Perhaps you'd like to write a letter or
booklet or tape-record a conversation for your
child, like Rae did (Chapter Four). If you need
help with this, ask a confidant or hospice
volunteer.
Make a list of the ways people can help you,
and have it printed at a local copy shop. Hand
out this list to those who care. Wendy Bergren
included these items on her list: cook a dinner,
pray, tell me jokes, bake and freeze homemade
pastries, and babysit. (See Appendix I for how
to obtain a copy of Wendy's list.) By making a
list, you'll receive the help you need.
Do you have any unfinished business? Do you
need to write a will? Should you mend a
relationship with someone? With God? Work on
addressing these responsibilities now.
View your life realistically. Make a list of
your successes and achievements--the bright
spots. Speak about your fears and angers to God
and to those who can offer comfort and
direction. Rejoice in your baby's life. Strive
for a peace that will remain until death.
Suppose You Die First?
Suppose you die before the baby is born?
Modern technology may be able to keep your body
alive until your baby's birth. If you want your
baby to live, put your desire into writing now
and file it with a lawyer.
When pregnant Helen suffered total brain
death during an operation to remove a brain
tumor, her live-in lover Yates remembered her
last words, "You take care of the baby." Despite
objections from Helen's mother, he fought a
legal battle to keep Helen's body alive for
almost two months until her baby was mature
enough to be born and live. Yates's married
sister is raising the baby while Yates remains
the proud and loving father. The child is also
in touch with Helen's parents.
UTERINE AND CERVICAL CANCER
Pregnancy may cause your death if you have an
advanced, untreated case of uterine or cervical
cancer. Carrying your baby to term may give the
cancer enough time to spread to other internal
organs and endanger your life. However, if the
cancer is not advanced and is under treatment,
it may be possible for you to give birth without
severely threatening your life. For example,
some doctors will treat the cancer, deliver your
baby early by Cesarean section, and then
administer more aggressive treatments. If you
have these cancers, consult several doctors so
that you can obtain and consider different
treatment options before making any decisions.
You may be willing to risk death in order to
give your baby a chance.
Vera and Zita had uterine cancer and wanted
their unborn babies to live. Under her doctor's
close supervision, Vera (Chapter Three)
continued her pregnancy and gave birth early by
Cesarean section before undergoing surgery for
the cancer. Both she and her teenaged son are
healthy today. Zita, a doctor, knew that her
very malignant uterine cancer would kill her if
doctors did not remove her uterus. However,
removing her uterus would kill her baby. A very
prayerful woman, Zita chose to continue the
pregnancy and died two weeks after the birth of
her healthy fourth child.
ECTOPIC PREGNANCY
An ectopic pregnancy is often
life-threatening. In 95 percent of ectopic
pregnancies, the baby is growing in a Fallopian
tube. The Fallopian tube leads from the ovary,
where the egg is released, to the uterus, where
babies normally develop. At this time, doctors
can't safely transplant the baby to the uterus.
Doctors must remove the baby before the growing
infant bursts the tube, causes internal
bleeding, and dies. If a rupture occurs, the
mother might die.
The remaining 5 percent of ectopic
pregnancies occur in the ovary, cervix, or
abdominal cavity. A baby growing in the
abdominal cavity has a small chance of growing
to nearly full term and being born alive.
If you have cramping, bleeding, or a pain or
lump in your side during the first two months of
pregnancy, ask your doctor to test for an
ectopic pregnancy. Otherwise, you could be in
serious danger.
Despite Lynn's severe cramps, excessive blood
loss, two fainting spells, and a lump in her
side, her doctor never diagnosed ectopic
pregnancy. Instead, once Lynn's pregnancy test
registered negative, the physician scheduled a
routine operation to empty her womb. Overhearing
Lynn's symptoms, another doctor examined Lynn
and discovered a ruptured ectopic pregnancy that
could have killed Lynn or destroyed her entire
reproductive system. A quick operation saved
Lynn, who went on to have other children (see
Lynn's story in Chapter Two).
OTHER CONDITIONS
Other than ectopic pregnancy and some cases
of advanced, untreated uterine or cervical
cancers, modern medicine can manage most health
conditions, including diabetes, heart disease,
kidney disease, treated cancers, leukemia,
multiple sclerosis, ostomies, and lupus, so that
you can give birth without dying from the
pregnancy. Chapter Four contains many stories of
women with health problems who safely gave
birth. In addition, repeat Cesarean section is
much safer than it was thought to be. Irene has
had eight Cesarean births and knows of a woman
who has had thirteen.
If you're told that your pregnancy will cause
your death, ask your doctors the questions in
Appendix E. You may have additional questions.
You'll want to know the exact reasons why your
doctors predict death, the probability of your
dying, and how your doctors can minimize or
eliminate the risk. Request
facts and literature on your condition. Read
about what you are facing and think about your
doctors' suggestions. Chapters Three and Four
will give you additional guidelines. Dire
consequences may be only a slight possibility.
Good medical treatment might greatly increase
your chances for a safe pregnancy.
You are the one who wants to have your baby.
You make the final decisions. If you're
insistent, your doctors are likely to go along
with your wishes. If some doctors won't treat
you, find others who will.
OVERCOMING SUICIDAL TENDENCIES
If your situation has led you to think about
suicide, seek counseling at once! Don't assume
that those around you "know" or "sense" what you
are planning and would stop you if they cared.
Most people don't "sense" that someone is
planning suicide, nor do they take seriously any
mention of suicide. People will either be angry
with you for mentioning it, or they will ignore
you. They may joke about suicide or even dare
you to do it! These attitudes will upset you
more. Get help!
Immediately call either a suicide prevention
hotline, the local police, or a hospital, or
call a national twenty-four hour, toll-free
hotline (some numbers are listed in Appendix H).
Counselors will help you deal with your
immediate disturbing thoughts. They will not
send someone to whisk you away to the nearest
psychiatric hospital or police station. If you
want to speak to someone in person, ask that
someone be sent to you. If you want to go to a
hospital, say so.
Also call a PREGNANCY AIDgency
twenty-four-hour hotline (see Appendix H) to
learn what pregnancy help is available. A local
AIDgency may be able to locate a professional
counselor to help you, perhaps with no fee.
