One of the Mamamia team is pregnant. And she’s been keeping it a secret until now …
For more than 30 weeks I’ve been keeping a secret.
I’m pregnant. With child. Knocked up. Got a bun in the oven. Up the duff. In the pudding club. On stork watch. Preggers. In the family way. That’s right, in less than 2 months I’m due to have another baby and I couldn’t be, well, more terrified. Not just of how I’m going to cope with having three children under five (Well hello, Mr Gin Bottle) but of this pregnancy itself.
Which is precisely why I haven’t told people – most people – until now.
For me, being pregnant is something of a rollercoaster ride with more stomach-churning drops than exhilarating peaks. It is – for the most part – a white-knuckle experience where faith is my seatbelt and hope, the safety rail. And I’ve struggled in this pregnancy – more so than any other – to allow myself to believe that it’s real. That at the end of it I will have a healthy, happy, very much alive baby in my arms that I get to take home.
And I suspect that feeling of being scared to let yourself relax is probably true for anybody who has lost a pregnancy. Lost a child.
Of course it wasn’t always that way.
The first time I fell pregnant my girlfriends Katie and Nic stood with me in the kitchen as together we stared at that just-peed-on pregnancy stick as though we were willing Makybe Diva over the line at the Melbourne Cup. Come on! Come on!
When the faintest second line started to form we whooped and cheered like Lotto winners and I was planning nurseries and buying copies of Possum Magic and sticking cushions up my jumper and, well, eating for two before the test had even dried. Back then, in 2006, as Brad and I joyfully told people I was pregnant (PREGNANT! WOOO!) it just never even dawned on me that I’d be ‘one of those people’ who would ever suffer from a miscarriage.
Top Comments
For my first I waited until 5 months to tell my in-laws, 6 months to tell most of my friends, and at work some people didn't know until I had left for my maternity leave. I am currently pregnant with my second, 4 months along, and have told only 6 people. I don't plan on telling any earlier this time around! I am grateful that I am tall and hide it well :)
I don't get why women who already have a couple of kids get so upset about having a miscarriage and keep trying. You should feel lucky that you already have kids. There are so many of us women who can't even have one child. So I can't feel sorry for women who are trying to conceive their 3rd or 4th and can't, because they've already got 2 kids and are lucky.
I know this is a month down the track but that is the most hurtful comment I have ever seen on this site and cannot believe it was posted.
Whether you have one child or 20 children, a miscarriage hurts just as much.
It hurts, but it doesn't carry with it the same finality of childlessness.
I have had miscarriages in the past, and have been able to put my sadness to rest when I finally became pregnant with my first child after 14 years of infertility.
It's absurd that you think someone thinking you should feel blessed is "hurtful." Grow up and have some empathy.