This article deals with miscarriage and may be triggering for some readers.
Today is my fourth day of waiting to confirm that I am having a miscarriage.
There has been no blood, no cramping and no dramatic middle-of-the-night trip to a hospital.
There was a bad result on a blood test, and a nurse that told us to prepare for the worst. So we cried and talked about how we were shocked/terrified/sad and I deleted my pregnancy apps so I wouldn't get any alerts about special deals on breast pumps or what my baby looked like that day.
Then an ultrasound, and a sonographer that told us she was sorry. So we cried, and I quietly packed up our pregnancy books and the photo on our fridge and we talked about getting a little box to keep our special memories in.
The pregnancy symptoms, which I had been gleefully documenting on my phone, disappear slowly and then all at once. I ask my husband to buy pads, overnight high absorbency and with wings, so we can be ready.
Then a doctor's appointment, and she told us not all hope is lost. Maybe this is a grey area. We will have to wait and see. So I quietly start looking up stories like ours, most that ended with miscarriage but some that did not. I can’t find any that fit my story exactly, though, so I keep on searching more and more stories.
When my husband asks what I'm looking at, I hide my phone. He says whatever it is, it doesn't seem to be very helpful, because I am crying. "Try and be good to yourself honey," he says.
I post on forums and thank kind strangers for their reassurance while I rebut their comforting words in my head. I don’t have the dates wrong, this is an IVF baby. Maybe your HCG rise slowing doesn't matter after six weeks, but our baby is also measuring too small. It wasn't an unclear abdominal ultrasound by a random ER doctor who doesn't understand the difference of a few millimetres, it was a transvaginal scan by someone who specialises in early pregnancy. There is a lady in Ireland, where they found the heartbeat right before doing the D&C. There is a lady in London whose IVF baby caught up a whole eight days on their next scan. I re-read their stories again and again and imagine they are me.
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