I only knew I was pregnant when I miscarried; this is how it felt… (2024)

Trigger warning: This piece contains a description of miscarriage and mentions pregnancy loss and may be distressing for some readers.

Pregnancies, like stories, are supposed to have a beginning, a middle and an end. So what happens when a pregnancy ends before you even knew it began?

It’s 3 am, the morning after Mother’s Day and suddenly I’m awake. Thick with sleep, I stumble bleary-eyed to the bathroom, galvanised by gnawing stomach cramps and an urgent need to pee. Sitting slack-kneed on the loo, I feel a rush of something heavier, warmer than wee. The toilet roll is ruby-dark with blood. I’ve always had heavy periods so this isn’t unusual, but still I pause before reaching for a tampon. Pushing it in is weirdly easy. A mini alarm bell rings faintly somewhere, before I silence it.

On my way back to bed, I grab an old towel from the cupboard and, lying back down, press it between my legs. My boyfriend murmurs in his sleep as I listen to my heart thump, eyes wide in the darkness. I feel the persistent flow pulse between my legs. Still, I wait. The need to wee and the cramps continue; when I go back to the loo, the tampon falls out in a mass of blood and mess.The ambulance comes soon, with two friendly paramedics asking questions, taking my blood pressure. And then, in a blur of swapping pyjamas for tracksuits and trainers, we’re in our car, heading to the hospital. Still the blood flows, soaking through the giant, nappy-thick pads the paramedics gave me. In the brightly lit A&E ward, a man snores loudly, raspily, his legs and back splayed against the uncomfortable blue plastic chairs. Apart from El Snoro, we are the only people there. I frown at the snores, comical under any other circ*mstances, and the high-pitched beeps emitting from the hospital bowels like a deranged heartbeat. It feels lonely, deserted and sad, and I decide we won’t be there long. “It’s probably nothing,” I whisper to my partner.A nurse gives me a small plastic tub to take to the toilet and pee in. Containing the gush of blood and other stuff into that little pot is a challenge. More alarm bells. As I wait to be seen, I feel increasingly peculiar. I’m hot, dizzy and clammy, and suddenly lying down on the cold floor is the only thing to do. I’m used to fainting, and know to follow the warning signs and get low, the sooner the better. So that’s how another nurse finds me, face-planted on cement, when she walks past.

Her voice floats down to me from above: “Why is she lying like that?”

From the cool, quiet floor comes my reply: “I was about to faint.”

“Well, she can’t stay there,” she says, ushering us over to a row of seats, gesturing for me to lie down.

A little later, we’re taken to a curtained cubicle where a nurse tells me I’m having a miscarriage. As she speaks, I black out. The next faint is a little later, when I’m in a wheelchair, being taken for a scan to see if anything “viable” is left inside me. I slither out of the chair and onto the floor like a drunken worm, giving the orderly a fright. Faint number-three happens in the crowded waiting room; I regain consciousness with a bouquet of concerned faces looming above me.We hadn’t had a clue I was pregnant. “Eight to ten weeks,” confirms the kind-eyed gynaecologist. They decide to operate on me to stop the blood loss and make sure that “everything is removed”. I’m wheeled to the operating room and given a general anaesthetic. I fall asleep to the sound of the surgeon’s quiet voice, gently asking me inane questions that I never get round to answering.When I wake up, dazed and dozy with morphine, the gynaecologist comes to see me. She asks if I want to see what was removed, holding up what looks eerily like a tub of beetroot hummus. I look away quickly. “No thanks.”

I only knew I was pregnant when I miscarried; this is how it felt… (3)

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My boyfriend goes home to sob, walk the dog and source some lunch for us. He returns later that afternoon, bringing a champion’s feast sourced from a local Italian deli: panini bursting with thick slices of mozzarella and tomato, golden-crusted arancini, fizzy pop, crisps, even a fistful of cannoli with vanilla, lemon and pistachio fillings. He has always expressed love through food; I have always gobbled both up. We smile as a visitor opposite us chats about plantain and curried chicken to her bedridden friend on a liquid diet. The sounds and smells of the hospital wash over us. Life goes on: mundane, tragi-comic, precious, painful. A month after the miscarriage, I feel raw and bruised, as if a layer of me has been forcibly removed. Walking around like a wound, tender and tight. Perversely, I seem to have become a baby magnet: they’re suddenly everywhere I look: in films, on the streets, in friends’ arms, all over Instagram.Two months later: I remember what happened with something akin to awe, recalling the immediacy and shock of it all, the bright lights, the mass of blood, the juddering blood pressure, the faints, the floor’s embrace and the hospital bed. Other things come to mind, too: the nurses’ kindness, the flowers sent by family and friends, turning our kitchen into a mini hot house, the notes floating like doves through the letterbox, the texts received, the hugs given. The card I took ages to send to the A&E team: ‘Thank you for being absolutely bloody brilliant.’ I wonder if they remember me when they finally read it.

Five months later: the wound feels thinly scabbed over. I get an occasional ache in my lower left side: hello, ovaries. The grief remains close to the surface, oozing out unexpectedly. On the radio one morning, a presenter discusses a new government review into enhanced support for parents who have lost a pregnancy before 24 weeks’ gestation. Suddenly I’m back at the hospital, dizzy and disorientated; my cheeks wet with tears. Work feels jarring. Friends feel far away.

Rebuilding strength

I decide to start PT sessions to burn through the funk and to shift the belly-wobble reminder of what wasn’t. A reminder that means some of my clothes don’t fit. When I turn up to meet Hannah, my trainer, a session for new mums and babies is taking place in the gym. Fuzzy-haired, velvet-skinned babies as plump as Botticelli cherubs, sitting amid dumbbells and kettlebells like ducklings that got lost. In a fiercely air-conditioned studio, I start crying as I explain why I’m here.

