Warning: This post contains mentions of stillbirth and may be triggering for some readers.
One month after our wedding Nick and I fell pregnant. I was 30, extremely fit, healthy and excited (if not slightly daunted) at the prospect of becoming a mum. My whole pregnancy was considered ‘low risk’ and ‘textbook’. I did all the classes, read all the books and had the very best clinicians on my side (including midwives, obstetricians, a nutritionist and a prenatal Pilates instructor).
I was however a complete ‘Pollyanna’. Unknowingly, I was completely uninformed and oblivious to any risk factors or complications that could happen to me and my unborn baby. Sure, I knew to avoid oysters, brie and champagne, but that really was the limit of it. I believed (and wasn’t told otherwise), that once you pass the 12 week mark of pregnancy, everything is relatively smooth sailing.
Questions about childbirth answered by mums and non-mums. Post continues after video.
Being pregnant and having a baby is the most ordinary thing I would ever do. Women have done it all over the world for centuries – right? Well yes, but I was oblivious to the fact that women and babies have been (and continue) to die every day.