Learn about the signs and causes of miscarriage and get support for coping with pregnancy loss.
t’s a big step forward. But it also raises a glaring question for American women: Why don’t we have anything like this in the U.S.?
In a viral TikTok, @thelabornursern shared her process for creating the pillows. " Your patient just gained an angel baby 🪽 and you make sure she doesn't go home empty-handed."
In the video, we see family, friends, and even delivery drivers dropping off meals, flowers, and small tokens of love at her doorstep.
Any parent who has experienced pregnancy loss will instantly relate to her words.
This is paradoxical: to love and to lose in this way. It’s unthinkable, and yet here we are.
I worked through the emotions of that miscarriage by telling myself that whoever that little baby was, he or she is up there baking cookies and gardening while my mom is telling them all about me.
“Another day of bear-wearing because my baby is not here.”
PSA: You don’t even have to contribute to feel supported.
At 48, Louise Warneford finally gave birth to her rainbow baby.
But in case you are one of the few like me that feel better knowing as much of the truth as possible, here are some things I wish I would have expected when I stopped expecting.
#1: That it would replace the pain.
“I feel so sad, and I can’t imagine what you are feeling.”
You are not alone—and you will get through this.
"Remember you are not alone. Be gentle with yourself."
Get back to the breath, mama.
Our time together was so short I never got sick, my breasts never swelled and my insomnia never set in.
A mama tells us how her miscarriages almost broke her... until she got pregnant again.
I just wanted to understand what the hell was going on and why this was happening.
And as abruptly as she has joined us, she is gone.
Whitney and her husband have been open about their struggles to conceive, including multiple miscarriages.