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In a text quoted by the Evening Standard, the Duchess of Sussex described the loss of a baby as “excruciating pain.”
“Losing a child means carrying with you the excruciating pain that many, but only a few, speak of,” he said.
In a text message called Losses We Share, Meghan Markle wrote that she was in intense pain holding Archie’s son in her arms.
“I leaned on the floor with him in my hands, nodded with the lullaby so that we could both stay calm – a happy tune, as opposed to the feeling that something bad had happened.
Pressing my firstborn into my hands I knew I was losing my second. A few hours later, I was lying on the hospital bed, holding my husband’s hand. I felt peace in the palm of his hand, kissing the wet teeth of our tears. Looking at the cold white walls, mist appeared in my eyes. I tried to imagine how we would handle it. “
Prince Harry’s wife continued to talk about how she tried not to show in public that such a disaster had occurred and recalled an interview with journalist Tom Bradby filmed during her trip to South Africa. When asked how the duchess was feeling, she replied, “Thank you for asking. Not many people asked me if I was okay. “
“I responded openly, not knowing that it would affect so many (people – past ed.) – new mothers and older mothers, and anyone who suffered silently in their own way.
My unprepared answer seems to have given people permission to tell the truth. However, it was not the open answer that helped me the most, but the question itself, ”he continued.
Meghan Markle said that when she saw the man’s pain in the hospital “while trying to glue my broken fragments together,” she realized that the only way to recover was to ask herself “Are you okay?”
In a text for The New York Times, the Duchess of Sussex also recalled the 2020 trials, the “loss and pain” caused by the health crisis and the Black Lives Matter protests.
“Where there used to be a community, now there is fragmentation. We don’t just fight for our opinions on the facts; we are polarized as to whether a fact is in fact a fact. We disagree on whether science is real. We do not agree on whether the election is won or lost. We do not agree on the value of the pledge, “wrote Meghan Markle.
The duchess then recalled an incident in her teens when she saw a woman crying while hailing a taxi on a New York street. The driver told him not to worry, because someone would actually ask him if he was okay.
“Now, after so many years, in isolation and quarantine, mourning the loss of a child, my country, having lost the general conviction of what is true, is thinking of that woman from New York. What would have happened if no one had stopped? What if no one saw her suffer? What if no one helped her? The Duchess continued.
I would go back in time and ask the taxi driver to stop. I understand that this is the danger of a life isolated from others, when experiencing sad, terrible or sacred moments in solitude. Nobody stops asking “Are you okay?”
Meghan Markle wrote that she was disappointed to learn how many women are having miscarriages, but conversations about it are still considered “taboo, marked (unjustifiable shame),” so she urged her loved ones and friends over the next vacation to ask if They were OK.
Chrissy Teigen was praised last month for reporting that she had had a miscarriage and for sharing photos from the hospital that captured the pain. The woman wrote on a social network that she lost her son Jack in the 20th week of her pregnancy.
Chrissy Teigen, who is raising two children, said she “knew she had to share her story.” Meghan Markle also urged others to share her grief.
“We know that when people ask how someone is doing and when they really listen to the answer, with open hearts and minds, the burden of pain becomes easier for all of us. By inviting ourselves to share the pain, we are taking the first steps toward healing together, ”wrote the Duchess of Sussex.
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