. I understand. Sending you love xxxx

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    • Jane DJ

      So true, I feel an ache for them too, the injustice, the heartache, SO many years. I wish only the best for them all.

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  27. bowerbird

    Bec, what you have written here is so beautiful and powerful. We can never truly understand another’s pain, especially if we haven’t been through something similar. But we can always remember that we do not know….

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  28. Victoria

    Bec that was truly moving. My heart goes out to you and what you went through, and still go through every day.

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  29. karenp

    Grief is so complex and difficult to explain. You just described it with such accuracy and raw honesty that I am weeping into my keyboard. Thank you Bec xx

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  30. feistyangel

    10days after we were told that they little baby we had spent 10weeks loving and dreaming about our future together was no longer with us my partner and I got married. We laughed and spent most of the day in each others arms. Only a handful of people knew what we had gone through.
    The day after my D&C I was being fitted for my dress while in so much pain both physical and emotional.

    From that day on to now not a day goes by when I don’t think about my little angel and whisper to this little one growing inside that they have someone watching over them.

    To me we are not a family of 2 soon to be 3. We are a family of 4.

    Grief is such a powerful firce and I hate that people still expect others to act in certain ways. I know some people are shocked when they hear how we acted in the days after our news, but for us focusing on our wedding was the only thing keeping us together so we didn’t fall apart at the seams.

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    • katia

      Feisty Angel – thank you for sharing. I too like to think that you have a little angel watching over their baby brother or sister.
      Wishing you luck and courage – and congratulations

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  31. Kate

    Yep no words, just tears….

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  32. hellopetal

    Bec, that’s a really honest piece of writing. Thanks for sharing.

    It’s amazing what we do when we’re grieving. After my daughter’s birth with a hefty case of PND, I wondered why people weren’t calling & visiting etc but realised that I’d had my husband send the pre-written email re her birth saying I’d let people know when we were ready to have visitors. With the sudden onset of PND & a 6 week hospitalisation, I was far from ready & didn’t want to see anyone. But I wanted my friends to want to see me. The juxtaposition of life pre-baby & the shock of birth/baby felt as irreconcilible to me as you the feelings you describe when holding your daughter, then attending the football evening a week later. I hope that analogy doesn’t offend.

    We all grieve & show our emotions so differently. No one has the right to judge Lindy or Joanne Lees, or Janelle though I’ve not read her article. There can be worlds apart from what someone feels, what we perceive they feel & what they actually reveal in private.

    Thanks again for sharing & I’m really sorry re your loss of precious Georgie.

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  33. Janie

    Such a beautiful post Bec and I agree that there is nothing that could be worse than the loss of a child. And like so many of life’s experiences it is difficult to fully understand the feelings that are brought about by such an experience until you have the experience. And you wish that noone would have to know. Thank you for such powerful words. One can only hope that there is some solace for Azaria’s family today.

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  34. jessc

    Nothing I can say other than beautiful post, Bec.

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  35. Anon

    Beautiful. I am so sorry for your loss and your post has really got me thinking.
    My best friend has been diagnosed with terminal cancer and it’s so strange how matter of fact I am about it (like as if I’m talking about her getting a new haircut)! It’s freaking me out a little and worrying those around me, I don’t know when it will truly hit me…

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  36. Nicki

    No words, just “(

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  37. Angela

    A very moving piece, Bec, which resonates with my experience of grief and loss. The horrors endured by Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton began with the loss of her baby. It saddens me that public sympathy has taken more than 30 years — and that some people *still* question the findings.

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  38. Lucy Ormonde

    Absolutely beautiful xxxx

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  39. Anonymous

    Bec, as always, you are so eloquent and strong. I cried today when I heard the coroner’s voice wavering as she announced her verdict. I hope Lindy, Michael and their families find some solace in the words and the sentiments such as these….

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  40. Anna mum of one

    Beautiful Bec, just beautiful.

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