Problems Have Solutions
Every problem does have a solution that you
can handle. You have more strength, talent, and
hope than you know. You can make good choices,
learn to cope with life, find joy in living, and
believe in yourself. You can find people who
really care.
Make yourself six promises. 1. For your own
sake, promise yourself that you won't act on
your thoughts of suicide for at least a year.
2. Determine to call both a PREGNANCY
AIDgency and a suicide hotline for help today,
now. 3. Promise that you will be open and honest
with those who are trying to help you and that
you will follow their instructions not once, but
for a whole year.
4. Then determine that every time suicide
enters your mind you will call a hotline
immediately.
5. Throw out any object that makes you think
of suicide. Drop friends and activities that
depress you. Make new friends and find new
activities.
6. Finally, if your home situation is making
you suicidal, call a government office that
deals with family problems, a women's shelter, a
PREGNANCY AIDgency, a member of the clergy, or a
hotline and tell the person who answers the
phone about your situation.
You may be able to live in a foster home, a
group home, or government housing, or with a
friend or relative. You need a supportive,
positive environment where you can learn to feel
good about yourself and discover and use your
abilities.
You can feel different about life in a year.
Then give yourself another year of life. You
will still have crises to face, emotional wounds
to heal, and skills to learn. With counseling,
the road ahead will be a lot smoother than the
road you're on.
Sixteen-year-old Maggie made her third
suicide attempt when her drug-addicted boyfriend
got her pregnant. Placed in a mental institution
for the third time, she, with her counselor's
support, was planning an abortion when her
father asked a member of the clergy and a
PREGNANCY AIDgency volunteer to speak to her.
Maggie resented their visit, but began to
rethink her decision when the AIDgency volunteer
sent her an encouraging note. Maggie called the
PREGNANCY AIDgency, which sent her to a home for
unwed mothers, and then to live with a foster
family. Enduring her rebellion, the foster
family, through their example, led Maggie back
to the faith she had rejected for seven years.
Maggie made an adoption plan. Two years later
she married, and is now the happy mother of
three additional children. She feels that giving
birth to her baby, despite her own self-hatred,
was the turning point of her life.
LIVING WITH DYING
Facing your death at the beginning of your
baby's life is a bittersweet time. Confusion and
fear mingle with anticipation and hope.
Begin to plan for the future by getting sound
medical advice from compassionate and informed
doctors. Know exactly what your risks and
chances are. Your decisions are only as wise as
the information on which you base them. Seek
help from a PREGNANCY AIDgency and reach out to
friends and relatives. Soon you will know which
of them will support you. If you have a
relationship with God, seek spiritual help from
a member of the clergy and in prayer.
You have a say in your baby's future. Make
plans and never stop hoping. Life has a way of
working out for those who hope and trust. Your
days ahead may be brighter if you work to make
them so.
MAKING PARENTING PLANS FOR THE
P SPECIAL NEEDS OR DYING CHILD
"Love is always ready to excuse, to trust,
to hope, and to endure whatever comes."
--1 Corinthians 13:7
Hearing that your baby has special needs or
is dying overwhelms you with confusion and
grief. The diagnosis must be incorrect! How can
this be happening? In vain, you search for a
doctor, technology, or medication to cure your
baby. Feeling helpless and out of control,
bitter and angry, you see your baby as a human
"time bomb."
If you continue the pregnancy, you'll begin
to see each day as one more day of nurture. As
you make realistic plans, you'll respond
lovingly to your child.
Learning that a home for special needs
children would care for their Down Syndrome son
if they couldn't, Bess and Gene decided to
continue the pregnancy even as they mourned
intensely for the intelligent son they'd never
have.
At three months of age, the infant began an
early educational stimulation program. Ten years
later, the child speaks well, reads at the first
grade level, and is in a special classroom in a
regular school. He enjoys bowling, arts and
crafts, swimming, and camping. Although Bess
admits that she's had some trying moments, she
laughingly says, "He's a neat kid, and we love
him for who he is. Trade him? Never!"
Darlene, whose story follows, told her
doctor, "My child has special needs and is
special to me." A child with special needs or
health problems requires a special love. Not
every family can give this love. Your decisions
will forever influence your child's life and
yours. Both of you must reach your potential.
You may choose to parent your child or you may
choose foster care, adoption, or institutional
care. By answering the questions in Appendix G,
you can explore every parenting option so that
you make the best plan.
OBTAINING TREATMENT FOR YOUR CHILD
You began to parent your child when you
decided to give birth. Ask your doctor if
vitamins, medication, or surgery can help your
baby before birth. Request treatment for your
child, and choose a doctor who will aggressively
treat an unhealthy child regardless of whether
the child has special needs. Darlene feels that
her doctor did not properly treat her son.
Thirty-seven-year-old Darlene had three
living children and six miscarriages. When
prenatal tests confirmed that her unborn son had
Down Syndrome, her doctor, Dr. Smith, wanted
Darlene to abort, and sent her and her husband
to a genetic counselor who told them what the
worst possible outcome could be. Even the
ultrasound technician, who said that the baby's
heartbeat was strong, told Darlene, "You won't
have an abortion no matter what I say, will
you?" Darlene had to tell everyone that her baby
"deserves a chance, like everyone else."
When Darlene was six months pregnant, she was
in a car accident and began spotty bleeding that
continued throughout the pregnancy. Dr. Smith
told her that the placenta, not the baby, was
probably injured. If the baby were injured,
doctors could do nothing.
At Darlene's eight-and-a-half month checkup,
the baby's heartbeat had dropped, but Dr. Smith
said it was "within normal limits." About an
hour after Darlene took a three-hour glucose
tolerance test, the baby went into a frenzy of
movement and then was still. Five days later,
Darlene demanded an ultrasound which confirmed
that the baby had died. Grief stricken, Darlene
asked that the doctors induce labor, then do an
autopsy, which found nothing unusual about the
baby other than Down Syndrome.
Dr. Jones later told Darlene that Dr. Smith
must have known that her baby was in trouble
when the heartbeat dropped. Had the baby been
normal, Dr. Smith likely would have done an
emergency Cesarean section, but he had decided
that saving a Down Syndrome child's life was not
worth the risk of Cesarean section to overweight
Darlene. If the couple had known that their baby
was in trouble, they could have found another
doctor or insisted that the Cesarean be done.
