Next February, it will be twenty years since I became a mother for the first time.
I was 25 and living in Newcastle, far from home and newly married to an unpredictably violent man. He hit me. Often. It hurt. Every time. He was 6ft 4″. I am 5ft 2″. He was cruel and I was suffering from an appalling lack of self-esteem.
It was a match made in hell. I had been fired from my radio job at the time because it was apparently uncool to be a female breakfast radio personality with a pregnant belly. (It’s okay. I later sued the radio station and I won.)
Just before my daughter’s birth, I went into her room where everything was shiny and new. I had been in there hundreds of times, but on this day in particular, it stuck me that a baby was never going to sleep in that room.
But I brushed the thought aside thinking all new mothers have weird thoughts like that…
I went into labour on her due date. It was long. It was painful. I started feeling like something was very wrong, so I asked for the doctor on duty to come to check things over.
I was in a midwife attending birthing program. The midwife kept telling me everything was fine. I kept telling her everything was not. Finally the doctor came. He checked me over. He patted me on the head and told me how I was feeling was something all new mothers felt and that I was fine. I told him I wasn’t and neither was the baby. And he walked out anyway.
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Beautiful and I have tears streaming down my face 😢
Our little boy Aaron thirteen years ago, and I think of him every day. Beautifully written Melissa you 'wrote my heart'....going through the next pregnancy with our daughter was a nightmare and even after her birth I was terrified something would happen to her. It had me being an obsessive mother to our two children.
I felt so alone when we lost our son, grief beyond measure. Our second little boy has high functioning autism and we are now living in Italy and creating a simple life. Aaron taught me many things....
Writing was a gift to me when we lost Aaron and a way to communicate with my husband who was going through his own personal hell without the support that we as women are given. Fathers are often the forgotten ones when a child dies.
I would like to suggest you include some help sites here on this post, I can personally suggest these. https://www.nowilaymedownto... and also a documentary made around the same time we lost Aaron called Loosing Layla (http://www.youtube.com/watc..., Vanessa and Micheal lost Layla with the same problem that Aaron had.
So much I want to share, just the lack of knowledge and the hidden grief I hope sharing can help in some small way for parents who might one day go through this unbearable loss xx