A mother has spoken out about the 'shame' and 'embarrassment' she felt after suffering two miscarriages just months apart from one another. Natalie Roberts' first miscarriage happened in late 2019 when she was eight weeks pregnant.
Just three months later she had another miscarriage when she was 13 weeks pregnant. 31-year-old Natalie haemorrhaged and began bleeding heavily.
She was rushed to hospital where she had an emergency operation to remove the foetus from her womb. “The main thing I felt was that I was embarrassed,” she told the Manchester Evening News .
"I felt shameful that I couldn’t carry my babies for whatever reason, and if my partner told X, Y or Z I would be really annoyed. That was my overriding emotion – you don’t see it presented as being normal.
“Everyone reacts different. There will be women trying for a baby for a long time who will take the loss a lot harder. I didn’t want to talk about it, it felt like a taboo.
“Because they were quite close together, it caught me off guard. The second miscarriage was really traumatic and led to me having a change of mindset in my life.
“The thought that I was going to die crossed my mind in that situation. I wasn’t aware those types of things can happen when you lose a baby, it’s brushed under the carpet.
“When I came round after my operation, the midwife came over and said: ‘You’re young, it happens, you’ll be fine’. It made me feel like it was something I couldn’t talk about.
“With the first one, obviously I was sad but got over it quite quickly. For it to happen again, that’s what hit me the hardest. I didn’t expect it to happen twice. I thought I would have one blip and I would be done.”
Natalie later went on to have a baby boy, who she named Raife. She now lives in the Stockton Heath area of Cheshire along with her five-year-old daughter Anaya and partner Rhys.
Following the birth of her son, Natalie did not feel ready to return to work full time – instead wanting to spend as much time with her children as possible. While on maternity leave, she decided to set up her small business, Hey Bear , offering baby muslins, blankets, bibs and accessories.
“I wanted to ensure I broke the taboo on baby loss and use the opportunity to raise money for Tommy's charity,” she continued. “To talk about it felt like a taboo. I wanted to make sure that wasn’t the case and that I could use my platform to talk about it confidently.”