When Darlene became pregnant again, she
sought a different doctor who would treat a
special needs child more aggressively than Dr.
Smith had. Asking a doctor the questions on
medical difficulties in Appendices E and G can
help you choose a doctor, too.
If a medical crisis arises or if your doctor
seems to make light of a health problem (as Dr.
Smith did), ask your doctor about treatment
options. If your doctor says it would be
hopeless to treat your child, be sure that the
prognosis is accurate. Your doctor may be
uninformed, may think that your child is "better
off dead," or may want to spare you the
emotional strain and financial burden of caring
for your child.
Obtain a second and third opinion--quickly,
if necessary--by calling other doctors and
detailing the problem without mentioning that
your child also has special needs or a terminal
illness. Also call national groups that work
with people who have children with the same
special needs or illness as your child. These
groups can suggest ways to deal with your
child's disability or illness and may advise you
of the different treatments and therapies
available and of your child's prognosis.
If most children with that medical difficulty
would receive treatment, but your doctor doesn't
recommend it, you must decide if you want
treatment and who will administer it.
Certainly any treatment that is life saving
or life enhancing should be performed regardless
of whether it is done prenatally or after birth.
Any treatment that would unquestionably be
administered to a "normal" child should probably
be given. If death is imminent, that is, if your
child will die within hours regardless of
anything you can do, you'll probably want to
refuse treatments that would merely delay your
child's death.
FIRST PHYSICAL CONTACT
The more handling and touching a child
experiences, the more that child will develop
physically and mentally. Beginning in the
hospital, hold and touch your baby frequently.
Have relatives or friends spend time with the
baby. An elderly person or a nursing home
resident may enjoy holding the baby, too. If
others will be parenting your baby, they should
make contact. Or ask a doctor, hospital, church,
or PREGNANCY AIDgency to help you locate
parenting substitutes for your baby.
If your child returns to the hospital, see
that she or he receives extensive touching and
loving. Hang mobiles above your child's bed or
tape colorful pictures next to it. Also bring
toys to the hospital to amuse your child. This
will help your child heal faster, feel secure,
and develop mentally.
When their newborn needed several operations,
Dwayne and Orlena spent days in the hospital,
touching him, playing music, and speaking and
singing to him. Because music had such a
soothing effect, they began a career writing
spiritual children's songs. Their son has grown
into a healthy teen.
LONG-TERM PARENTING
You'll probably consider parenting your child
yourself. Speak to families, foster families,
and institutions that are parenting children
with special needs or terminal illnesses, or
consult local, state, and national agencies that
deal with these children. Also join a support
group for families of special needs or dying
children. Visit some of these families and
observe their parenting techniques. Ask as many
questions as you like. Learn what help is
available and decide if you can parent. Divorced
with twins, both of whom had severe
disabilities, and another child, Ella helped
organize a support group for families with
special needs children. The parents help each
other and lobby for better services for their
children.
Find out exactly how much medical treatment
and equipment will cost and if insurance or
government medical aid will pay for it. An
accountant or insurance agent can help with
financial planning. A university engineering
department may be able to design custom
equipment for your child. Surgery may correct
any unusual physical appearances or
life-affecting deformities. If you can't pay,
make your plight public. Speak to a doctor,
hospital, religious group, or PREGNANCY
AIDgency. Contact a newspaper; the press may be
interested in your story. Community or church
groups may raise money to help you, and
individual donors may make grants.
When Nellie's twins were born during her
twenty-third week of pregnancy, only one
survived. This child required expensive
equipment to monitor his breathing, and amassed
huge medical bills. Nellie had to quit her job
to care for her son, and Otto's jobs couldn't
pay all their expenses. The couple was
ineligible for public assistance.
Following a newspaper feature on their
dilemma, Nellie and Otto received donations of
food, money, a better car, medical help, an
expenses-paid night out, and clothing, as well
as on-going financial aid. An agency hired
Nellie to do at-home mailing. A year later, a
follow-up article brought additional help.
Education
Intense exercises and games help special
needs children develop to full potential. A
support group, pediatrician, or hospital may
refer you to an early intervention program.
Certain books can help you organize such a
program for your child.
Many children with special needs or health
problems are taught in public schools in special
classes, vocational classes, or regular
classrooms. Your child can function, as much as
possible, as a self-supporting citizen. Arrange
for home tutoring or other instruction if your
child's health problems interfere with regular
school attendance.
Often school or government programs provide
educational opportunities and financing. You may
have to inquire about these programs, or your
child may have to take certain tests before
being admitted. Sign your consent for testing
only when you fully understand the tests, their
classification systems, and what programs they
apply to. With parents of other children who
have special needs or health problems, fight for
your child's educational rights.
Donna's newborn was paralyzed from the neck
down. Donna sent him to a children's hospital,
where he received physical and speech therapy
along with the usual grade school subjects.
After learning to use a headpointer to type, he
excelled in computer science in high school
classes for those with activity limitations.
After graduation, he worked in the computer
industry, then started his own business in
computers and electronic aids for persons with
disabilities.
Parenting Help
If you need help, look for live-in,
part-time, or babysitting help, or use respite
care. Sometimes government funds can pay for
this help. Join other families in lobbying for
expanded services. Make a list of the kinds of
help you need and give the list to friends who
say, "If you need my help, just ask." You might
suggest that others volunteer to grocery shop,
go to the library, babysit for two hours, or
send a child over to play with your child.
You're going to get a lot of parenting advice
from friends, relatives, and professionals.
Weigh what you hear and use this book to back up
any plans you make. Only you know which
parenting plan is best for you.
Doctors advised Michelle and her husband to
institutionalize their daughter, who was born
with cerebral palsy, since she would never
speak, hear, or function normally. Instead, they
parented and educated the child, even giving her
music lessons. When the young woman was a junior
in college, over sixty percent of her body was
severely burned in a fire. She survived because
her mother insisted on treatment. Today
Michelle's daughter cannot dress or use the
toilet herself, or write. But she is a
professional counselor in private practice who
writes by dictating to a secretary, and lectures
widely on the problems of people with
disabilities. A personal nurse helps care for
her. She is determined to have others treat
persons with disabilities with respect.
