Sharing Your Stories - Katie (missed miscarriage: faith, hope, & a rainbow)

Sharing your stories: Katie (missed miscarriage)

I am so inspired and humbled when women allow me to share their stories. Especially stories of their personal struggles of pregnancy loss or infertility. I know those are stories that are kept close to their heart because that is where I keep mine. It takes so much strength and bravery for them to share. I am so grateful for the opportunity to share Katie’s story today about missed miscarriage.

A missed miscarriage is a miscarriage that shows no signs that something is wrong. Unlike other pregnancies where there is often cramping, bleeding, or pain, a missed miscarriage happens silently. Often it is not diagnosed until an ultrasound is given. Miscarriages rip the floor out from under you. They are shocking and leave a painful ache behind. They strip away the hopes and dreams you had for yourself, the baby and your family.

Katie and her husband Dallin are such a darling family. She is so full of faith, hope, and kindness. This is her story…

My husband, Dallin, and I knew that when we got married we didn’t want to wait very long to start our family. We just didn’t know when exactly Heavenly Father wanted us to start trying. So, last summer, about 6 months into our marriage we had been praying about the decision for a few weeks, we finally got the answer that we needed to start trying right away. God made it clear that I would be a mother very soon.  

Well, not even a full 4 weeks later I found myself pregnant, I knew that it was a sign that Heavenly Father really was serious when He had given us the answer to grow our little family. We couldn’t have been more excited! We started planning a life for this child and couldn’t wait to meet him or her.

I was constantly nauseous and would throw up just about everyday during the first trimester. I was starting school in the Fall and was so worried about how I would handle my classes while dealing with morning sickness, so, I asked my husband to give me a blessing from my Heavenly Father. In that blessing God said that we would have a healthy baby. I didn’t think too much of it at the time, but little did I know what it really meant.

Things had been going well in the first trimester. We had been to several prenatal appointments and heard the baby’s beautiful heartbeat a couple times. Our baby was growing and progressing towards the second trimester just fine.

Last year, on October 16, 2017 we went in for our 12 week appointment. My OB congratulated us and told us that any risks for miscarriage is significantly low at this point in the pregnancy. We were happy to hear that, but, again, we didn’t think too much of it.

The OB pulled out her doppler and started to look for our baby’s heartbeat, just a routine checkup at 12 weeks. A minute or two went by and I began to wonder why it was taking so long to find our baby’s heartbeat. Soon my OB said that our baby just might be in a weird place that was hard for the doppler to pick up the heartbeat so she moved us over to the ultrasound to check on our little one.

My husband and I started to have some concern creep in, but we both said to each other not to think of worse-case thoughts, that everything was fine. Soon we were in the middle of the ultrasound, I saw my beautiful baby. Our baby had grown so much, I could see his or her little fingers and toes and facial features, and everything looked so much more developed from the previous appointments. I was in awe for a small moment, until I looked over at my OB. She didn’t say a word, and I started to feel my heart sink for a moment wondering what was wrong. I then heard that words that I never imagined hearing, “I’m so sorry, there is no heartbeat.”

My brain wasn’t fully processing what was just said. I was in instant denial. I didn’t want to believe that this meant the worst thing that could’ve ever happened- losing a child. My sweet angel was only measuring 11 weeks and 5 days, not 12 weeks and 5 days like he/she should’ve been measuring. My husband and I just held each other and sobbed in the middle of the room, staring down at our ultrasound photos of our sweet angel who had passed away without warning.

I felt like my body betrayed me. I had been feeling pretty sick the entire pregnancy and I didn’t even have any bleeding or cramping at all when the baby died… nothing indicated that something was wrong or that the baby had passed away. I had experienced what is known as a missed miscarriage, which is when your body doesn’t recognize that the baby passed away. Due to how far along I was and that my body wasn’t going to pass the baby anytime soon, my doctor said the safest option for me so I wouldn’t hemorrhage was to have a D&C. Three days later, on October 19, we went in for surgery. We left the hospital that day with empty arms and empty in my belly.

The months following my miscarriage were full of depression. Both my husband and I struggled with our loss, but my depression lingered much longer than his. I felt I had lost my purpose and identity which was to be a mother. There was nothing I wanted more than to have my angel baby alive again.

It was so much more than “just a miscarriage.” We lost a child. For 3 months we had planned a life for this child. This sweet little one was a part of our family and now it feels like something is missing. No matter how long you got to carry your baby, whether it was one day, or 3 months, or full term- it leaves a big hole in your heart. It’s not just the mother who carries the baby who hurts, it’s just as equally painful for the father to lose a child too.

