A smiling pregnant woman in a London ultrasound clinic waiting room asked innocently, ‘So, when is your baby due?’ She glowed, caressing her round bump on Mother’s Day, eager for her scan. But I was there to confirm a miscarriage.
The Painful Confirmation
My husband held my hand tightly as cramps twisted my stomach amid expectant mothers and baby scan photos on the walls. A week prior, my first ultrasound showed a heartbeat, but the small gestational sac raised concerns. Doctors advised monitoring for bleeding.
One in four pregnancies ends in loss. In that room of four women, I became that statistic. Bleeding started, forcing me back to the clinic—the last place I wanted.
The technician confirmed no heartbeat. She explained awkwardly, then moved me to another room to cry quietly, avoiding upsetting others. No guidance followed on bleeding duration, support options, or next steps—just advice to see my GP and take paracetamol. My husband handled payment, rushing us out.
From Hope to Heartbreak
I’ve always dreamed of motherhood, caring for my younger brothers prepared me. My husband and I tried for nearly a year, negative tests turning excitement to worry. The positive result brought pure joy—we dreamed of baby names and family life.
At eight weeks, joy shattered. The blunt delivery stung as much as the loss. Connecting with others later revealed similar unprofessional treatment in busy wards, leaving women feeling like inconveniences.
Pregnancy After Loss and a New Beginning
Six months later, IVF brought a rainbow baby. But fear replaced glow—no excitement over milestones, just bathroom checks for blood. My husband stayed cautious too.
This highlighted gaps in miscarriage and subsequent pregnancy support. Mid-IVF, I quit finance to launch Carea, a platform aiding women’s physical, mental, and emotional health through fertility, pregnancy, and postpartum—without triggers or false ideals.
Carea provides tools, information, community, and support. Learn more at https://www.careaapp.com/.
Gratitude Amid Grief
Today, I’m mom to a 22-month-old boy and 16 weeks pregnant. Gratitude fills me, yet Mother’s Day evokes complex emotions. Our lost baby lingers—a birthstone bracelet, rainbows in our son’s room, even one spotted last year.
Motherhood journeys vary: longing, raising, grieving. Pregnancy loss mirrors postpartum heartbreak. Share stories openly. Provide body information, choices, counseling, groups—not dismissal.
As our second baby arrives in August, I envision a world offering real help for all mothers.