As your child grows, you may notice traits
that doctors or social workers could miss. Call
these to the attention of the professionals.
Your child may exceed expectations. Doctors
thought that Christopher Nolan, severely brain
damaged due to a traumatic birth, was a hopeless
case. His mother, however, detected signs of
intelligence and had Christopher educated. He is
an accomplished poet today.
Your partner and your other children need
your attention, too. Take the time to do special
things with them--and remember to take time out
each week just for yourself. Everyone in your
family needs love and nurturing, including you.
THE TERMINALLY ILL CHILD
What if a fatal condition will eventually
cause your child to die? You will have to parent
your child through medical crises and the stages
of death. Terminally ill people receive many
treatments that improve and extend their lives
but do not cure their illnesses. The previous
section as well as this one will help you decide
if you can parent a child with a fatal
condition.
Your child may live a short while or many
years before dying. Tay-Sachs victims gradually
lose both their physical and mental abilities
and usually die before the age of four. Victims
of cystic fibrosis have difficulty breathing,
because of abnormally thick body mucus, and live
into their teens and beyond. So do victims of
muscular dystrophy, a disease of progressive
muscle degeneration. Children with Wilson's
disease, which causes an abnormal accumulation
of copper in the body, will have no symptoms for
eight to twenty years and can be treated with
drugs. Victims of Huntington's chorea, a
progressive disease of the nervous system, live
normal lives until the disease begins in
midlife.
National research groups and hospitals know
the latest drugs and treatments to prolong and
improve life for children with terminal
illnesses. While these groups can give you the
latest prognosis for your child, remember that a
new treatment or cure may be around the corner.
Face the future with hope as well as realism.
Parenting a dying child means overcoming the
anticipation of death and living in the present.
Don't deny your baby your love to protect
yourself from grief. Know what you are facing by
talking to your doctor, a national group
(Appendix H), a counselor to the dying, and
other parents of terminally ill children. Visit
some children with terminal illnesses. Are you
emotionally and physically strong enough to
parent your child?
A hospice can help your family and your child
through the final stages of death. If a hospital
cannot refer you to a hospice in your area, a
PREGNANCY AIDgency, religious group, or civic
group may be able to find volunteers to help you
a day or two a month. A counselor or member of
the clergy can help you confront your emotions
and live one day at a time. Those who care for
your child will grow in their ability to love,
to give of themselves, and to hope in the face
of despair.
ALTERNATE PARENTING PLANS
Making an alternate parenting plan requires
courage and honesty. You're making the best
choice for both you and your baby. Don't feel
guilty about it.
Many excellent group homes exist for special
needs and terminally ill children. Appendix H
lists a few of them. A hospital, church, doctor,
or PREGNANCY AIDgency may be able to refer you
to a home in your area. If one home cannot take
your child, ask for a referral to another home.
When you find a home that seems promising, visit
it. Observe how the employees care for the
children. Speak to the personnel. Discuss
financial arrangements. What expenses are your
responsibility? What are covered by insurance,
the government, private grants, or the home? In
the best homes, children receive loving care.
Tammy and Mitzie both chose institutional
care for their children.
For a while, Tammy and Harold parented their
daughter Joy, who had multiple disabilities.
Then they placed her in an institution until
their other children were older and family
finances were more stable. The whole family
visited Joy frequently until they brought her
home again.
Calvin, one of Mitzie and Lane's newborn
twins, required constant care. His parents
selected an institution to become his legal
guardian. Visiting often, they were pleased at
the loving treatment he received until his
death.
Adoption is a choice for your special needs
or terminally ill child, too. When Dora and
Oscar discovered that their unborn baby was
mentally retarded, they made an adoption plan
and tried again for a normal, healthy baby. As
Dora and Oscar discovered, many families are
eager to adopt special needs or ill children.
Perhaps you already know such a family. You can
also contact a local, state, or national
adoption agency, service, or lawyer. Call
national agencies that work on behalf of
children with special needs or terminal
illnesses (see Appendix H). Their personnel may
be able to put you in touch with some adoption
agencies. If your child is adopted, you may be
able to keep in touch with the adoptive family
and visit your child. Yetta and Zack have
adopted seven children with severe, multiple
disabilities, and Dave and Neala have adopted
three. These disabilities include profound
retardation, physical limitation, and terminal
illness. The couples call these children "rays
of sunshine, God's blessings, special gifts of
love." Some of the children have parents who
keep in touch with the adoptive families.
Foster care, usually located through adoption
or child welfare agencies, can be a good option
if your child has only a short time to live.
Salina has cared for nearly forty foster
children over a fifteen-year period, many of
them with multiple disabilities, some dying,
others with brain damage so severe that they had
only the most minimal brain function. The
government may pay for foster care. Visit your
child and the foster family so you'll feel good
about your choice.
If you decide to parent your child, but then
change your mind, you can make another plan at
any time. Rita and Quinn brought home their
child, who had severe disabilities and was
dying, but found that they simply could not care
for this newborn. As they arranged to place her
in county-financed foster care, the infant died.
An adoption agency, member of the clergy,
counselor, or PREGNANCY AIDgency can help you
work through the many emotions you will
experience when you consider alternate parenting
plans. If your child is dying, a hospice or
member of the clergy will help you deal with
grief.
ACCEPTANCE
Having a child with special needs or severe
health problems changes your life. You must
resolve your feelings of anger, despair, and
confusion, accept reality, and plan for the
future. Desire your child to be all that she or
he can be, not all that you wish your child
were. "I am who I am, and that's all that I ever
can be." A brilliant child may change the world;
a child with special needs or health problems
may change you.
By making a parenting plan, you acknowledge
your child's worth and dignity as well as your
own. Both of you deserve an environment in which
you can thrive. The challenge, a nurse told a
World Federation of Doctors, is to interact with
the special needs child on the levels that the
child can share--touch, recognition, gentleness,
stimulation, presence, and love. Your parenting
plan will share these qualities with your child.
Your special needs or ill child will never give
the world all that a well child could. Depending
on your attitude, your child could give much
more.
