It’s Saturday morning and there’s a pregnant woman at your local park, enjoying her baby shower. Her friends and family are circled around her and she’s smiling, her hand cradled around her bump. You can’t help but think that she looks the picture of health and happiness. And in some ways, she is. But although you can’t tell as you walk past, she’s paid a high price for that beautiful belly of hers.
That woman is me. That woman is my sister. That woman is Jennifer Hawkins. She’s Jesinta Franklin. She’s your colleague, your cousin, your best friend from high school. She might even be you. It’s a natural response to see an expectant mother and assign a positive narrative to her circumstances. But there may be so much more to her situation than love, marriage and a baby carriage.
Behind every bump, there is a story. It’s just not always a happy one.
Our long-held traditions of not speaking about ‘women’s business’ have created societal views on pregnancy that border on mythological. Infertility affects 1 in 6 Australian couples, miscarriage occurs in 1 in 4 pregnancies and 2,200 Australian families every year experience the agony of stillbirth. No matter how much we want to give pregnancy and childbirth the Disney treatment, experiences like Jen’s and Jesinta’s are important because they remind us that making another human being is hard. Every voice added to the choir shows us we’re not singing this sad, slow harmony alone and gives us the strength to keep going.