Content warning: This post contains the loss of a child and could be distressing for some readers.
As told to Lorna Gray.
It’s difficult to put one foot in front of the other when you lose a child, let alone think about the future. We didn’t know it at the time, but losing one of our baby twin girls, Madison, was going to become a huge part of our future, just not in the way you’d expect. She’s spurred us on for over 18 years to help others in her name. Her legacy has become part of our whole family’s – and beyond.
In 2004, Madison and her twin sister Charlotte were born extremely prematurely at 28 weeks. It hadn’t been an easy pregnancy as I’d been on bed rest for 14 weeks leading up to the labour because I’d been losing amniotic fluid. As soon as they were born, the twins were whisked off to the NICU in the Royal Hospital for Women in Randwick and spent two weeks in intensive care before they were moved into the critical care level of the unit, sharing a cot. They were tiny but progressing well for babies who’d been born a whole trimester early. Madison was born with a small hole in her heart, but we were told it was fixable, she just had to put on a little bit more weight before they could operate.
Watch: A tribute to the babies we've lost and the significance of remembering their names. Post continues after video.
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