Grief, Infertility, Miscarriage, Parenting, Pregnancy

When Pregnancy Loss is Devastating

Some people have a miscarriage or pregnancy loss and it is disappointing or sad. But for many of us, when a pregnancy ends and there is not a healthy baby for us to love and care for, this can be more than difficult or sad, but it can be devastating.

The first thing to know is that there is no right way to experience or understand the end of a pregnancy. Some people call it a miscarriage – others don’t like that term. Some say, “My baby died,” and for others, it doesn’t feel like it was a baby. Some people who are very distressed after a pregnancy loss are pro-choice and support people’s rights to make decisions about their body, and still they grieve deeply after a pregnancy loss. Some people find out that their baby would be born with life-threatening or fatal issues if a pregnancy was carried to term, and they decide to end the pregnancy in order to reduce suffering. There are a million reasons pregnancy ends. There are many ways to understand and experience this. The important thing to know is that feelings are not wrong. There is no right way to handle this.

If you are feeling devastated and wondering how to cope with this, there are a few things you can do to begin to process this grief. Of course, you will never truly “get over” the loss of a much-wanted pregnancy or child, but there are ways to begin to recover and heal.

1. This can feel very lonely. Know that you are not alone. Our culture does not adequately recognize pregnancy loss as the loss of a child or as a major life event, particularly if a person is not yet visibly pregnant. So, on top of feeling as though we’ve lost a child, lost hope, lost a future of first steps, first words, first days of school, we also often feel alone in our loss. When we are hurting, it is important for other people to truly see us, to really hear where we are coming from. So there is often an added layer of loneliness to this loss.

2. You don’t have to “move on” or “look on the bright side.” When people encourage us to move on after pain or grief, or to “appreciate the good things,” this doesn’t actually result in “moving on” or feeling better. It encourages us to push our feelings down, hide them, or ignore them. This will not help you heal or recover. Thus, in order to begin to handle your devastation, it is important to feel your feelings and find people who will support you as you recover. Some people find a psychotherapist who specializes in infertility, pregnancy loss, or grief to be helpful, but it also might be a support group of people who have had similar experiences, a close friend, or understanding and empathetic family. Sometimes we need to tell our friends and family: I need you to support me right now. I need you to respond empathetically. I am not ready to hear encouragement to “move on” or “be positive” right now.

3. Many people take comfort in ways to ritualize or memorialize their baby. Sometimes people bury their baby in their yard and put a small gravestone there or flowers. Some families like to name the baby. It is okay to name your baby after he or she has died, and you don’t have to know the gender. Some people sense if it was a boy or a girl, maybe you already know the gender, or you might select a gender-neutral name. If you can’t bury your baby or don’t want to, it can be special to make a small memorial garden or area for them with colored or painted stones and/or plants and flowers. You can do this in a yard or a small pot in a window or a porch. Sometimes people get a small memorial tattoo, or frame the ultrasound picture. In some cases, having a small funeral or ceremony for your baby can be really special and meaningful. You can do this alone, with family or friends, at home or with a faith community that you feel connected to. Finally, some people find it helpful to write a letter to their baby and many believe that baby can hear and understand the content of the letter, even if baby is not physically here with us.

4. This is not your fault. We live in a culture that likes to have a good reason for why things happen and, honestly, often likes to blame women and mothers for things. If you are feeling guilt about this loss, please know that this is not your fault. Unfortunately, sometimes bad things happen and there is no good reason and no one is at fault. Growing a little human is a complex process and estimates are that between 1 and 3 and 1 in 4 pregnancies end in loss. Although it is heartbreaking and unfair, this is not something you caused. This is a time to practice being gentle on yourself and nurturing yourself as you recover from your grief.

5. This is a time for comfort. You do not have to “bounce back” quickly from this or buck up. When we are grieving, this is a time to nurture ourselves and take care of ourselves. This helps with the healing process. If you are able, this is a time to do things that help you to relax and bring you comfort. This might be snuggling up with a good book or tv show, a massage or pedicure, extra snuggles from your sweetie, coffee with a friend, or keeping a vase of your favorite flowers nearby. These are different things for everyone. And, of course, sometimes we are not able to do this because of other children or responsibilities. But, if you can, try to find ways to care for yourself during this delicate and painful time.

