Sitting on the hospital bed, my bottom lip began to tremble as I watched the expression on the doctor’s face changing and he started to speak. ‘The fetus has stopped developing,’ he said softly. ‘I’m so sorry.’ I’d been 12 weeks gone when I turned up at the hospital for my scan that day – at least I’d thought I was. I’d spent three months imagining myself as a mum, showing off my smiling baby. But it turned out my baby had died weeks earlier, and I’d been walking around with a huge smile on my face, announcing the news to friends and family, oblivious.
When you first see your positive pregnancy test, its silent announcement brings a cacophony of emotions. And that mix of excitement and anxiety was exactly how I’d felt when I discovered my husband and I were expecting in February 2010. We were living in Israel, where my husband was born and where I now called home and had only been trying for a couple of months after marrying the previous year. It felt like our entwined future was being cemented with the child we’d always wanted.
I’d suffered breathlessness and felt swollen and sick in the weeks after we found out I was pregnant. ‘Something doesn’t feel quite right,’ I’d groaned to my husband. But doctors said it was normal, so I’d put it down to morning sickness and started telling friends and family, dreaming of what life would be like as a family of three.
But after that horrific can in May 2010, I had to take a tablet to bring on contractions and then endure a traumatic procedure to have my baby removed. I was utterly bereft and found the ordeal difficult to talk about for months.
Denne historien er fra February 16, 2021-utgaven av WOMAN'S OWN.
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Denne historien er fra February 16, 2021-utgaven av WOMAN'S OWN.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
MIND OF MY OWN
The Woman's Own columnist has her say on the gender gap, cats and timed hugs
Check out CHICAGO
With a spectacular skyline, sandy beaches and great food, the Windy City is calling, says Zoe West
LET'S EMBRACE OUR CHRISTMAS TAT!
Becky Dickinson explains why she'll still be rocking around her tinsel-strewn tree this year
BURIED SECRETS
We look at the shocking cases of celebrities posthumously accused of being sexual predators-and how they got away with it
FESTIVE NO-BAKES
Pop on the Christmas tunes and whip up a batch of these easy sweet treats
PROTECT YOUR SMILE
Are you doing enough to look after your teeth and gums?
'TIS THE SEASON TO SHINE!
At last, Hayley McCrossan, 39, feels fit and healthy
FOR THE LOVE OF TOM
When Deborah Mitchell, 57, lost her son, she vowed to help other families facing the same heartbreak
THE NURSE WHO LEFT MY GRANDAD FOR DEAD belict
Rachael Fealey, 31, had one question for the woman who killed her beloved Grampa - how could you?
Coleen's MONEY WORRIES
What are the reasons behind her financial and marriage fears?