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By Christine Bordelon
When a person is substituted for the statistic – 1 in 4 pregnancies end in miscarriage – that means many couples are familiar with the pain associated with the loss of a child.
How couples recover and the time it takes to grieve this loss varies, but there are concrete steps to take to ease the pain, said Elizabeth Wilson, LCSW, senior therapist/clinician for the past nine years at Woman’s New Life Center in New Orleans.
“You have to work through the grieving process,” Wilson said. “The more you work through the grieving process, the greater the healing.”
Husband and wife do not grieve at same rate, she said, making it “so important to empower the couple to acknowledge what they are going through and give them tools to grieve effectively.”
Wilson says she meets couples individually who are facing a pregnancy loss through miscarriage to put the loss in the context of where that woman emotionally began her pregnancy.
A couple who had a planned pregnancy is happy and generally have lots of support and joy surrounding the event before a miscarriage rocks their world.
Unplanned is not unwanted
If it was an unexpected pregnancy, the woman might still be adjusting to the pregnancy when a miscarriage occurs. “Unplanned does not mean unwanted,” Wilson said. “It’s not that they don’t want their child.” A miscarriage might bring momentary relief in this situation because the “crisis” is over, yet the woman also experiences sadness because she lost her child. “Time and space is needed to adjust to this new reality.”
Since Wilson works with women in both crisis pregnancies and those considering abortion, she’s found women who have changed their minds about abortion and decided to have their baby and then experience a miscarriage pile guilt on top of dealing with the loss just like unplanned pregnancies.
“I will first validate her fears and normalize what she was experiencing instead of making her feel like an outlier,” Wilson said. “Many times, a woman uses distortion – ‘I caused this because I didn’t want this, I didn’t plan this.’ That is a total distortion. We say you need to bring it back to reality. A more realistic statement would be – ‘I was not ready for a baby, but I was planning for it but lost it.’ That’s truth-based.”
All couples need to work through the stages of grief:
A loss of a child through miscarriage can be either a dividing (if there were previous problems in the relationship) or unifying factor, so “it’s important that mother and father have a confidante they are talking to during this time.”
When multiple losses are involved, Wilson has seen couples experience a crisis of faith and ask why this was happening and what it meant. “If the woman had had a previous abortion before the miscarriage, they might feel they are being punished in some way. They have to be reminded that the grieving is for this child – it is a separate loss from the other.”
Wilson suggests Catholic women who have suffered a miscarriage might want to talk to their pastor about holding a memorial service. “It’s really beautiful. This is where the loss is not the end. It’s about being surrounded by hope, faith and grace. It’s makes such a big difference.”
She also says some of her clients find comfort in buying a piece of jewelry (a charm on a bracelet or necklace) to wear as a remembrance of the baby’s life.
The Woman’s New Life Center is open Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Call 831-3117.
Christine Bordelon can be reached at [email protected].
AVAILABLE RESOURCES TO COPE WITH MISCARRIAGE
Tags: Compassionate Friends, East Jefferson Hospital, Elizabeth Wilson LCSW, Gentle Hands Ministry, indigent babies, Latest News, miscarriage, Mommy & Me, online education, Woman's New Life Center