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A warm welcome to the following bloggers:
Life Without Clarence*
Our Cup Runneth Over
Kirchink
Carly Nicole Elliotte My Micro-Preemie and Hannah Kathlean Elliotte...My angel in heaven
By the pricking of my thumbs
This blog is created and maintained by people who have experienced the loss of a baby in miscarriage, stillbirth, medical termination, or infant death. Our goal is to maintain a current listing of Babyloss Blogs, recommend related resources, and to post the latest Babyloss information.
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A warm welcome to the following bloggers:
Life Without Clarence*
Our Cup Runneth Over
Kirchink
Carly Nicole Elliotte My Micro-Preemie and Hannah Kathlean Elliotte...My angel in heaven
By the pricking of my thumbs
Posted by BabylossDirectory at 10:46 AM 1 comments
Labels: new blogs submitted
A warm welcome to the following bloggers:
One in my heart and one in my arms*
Tuesday's Hope
Overeducated Mommy*
Embracing My Life*
Heart Heal Hope*
The Real Bean
Posted by BabylossDirectory at 9:26 AM 0 comments
Labels: new blogs submitted
A warm welcome to the following bloggers:
From Valleys to Rivers*
burble
Missing Eliana
life without my baby
Into The West
The Great Umbrella Heist*
Until we meet again...
Forever in our Hearts*
loving, living and loss*
STILL
Departed Angel
Are we there yet??*
aurelia ann*
November I will Always Remember
Everything Is Under Control*
Posted by BabylossDirectory at 5:18 PM 1 comments
Labels: new blogs submitted
A warm welcome to the following bloggers:
Thoughts From A Grieving Mother*
From The Grid And Beyond*
Harry Line*
Life and Love in the Petri Dish
Because You Never Know
Tiny Footprints*
Surrender*
Posted by BabylossDirectory at 11:15 AM 0 comments
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A warm welcome to the following bloggers
Dan, Hillary, and Little Russell
A Garden For Butterflies
Infant Loss- Past, Present, Future
A Lifetime of Love
Shareapy
He Will Carry Me
California is Calling
Angels Brielle and Natalie
More Love to Thee
If you sent an email and your blog hasn't been added yet, apologies. Please bear with us as we work together to catch up on a backlog of emails.
Posted by BabylossDirectory at 7:37 AM 2 comments
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When Thelma Williams' baby died at birth, his body was whisked away and he wasn't spoken of again. It took 40 years to confront her grief and finally give a name to her lost child - James
As told to Kate Hilpern
The Guardian, Saturday 10 January 2009
I know I'm not the first woman to have found something she would rather not have discovered in her husband's suit pocket. In my case, it was a notification of the burial of our son. I didn't even know he had been buried until that moment. I had been told when I was six months pregnant that he would die the moment he left my body and somehow I just accepted it when he was whisked away and never spoken of again. This was the 1960s. You didn't talk about such things.
At least, I think it was the 1960s. That's the thing. It could have been 1970. I couldn't tell you what day it was, what season, let alone which year - such was my determination to follow the advice and forget, a task only momentarily but acutely interrupted by the burial slip.
We had another baby later on. I did everything they told me, resting almost solidly for nine months. On 26 December 1971, in the afternoon, Emma was born, a beautiful little girl weighing 7lb 13oz. Home we went with joy in our hearts and everything ahead of us.
It was only when Emma had her own baby, Millie, that it hit me. They say time heals, but there has been nothing chronological about my journey of grief. Nor anything predictable. Out of nowhere it came, threatening to drive a wedge between me and my granddaughter, a granddaughter I had loved unconditionally from the moment I knew she was conceived. But love is different from bonding, I have learned. Bonding is something I could not do with Millie until I acknowledged the loss of my baby boy. And when I had done that - and at last found a place for him to rest in my consciousness - I discovered a bond closer than I could have imagined.
It was 2004, the year before I turned 70, that Emma became pregnant. It was such wonderful news and at first I accepted my niggles of fear as normal. Doesn't every mother of a pregnant daughter worry like mad that everything will be all right? But my anxiety kept growing. Emma knew the reason immediately. Once she reached adolescence, I told her about my stillbirth. She had wanted to know why she had no brothers and sisters. I had surprised myself with how "together" I sounded when I spoke of it. I could relay the facts - facts of which I had hardly mentioned in decades - without a tear in my eye and after I told Emma, I found I could tell others too. Provided I stuck to the facts - and didn't enter the realm of feelings - I sounded like a survivor.
Emma knows me very well and as the weeks of her pregnancy totted up, she spotted the cracks in my shield. She wanted to protect me, to reassure me that everything was OK, but understandably she was starting to feel anxious too. Could what had happened to me happen to her too?
We spoke to the midwife and the specialist. They assured us that all was well. The specialist knew about the condition that befell me when I was pregnant and was shocked to hear how I was treated. He used the word barbaric. He asked if I would like to see the scan of Emma's baby for myself, so I could feel comforted. I did see the scan but I didn't feel comforted. More
Posted by Rosepetal at 12:33 AM 0 comments
Labels: awareness, infant loss, poor outcome, poor prenatal diagnosis