DEALING WITH PREVIOUS ABORTION
"If I knew then
What I know now,
You never would have died.
I'd have held you close
And nurtured you, and kept you
by my side.
I'd have sung you songs
And treasured you
More than silver,
More than gold;
But this song is all I'll give
To the babe I'll never hold."
--An anonymous woman who
experienced an abortion
You may have had an abortion in the past. An
abortion procedure involves violence. Your baby
died violently. You may have aborted amid
violent emotional upheaval in your life. Now you
may understand that you could have given birth.
The knowledge that you can never reclaim your
baby can torment you. You may hide your painful
memories through addictions, sexual excess, wild
or deviant behavior, or extreme commitment to
career. Now pregnant, you may be remorseful over
an abortion.
Why did you abort the last time? Family,
friends, your partner, or a clinic counselor may
have thought abortion was best for you. You may
have felt guilty or upset over your pregnancy
and chose to end it without outside pressure
from anyone. You probably didn't hate your baby;
you just wanted to simplify your life, and
abortion seemed like the simplest solution. For
a while you were glad you had the abortion, but
now you may be very troubled by it. You may even
wonder if you have a right to cry since you
chose the procedure on your own.
Having this baby will help you understand
that you do have a right to grieve. You are no
longer denying your pregnancy or your baby--you
are admitting to yourself that your baby is dead
and that you have forever lost all contact with
your child. PREGNANCY AIDgency volunteers and
those who specialize in post-abortion
counseling, as well as other women who regret
their abortions, will help you work through your
feelings.
You will have to confront your memories, your
regrets, and your reasons for getting an
abortion, then forgive others, your baby, and
yourself for the role each played in your
choice. Letting go of painful memories takes
time. You may want to name your aborted baby or
have a special memorial service for your child.
Eventually, you may consider helping other women
who are uncertain about getting abortions.
If your body suffered damage during the
abortion, you may need medical treatment. If
your injuries were extensive and/or permanent, a
lawyer can advise you about suing an abortion
clinic or abortionist for what happened to you
physically during your "safe," legal abortion.
Do you need help in having this baby or
making parenting choices and arrangements? A
counselor can help you understand why you don't
have to abort again. Regretting previous
abortions, Valerie (Chapter Two), Jayne (Chapter
Six), and Mercedes (Chapter Seven) went on to
give birth. So did Bonnie, who was working to
put herself through college when she became
pregnant following a vicious rape that left her
almost dead. Bonnie continued her education and
her job and is now parenting her baby. You, too,
can lay the past to rest and build a future for
yourself and your child.
LIVING EVEN THOUGH YOUR BABY IS DYING
". . . such a tiny thing,
A bud that had not opened,
A song too pure to sing."
--Alice Briley
One in four women experiences the death of
their unborn or newly born babies. Often death
comes unexpectedly. Other times prenatal tests
indicate that the unborn child is dying. If you
have had a test, request a second test to
confirm the diagnosis of a fatal condition. In
rare cases, prenatal tests give false positive
results. You can never be 100 percent certain
that your baby will die until death actually
occurs. Appendix E has questions to ask in this
situation.
Ectopic pregnancy, discussed earlier in this
chapter, will almost always result in your
child's death.
Miscarriage (spontaneous abortion) is the
spontaneous ending of a pregnancy before the
twentieth week and is signaled by bleeding from
the vagina. Miscarriage may occur for any number
of reasons.
A stillbirth occurs when a baby is born dead
after the twentieth week of pregnancy. Babies
who die in the womb suffer intrauterine death.
If the baby is born alive, but before term, the
baby is premature.
If a pregnancy continues several weeks beyond
the anticipated due date, the baby is termed
postmature. Postmaturity can be dangerous to the
child because the placenta may cease to work
well when it is too old.
A genetic condition has been with the child
since conception; the condition is in the
child's genes. Some genetic conditions are fatal
while others are not.
A congenital condition happened to the child
after conception, either due to influences in
the womb or during birth. Some congenital
conditions are fatal.
Infant death brings many, many questions.
Discuss with your doctor how you can prevent
future pregnancy loss.
TESTS
A simple pregnancy test may not tell you if
your baby has died. Pregnancy tests are very
sensitive to
even a tiny amount of pregnancy hormones in
your urine or bloodstream. The level of
pregnancy hormones climbs daily as your baby
grows. When your baby dies, the hormonal level
drops each day. However, enough hormones may be
present to give a positive pregnancy test. This
is what happened to Lynn, Gisele, and Clarissa,
whose stories appear in this chapter. They had
pregnancy tests register positive days after
their babies had probably died.
Ask your doctor for a pregnancy test that
measures your hormonal level. Take the test over
in a few days and see if the level is rising or
falling. Is the level near the normal limit and
rising? Your baby is probably all right. Bed
rest, hormonal treatment, or some other
technique may avert disaster. Is the level very
far below normal and falling? Your baby has
probably died. Take the test one more time, a
few days later, to be sure.
Advanced ultrasound procedures are proving
that many more pregnancies than previously
thought begin as twins. Bleeding early in
pregnancy may indicate the death of one twin but
not the other. If your hormonal levels drop, and
then begin to rise again in a few days, you were
pregnant with twins. One has died but the other
is alive. The living twin may be fine, as Abby's
twin was (Chapter Four), or may also die, as
happened to Trudy (Chapter Four) during one of
her miscarriages.
Many times, pregnancy loss resolves itself.
You may miscarry or give birth to a dead child.
Bleeding will continue for days, weeks, and
possibly over a month, but will end by itself.
Sometimes, bleeding is prolonged or very
profuse. A doctor may think that some matter is
lodged in your womb and may suggest a minor
surgical procedure to be sure that your womb is
empty and can heal without danger of infection.
Before consenting to any surgical procedure,
have a hormonal level pregnancy test and
possibly ultrasound to be sure that you are not
carrying a living baby.
Many women state that the sounds and sights
that occur during certain surgical procedures
are upsetting. They prefer to be asleep. Other
women opt for being awake, and possibly even
refuse painkillers, so that they will physically
confront their child's death. Although your
doctor may not ask you what you prefer to do,
state whether you wish to be put to sleep for
any procedure. Your choice may differ from the
doctor's usual routine.
