Monday Mourning: Miscarriage

Today I have Mike McMullen on the blog.  Mike lives in Fort Worth, Texas with his four children and is the author of

"I, Superhero

." I saw a post from Mike on Facebook a few weeks ago about his experience with miscarriage. Not only do many women suffer in silence when they experience a miscarriage, so do their partners. It was enlightening to hear a man's perspective.

October 15 was

Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day

.

DW: Who was the person that died?

MM: My wife at the time suffered a miscarriage while pregnant with our second child. We had a one year old son at the time and were excited about not only having a new baby, but providing a future playmate for him. 

DW: How old were you at the time? 

MM: I was 34, which seems incredibly young looking back. I’d never really experienced a miscarriage before. My mom had a couple, but I was either too young to know what was going on or they happened before I was born.  

DW: How old was the person? 

MM: We were just a few months into her pregnancy when we lost the baby. I  can’t say exactly how old she was, or even if the baby was really a “she,” but we both had the feeling it was a girl.  

DW: Was it a sudden death or did you know it was going to happen?

MM: It was sudden. There were no indicators that she was particularly susceptible to this happening. It was just one of those things that blindsides you sometimes in life. Even believing as I did that it was, even at just a few months, a real, living human being, the loss hit me a lot harder than I ever could have thought. I tried to keep it together at home to support my wife, which in retrospect may have been a mistake. I should have let her see me grieve more. It may have helped her know she wasn’t alone. I couldn’t hold it in forever, though, and one day at work I completely broke down. Mercifully, all my coworkers were on a lunch break, but I ended up literally curled up on the floor in front of  my cubicle sobbing uncontrollably.  

DW: Were people supportive of your grief or did they shy away when you were grieving? 

MM: My family was supportive, and the few friends and co-workers I told about it were to a lesser extent. Not that they didn’t want to be supportive, but I think miscarrying in some ways makes consoling someone – already a difficult and sometimes awkward task – even harder. No one’s ever seen the child, to some it may not even count as a person yet, so they may not understand your grief or know what to say. However, I always knew there were people I could talk to if I needed to. 

DW: Buried or cremated? 

MM: That was one of the more difficult aspects of the loss for me: not only was there nothing to bury or cremate, but what was there of our baby was, to be blunt, either flushed away or removed by doctors and, I would assume, incinerated. I never looked into

exactly

what the doctors do with whatever they recover in those situations because I really didn’t want to know. I think it would have just depressed me further. The idea of being buried or cremated might be odd when viewed objectively, but we’ve grown accustomed to the fact that our loved ones are, generally speaking, put in the ground or formally cremated. Finding out they’re basically discarded like rubbish would be adding insult to injury. 

DW: Did you learn anything about the grieving process that you'd like to share? 

MM: The main thing I learned is, if you’re in a relationship with someone and you both suffer a loss, “being strong for them” is, to a certain extent, bullshit. Be weak for them. Let them know the loss hurts you as well. That you’re not just sad or blue, but that you feel the loss all the way down to the bone. I don’t mean lose it to the point that  neither of you can function any longer, but let them see. Your grief can be like a gift to them. 

Unspeakable Loss


     The day of my first wedding, and yes I’ve had two, I found out that I was pregnant.  My period was late, but I attributed its absence to pre-wedding jitters.  It was bad timing on my part to take a pregnancy test on an already emotionally weighted day.  When I showed Guy the stick with the two blue lines, the color drained from his face.  He tried to keep it together for my sake, but his eyes revealed an inner horror, like he was in a tiny canoe heading towards Niagra Falls.  
     I wasn’t too thrilled either.  The pictures from our wedding show a lot of fear.  Our bodies look like mannequins, stiff and uncomfortable with frozen strained smiles on our faces.  During the champagne toast, I felt guilty for even holding a glass of alcohol.  While I did my best to hold back tears, Guy looked like he had a corncob firmly wedged up his butt.  We waited a couple of weeks after the wedding to share the news with our family.  They weren’t exactly thrilled, as we were young and not particularly settled into secure corporate jobs with insurance and a 401k.
    
     In my tenth week of pregnancy, I was in the dressing room of a maternity store trying on waist expanding pants.  I removed my too tight Levis and found that my underwear was spotted with bright red blood. I grabbed some tissue from the dressing room and left in a panic.  I called Guy from a phone at the mall and we met at the hospital.  Since UCSF was a teaching hospital, several pre-med students stood around and watched as the doctor performed an internal ultra sound, which was like a gynecological exam times ten on the embarrassment scale.
     The room was silent and tense as the head physician stared at a screen near my head looking for something, anything.
     “I’m afraid the fetus has died,” he said, his eyes still fixated on the monitor.  I turned towards Guy, the only friendly, caring face in the room.  I don't know if it was nerves or what, but my husband of two months looked more relieved than concerned.  As the nurse lowered the stirrups and helped me sit up, the medical students left the room. 
     “It’s for the best,” said Guy patting my arm.
      I was in shock, not fully aware of the implications of this dismissive comment.
     “I can order a D&C right now, or you can let it happen naturally,” the doctor said.
     The last thing I wanted was to break down and cry in front of that steely-faced doctor, so I chose option number two and fled from the hospital as fast as my unstable legs could carry me.
    The next few days were weird and tense, as I waited for the fetus to expel itself from my body.  

