The Reality of Enduring a Miscarriage: My Story

That morning is vivid. I got dressed, brought my daughter to school and met my husband at Ochsner. We were going in for our seven week ultrasound to see baby number two for the first time. However, the appointment did not go as I had thought it would.

Immediately when the ultrasound image appeared on the screen it looked different than my seven week ultrasound with my daughter. My muscles tightened. I tried to keep a clear head. As the ultrasound tech performed her job, I began to ask her questions. She said that it did not look normal, that it looked that I was not as far along as I had thought. My response was, “You mean there is no heartbeat.”

After what seemed like an eternity, which was probably about 3 minutes, the doctor came in to bring the news. There is no heartbeat.

Finding Out Your Baby Has No Heartbeat

I don’t really know how you are “supposed to” respond in that situation. Do you break down in the tears that I was desperately trying to hold back? Do you listen intently to everything the doctor is saying so you get your questions answered? Do you crawl under the sheets and pretend like this did not just happen?

After the news, they sent me down for more blood work. Of course, you have to walk through the waiting room of expectant moms with their baby bellies with eyes gushing with tears.

In the middle of the waiting room, I tried to keep my composure, but it was just too hard. My mind was wondering. Did I do something wrong? What does this mean for us? How are we going tell our parents when I can barely form a sentence every time I think about it?

After they called my name and I got yet more blood taken, it was time to go. When I walked in my house, it was not the feeling that I thought I would have. I thought I would be holding ultrasound pictures of the little bundle of joy that was going to join our family. Instead I dragged my heavy heart through the door.

From there it was all about waiting. I had to wait for blood work to come back and wait another week for a follow up ultrasound. Maybe I am a week behind on my timeline and the heart beat will be here next week? Or, is it that I have miscarried? I didn’t know how I was going to make it a week, much less the two hours until I got the phone call about the blood tests.

Annelise and Mommy
Annelise and Mommy

The Results

After a week of additional blood tests, my numbers were dropping. It was not looking good. At a follow up ultrasound exactly one week after the first, it was confirmed that I had miscarried.

If you don’t know how it works, basically you are given three options. You can wait for nature to take its course, you can take a pill to force your body to miscarry, or you can have a procedure known as a D&C.

All of these choices have their positives and negatives, and it is different for each person. My hubby did not want me to have the D&C. Like any good hubby he did not want to see me in the hospital, and he did not want me to under go surgery.

However, I did decide that the D&C was the right option for me. I decided that I did not want to wait. It had already been a week, and I needed the light at the end of the tunnel for closure. I also liked that the D&C procedure was very surgical. For me, personally, it removed the emotional element of it as I was already emotionally drained. Plus, my biggest fear was being at home and “passing” it. I didn’t want to do that.

No one really talks about this aspect of a miscarriage. While people focus on the emotional element and the loss,there is a lot that goes into the physical aspect as well. Like when you have a baby you ask others questions as a way to familiarize yourself with the choices, the processes and other’s experiences. Not so much with a miscarriage. It is very lonely.

Grieving

One of the hardest things about a miscarriage is telling people. I just wanted to be alone. I was trying to process and heal both mentally and physically.

Just saying that I had miscarried was enough. I mean, why do they even call it miscarry? I didn’t miscarry anything. That word makes it feel like I did something wrong.

My husband was the rock for both of us. He handled telling our family and friends. He also told everyone to just give me my space. This was the most helpful thing. I became a hermit and it was what I needed. After a couple of days, when I was ready, I started to venture out. I had dinner with family after my husband had given strict instructions for no one to talk about the miscarriage.

It was exactly what I had needed to feel normal again. I was through feeling sad and I was ready to resume life, but I wasn’t ready for everyone to want to talk about it. While people mean well, it is talking about it that made me feel worse.

I sort of feel like it makes others feel less awkward around me to talk about it. Please remember, that if someone is going through this and they don’t bring it up, then neither should you.

Everyone grieves in their own way.

Moving On From a Miscarriage

I don’t know what is next for us. I do know that I am in a better place now. I have been able to process my thoughts and my emotions, and I have come to terms with what happened.

Our daughter, two, was our anchor in this. When I picked her up from school on the day of the first ultrasound, she made it all better. She smiled at me, hugged me and said, “Mommy, I love you.” And, there was no better medicine.