I didn’t understand why Heavenly Father told us that we would have a healthy baby when instead we lost our little angel. Throughout the months, little by little, Heavenly Father has told me that one day, later in my life, I will have an understanding of this trial, but for now I don’t have those answers.  What I have learned however, is that it turned out that God was actually referring to a different child when He said we would have a healthy baby. It had never occured to me that promised blessings to us don’t always come in order, but I can promise you that they do come.

I consider October 19 to be my angel’s birthday, after all, my angel was brought into this world on that day even though he or she wasn’t born alive. It has almost been a year since that day, and there has been so much growth and learning through it all.

I have learned that healing is a painful process and it doesn't come quick, but I have come to know and understand God so much more during this time. It’s okay to hate trials, it’s okay to struggle and to be angry and sad, even God had told me that it’s okay to feel all of those things, just as long as I don’t let it steer me off His path. I grew so much closer to God as I cried out to Him in honesty every day telling Him how much I hated this trial, and how broken I felt losing my baby. Heavenly Father is perfectly okay with us hating our trials and not being grateful for them, I’m still not grateful for this trial at all. God weeps with us and it hurts Him too to see us hurt.

A few months after our miscarriage, my husband and I got the impression we needed to start trying again. We were terrified, and I didn’t feel ready at all. I was still grieving and struggling with depression. We didn’t succeed at getting pregnant the first month we started trying. This only sent me into an even deeper depression. I began to fear that we would never be able to get pregnant after our loss.

Because of this, and on top of the constant struggle I was already dealing with from grieving over the loss, I started to experience a crisis of faith. All of those months I struggled to feel peace and comfort in my life, and I would plead for it every single day. I began to question if God was even there. One night I drove around so I could pray privately in my car… I asked Heavenly Father why my baby had to die, I begged to feel peace from this trial, I begged to have this pain and darkness taken from me. I didn’t feel anything though. I asked Heavenly Father to send me my angels to minister to me and help me through this, because I was at my breaking point, I didn’t have anymore strength to endure through this trial or face any more heartache.

After I had said that prayer I still didn’t feel anything. Why were the heavens closed during my darkest hour? I sat in my car and sobbed. I felt like giving up. Then, I heard a tap at my window. My husband had found me. I began to tell Dallin about my crisis of faith and questioning why Heavenly Father wouldn’t come help me during one of my greatest times of need. My husband then said to me, “Sometimes God answers prayers through other people, and angels are simply just messengers of God… and He sent me, I may be an imperfect angel but I am your angel and am here for you.”

I had not even told Dallin that I had been praying to have angels sent to help me and yet he said exactly what I needed to hear. God did hear me, He sent my angel (husband) to be with me during one of my darkest times. These horrible trials can leave someone in such a dark place and sometimes it feels like the heavens have closed on us and can’t hear us… but after this experience I know and can promise that God is still listening even when it feels like He isn’t. Don’t give up. I didn’t know what the future held for me and Dallin with having children, but what I did know right at that moment is that God had not abandoned me. And He won’t abandon any of His children. We can always rely on Him, even if it means patience during His silent times.

About a month later, I had the most vivid dream that I had a positive pregnancy test. When I awoke I couldn’t shake the dream from me. I didn’t feel pregnant at all, just like the previous month when we didn’t succeed, but I took a test anyway and sure enough it was positive!

It has been a terrifying experience to be pregnant again. It has been full of PTSD and anxiety. It’s strange to experience both grief and joy at the same time while being pregnant with our rainbow baby. I love the meaning of “rainbow baby.” It is a baby that is born following a miscarriage, stillbirth, neonatal death or infant loss. In the real world, a beautiful and bright rainbow follows a storm and gives hope of things getting better. The rainbow is more appreciated having just experienced the storm in comparison. The rainbow does not mean that the storm and devastation never happened but that something beautiful and full of light has emerged from the darkness.

After all the pain and darkness we’ve been through… we have hope, we have our rainbow. Nothing can ever replace our angel baby, for he or she was our first child and we still love, miss and think about that baby often. Our rainbow’s due date is November 19, 2018. The moment I found out that our rainbow’s due date is on the 19th it felt like this little tender mercy because our angel baby was taken out of me on October 19, 2017 and it felt like Heavenly Father wanted us to be able to associate the 19th with something happy too and not just sadness.