    “It will be like a heavy period,” the doctor offered as some sort of reassurance as we left the hospital.  At the first sign of cramps, I swallowed one of the pain pills I’d been given. Within an hour, I was writhing in pain in the bathtub, hoping the heat from the water would help to soothe my aching body.  But it was unbearable.  I was alone and I wanted nothing more than someone to walk me through this, give me comfort, or just hold my hand and say they were sorry.  As I exited the tub, a spasm of pain overtook me and I fell onto the tile floor.
     Guy rushed me to the nearest emergency room, which was located in a Catholic hospital, just a few blocks from our apartment.  Contractions surged through my body as I approached the receptionist.
     “Can I help you?” the receptionist asked coldly.
     My body twisted and contorted like Joe Cocker in the throes of a song. 
     “She’s having a miscarriage."
     “Oh,” she replied and called a nurse, who quickly shuffled the two of us into a room.  I was instructed by the nurse to remove my underwear and to change into a gown.  She then led me to a scale.  Blood streamed down my legs and onto the green tile floor.  I was mortified, but as usual, I kept my thoughts to myself.  The nurse threw a large cotton pad onto the examination table, asked me to sit down and then proceeded to stick me about four times with a needle.  Her unskilled intrusion popped one of my veins, resulting in deep blue bruising up and down the length of my arm making me look like a track-marked junkie.
     After thirty minutes of waiting and wondering why I wasn’t an emergency, the frazzled ER doctor wandered into the room.  While examining me, he asked the nurse for a pan. 
     “No wonder this was so painful,” he said and removed the placenta, which was the size of a calf’s liver.  Like an oddly excited kid in a science lab, he pointed out the fetus to Guy, who relayed to me later that it looked like a tiny slug.  
      That night, and for many nights after, I went home; cried, slept, chain smoked, and ate a lot of ice cream.  I never went back to my job. I wanted to start over and pretend that it didn’t happen. There was no funeral or public grieving over this thing, this slug.  Everyone was complicit in maintaining the silence.  It wasn’t until I saw my father at a family gathering that I was cruelly reminded of the potential of my loss. Holding my cousin’s newborn baby, he said, “See what you missed out on?”


     I met Susan Oloier in Bayfield, CO when we both showed up for a new writer's group at the public library.  That night, she read an essay about suffering a miscarriage and we bonded over our shared experience.  I don't know about you, but I find it incredibly refreshing when someone speaks about something that no one ever really talks about. Miscarriage is one of those things.  It's important to share our stories.  Just because we don't have a physical body to bury or a picture to remember that being, that life was real the minute the two lines appeared.  
     If it were up to me, I'd wear a shirt that said "Ask me about my miscarriage," as a social experiment.  And I bet you I'd get approached by a lot of women--women who had no one to commiserate with, or who were embarrassed that they'd failed at doing something "natural", or shamed that is was their fault.  Our stories are important.  They define us.  The help us make sense of things.  They let us heal.
     Susan has written a novel called "Fractured" about a couple who experiences a miscarriage.  It is available as an E book at Amazon and Smashwords.
     I'm so proud of Susan for writing this story and getting it published!  She's doing a blog book tour, so check it out!

     Have you experienced a death in your life?  Would you be willing to be interviewed on this blog about it? I'm looking for people to talk with on my "Monday Mourning" posts. 


     
     

M is for...

Miscarriage

When I first began this project of exploring professions that dealt with death, I naively thought that I didn't have any experience with death, other than the death of my grandmother when I was a teen.  At the age of 38 when I began this journey, I'd already had two miscarriages.  
Why didn't I consider their loss as a death?

For me, the minute those two lines appeared on the test, I was literally pregnant with possibility--living in the future with my snuggly little bundle of joy.  Although my mother experienced several miscarriages before having six children, I never considered that possibility for myself.  Until it happened.  Immediately, I felt shame that my body couldn't do the most natural of natural things.  Then I blamed myself, thinking I had done something wrong.  Ultimately, I felt unable to grieve openly over my loss.  

Why?
Miscarriages make people uncomfortable.  Heck, all death makes people uncomfortable.  (That's why I'm so thankful for the few followers that I do have.  You all get brownie points for joining the discussion.) I'm partly to blame.  I silenced myself so that others wouldn't feel uncomfortable. When I did talk to someone, I was told either, a.) It's good that it happened early or b.) Don't worry, you'll have another one.  So, in other words, forget about it. Suck it up. Move on. Is this just an American attitude?  I'd be interested to hear from people outside of the states.


Jizo Statues

If you'd like to read about what they do in Japan, there's a wonderful article,"Mourning my Miscarriage" by Peggy Orenstein that talks about this tradition.

In my own research, I found this wonderful book, "Unspeakable Losses" by Kim Kluger-Bell. If you've experienced a miscarriage or know someone who has, I highly recommend it.

So, who is going to be brave and talk about it?  What helped you in the grieving process?