20% of pregnancies result in miscarriage. While I know it is not something that anyone plans for, it is in fact a reality.

Of course I worry that I will have another one and have to go through this all over again. But right now I am thankful that I have found peace with this and am even more thankful of the wonderful support team that I have in my friends and family.

I am sure that when the baby’s would-have-been due date arrives, it will be a hard day. But I know that this experience has brought us closer as a family and reminded us of what is important in our lives.

Author’s Note: I am writing this post for the readers who have struggled with miscarriage, as well as therapy for me. I ask you to leave this post as it is, a journal of my experience, and not as the subject of our next conversation. As it is still very fresh, I continue to prefer to not talk about it.

32 COMMENTS

  1. Linzy, I know that sharing journey’s like this can be chellenging but rewarding in the long run. I am certain that there are so many women out there who have had a similar expereince grieving through this loss. I have no doubt your courage in sharing your experience will provide them the comfort of feeling less alone in that process.

  2. Linzy, I too had a “miscarriage” as they call it. I can relate on the griving process although I did chose to deliver at home. It has been two years now and it is still very emotional, especially on the would-have-been-due date. My husband and I did decide to get pregnant again shortly after. I tried not to worry too much during my pregnancy as stress is not good for mom or baby. But it was still hard, every doctors visit made us both nervous. We now have a beautiful heathly one year old boy that I am so thankful for each day but there will always be a piece of me missing.

    • Marissa
      Thanks for sharing. It is a very emotional process. I can’t imagine getting pregnant again and not worrying. I think post miscarriage that would be all I could think about, which of course be a bad thing.
      Linzy

  3. Thank you for sharing your story! I know from personal experience it continues to be a hard journey but opening up and sharing our stories allows us to heal and know we are not alone.

  4. Thank you for sharing, Linzy! We had a miscarriage with our 2nd child at 9 weeks and it was heartbreaking. I also underwent a d&c about a week after I started miscarrying due to complications…which made the process last about 2 weeks. It is a very lonely experience, but what helped me most was the outpouring of support from family and friends, and others who shared their experience with me, to know that I was not alone. Getting to the due date was hard…we ended up having a little party on that day-we had cupcakes and got balloons that we “sent to heaven” for the baby…it was really helpful in helping me with the healing process, and was helpful for my older daughter too, who was 3 at the time. I think the most difficult thing was watching friends who were due at the same time posting updates about how well their pregnancies were going. For my own sake I hid those posts from my timeline and held off on reading their blogs for a while. We ended up getting pregnant again and have a healthy little girl. We’re due again in September. I never thought I would even have another child after the miscarriage, so there is hope!

    • Kaitlyn,
      such a good idea! I agree hearing of others talk about pregnancies that are on the same timeline as my would have been date is one of the hardest things. I makes the loss even more real to see where I would have been “if”.

      Linzy

  5. Linzy, my heart goes out to you and your family. I’ve been there and it’s not easy. Once you’ve really come to terms with everything, however long that takes, talking about it gets easier. Honestly, talking about it to my niece and friends who suffered losses had been very healing. You realize it’s truly not your fault. You see it can happen to anybody. You are shocked by how common it really is. You are able to help others heal. Thank you for telling your story.

  6. I am so very sorry for your loss. There is nothing easy about a miscarriage – from the moment you find out that you’re pregnant the baby becomes a part of your family and your future. I think the most challenging thing is undoing all of the future plans you start to make in your head. Like “at her 3rd birthday I will be X months pregnant” and “by the holidays we’ll have a baby” and “I will need to get a maternity dress for that wedding.” And then it all comes crashing down. Someone once told me that with the loss of a parent or grandparent you grieve the past, with the loss of a friend you grieve the present and with the loss of a baby you grieve the future … but the challenge is that the future is just that, the future. So it almost feels like you can’t get away from it. One day at a time, and it does get easier. Talking about it like this is the first step in healing. Hugs.

    • Ashley- You made the exact point that I just could not put my finger on. Yes, it is that you have already made plans and you can’t escape the future. You are so right!
      Linzy

  7. Thank you for sharing your story, Linzy. I too, share a similar story and you’re right, the experience is a very lonely one. I think by sharing the heartbreak you really find that it you’re not as alone as you feel. You and your family will be in my thoughts and prayers.

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