Obviously the title gives it away – this is not a story with
a happy ending. But, it’s part of my motherhood journey, and from the start, I
promised to be honest and share every aspect of the journey. Of course I wasn’t
expecting the journey would take me here, but that’s the thing about a journey –
you never know where you’re going to end up!
Friday
I was celebrating reaching 7 weeks and it had been a good
day. I was feeling well and other than slightly sore boobs, hadn’t experienced
any other symptoms. In the afternoon, I
went to the toilet and noticed black stains on my underwear. They were lines so
it looked like old stains rather than spotting. I always imagined spotting
would be just that – spots!
I knew they weren’t there in the morning but couldn’t figure
out what it was. The midwife had only told me the day before that they didn’t
really worry about first trimester spotting but to make sure I had anything checked
out to be sure.
I called my Mother who told me she had some spotting with
her first pregnancy and rushed to the doctor who told her to go home and rest
up. My nearly 10 pound brother popped out a few months later! She said it’s
probably nothing but to just watch it.
Saturday
I was getting ready to go shopping and went to the bathroom
before I left. There again were the black marks. I knew something wasn’t right
and called my obstetricians office. The
doctor on call told me to go to the hospital. He said if everything didn’t work
out ok I might need to stay over. It wasn’t a helpful comment.
My husband and I got to the hospital and I told the
receptionst what happened. She told me she had spotting with all her
pregnancies and her waters never broke. She said “I was a real pregnancy freak.”
I said “This is my second trip to hospital in 3 weeks so I’m feeling like a
freak too.”
We were taken straight through which is the benefit of
paying to go to a private hospital. I had a blood test taken and we had to wait
to get the ultrasound. I was due for my 7 week scan just a few days later so I
wasn’t sure if it was too early to see a heartbeat or not.
As I was put in a wheelchair and wheeled to the scanning
area, I tried to remain calm. I had read so many stories of women who had gone
through this and everything was ok. I tried to shut up the voice in my head
that was telling me I was not going to be one of those women.
The sonographer did the ultrasound and couldn’t find the
heartbeat. He said they would “normally” expect to see a heartbeat given the crownsize
which I later found out was the length from the embryo’s head to the rump.
Again, I had stories in my head of women who had experienced the same but they
found the heartbeat through the internal scan. The internal scan was done and
there was no heartbeat. Peanut was not “viable.”
I was wheeled back into my room in a state of shock. We now
had to wait for the blood results to confirm the miscarriage. I asked my
husband to call the nurse to see if I could have water. I didn’t know if I
would have to stay in hospital to have an operation or not. Unfortunately he
accidentally pressed the emergency button and suddenly I had a swarm of nurses
around me. We had to stifle a giggle – we needed some light relief in the
moment.
I asked the nurse if I could have water or if I would need
the operation. She seemed mad the sonographer had told me the pregnancy wasn’t
viable and in her thick German accident, told me I had to wait for the doctor.
I felt like a naughty school girl! But she bought us in some sandwiches and
juice which were most needed as we had been there several hours and were
starving.
Finally the doctor came in and told me my hormone levels
were 78,000. For 7 weeks pregnant, they should be between 72,000 and 220,000 so
it was clear the miscarriage was very recent. He recommended we go home and wait for the
miscarriage to come on naturally. He checked with an obstetrician who agreed
and we were sent home to see if my baby would leave my body naturally.
That thought horrified me. I didn’t want to see parts of my
baby coming out of me. I didn’t want to see something that looked like an
embryo or bits of the placenta, or the yolk sac. Actually, I didn’t want to see
any of it. Knowing I was going home to do nothing but wait ripped my heart
apart.
When I got home I called my Mother to tell her. I was told
that if the miscarriage didn’t come on by Monday to call the obstetrician who
could operate on Tuesday. My Mother still had hope that it was too early to see
the heartbeat. I did too, but it was vanishing by the second.
I went for a walk to clear my head. I rubbed my stomach and
said “Peanut, if you’re not well or you’re not happy in there it’s ok to go my
darling.” This was 5pm. By 7pm, I had on overwhelming sense Peanut was gone.
I went to bed that night and sobbed. I was sad that I couldn’t
protect my baby. I was sad that I couldn’t do anything to change it. I was sad
that I couldn’t control anything – not even my body. But, I was also glad that
we knew it happened when it did. I was glad that I wasn’t showing and the whole
world didn’t know. I was glad that I wasn’t one of those women that miscarried
at 7 weeks but didn’t find out until their 12 week scan. There were things to
be thankful and I tried to focus on those. However, none of those really made
up for the fact I didn’t have a baby anymore!
Sunday
I woke up knowing I had lost my baby. I hadn’t felt any
symptoms for a few days now and I knew it was part of the process. I decided
the most proactive thing to do was just to get on with life. I went and did the
groceries then came home and cleaned. While I felt some anger towards the
universe, I was also immensely grateful for the fact it was a random weekend
when my friend Chris was up from Newcastle. She had had two miscarriages and the
operation both times. She was going to come over to have a chat to me about
everything.
