I miss my son’s twin

pudnanewell1986

New member
The wife (34F) and I (34M) agreed last year to try for a baby. We were incredibly blessed and got pregnant within 60 days and were over the moon. Fast forward to week 8 where we had to go to the ER for abdominal pain...Turns out she had a heterotopic pregnancy.

Trigger warning: unpleasantness ahead

For those who don’t know, a heterotopic pregnancy means two eggs, both fertilized but at least one stuck in the Fallopian tube. Usually, “plan B” and try again is the “remedy”, but with a viable egg, we chose to fight for our babies, which meant surgery and at best, only the implanted egg in the uterus would be viable and the one in the Fallopian tube would have to be sacrificed. By some miracle, it remained so.

Fast forward to the gender reveal; it’s a boy! I immediately had that “YAY” and subsequent “what would have been” feeling.

Our son was born reasonably healthy though small. He’s 9 months now and thriving. Every time he does something new, I get that same double edged feeling. For the most part, it doesn’t affect me too much day-to-day.

The other day, he was playing with himself in the mirror. It broke me. I cried. More than I’d like to admit. I know neither my wife or I are to blame, and I’m incredibly thankful for the boy I do have (especially after a horrendous pregnancy for my wife) but I can’t help but miss his sibling, even though we never met.

Sorry for the long post. Not sure why I posted it, maybe I’m hoping it will help me in the long term. Hold your kids tight. I know they’re tough to deal with sometimes, but man... aren’t they just everything and then some? Much love to all you parents.
 
@pudnanewell1986 My sister recently has a stillbirth and was told by her therapist that grief and joy can coexist. You can mourn your son’s twin and still find joy in the things your son is achieving. It’s not a bad thing. That sounds horribly traumatic and infant and pregnancy loss just sucks. What you are feeling though is normal, healthy, and valid.
 
@pudnanewell1986 I haven't lost a child myself, but I think that as life goes on it'll get easier though. My aunt lost her 15 year old in a house fire about 15 years ago, and for the first few years all she thought about was her daughter and everything she did was for her. Now when her daughter is mentioned in memories at family gatherings, she joins in laughing and shares her own memories, while also making sure to visit her grave and have a proper cry on her birthday. I think it only took her about five years to get to that state of acceptance.

You'll never not miss your baby and cry for them, but it WILL get easier with time.
 
@incristalone Reminds me of Kahlil Gibran on Joy & Sorrow: "When you are joyous, look deep into your heart and you shall find it is only that which has given you sorrow that is giving you joy. When you are sorrowful look again in your heart, and you shall see that in truth you are weeping for that which has been your delight."
 
@incristalone This is very true. I recently met an acquaintance who had just had a baby. They confided in me that they had lost a fullterm baby last year. They are very happy about having their little one now.

I had miscarriages myself, and I could not help thinking that baby 2 would not have come into existence if baby 1 had not died. It's the same with every baby born after miscarriage or stillbirth. The rainbow baby would not be here if the previous pregnancy had had a better outcome. Being alive is a weird thing.
 
@scdanladd I felt/feel the same after my first miscarriage and subsequent positive pregnancy weeks later. I wanted that first baby. But I wouldn’t have my son if that baby had been viable. It’s a strange thing - to feel joy in something painful. I felt it the entire pregnancy. That and fear that I hadn’t “waited” long enough and that something bad was going to happen. For some reason I thought I had to menstruate before getting pregnant. It turned out the miscarriage basically actually acts as menstruation and you can become pregnant just days later. I was shocked at the time. Took months for me to process.
 
@imchance I feel that. My happiest pregnancy was my first one. I was glowing, so ridiculously happy, touching my belly all the time. That lasted 8 weeks. I never got that feeling back. I used joked that I am the president of the association of panicky pregnant women. After an appointment all was well as I had just seen a living fetus. Then as time went on, I started worrying again. It got better when I could feel the movements but I never got that careless happiness back.

I had a miscarriage, a menstruation, a healthy pregnancy with my first child.

When we tried again, I miscarried at 7 weeks. It hurt way less because I only lost one pregnancy, not the chance at children per se (which was what my first loss due to financial stuff felt like), and I knew I could carry to term by then and had my rainbow child already.

It was like your pregnancy: I started spotting on the 10th of the month. Stopped bleeding on the 19th. Had sex on the 22nd and 25th or 26th. One of these resulted in my second child. My obgyn was kinda speechless. In retrospect, this is kinda what my second is like. Her way or the highway.

A friend studying to be a doctor told me that she had been told by an older obgyn that a healthy pregnancy directly after a miscarriage is quite common. She explained it with the body already being prepared and hormony.
 
@pudnanewell1986 My daughter was stillborn at 5 months, and though I have my son now and I love him very much I think about her everyday and wonder how different things would be if my son had a big sister.

These feelings may not go away, but they're 100% normal. Hang in there, and consider counseling if you feel your grief is interfering with your life.
 
@pudnanewell1986 I lost a twin as well, a bit further along in my pregnancy, my daughter is turning 11 this week so it was a long time ago. I have fertility issues so I was unable to conceive again after I had my daughter. She’s a happy healthy thriving only child. But I can’t say it still does not hurt. My daughter is always telling me how she needs a sibling and fees incomplete (which makes me wonder if there was some sort of bond in the womb). But that said, my family of three is perfect and we are happy with our life. But it’s normal to grieve, especially for you since this is new. I never had a chance to fully grieve, everyone basically said I should appreciate my healthy daughter and be done with it. But I think pushing down my sadness at first was unhealthy. So let yourself grieve. After you are done grieving, appreciate your beautiful baby.
 
@momullins We had no choice but to do the same. Our boy was in and out of hospitals and such for all kinds of specialist appointments because he had been diagnosed prebirth with IA, which ended up being a false alarm despite the MRI, but still had symptoms. Thankfully he grew out of the symptoms (with assistance).
 
@katrina2017 My daughter did find out, though well before I planned to tell her. She found some ultrasound pictures and was asking me about them and why there were two babies (they had Baby A and Baby B notes on the pictures). She was around 5/6, a bit young to understand but I was honest with her about what happened. It did upset her a bit and sometimes she will mention her brother. It’s funny I never told her the sex but somehow she knew it was a boy. I really do believe there was some sort of connection there.
 
@momullins I 100% believe in a connection between twins. There is no way you could convince me that two humans growing together don’t have shared thoughts or feelings.
 
@momullins If you don't mind, I have a book recommendation for your daughter for when she is a little older: Theo's Odyssey by Catherine Clement.

I read it at about 13 or 14 years old. It's about a boy, Theo; who is having some mysterious illness, and his aunt believes that he needs a spiritual jouney and takes him around the world to exoerience different religions and believes, and also to explore his stillborn twinsister and to heal. I really liked that book and (a twin myself) have thought about it on and off during the last 20 years.

I see on amazon and good reads that those who read it as an adult do not particularly like it, while those who read it as a teenager loved it.
 
@pudnanewell1986 I had a stillborn daughter in 2017 and quickly thereafter got pregnant with twins. One of them stopped developing in the first trimester and our second son was born a year after the stillbirth. A lot of people think they should just be grateful for having one surviving baby, but the fact is that a lost twin is still a loss. It's ok to mourn what could have been, even while being thankful for what is.
 
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