BEATING THE ODDS
If death has not already occurred, you may be
able to help your baby live. Some pioneers in
prenatal infant psychology advise telling your
baby of your love and your dreams. Your child
may sense your concern. Ask your doctor if
surgery, medication, vitamins, hormonal
treatments, environmental changes, or bed rest
may save your child. Since one doctor may be
willing to try a technique that another doctor
may overlook, get a second and third opinion.
Despite their doctors' dire predictions about
their babies' ability to survive, Leslie and
Roberta both did all they could to help their
children live.
Doctors advised Leslie to abort her dying
unborn baby because his stomach had not closed
and his bowels were outside his body. Instead
Leslie continued the pregnancy. The baby
underwent surgery immediately after he was born
and is doing well today.
Roberta had several miscarriages and had to
remain in bed for four months to prevent another
one. During one pregnancy, her water broke when
she was five months pregnant. Although doctors
told her that the baby could not possibly
survive and was probably "defective," Roberta
went on complete bed rest and gave birth two
months early. Her premature son is fine today.
During another pregnancy, Roberta had to stay in
bed for months because she developed placenta
previa, a condition in which the placenta
develops too low in the womb, where it may
detach early in pregnancy and endanger the baby.
The child was born full term. During each of
these crises, friends from church and prayer
groups brought meals and did housecleaning.
Roberta's husband and other children helped,
too.
Be aware of your unborn baby's movements.
Report any underactivity or overactivity to your
doctor. Your baby's radically changed behavior
pattern may be your first indication that
something is wrong. A quick delivery may save
your baby's life. When doctors could not detect
any vital signs on two monitoring machines, they
declared Ami Zilembo, twenty-seven days overdue,
as stillborn. After a quick Cesarean section,
Ami was born alive and is a healthy child today.
Request tests if you are two weeks or more
past your due date. Your baby's placenta may be
functioning less efficiently, and delivery might
be wise.
Prematurity
If premature labor threatens, let your doctor
know that you are determined to carry your baby
as long as possible. Check with a large city
hospital on the latest techniques, treatments,
and technologies to prevent premature labor. Ask
your doctor to try these. Follow your doctor's
instructions, try to remain calm, and count each
day as a victory. This is what Abby and Barb
(Chapter Four) and Roberta (this chapter) did.
They were able to stop premature labor, at least
for a time.
Very small premature infants sometimes
survive. Trent Petrie, born twenty-two weeks
after conception and weighing only twelve
ounces, survived because his parents chose life
support systems for him. Today, although
functionally blind due to his extreme
prematurity, Trent is otherwise healthy.
Jacqueline Benson also weighed twelve ounces
at birth and survived. Four months premature,
Monica Mere weighed thirteen ounces and was
delivered early because her mother was suffering
from a disease in which the liver fails and the
blood system stops its clotting process. Both
Monica and her mother are healthy today.
Babies born six months after conception have
over a 50 percent chance of survival. Most will
have few, if any, permanent difficulties. Breast
milk is the best food for preemies. If your
child is too small to nurse, pump your breasts
and give your baby breast milk by bottle or
feeding tube. Breastfeeding support groups can
advise on breastfeeding premature infants.
Despite your child's tubes, wires, monitors, and
machines, determine to speak to, touch, and play
with your baby as much as possible, as did
Kelsey and Vance, whose daughter was born
three-and-a-half-months early. Their incredibly
long hours at the hospital resulted in a
daughter who is now developing normally. Their
child, like all premature babies, thrived on
human attention and stimulation.
LOVING THE UNBORN BABY WHO HAS NO CHANCE OF
SURVIVAL
The knowledge that your baby is dying within
you can evoke the most brutal emotions you will
ever face.
Your decision to allow your baby's birth and
death to take place naturally may meet great
opposition. However, many mothers who know that
their babies can't survive still choose to give
birth.
Monica was seven months pregnant when
ultrasound revealed that her unborn baby had no
kidneys and would be unable to survive outside
her womb. The baby was becoming less and less
active as his own body wastes poisoned his
system. Monica's doctor began to monitor the
pregnancy weekly. If the baby died and Monica
did not go into labor, the doctor could induce
labor to prevent the baby from infecting
Monica if his body began to decompose.
Monica cherished each day that her baby
lived, and imagined that he was warm and
comfortably relaxed in her womb. When Monica
went into labor a month early, she and her
husband had the baby baptized. After doctors
confirmed the child's condition, Monica and her
husband had the life-support system disconnected
from their baby and held him until he died in
their arms. Monica treasures her memories of
that morning with her son.
If doctors determine that your baby will be
unable to survive after birth, some people may
try to persuade you to end your pregnancy early.
Even though you may want to carry your baby to
term, others may argue against this decision.
Following are some suggested responses to
comments or questions that you may hear.
"Why continue the pregnancy when your baby
has no chance of survival?"
"I know that my doctor probably is correct
with the diagnosis, but I want to make
absolutely sure by having my baby tested after
birth. If the prenatal test results are wrong, I
want my baby treated."
"You won't be getting an abortion. You'll
just be ending your pregnancy early."
"My baby is still alive. Even a healthy baby
couldn't survive being born this prematurely."
"You'll lose valuable time in conceiving a
healthy baby if you don't end this pregnancy."
"My cervical and uterine muscles aren't ready
to deliver my baby yet. If labor is induced or
if I get an abortion now, those muscles might be
weakened. I don't want to take that chance
because it might cause me to miscarry or to
deliver my next baby prematurely."
"You are only a life-support system for your
dying baby. Why don't you disconnect the life
support?"
"Every pregnant woman is naturally a
life-support system for her unborn baby. When my
baby is born, I won't choose artificial life
support."
"Your unborn baby is suffering."
"Babies who die after birth often die
peacefully. My baby may not be suffering at all.
If I thought that my baby was in pain, I would
ask my doctor to do something to ease the pain."
"Your baby might die and start to decompose
inside you. Geneticists can't use decayed cells
to determine what caused your baby's problems or
whether they can happen again."
"If I was concerned about this, I'd request
an amniocentesis before my baby dies.
Geneticists can examine my baby's cells to
determine if the problems are genetic in origin.