Am I grateful yet for the trial of losing my baby? No, still hate the trial. Do I have the answers I want as to why my baby had to die last year? No, I wish I did. I know that one day I’ll have the answers... but for now, I will continue to honor my angel baby’s life. I thank my little angel for sending me my rainbow, I only wish I could have both of you here with me. I know one day I will be reunited with my angel baby and I’ll get to raise that child. But for the time being, I will learn to live with a hole in my heart until that great reunion. My family will be complete one day when we reunite with our angel and I will forever hold on to that hope. For there is always hope. I am the mother of an angel, and I am grateful that that beautiful child chose me to be his/her mother, I will see that child again someday.

I am so unbelievably excited and happy for Katie, and Dallin. They have such a beautiful family and I am so excited to see their sweet rainbow baby. I love how her story shows that God is always in the details, especially when things are at their darkest.

Too often I push away from everyone, and sometimes God. I love Katie’s example of leaning in. She leans into her husband, her faith, and her relationship with Heavenly Father. Katie is a light and so strong! Her hope and light that she shares is everything. Her angel baby and her rainbow baby are so blessed to have her as their mother.

If you have experienced a missed miscarriage please know that you are not alone, hope does come, be kind to yourself, and reach out if there is anything I can do to help support you.




Missed Miscarriage 101

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Miscarriages are so shocking and emotional. A miscarriage shatters hopes, dreams, and plans for the future. After each of my miscarriages I have felt emotionally broken. I shared a “miscarriage 101” post a few months ago. Did you know miscarriage occurs in 1 of every 4 pregnancies? You can find it a few posts back or on my blog. A type of miscarriage I hadn’t heard before is called a “missed miscarriage.”

- A missed miscarriage is a type of early pregnancy loss that occurs before 20 weeks it can also be called a “silent miscarriage,” or a “delayed miscarriage.”
- A missed miscarriage can happen completely unnoticed. In other miscarriages there is usually an indication that something is wrong. In a missed miscarriage there are no signals that a miscarriage is happening. No bleeding, spotting, or pain to indicate signal something is wrong.
- HCG labels can remain high in blood because a placenta can still function even after an embryo dies.
- To diagnose a missed miscarriage an ultrasound scan is often required.
- A missed miscarriage is also not a sign that you can’t be pregnant or a mother in the future.

I would really like to stress that if you have experienced a miscarriage or a missed miscarriage you did absolutely NOTHING wrong. Miscarriage is so awful and extremely difficult but it is not your fault, and you are not alone.

Feelings of loss, grief, numbness, anger, and shock are totally normal. You are not alone! Allow yourself time to heal and be kind to yourself as you grieve. It takes time to recover and reach out for help if you need it.

Have you ever heard of a missed miscarriage or have any questions? Please ask below or share a 💛 if you’ve experienced one so others will know they aren’t alone.

Healing Spiritually Through Infertility & Loss: Part 1 - Feeling Abandoned by God

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A big part of who I am is my spirituality, my relationship with our Heavenly Father, and the Savior. I know we are all children of God. God loves and knows each of us personally. We were sent a Savior so we could be saved, have comfort in all things, and return to live with our Father and families eternally. However, this year I have never felt more broken, abandoned and forsaken. In previous times of trial, I have felt carried to higher ground to be able to heal. After a year and a half of infertility, to finally be pregnant, and then lose my fourth baby along with my ability to safely be pregnant again I have felt so alone. I have sobbed while on my knees in prayer begging for relief, had the feeling of overcoming despair, and grief becoming more like a dark place I could not climb out of. 

Then anger began to set in. Where was God? Where was He now that I needed Him most? For weeks I retreated and isolated myself. At the counsel of inspired church leaders, my husband, and friends I slowly started being brave to move forward. To keep trying regardless of my broken pieces and blindly stumbling to stand again. 

The more I kept taking tiny steps forward, the more the "abandonment" felt like more of an opportunity. This was a time my faith could be perfected. I could be strengthened and slowly start polishing out my rough edges. I was not going to let this one moment, this one situation define who I am. Infertility does not define me, and God was teaching me just who I could become. I still ache and yearn to be a mother again, but I have more empathy now than I ever have had before. I feel like I can deeply relate to those other women and couples who have walked the trenches of infertility and loss. I can lift those going through grief. I understand exactly what that feels like and can more personally mourn with those that mourn. 

Slowly I could see the hand of God in my life. He had been there all along and little moments of hope would come in. I actively started looking for Him in my life. Sometimes it came from a simple text from a friend. Even weeks, and months later I needed to know someone was thinking of me and would not judge me if I said, "I am struggling today." Sometimes it has come from little thoughts and impressions. For example, starting to act on my talent of baking has been a huge blessing. Not only has it provided some extra income, but it has been a better healthy way for me to take a break from my grief and focus on something else. Starting this Four Hearts Project has been such a meaningful way for me to heal. It has also been so powerful meeting a community of women who have felt and thought similar things that I have. There must be "opposition in all things," and because I have felt forsaken, grief, pain, and loneliness I have also been able to feel pure joy and relief.

