Guest guest Posted June 11, 2001 Report Share Posted June 11, 2001 The following article is from the Daily Telegraph, 11/6/2001 Lesley -------------- http://health.telegraph.co.uk/health/main.jhtml?xml=/health/2001/06/11 /thstill.xml Solace for parents of stillborn babies (Filed: 11/06/2001) Cassandra Jardine on a charity set up by grieving parents STILL-BORN babies are quickly forgotten - by all except their parents, says Sue Hale, as we enter the new National Memorial Arboretum, outside Lichfield, in Staffordshire. Most of the plots commemorate those who died in action in the 20th century but, in their midst, lies one garden with a more intimate feel. From the entrance, a pathway winds through dark shrubbery in a cemetery to an open space, designed like a weeping eye. Its pupil is a low plinth, at the centre of which lies a sculpture of a new-born baby, curled in sleep - inviting hands to stroke and minds to remember. While her other children play, Sue fights tears as she sits by the baby and pulls out a book of photographs of her son who would now be five. She is reliving the day she went into labour at home: " Everything was going fine until the midwife tried to find a heartbeat. We knew before I delivered him that he was dead. " The photographs show the pink face of an apparently healthy 9lb baby, wrapped in shawls, with strangely purple lips. " They say it's something to do with never having breathed, " says Sue, who does not know why, or when, died. " I wish I had held him for the photographs but I couldn't bear to at the time. I wish, too, that I had asked to keep him with us for longer, so that his grandparents could see him. " One family in 100 goes through this bereavement, yet Sue finds other people embarrassed to talk about it. " People treat it like a failed pregnancy and expect you to get over it fast. " For the parents of a baby who dies at or soon after birth - and 19 such babies are born every day - that child needs to be mourned. " It's worse in some ways than losing a child, " says Sue, " because there are no happy times to look back on. " Sue was an environmental health officer when was born, but for six weeks she could not leave her home. " I felt I had failed my son, failed my family, failed myself. And, having lost a child, I didn't feel I could cope with the one I had. " It was six months before she could return to work. In that difficult time, they received support from the Stillborn and Neonatal Death Society (SANDS), a charity set up by grieving parents. Through SANDS Sue met other people who made her feel less of a " freak " . When she decided not to leave her son, , an only child, SANDS friends helped her through a pregnancy which left her " a nervous wreck " . " With most pregnancies you are focused on the end, " she says. " After a stillbirth you have to live one day at a time - having a healthy baby at the end of it is your wildest dream. " The friends understood, too, that although she was delighted by Isabelle's birth, her daughter could not replace the son she had lost. And so, when she felt strong enough, she started to work for SANDS. Sue now runs the Birmingham branch of SANDS, fund-raising and befriending people often in even more agonising situations. For some, the still-born child was their only chance of parenthood or marked the end of a relationship; others had to watch a frail child lose a fight for life. Her own worst fear was that she would forget , and she took care to keep his memory alive. Her children chat easily of " the accident in mummy's tummy " that deprived them of their brother, of the candle they light for him and the tree they have planted in his memory near their home. Seeing something grow, in memory of a child who lost that chance, is restorative - as Jon Stokes, another bereaved parent, knew when he created the SANDS garden within the National Memorial Arboretum. The first time that Sue saw it, it took her breath away and visiting it made her mother understand for the first time the joy as well as the grief of 's brief existence. " Recognition is so important, " says Sue, who yesterday attended a memorial service in the arboretum's chapel dedicated to all those lost babies. Now, anyone can go to the garden in search of solace and even have a tree planted nearby in their child's name. The National Memorial Arboretum, Croxall Road, Alrewas, Burton-upon-Trent, DE13 7AR, 01283 792333; SANDS helpline 020 7436 5881 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.