Gillian’s entire pregnancy had been smooth-sailing.
She was a few days past her due date and was waiting impatiently to meet her baby girl – the first child for her and her husband, Gavin – when she noticed her baby hadn’t moved for a while.
She tried the usual methods of rousing the little girl they had named Layla — drinking cold water, changing positions, pressing the bump.
But nothing worked.
“Layla was stillborn at 40 weeks and 5 days,” Gillian told Mamamia.
“Her little heart just stopped beating and unfortunately, since that time, the doctors haven’t really been able to tell us why that happened.”
The first time Gillian heard the word ‘stillbirth’ was when one of the doctors came to talk to them about a study the Stillbirth Foundation was funding.
“I can actually vividly remember turning to my husband and saying, ‘Stillbirth. Is that what this is? Is that what’s happening to us?’,” she says.
Related: A father’s letter to his stillborn son.
“Because, to me, that was a term from medieval times. It was something that happened to Henry VIII’s wife. It wasn’t something that happened to me… it wasn’t something that happened in this day and age with all the medical advancements we have. So it took me a long time to grasp.
“I remember feeling quite angry because we’d done our birth classes, been to all the obstetrician appointments, I’d read every book under the sun, and not once did I read about the risk of movement slowing down, or of a baby dying in utero.”