6. You get to decide how to understand your experience. It is okay to talk about your baby’s birthday (or not). It is okay to talk about being a mother (or not). It is okay to understand yourself as having labored (or not). Many people find it helpful to name that they labored and gave birth, there was a baby (no matter what size or how many weeks!), and that there is a birthday of baby. When there is a pregnancy loss, it can sometimes be treated as a minor event. And, for some people it is, and that is okay. But for many people it is a devastating loss. You are not “making a big deal of things.”

7. Postpartum depression is real after a pregnancy loss or miscarriage. Your baby does not have to born alive for you to experience the hormonal and emotional effects of pregnancy, labor, and birth. Of course, the risk of depression is also increased by the trauma, devastation, sadness, and/or grief that many people experience after a pregnancy loss or miscarriage. Pay attention to how you are feeling. If you are struggling to get out of bed, to stop crying, to eat, to take care of your living children, to be present in relationships, or to take care of yourself after an initial period of shock and grief, you should speak with a caring, empathetic medical professional who specializes in infertility, pregnancy loss, or grief in order to assess what kind of additional support or care you may need.

Additional resources:

Pink Elephant is an organization focused on support and advocacy after miscarriage and pregnancy loss. They provide resources and information for both mental health as well as issues related to the medical aspect of miscarriage and pregnancy loss.

Tommy’s is an organization that offers information on miscarriage both in terms of the medical issues with recurrent losses, as well as the mental health challenges involved in miscarriage and pregnancy loss. They have a Facebook support group.

The Worst Girl Gang Ever is an organization founded by two women who have experienced losses that helps offer support after pregnancy loss and miscarriage. They have an Instagram account, podcast, support groups, and other resources.

Jessica Berger Gross wrote About What Was Lost: Twenty Writers on Miscarriage, Healing, and Hope. This book can help those who have experienced a miscarriage to feel less alone. People who are still feeling very emotional or vulnerable about a miscarriage may find this triggering.

Jessica Zucker wrote I Had a Miscarriage: A Memoir, a Movement. Zucker is a therapist who had a miscarriage. She has done a lot of important work to destigmatize miscarriage. People who are still feeling very emotional or vulnerable about a miscarriage may find this triggering. She also has an Instagram feed and has written a range of articles on miscarriage and pregnancy loss..

You are not alone.

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If you found this article helpful, we encourage you to share it with others who might also benefit.

If you would like to dig into some of these issues deeper with Dr. Elizabeth Gish, author of this post and lead psychotherapist for Lotus & Phoenix Psychotherapy, you can reach out via YouAreTheRising@gmail.com. Dr. Elizabeth has experienced multiple pregnancy losses, so she is able to support clients both from a psychotherapeutic perspective, as well as from her own experiences. She provides empathetic and caring in-person and remote therapy to clients across the United States and world (except where prohibited by law).

If you’d like to read more about this issue, please visit our resources page, where we have a curated selection of books, blog posts, Instagram accounts, and articles that many of our clients and readers find helpful.

Please note that this website is for informational purposes only. Nothing on this website is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have about a medical or mental health condition. The use of the information provided on this site is at your own risk.

Grief, Infertility, Pregnancy, Trauma

The Trauma and Grief of Infertility

Nearly 10% of people struggle with infertility at some point in their lives. For some people, this is difficult, sad, and frustrating, but it does not rise to the level of trauma or grief. But for many people, the longing to have a child or more children, the stress of fertility treatments, or the inability to grow their family in the way that they imagined is so stressful, so disruptive, and so painful that it is traumatic and causes deep grief. This happens to people who are not able to have the pregnancy and child that they wanted, but it also happens to people even when they are eventually able to become pregnant and welcome a baby into the world.

If you find your infertility journey causing depression, anxiety, sleep disruption, uncontrollable crying, or impacting your ability to connect with yourself or others, you may be experiencing infertility grief or trauma. The most important things to know about this are that this is real, your feelings and experiences are legitimate and understandable, and you are not doing anything wrong.