I told her about the last few days and she said the weird
black marks were exactly what she had. Every detail I provided summed up her
experience. Any last remaining drop of hope I had went in that moment. She went
through the operation and recovery process. It was horrific going through this once
let alone twice and I was so thankful for her bravery in sharing the intimate
details with me. It bought me a lot of comfort.
Monday
There was no sign of the miscarriage happening naturally so
we went to the obstetrician. I still hadn’t met my obstetrician as he was on
leave so I saw the one the doctor had spoken to in hospital. He looked at my
paperwork from the hospital and asked “How many babies do you have?” “None,” I
replied. “How many pregnancies have you had?” “None,” I replied. “Well, that
sucks,” he said. “Yes, it sucks a lot,” I replied.
He took one look at the scans and said “Yes, the baby isn’t
viable.” He told me that given my age, and the fact it was my first pregnancy
it was very common. I said “Are you sure?” and he said “There’s no doubting it
but I can do another scan if you like.” I agreed.
He didn’t even bother with the ultrasound and went straight
for the internal scan. He said it’s really obvious when the baby’s heartbeat
was there and really obvious when it wasn’t. In this case, it wasn’t there. That
was it. Nothing else needed to be said. Peanut was gone.
My husband asked him what the longest time was he knew of
someone waiting for a natural miscarriage to come on. He said 16 weeks. I was
shocked. The last 2 days had been painful enough, let alone waiting everyday
for 4 months. He said I could wait but couldn’t guarantee how long it would
take to come on. He recommended doing the operation as any extra time we waited
was time we wasted in trying to get pregnant again. I was booked in for the
next day.
The doctor asked us if we wanted to have chromosomal testing
done on the embryo. He said he didn’t recommend it for the first miscarriage
but would if I had another one. He said the first was treated as a random event
and there was no reason to think it would happen again. Chris had told me she
had it done for her second and had found out the sex and what the chromosomal problem
was. We decided we didn’t need to know that information at this time.
We dined on smoked salmon for lunch and got some wine for
dinner. I decided to send Peanut off with a bang! Despite not drinking for 2
months, I still managed to polish off a bottle of wine with no difficulties.
Tuesday
I tried to keep myself busy but I was exhausted as I woke up
at 4am and couldn’t go back to sleep. I went to the shops with my Mother but
felt overwhelmed so had to leave quickly to get home. The tears were coming in
random moments in random places but for some reason, almost always in the car!
Eventually it was time to go to the hospital. I kissed my
husband good bye and quickly left as the tears began to well up. I waited in
this sterile room reading the paper. I was looking for anything to distract me
so even read a 5 year old Readers Digest that was falling apart.
I was finally the last person sitting in the waiting room
and was called in. The nurse looked over the paperwork and said “How many
babies do you have?” I replied none. “That’s
really sad,” she said. I wondered why people kept stating the bleeding obvious.
I just smiled. As we were wrapping up,
she said they had another patient come in from the ward and I would be pushed
back. But she let me go into the other waiting room with the comfy chairs.
I was placed in the recovery room, outside the kitchen. So for
the next few hours I saw sandwiches and drinks come and go to people coming out
of their operations. I hadn’t eaten or had anything to drink in about 7 hours
at this stage. It was killing me.
I was thinking it must surely be my time when the nurse sat
down next to me. But no, the doctor had had to do an emergency caesarean and I
would be another hour. A rather cruel twist of fate to think the operation to
remove my baby was being held up by a woman having a baby. I chose to let that
thought go.
Finally, after waiting nearly 4 hours, they took me through.
There was another caesarean coming so they wanted to push me through before
that would hold me up again. I was wheeled into a room and had my blood
pressure taken. The doctor came in and put the drip in. The anaesthetist came
in and explained everything to me. The nurse came in, looked at my paperwork
and told me how sorry she was. Everyone was sorry but I was just sorry I had been sitting here for
so long and just wanted it over and done with.
I was pushed into the operating room and had a variety of
medicines pushed into my blood system. I had a mask put over my face and was
told to suck in the gas. I had a moment of panic that they would start
operating on me without me being under so I made sure I kept my eyes open. I
must have passed out sometime soon after.
I woke up in recovery 45 minutes later. I had some pain and
they put a heated blanket on my stomach and gave me a panadol drip. They kept
asking me what my pain level was and I kept telling them it was nothing
compared to my hunger pains. At this stage, it was nearly 5pm and I hadn’t
eaten in 10 hours. All I wanted was the bad sandwiches I knew were waiting for
me around the corner.
Thirty minutes later I was told I could get dressed. I had
some bleeding and had to wear a pad. I was also given some wet wipes to wipe
the orange goop off my thighs they must have rubbed on before they operated. I
was then put into a wheel chair and taken to the food.