Our training sessions help. Despite my puny arms and seeming inability to hinge instead of squat, lifting weights feels like medicine. There’s satisfaction in the muscle aches, hunger and tiredness the following day. I want to take back control of my body, deadlift by deadlift, goblin squat by goblin squat. No beginning, no middle, no end; just life in its constant, irregular waves, moving through me.

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I only knew I was pregnant when I miscarried; this is how it felt… (2024)

FAQs

What happens if you have a miscarriage but didn't know you were pregnant? ›

Most women who miscarry do so in the first 12 weeks of their pregnancy. Many women have a miscarriage before they even know they're pregnant. If this happens it can feel like a late period with heavy bleeding.

Do you still feel pregnancy symptoms during miscarriage? ›

While many miscarriages begin with symptoms of pain and bleeding, there are often no such signs with a missed miscarriage. Pregnancy hormones may continue to be high for some time after the baby has died, so you may continue to feel pregnant and a pregnancy test may well still show positive.

Is it possible to think you had a miscarriage and still be pregnant? ›

1 Though rare, people can be diagnosed with a false miscarriage. A false miscarriage is when a suspected pregnancy loss has happened—but a person is still pregnant. The diagnosis can result from inaccurate conception predictions and ultrasound technology issues.

How long does your body think it's pregnant after a miscarriage? ›

After a miscarriage, you may still have some pregnancy symptoms, like nausea and vomiting, breast tenderness, and fatigue. These symptoms are related to the amount of beta HCG (pregnancy hormone) that is still in your bloodstream, and they usually go away after about two weeks.

What are the symptoms of carrying a dead fetus? ›

Symptoms are things you feel yourself that others can't see, like having a sore throat or feeling dizzy. The most common symptom of stillbirth is when you stop feeling your baby moving and kicking. Others include cramps, pain or bleeding from the vagin*.

What does a 2 week miscarriage look like? ›

Bleeding during miscarriage can appear brown and resemble coffee grounds. Or it can be pink to bright red. It can alternate between light and heavy or even stop temporarily before starting up again. If you miscarry before you're eight weeks pregnant, it might look the same as a heavy period.

What is the most common week to miscarry? ›

Most miscarriages happen during the first trimester of pregnancy, which is about the first 13 weeks.

Did your symptoms disappear before miscarriage? ›

While the loss of pregnancy symptoms can indicate miscarriage, it might also be part of your normal pregnancy progression. If the disappearance of pregnancy symptoms happens alongside other possible signs of miscarriage—especially vagin*l bleeding or cramping—then the combination presents greater cause for concern.

What are the symptoms of silent miscarriage? ›

But even though a silent miscarriage has occurred, pregnancy hormones are still high. This means a person may continue to experience pregnancy symptoms such as breast tenderness, nausea, and fatigue, though possibly to a lesser extent than before. A pregnancy test may continue to show a positive result as well.

Do you bleed when you miscarry a twin? ›

Some women might experience vagin*l bleeding, says Kalish. A smaller group of women may also experience more noticeable miscarriage symptoms, including uterine cramps and pelvic pain. Due to the general lack of symptoms, vanishing twin syndrome is only diagnosed through an ultrasound.

Does the uterus still grow with a missed miscarriage? ›

Missed miscarriage is suspected when pregnancy symptoms disappear and the uterus stops growing. It is diagnosed by an ultrasound examination. Blighted ovum – this occurs when a pregnancy sac is formed, but there is no developing baby within the sac. This is diagnosed by ultrasound, usually after some bleeding.

How to confirm a miscarriage at home without bleeding? ›

Other symptoms of a miscarriage include:
  1. cramping and pain in your lower tummy.
  2. a discharge of fluid from your vagin*.
  3. a discharge of tissue from your vagin*.
  4. no longer experiencing the symptoms of pregnancy, such as feeling sick and breast tenderness.

Did I miscarry or is it my period? ›

It can be hard to distinguish between early pregnancy loss and a period. If bleeding is heavier than is usual, appears suddenly, or occurs with unusual abdominal cramping, this can indicate pregnancy loss. In the early stages, a person may not have known that they were pregnant.

Can your stomach get bigger after a miscarriage? ›

These symptoms can be so profound in some women that it can seem like the miscarriage didn't even occur. They may include: Abdominal enlargement with increased firmness. Bloating and gas.

Do breasts get bigger after a miscarriage? ›

1. Changes In Your Breasts. After a miscarriage, you can expect breast discomfort of some kind, including enlargement/engorgement or leaking milk. These are temporary and should stop within a week but you can ease the discomfort with ice packs and a supportive bra.

Is it possible to have had a miscarriage without knowing? ›

Miscarriages are relatively common and it is possible to have a miscarriage without bleeding or cramping. The missed miscarriage is also known as “silent miscarriage”. It is called as “missed” because the body has not yet recognized that the woman is no longer pregnant.

Is it common to have a miscarriage without knowing? ›

In fact, a woman may not experience any symptoms and only learn of the loss only when a doctor cannot detect a heartbeat during a routine ultrasound. Bleeding during pregnancy loss occurs when the uterus empties. In some cases, the fetus dies but the womb does not empty, and a woman will experience no bleeding.

Is it possible to have a miscarriage without noticing? ›

A completed miscarriage can be confirmed by an ultrasound or by having a surgical curettage (D&C) performed. Missed Miscarriage: Women can experience a miscarriage without knowing it.

How do I know if I had a silent miscarriage? ›

A missed miscarriage typically occurs during the first trimester. It is often diagnosed when there is no fetal cardiac activity during a routine prenatal ultrasound. Treatment options include waiting for nature to take its course, medication to expel the remains, and, in some cases, surgery.

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