Below are five insights that many people struggling with infertility grief and trauma find helpful as they seek healing and recovery:

1. The first step toward healing is to name these issues, and acknowledge how difficult they are. You do not need to “be tougher” or “stronger.” You do not need to look on the bright side. You do not need to pretend to be okay with something that hurts this much. You are going through something so hard, scary, sad, or disruptive that it can feel like it is almost too much to bear. This rearranges us in fundamental ways. This is a human reaction to a horrible situation. It doesn’t matter if it doesn’t bother someone else as much. It doesn’t matter if other things in your life are good. What matters is that this is how you are experiencing it and in order to find ways forward, ways to heal, we must first name: This is awful. This hurts. It is unfair. I don’t know how to handle this. I am having lots of overwhelming or painful feelings about this.

2. Feelings are not wrong. You cannot have wrong feelings. Feelings are messages from our brain, heart, mind, spirit, and body. We live in a culture that often does not want people to feel their feelings. They say: You are too much. This is too much. Feel differently. Experience things differently. See things a different way. Focus on the good. But this does not actually change or heal feelings. What this does is tell us to swallow our feelings, push them down, or ignore them. Often, it can feel like something is wrong with us because we are having these feelings and can’t make them disappear. Part of the healing process is to acknowledge, name, and experience our feelings so that we can release them. This can be difficult if we don’t have practice listening to our feelings or naming them, and if we don’t have the support around us that provides the empathy and support we need as we learn to listen to and express our feelings.

3. Finding support is essential. Partners, friends, and family can provide us some measure of support and care, but there are often limits to their ability to provide the sort of care we need. Many times, those around us are not able to hold the intensity or complexity of experiences and feelings around infertility. Many who are struggling with the trauma and grief related to infertility find that a support group specifically for people struggling with infertility or a therapist who specializes in infertility is an important part of the path to recovery and healing. If therapy or a support group feels like too much, sometimes there are online groups or message boards that can help.

4. Find ways to comfort and nurture yourself. This looks different for everyone, but when we are hurting and struggling, it is all the more important to find healthy ways to ease our pain and take care of ourselves. This might be small things like a walk in fresh air, your favorite comfort food, or a foot rub. It also might be bigger things like taking a month or two off from treatments so you can take a short trip without having to worry about medications, embryo transfers, or timing of intercourse. If you have people around you who want to support you, think about what would help: a meal delivered? help cleaning the house? time to listen to you vent? a friend to go out for tea? You do not have to be the hero. It is healthy to accept support when offered, or to ask for it as you need it. Neither small nor big comforts will fix anything. Yet, the act of honoring our longings, our desire for comfort, and our own needs is important both physically and mentally as we seek to make it through this.

5. There is a path to healing and recovery. Things will not always be like this. Even though grief and trauma never disappear, many people find that with time, therapy, and support, the pain is not as sharp or unbearable as it once was. The grief and the trauma of not having the pregnancy and family that we dreamed of will change us – even if we eventually get what we long for and especially when we don’t. The space that grief and trauma take up in our life can change and shift over time. The love we have for the baby we long for or wanted is real. Part of healing and recovery is finding ways to honor this love we have, and to draw on it, so that it can be part of own healing and recovery.

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If you found this article helpful, we encourage you to share it with others who might also benefit.

If you would like to dig into some of these issues deeper with Dr. Elizabeth Gish, author and lead psychotherapist for Lotus & Phoenix Psychotherapy, you can reach out via YouAreTheRising@gmail.com. Dr. Elizabeth works with many clients who struggle with infertility, and she has also been through infertility herself so she understands first-hand how difficult it can be. She provides in-person and remote therapy and support to clients across the United States and world (except where prohibited by law).

If you’d like to read more about this issue, please visit our resources page, where we have a curated selection of books, blog posts, instagram accounts, and articles that many of our clients and readers find helpful.

Please note that this website is for informational purposes only. Nothing on this website is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have about a medical or mental health condition. The use of the information provided on this site is at your own risk.