I had a lemonade and sandwiches that consisted of ham and
cheese, cheese, egg and chicken loaf. They were four of the most miniscule
sandwiches I had ever seen. I didn’t touch the egg one as that was just wrong
but I scoffed the rest down. I could have eaten another truck load but I just
waited until my husband came and dreamt of pizza!
I was finally called to leave and had my drip taken out. The
nurse gave me some information on how to deal with going home including a name
of a support group. I listened to her half-heartedly as I was really just
focussed on getting some food. I walked out, found my husband, and said just go
to MacDonald’s or something.
I went to bed early and my husband cuddled me. He told me he
was so scared all day and was just happy to have me home in one piece. He was
upset about the baby and wondered what it would have been and who it would have
been. But he told me there could be plenty of babies but only one me and that
was what he was most concerned about. I went to sleep feeling so lucky I had
such an amazingly supportive husband.
Wednesday
I woke up feeling groggy as I hadn’t slept well. I hadn’t
used pads in years and they were so cumbersome and uncomfortable. I felt crampy
and had a headache so got up, had a shower and a few panadols.
We had decided to go up the coast for a few days so we could
just rest and recover and not be at home to do it. I wanted to go to the bottle
shop and get some wine to take with us. I then realised I couldn’t drive so had
to get my husband to chauffer me. We were both tiered and emotional so had to
try very hard not to snap at each other. We had to remind ourselves to be
gentle with each other.
Just before we left, I checked the mail. My copy of
Practical Parenting magazine had arrived. I took it inside, showed my Mother and
said “Sometimes the world has a really sick sense of humour.” I didn’t even
look at it. I just tossed it into the box where I had tossed all the other baby
magazines and information I had been given. I’m letting it sit there until I
need it again.
My husband and I arrived at our apartment and we went for a
walk. We had a coffee and got some groceries. We decided we may as well make
the most of the situation so we filled our basked up with blue cheese, brie,
pate and nuts. All the yummy bad things I couldn’t previously have. That, and a
bottle of two of wine would be dinner tonight.
I was starting to get a bit worried that I wasn’t really
bleeding. I looked online and saw a lot of women had said they didn’t have any
for a few days and then it suddenly hit. Clearly, it was going to be one of
those things that would come on and off. I decided not to worry about it.
While I was googling, I came across a miscarriage support
group. I read out one of the woman’s posts who said she had had a miscarriage,
went on to have a baby, but still felt so angry and bitter about the
miscarriage. I told my husband I didn’t feel angry about it as there was
nothing to feel angry about it. I really was just accepting it. I didn’t want
to be like this lady and hold so much anger and bitterness about it. I was
really focussing on the things I was thankful for about the timing of it. My
husband and I decided we would try again as soon as we could. We would try
before my cycle came back and just take pot luck at when I would be ovulating.
We wouldn’t put any pressure on ourselves and just see what happens. It seemed
the most logical, calm and peaceful approach to take.
Thursday
I woke up this morning thinking how quickly your life can
change. This time last week I was celebrating being 7 weeks. Just 7 days later,
I was lamenting the loss of my baby. I’m always amazed at how life throws us
curve balls and all we can do is decide how to deal with them.
I told my husband I could easily be angry every time I see a
pregnant woman walk past or a woman pushing a baby in a pram. But shooting them
death stares would not be a proactive or a terribly caring thing to do. Even
when I told my friends who knew I was pregnant, I wished them love and hugs to
their precious babies. This process has taught me that every single child who
makes it into this world is a precious addition as so many don’t. What I hope
this situation will teach people is value every morning sickness vomit you
have. Value every time your 2 year old has a tantrum. Value every time 4 year
old tells you they hate you. Because they could have very easily not have been
here to do those things.
Luckily, I’ve done a lot of emotional work with counsellors
over the years so I think that’s put me in a good place to deal with all of
this. I feel well equipped and relatively emotionally stable, minus the random
tears. But I know that moving on all depends on how I choose to respond. I
choose to respond with love and appreciation rather than anger and bitterness.
I know the hard times will come when I see in my diary in a few weeks time I
was meant to be having my 12 week scan. Or when I see my friend who was due at
the same time as me and realise her baby is coming and mine isn’t. When I see
my grandmother in a few weeks time and realise that was when I was meant to
tell her. So, I am under no delusion that there will be some tough times ahead.
But, I have decided I will look at pregnant women with love
and joy for them knowing my time will come. I will look at my diary and know my
12 week scan will come. I will look at my friend’s growing belly, send silent
prayers she has a safe pregnancy, and
know my growing belly will come. I will look at them with the same love, joy
and appreciation I always have. Because, afterall, when my time does come, that’s
what I want to teach my child – that the universe will throw curve balls at you
but you can choose to survive it and come out the other end stronger and better
off for having experienced it.