Here and Then Gone—Losing an Early Pregnancy

At just past five o’clock in the morning, I couldn’t wait any longer. Quietly, I snuck out of bed and into the washroom. As my partner slept, I took the third pregnancy test I had in 2 days since missing my period.

This time, a dark second line confirmed what I had been suspecting. This time, I told my partner that he was going be a father. We were officially expecting. November 14th would have been our due date. Would have. Because within 24 hours of finding out I was pregnant, it was gone.

We were thrilled when we learned we’d be having a baby. Shocked and ecstatic. We text back-and-forth all day about how lucky we were, how crazy this was, how easily we conceived, how we hadn’t been planning to start trying until later. We talked about how deeply that child would be loved. After work, my partner shared his plan for how to tell his mom, dad and sister. I smiled and laughed and felt joy explode in my heart. The timing was perfect for my parents with Mother’s Day around the corner I would share the news with my mom and step-dad. A family trip was planned over Father’s Day weekend, so I could tell my dad and step-mom in person, surrounded by extended family.

There were scary things about the timing as well. My partner is in the midst of completing his professional exams. I launched my marketing and branding business a year ago and am focused on growth. There’s no maternity leave or extended benefits for the sole proprietor, so financial options and business continuity would need to be considered right away. I’d have nine months to get organized. We hadn’t really been trying. At 32 and 40, we hadn’t been NOT trying, either. In fact, six months prior, I wasn’t sure I could even get pregnant. After a number of ultrasounds and x-ray tests that left me bleeding and in tears, it was determined that the sporadic cycle issues I’d been experiencing was related to uterine fibroids. Two of them, underneath the endometrial lining. I’ve been on a year-long waitlist for surgery. I also had symptoms indicative of polycystic ovarian syndrome.

There were numerous cysts in my ovaries and having been on birth control for over half my life, we weren’t sure I could ovulate naturally. After taking myself off the pill and tracking my cycle for a few months, I was confident I was ovulating on my own. My cycles evened out, but there were still internal doubts, buried deep down inside. Feelings of fear and inadequacy that I had to push away. Needless to say, we can get pregnant. We just haven’t been able to keep it, yet. 0 for 1. How strange it is that as women we go from debilitating fear and worry during our teens and twenties that we can get pregnant easily and by mistake, to being 30-something and dealing with fertility issues. Womanhood – swinging like a pendulum, from one anxiety to the next.

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The next morning I woke to more than spotting. Blood blood. Serious blood. In my body, I knew almost right away. I did my best to find strength and hope, but there was only devastation. Amidst panic, I tried to go about my day like usual. As my partner and I walked to the bus that morning, I found myself looking at him, imagining what our child’s face might look like. Which of his features will the baby be blessed with? Will his eyes light up the same way? I couldn’t help but hope – pray even – that the bleeding would be temporary. For his part, he was doing his best to maintain optimism. Maybe I was wrong. Maybe it would stop. The rest of the day is a blur of me attempting normalcy as every moment I was reminded that something was wrong. I teared up in front of the cashier at the local bakery, and was distant and cold in a morning meetings. Between crying, I met about being on the Board of Directors for a nonprofit that helps women and children flee from violet homes.

Twice I got emotional about something which normally wouldn’t bring me to tears. I sat there bleeding into a pad, rushing urgently to the bathroom after standing up to say goodbye. My partner kept checking in over text, encouraging me to be calm, stay optimistic. It’s a weird thing, trying to explain to a man what it’s like in your body. How their attempt at helpful logic and suggestions to distract yourself just aren’t feasible. There was no ignoring it. Every time I moved, I felt it. With every cramp and pain, I worried. Each time I went to the bathroom, anxiety took over at the amount of blood in the toilet, at the amount of red I couldn’t just wish away. The only word I can think to describe the next few days is… intense. There were numerous blood tests. A decline of hCG rather than a steady growth. There was a rise and then immediate dip in hormones, resulting in what I can only describe as what felt like an ‘exorcism’ – crying and then laughing and then laugh crying as my hormone levels returned to “pre-pregnancy”. There was a lot of blood, but no discernible tissue. That I could tell, anyway. There were five and a half hour long visits to the ER after the bleeding wouldn’t stop and got worse.

Excruciatingly painful internal ultrasound tests to confirm it wasn’t ectopic. A rollercoaster of emotions I wouldn’t wish on anyone. There were beautiful moments, too. My best friend, in the middle of her busy day joined me at my workspace, literally rushing to my side. Eight months pregnant herself, she sat across from me working on her laptop. She muted herself on calls to ask how I was doing, kissed me on the head even though she was on a video conference, and walked me to find a cab when I was indeed ready to give up and go home. My partner came to check in on me over lunch, walking to the co-working space for a hug and to see how I was feeling. He brought me soup and treats in bed later that night, making sure my water glass never got below half full as I watched movies, curled up in blankets and surrounded by pillows. He touched my face and stroked my hair and held me how I needed. A girlfriend reached for my hand in public a few days later, both of us crying. She too, had an early loss before her first born. I find myself mourning the loss of even being pregnant.

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I didn’t get to feel what it’s like, really. I didn’t hear a heartbeat or see a scan. There was no cute bump or maternity outfits. Not enough time to even digest the news. We were only 5 weeks along. Being that it was such an early pregnancy, even while it left my body that Friday afternoon, I downplayed my grief –

“There’s so much worse. There’s so much harder.”

And it’s true. I’ve known women who have had still births and family members who tried for years to have a baby only to experience loss after loss. I can’t imagine their suffering. I kept telling myself that what I went through was nothing. I was lucky. Coping mechanism, or unhealthy disregard of one’s own grief? I’m not sure. The truth is, one in four pregnancies are lost. Many early on – which every caring and well-trained medical professional continued to tell me in the appointments, tests and numerous calls that followed. As a society, we don’t talk about it enough publicly, let alone in circles of family and friends. Searching for support when I wasn’t ready to share yet, I discovered there are movements and Instagram accounts dedicated to breaking the stigma of pregnancy loss. Women bravely sharing their stories and their pain so that others don’t feel as alone in this world. I read once that grief is the loss of imagined futures. It’s true. When two lines appeared on that positive test, I couldn’t help but imagine. I can do a lot of imagining in 24 hours. I also Googled a lot in that time. What couldn’t I eat? Can I have a hot bath? As a result of the Googling (possibly even my phone listening to conversations) my Facebook ads to this day are all about pregnancy or conceiving. Algorithms deciding I should see maternity clothing and nursery décor. As another twist of the knife, the prenatal vitamins I ordered from Amazon arrived a few days after the loss. In what felt like the cruelest joke of them all, I lost my pregnancy on Friday, March 8th, 2019. International Women’s Day. Somehow that hurt more. At first I was angry –

“How dare this be taken from me while everyone is celebrating being a woman.”

But the more I thought about it, I realized. No. Of all days, on this day in particular, I knew I wasn’t alone. On March 8th I joined a tribe of women around the world who know this loss. I see you sisters. You are strong.

 

Words by Kate Bouchard

Kate Bouchard is founder + principal of Armature Collective

Photography by Carly Dame & Tianna Kwong

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