There are a lot of things I’ve failed at. Relationships. Cooking. Being a TV executive. Decorating. The list is long.
Some of these failures have been short-lived while others have been life-long. The feeling is always unpleasant, sometimes intensely so. The most challenging type of failure I’ve ever experienced though, is the failure I felt around pregnancy loss and the infertility that followed it.
Halfway through my second pregnancy, my baby daughter died. And I didn’t even know. My husband and I found out unexpectedly at the 19 week scan. She was there on the monitor and yet she was gone.
Among the tsunami of emotions that knocked me off my feet over the ensuing days and months and years, the feeling of failure was pervasive, punching its way up through my grief. I couldn’t wash it off. It clung to my most fundamental identity as a woman in a way that shocked me, making me feel hopeless and helpless and deeply, overwhelmingly ashamed.
I felt like my most primal function as a woman – to conceive a child, carry it to term and deliver it safely into the world – was something I’d failed at. No matter that I already had one healthy child. The baby I’d lost … I’d failed her. The babies I couldn’t conceive, month after agonising month, I’d failed them too. I’d failed my husband. I’d failed myself. My body had failed me. It had failed my babies both real and imagined.
This week is Never Forgotten: Mamamia’s Pregnancy Loss Awareness Week. Post continues below.