In addition, my doctor is checking me weekly. If
my baby dies and I don't go into labor, I'll
have labor induced so that my baby won't start
to decompose." (Refer to Chapter Four for a
discussion of amniocentesis.)
"It would be better for you emotionally to
end this pregnancy now."
"I don't think so. I'll admit that sometimes
I do feel hopeless, angry, and unable to endure
one more day. But that's how most people feel at
times if they're caring for a terminally ill
loved one. By allowing my pregnancy to end
naturally, I won't ever wonder if my baby might
have lived. I'm in touch with people who are
helping me deal with my grief [perhaps a hospice
or a support group for parents who experienced
infant loss]. I am cherishing each day that my
baby lives even though I am making funeral
plans."
When your baby is born, you will probably be
amazed by your child's beauty despite any
abnormal features. If your baby dies, you will
gradually get on with your life, but you will
never forget your baby. Time does not erase that
kind of love.
When Marcia learned that her
thirty-two-week-old unborn daughter was deformed
and dying, she wanted the pregnancy over, now.
Her doctor refused to induce labor. Marcia's
hatred, anger, and bitterness toward her baby
slowly evolved into love. Even as she made
funeral arrangements, she prayed that her baby
would live a while. The dying newborn had
abnormal features but was still beautiful.
Asking that the child be taken off a respirator,
Marcia and her husband held and caressed the
baby as she died slowly and peacefully. The
family grieved a long time, but are glad that
they had a natural birth experience.
PARENTING THE DYING NEWBORN
"I didn't forget to run my fingers along
her pug nose and talk to her in my lingo . .
.
"I didn't forget to take pictures of her
and note the color of her eyes.
"I didn't forget to cry in front of her
and beg her to get better . . ."
--Marion Cohen, Intensive Care #2
If your child is born alive but dying, you
will face life's most bittersweet
experience--nurturing an infant while watching
life ebb away. Love and comfort your child while
death comes, as did Monica and Marcia, whose
stories appear earlier in this chapter.
If your child is suffering, speak to a doctor
about it. Almost always, drugs and technologies
can greatly reduce or eliminate suffering.
Loving and touching can also help your child
feel much better.
DEATH OF A TWIN
If you are pregnant with more than one child,
one or more of your babies may die, leaving
other children alive. This happened to Abby
(Chapter Four). The need to both grieve and
rejoice, to release and to bond, can be
confusing. Fearing the death of your living
children, you may become overprotective of them.
Speak about your dead babies. Find out why
they died. Have a baptism or dedication service
for your living children, a memorial service for
your dead ones. Grieve at times and rejoice at
others.
Children seem to retain a subconscious sense
of togetherness with dead siblings, probably
because they were womb mates. This manifests
itself in drawings and conversation, even if the
living children were not told of the dead ones.
When your children are old enough, tell a
story about the ill siblings who died and how
sad you felt. Tell your living children how
happy you are that they are alive. Assure them
that they did nothing to cause the death. This
story will pave the way for additional questions
later. Answer questions openly. Accept emotions
as they arise.
When Sue spontaneously aborted one twin, she
had to separate rage from hope. Ill throughout
the pregnancy, she struggled through postpartum
depression to bond with the living twin. She
feels that the baby senses the loss of his
brother, and she plans to tell him about his
sibling when he is older.
SAYING GOOD-BYE
You will have your own way of saying
good-bye. You may choose never to see your baby,
or you may try one or more of the suggestions
listed below. Talk over what you can emotionally
handle with someone you trust or a member of a
hospital staff or national support group for
parents experiencing infant death (see Appendix
H).
You may wish to hold your baby. Tenderly wrap
the baby (or the remains) in a soft cloth or
blanket. Holding your baby makes your child's
life and death real and affirms your right to
grieve. If your child is alive, you will be able
to caress your infant as death, which is often
peaceful, comes. You may wish to photograph your
baby.
After many fertility treatments, Rene became
pregnant. When the baby stopped moving eight
weeks before his due date, doctors performed an
emergency Cesarean section and discovered that
the baby had no brain activity. In consultation
with doctors, Ed and Rene had the baby removed
from a respirator. They held, caressed,
photographed, and videotaped their five-day-old
son, who died in their arms. Rene's bitter
feelings toward women with healthy babies took a
while to resolve. Having mementos of the birth
helped. So did an autopsy report that helped
Rene realize that she could not have prevented
the death. The baby had a genetic brain
abnormality which caused his death.
Before any surgical procedure begins, tell
your doctor if you'd like to hold your baby's
remains or have them for a funeral. Many doctors
never consider that a woman would want the
remains. If a lab must perform tests on the
body, you can usually have the body later, if
you ask.
Naming your baby acknowledges your child's
existence. If you do not know your baby's sex,
you may want to guess at it, or choose a unisex
name such as Leslie, Sydney, Terry, Marty, Lee,
Pat, Robin, or Jody.
Memorial Services
Some parents use a funeral or memorial
service to say good-bye and to let others know
that they are grieving. A PREGNANCY AIDgency,
member of the clergy, or funeral director can
help you plan. The service may be simple or
elaborate, private or public, quiet or vibrant
with music. You may choose cremation or burial
for a baby whose body you have. Often a cemetery
will bury a miscarried or stillborn baby without
charge.
A funeral home may have available caskets and
burial vaults for infants, small children, and
miscarried babies. The smallest sizes are
available through the Pregnancy and Infant Loss
Center (see Appendix H). If you anticipate that
your baby may die, you may ask a funeral home to
order a small casket. Hopefully, you will not
need it, and the funeral home can have it on
hand for someone else whose baby has died. Often
funeral parlors will make free arrangements for
the burial of very small infants.
You may find much comfort in holding,
washing, and dressing your child for burial.
Small burial gowns are available, or you can
purchase an appropriate piece of newborn or
doll's clothing and dress your infant. If you
miscarried early in pregnancy, you can hold a
memorial service regardless of whether you have
the remains.
Five women memorialized the losses of their
children in five touching ways.
When Gisele's first pregnancy ended in
miscarriage, she wrote a poem to her baby, whom
she named Grace. She and her husband
memorialized Grace by taking a long walk near
the ocean. Here they prayed for Grace and for
themselves.
