By KIRSTY BADCOCK
“I’m so sorry this has happened to you,” the doctor says. She has come into the cold hospital room to provide a second opinion. I nod. I already know it’s bad news.
I’m 30 weeks pregnant and I’ve just been told that my baby will probably not survive. Thank goodness my mother is with me. After we receive the news, it’s suggested that we have some lunch and call my husband. Like obedient children, we do as we’re told. We’re so shocked we don’t know what else to do and, somehow, it is easier to follow instructions than to think for ourselves.
My precious, much longed for baby has a right-sided congential diagphramatic hernia – a large hole in the muscle that sits below the lungs. It has no known cause and is extremely rare. His liver and bowel have pushed up through the hole into his chest leaving little room for his lungs to grow. His right lung is almost non-existent and his left lung is small. We are told to expect the worst. His tiny lungs will probably not be able to sustain him.
Nestled within my body, my baby is fine – he doesn’t need his lungs until he is born. I can protect him now and want to keep him safe inside my womb forever. But, like any mother, I also want to meet my baby, to see his face and to hold him. It feels like wanting him to be born is somehow wishing for his death.
We are counselled by the doctors about how his death will be managed. That they will not let him suffer. That, if they need to, they will let him go. We need to pack some clothes in which to dress him in case he dies. The irony that I’ll only need clothes for my baby if he dies strikes me like a whip. It’s sharp and cruel and it stings.