{"id":4287,"date":"2016-10-15T08:03:39","date_gmt":"2016-10-15T08:03:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.theparentsocial.com\/?p=4287"},"modified":"2019-10-15T08:53:07","modified_gmt":"2019-10-15T08:53:07","slug":"day-one-17-6-years-4-months","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparentsocial.com\/day-one-17-6-years-4-months\/","title":{"rendered":"The Day We Were One of the 17: 6 Years and 4 Months On – Guest Post"},"content":{"rendered":"
The following is a personal account of losing a daughter through stillbirth, with the aim of breaking the silence and stigma surrounding it, and encouraging those concerned in any way about their pregnancy to seek immediate medical advice. It is upsetting so please don\u2019t read if you are pregnant and vulnerable or of a sensitive nature \u2013 just please always trust your instincts regarding your precious baby.<\/em><\/p>\n The day began well; my Mum was down to stay with us for a few days while my Dad was away on business – so I had my favourite partner in crime with me and my 2 \u00bd year old, Abigail, who dearly loved her Gran, was delighted. I was 25 weeks and 5 days pregnant, with what we knew was a much wanted second baby daughter. I hadn\u2019t slept well, and commented to my Mum at breakfast that I\u2019d had a really strange, lucid dream about being under real pressure to decide quickly on a name for the baby. She laughed and assured me I still had plenty of time.<\/p>\n The three of us had a gorgeous day out in the sunshine at Chartwell, Winston Churchill\u2019s former home and now a National Trust property. At lunch, my Mum told me I looked pale. I told her I was probably just tired\u2026.but I didn\u2019t feel\u2026.right.<\/p>\n Being June 2010, the World Cup was in full swing in South Africa, and that evening my husband Arthur and Mum sat down to watch the France v Mexico game. (I am not in any way a football fan, but that game is forever etched in my memory.) I told them that I hadn\u2019t really felt the baby move, all day. Thinking I had probably just been too busy, I went to lie down and stir her into action. I lay there for about 10 minutes. In the end, I was rocking side to side, prodding my belly, and crying. I knew something was wrong. We decided to call the hospital, who advised me to drink some icy fruit juice and lie still to stir her into action. I did. There was still no answer from her. After a call back to the hospital, they told me to come in for reassurance. My Mum and Arthur were encouraging me, thinking we would get just that \u2013 I knew otherwise.<\/p>\nThere are some times in all of our lives when everything we hold dear and sacred is turned on its head. For us, that day was Thursday June 17th<\/sup>, 2010, when we were one of the 17 families who that day lost a baby. This is our story.<\/strong><\/h4>\n