Clarissa named her three miscarried babies
"Chris" and baptized each of their remains, then
buried them with her family present. When she
retrieved a tiny, intact five-week embryo from
the third miscarriage, a member of the clergy
held a private memorial service for the family.
Then Clarissa and her family took the baby to
the cemetery to be buried, without charge, in
the stillborn vault.
When forty-three-year-old Lara's unborn baby
died after Lara was beaten by her boyfriend, a
PREGNANCY AIDgency that had arranged shelter for
Lara now found a funeral director to donate the
costs of her infant's funeral.
Betsy and Glenn planned a large funeral for
their premature first child. They both readied
their child for burial and participated in
church readings.
After Carol and her boyfriend Wes changed
their minds about having an abortion, their baby
was stillborn on Christmas Day. A PREGNANCY
AIDgency volunteer helped them through the grief
and shock. Carol, Wes, and their parents visit
the baby's grave often, bringing flowers.
If you were making an adoption plan for your
baby, the adoptive family should see and handle
the body and participate in any funeral
arrangements or memorial services. In the book
Daddy, I'm Pregnant, the anonymous author Bill
tells how his daughter Angela and the adoptive
family she had chosen both made funeral
arrangements when Angela's infant daughter died.
GRIEVING
Being left childless brings a startling
grief. You grieve not only for your lost
motherhood, but also for the infant, toddler,
child, teen, adult, and grandparent the world
will never know. This will happen whether or not
you intended to be pregnant.
The persistence and depth of your grief may
surprise you. You have a right and a need to
grieve, to be angry. Let your tears flow. Allow
yourself time to feel better. You may grieve for
a year or more.
Nevertheless, some people will assume that
you should quickly get on with your life and
conceive again. If you have one living child of
a multiple birth, some individuals may wonder
why you are grieving at all. And, if your
pregnancy was a crisis, some people may feel
that your baby's death should bring relief. In
trying to encourage you, people sometimes make
hurtful, insensitive remarks. Say, "Thank you
for trying to encourage me. I know I'll feel
better in time." Then seek out those who can
understand your pain.
Talk to a relative, lover, confidant, or
member of the clergy, or to another mother who
experienced infant death. Call your doctor,
hospital, or PREGNANCY AIDgency for referral to
a support group of people who have experienced
infant or child loss or who are parenting very
ill or dying children. Attend meetings of this
group or speak to a member by phone or in
person. You will feel much love and
understanding and will learn some practical ways
of dealing with the future.
Darlene (earlier in this chapter) attends a
support group for parents who have experienced
pregnancy and infant loss. So does Amanda, whose
newborn died on Christmas Eve. The meetings help
Amanda to deal with her grief and anger. They
are also a means of preserving her child's
memory and helping other parents.
AUTOPSY
If you want to know what caused your baby's
death, request an autopsy, as Ed and Rene did
(earlier in this chapter). Ask how long it will
take to get the results. Request a copy of the
autopsy and have a doctor thoroughly explain it.
If your doctor doesn't understand the
terminology, ask other doctors or medical
experts to explain the report. A PREGNANCY
AIDgency may be able to find a doctor to explain
the terminology to you.
If your baby had special needs or a terminal
illness, doctors may wonder why you want an
autopsy. However, you have a right to an autopsy
no matter what your child's condition.
If you feel that someone caused your child's
death, either from accident, misdiagnosis,
physical abuse, poor medical treatment, or
another cause, a lawyer can tell you if you can
sue for damages. Going to court is a costly,
emotionally draining experience. If your child
died before birth, it may be difficult to
collect damages, as the law may not consider
children to be persons until they are born.
However, you may be able to collect for
emotional damages.
CARE FOR THE GRIEVERS
Take care of yourself. Eat a nutritious diet
and drink plenty of fluids. Avoid caffeine,
which may increase tension; alcohol, a
depressant; and drugs. You will heal faster if
you face your emotions head on and work through
them.
When your doctor allows, exercise to release
tension. Rest often, even if you don't sleep. Do
less. Depression may keep you from maintaining a
full schedule for a while. Write down your
feelings, talk about them, or tape-record them.
Even if you are angry or bitter, continue your
communication with God. Every so often do
something you enjoy.
Maintain communication with your partner if
he is still part of your life. Both of you will
grieve differently. Men often conceal grief or
are poor at expressing feelings. Share your
feelings and open up to each other so that your
relationship remains strong. Resume sexual
relations when both of you are ready. Discuss if
and when you want to conceive again. Assume
nothing about your partner's feelings. Talk
things over.
Help your children express their feelings
about the death. Compare your baby's death to
the death of someone else your children knew or
to death in nature. Show your children that you
love them. Let them know that nothing they
thought or did caused their sister's or
brother's death. Involve them in funeral or
memorial services. Answer their questions
honestly. Allow your children to grieve in their
own unique ways and in their own time.
Some women find that helping others who are
experiencing similar losses is very therapeutic.
Others work with ill children. Still other women
go on to parent children, either biological
children or adopted children, and eventually
feel whole again. One mother acknowledges the
baby she miscarried in every formal portrait
taken of her large family. In these portraits,
one living child holds a rosebud to represent
the baby who had died. Even though you will
always remember your baby, time truly is a great
healer. Deal with your grief. Hope for the
future.
When Isaac and Rayanne lost all five of their
children to stillbirth, miscarriage, or death
upon birth, they turned bitterness into love by
adopting two children. Bernadette and her
husband also lost five children, three to
miscarriage and two to prematurity. They also
have adopted two children. Bernadette is
counselor of a large support group for parents
grieving the loss of a child, and editor of the
group's newsletter. Issac and Rayanne belong to
such a group and help other hurting families.
GIVE YOURSELF TIME
In the poem Our Wee White Rose, Gerald Massey
wrote about the death of a child. "You scarce
would think so small a thing/Could leave a loss
so large." The healing process begins when you
first hear that your baby is dying or dead. As
you work through the anguish of death, plan a
funeral or memorial service, and cry your way
through the period that follows infant loss, you
will begin to experience healing.
Healing takes time. Lots of it. You will get
on with your life, but you will still remember
losing your child. Your child will have helped
you to grow, even though your child died.
Memorialize your child by turning your grief
into service to others.