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by MIA FREEDMAN
Seven weeks ago today, friends of mine lost their precious son. He was their first child, a beautiful boy called Leo and he died the day after he was born. In all the photos I’ve seen of him, Leo looks nothing like a sick baby. A mop of black hair. Plump, squeezable thighs. Pudgy little arms. A sturdy body. A kind, peaceful face. Somehow, this robustness made his death even harder to fathom for anyone, let alone his parents whose hearts shattered into a thousand pieces the moment they understood he wasn’t coming home.
The cause was nothing preventable; nobody’s fault. An undiagnosable condition called Vasa praevia that meant the little guy had no chance. The abruptness of it was breathtaking in its random brutality.
Like many friends of Leo’s mum and dad, Sian and Paul, I heard of his birth and death at the same time. This is our way now. We share happy baby news via text message and I exclaimed out loud with joy as I began to read only to feel punched in the stomach by the time I finished. Oh no. Please no. Not them. Not two more grief-stricken members for the club nobody wants to join.
Every so often, too often, I’ll hear about someone who has lost a baby. To miscarriage, neo-natal death, stillbirth, SIDS or some congenital complication in the first few months of life. Sometimes I know them. Usually, I don’t. But I always reach a hand into the darkness because I’ve been there and I know its bleakness well.
Rebecca Sparrow and I met this way in 2010. Mutual friends contacted me quietly after Bec’s daughter Georgie was stillborn two years ago, hoping I’d have some words of wisdom or comfort for her. I don’t think I did. My own grieving process for the baby I lost halfway through a pregnancy had been stunted more than a decade earlier. Knowing no other women who knew how I felt, I withdrew deep into myself. When you lose a baby, a light flicks off and you’re plunged into black. Despair. Grief. There’s no roadmap. No end point. No closure. Eventually you become more comfortable with the discomfort but there’s no way to fast track the process. Friends and family want to help but they can’t. Grieving for a baby you may not have even held in your arms is deeply personal and utterly surreal because you have so few memories, such scant proof of their existence. Some blurry ultrasound images. Maybe a hand and footprint. Through the incredible work of Heartfelt – a charity that sends professional volunteer photographers into hospitals to capture extraordinarily poignant images of babies and their bereaved parents – some families are lucky enough to have photographs.