What You Should And Shouldn’t Say To A Friend Who Miscarried

by Jennifer Oradat

The first time I had a miscarriage, I remember my phone ringing off the hook. I was swamped with condolences and well-meaning messages.

I had never felt more alone.

I appreciated the thoughts and support from friends and family, but what I wanted was to vent. I wanted to be angry. I wanted someone—everyone—just to listen to me.

What I got was unsolicited advice and commiserations (with a few notable exceptions).

I learned something valuable during those days. When a friend is grieving the loss of an unborn child, there are things that you just shouldn’t say. Here are a few things that should never come out of your mouth towards a friend who miscarried, and some pretty good alternatives.

DON’T SAY: “I’ve been there.” Well, hooray for the Miscarriage Club! Seriously? No, you haven’t been here. Maybe you had a miscarriage, too, but you’re not living my life. You have no idea how this will affect me.

SAY THIS: “I remember when I had my miscarriage…” It’s a gentle lead-in, and allows you to share your experiences without encroaching on mine.

DON’T SAY: “It’ll get better.” You can’t promise that. Maybe it got better for you. And maybe “better” is subjective.

SAY THIS: “It got easier for me.” I really do want to hear that it got easier. I want to know what you did to recover from this loss. I want hope that I’ll eventually find some semblance of normal. Just do it without making empty promises, because I can’t handle that.

DON’T SAY: “You’ll have another baby.” Gee, thanks! I had no idea that babies were so easily replaced. Had I but known that this baby shouldn’t mean so much to me, I’d have stopped crying immediately. WHAT THE HELL?

SAY THIS: “…” That’s right. Say nothing about having babies in the future. I’m still dealing with the one that just died inside my body. My future has collapsed around me. Focus on the problem at hand and stop borrowing trouble.

DON’T SAY: “You weren’t that far along, so it’s not like it was even a baby yet.” Hey, asshat, guess what? You don’t get to decide when I become emotionally attached to the child in my womb. The split second that I became pregnant, I became a mom.

SAY T
HIS: “I’m sorry for your loss.” That’s what it is. I’m grieving the loss of a child that I never even got to hold. I’m grieving for the family that will never exist with that little person in it. I’m grieving, not just the pregnancy, but the birth and the birthdays, the life that will never be.

Women handle miscarriages in a variety of ways. The best way to help them is to listen, first and foremost. If, after that, you still feel the need to speak up, be empathetic and loving, and remember what not to say.

Jennifer ispotlight-Jennifers Editor-in-Chief at http://MomBabble.com. She’s also a stay-at-home mom, military wife, fount of useless knowledge, and the best recipe follower in a .01 sq. mi. radius. You can find her and Mom Babble on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram.

2 thoughts on “What You Should And Shouldn’t Say To A Friend Who Miscarried

  1. Yup, right on! Since mine was so late (18 weeks) I got the gamut — all of those, and more. One of my favorite (from my department chair) was “I’m sure you’ll be successful next time.” It’s so perfect, because it simultaneously communicates that I’m a failure AND that my baby didn’t matter and was replaceable.

    For late losses, some of these apply doubly. I really didn’t want to here about how you had a five-week loss in between your three beautiful children and you’re sure I’ll be pregnant again in no time. There are very real physical differences between a first trimester loss and a second trimester loss, and mine came with complications that dragged on for months before we were even able to start trying again. A single first-trimester loss has no medical implications for future pregnancies; my particular etiology of second-trimester loss means that all my future pregnancies are high-risk.

    The thing I try really, really hard to keep in mind when people say these things to me is that they are trying and they mean well. An awkward, misguided attempt at comfort was to me better than silence — when someone didn’t even acknowledge my loss, I felt even more alone. The whole situation is crap and nobody knows what to say, so at least these people are trying?

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