One of my favorite scriptures right now is:

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The entire 24th chapter of Isaiah is close to my heart, but this scripture has especially resonated with me recently. Even when grief and loneliness are consuming and it feels like it has lasted a lifetime, in the big eternal perspective it is really only a "small moment." God will never withhold blessings from his children. Not only will he not withhold them he will prepare "great mercies." He is merciful, kind, and has a pure love for us. He will comfort, He will lift, He will succor, and He will give more blessings than we could ever hope for. 

I am still working on growing my faith. Somedays the weight of infertility is still too much, but as I actively seek my Heavenly Father and the Savior I am able to move through the grief, have courage, and wake up to a new day with new blessings, and new opportunities for good. 

Up next: Part 2 - Angels Around Us

Letting Go...

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I love this quote… It is one I have referred to often. What if I am gripping so hard to my own life plans that I am preventing better plans from coming? I know that by struggling to hold onto them it is preventing me from moving forward and being stuck in grief. What if what if all the trials all the loss, all the experiences are to get me somewhere better? I’m trying really hard to let go, be still, and wait. I am already seeing huge blessings and opportunities. I am excited for what could be next.

Can you relate to this quote? How have you been able to “let go?”

Sharing Your Stories - Viann (A Brave New Ending)

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I am so inspired by connecting with other women and hearing your stories. Your stories of loss, grief, struggle, success, and love are so amazing. Viann is from Houston, Texas. I relate to her story so much. As I was reading it I kept thinking "me too! I know that feeling." Viann is so strong and filled with love. She is a warrior fighting to grow her family. I love how she always turns to hope and is looking to the future with faith. I know you will love her and her story...

"Our long and bumpy road of infertility began 9 years ago. After numerous tests and failed treatments, IVF was our only hope of conceiving. In 2015, the procedure was successful. Early in the twin pregnancy, one of our embryos stopped developing, however subsequent ultrasounds revealed a strong heartbeat with the second.  Our prayers had finally been answered and our dream of having a child was becoming a reality. At nearly 10 weeks, the doctor uttered the words no one ever wants to hear, “I’m sorry, there’s no heartbeat.”

Overwhelmed with grief, and so many other unnamed emotions, the months and years that have followed haven’t been easy. No one is ever really prepared for how to cope with loss. It’s not something that is taught in school and in most families, not discussed openly. Men and women grieve differently and we would soon learn, these strong emotions began to manifest in different ways.  

In the months prior to IVF, I made it my mission to prepare my body for pregnancy the best I could. It was almost like training for a marathon. My regimen included an anti-inflammatory diet and numerous vitamins and supplements. I felt strong and hopeful and started a blog to share my journey and encourage others struggling to conceive. 

Soon after the loss, that feeling of hope began to fade. Between the IVF medications, and miscarriage, the hormonal rollercoaster was unrelenting. I no longer felt I had a reason to focus on my health. There was nothing to look forward to and feelings of apathy set in. Not sure how to help me through this emotional struggle, my husband did the best he could to be supportive and loving, while dealing with his own feelings of grief. He often found solace in lone fishing trips and spending time with nature. 

Three years later, drawing strength from our faith in God and each other, the healing process continues to be a work in progress. Anyone who has experienced loss will tell you it changes you. We soon realized this life changing event was stressful on our marriage. Communication has been key and we are both learning how to lean in to the pain and allow ourselves to be vulnerable and honest about our emotions with one another. 

By reading and studying emotional resilience, grief and loss, we have started on a new path of healing by embracing and reckoning with the painful scars that infertility has left behind. Facing a lifetime of childlessness, we are rumbling through the middle of the messy emotions. Grief has no timeline and no one really knows how long the rumble will last.

While life hasn’t turn out the way we had planned, we are hopeful for the future. We are learning to flip the script and write a brave new ending. One where it’s okay to be sad and joyful, to grieve a painful loss and embrace the wonders of life with gratitude and most importantly, together."

I love the idea of a "brave new ending." It is heartbreaking and life-shattering when life doesn't go as planned. I think it is so powerful how Viann honored her emotions. She let herself feel all of them, including gratitude! She is taking it one day at a time and being brave to find a new ending that I  know will be perfect for her and her beautiful family.