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I Like The Look Of This Bright Light, But...

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Nothing ever goes right!:'( why does everything always end up so negative?:'(

I have been having bleeding, during my pregnancy, and sharp pains in my lower belly.. Friday night the bleeding got a lot worse, and had lots of stringy blood like blood clots. I didn't want to believe what had happened so I carried on as normal, until I started to have pain when I was with my boyfriend on Saturday.

We decided to go to the doctors on Sunday, I told him everything that happened, and he suspected miscarriage. I got taken to the hospital, where I had blood tests and people check my down stairs area. They told me that I was miscarrying. I had to go and have a scan straight away.

The whole time I was crying, this baby was supposed to make everything better in life, it was going to be a new beginning. I had the scan, and there was no baby:'( I kept telling them to keep looking, you will find it. But they couldn't.

My boyfriend was in floods of tears also, we both really wanted this baby.
I still cant get over it, I haven't left the house since, I haven't eaten, spoken to anyone, hardly even spoken to my boyfriend. I just don't feel up to any of it.

I feel like nothing more can go wrong for me, I'm 15years old, and I've already been through the trauma of rape, and now this. There's not much point of me being here.
 
Shannon... whilst a miscarriage is a devasting event, I have to say, it also can be a good thing considering you're 15 years of age and this was an accident.

Seriously, do you really want to be a teenage parent? Do you not understand the commitment being a parent involves? Babies growup... there like puppies, cute and fun when small, then expensive and time consuming as they continue to grow. They bring lots of joy into the world, absolutely... but when 15 years of age, seriously... is this what you really want with your life? To be a teen mother?

I'm not having a go at you here, but I am asking you a legitimate question. Seriously... do you really comprehend and understand the responsibility you nearly had at 15? You're not even of consenting age to have sex, let alone you are doing so... and then now wanting to be pregnant by the sounds of it, based on you miscarriaged due to what was an accident pregnancy in the first place.

Are you trying to find a connection to something in the thought it will help you recover from being raped? A child won't achieve that... it will actually make things worse.

Why not use this lesson to not make the same mistake twice, get help with processing your rape, get your head functioning correctly again, get an education and qualification, get employed, then think about children a little older, not 15 years of age.
 
Shannon,

I too am sorry for your loss. It must be devastating to have just got your head round this, and then it all goes wrong. However I must agree with Anthony. You have plenty of time. I know it will not bring 'this' baby back, but you have every opportunity to become a loving parent when the time suits you.

So, take stock, get your head sorted, grieve your loss and then plan for your future as a much stronger, healthier person.

Take care
Lucy x
 
I do realise that right now wouldn't be the best time to have a baby, but it happened, and although I knew I was not ready, I'd make myself be ready. There wouldn't of been a lot I could've done about it. So I Would've worked at it, and try to be the best Mother I could!

But now obviously I have lost the baby, yeah I am very upset and I wish I still had my baby, And I think you're right, It probably was a 'good thing', obviously I'm not ready for a baby.

If I hadn't of miscarried then I would be a teen mum to be. And a proud teen mum to be. I don't care about what others think, It's my life, and my choice. (I'm not having a go, just saying(:)

Yeah, I did think by having this baby it would of took away some of the pain from my rape, and people may stop talking about that, and talk about me being a teen mum. So yeah, I guess I did think it would help me recover.

When the time is right for me, pregnancy will happen, right now I am going to try focus on my education (which is very hard.) and get a good job, because I would like my baby to be brought up the right way, and be given everything it deserves, and to be spoilt and to have lots of clothes, and toys to play with, food to eat, and somewhere nice for us to live!:)
 
Hi Shannon,

I am very sorry about your loss. I know that it is very difficult to wrap your head around.
I lost a baby when I was 17. Although it was not planned, I thought, finally someone that will love me in return and will not hurt me.

It has been eleven years and although if i had the baby, I would have loved the baby, I see now eleven years later that really and truly it was for the best that I had a miscarriage. There is no way that I could have properly taken care of a baby and myself at that age.

The right timing will come one day.

I know that doesn’t change things but take the time to grieve your loss, as you have suffered a great loss.

Take Care.
 
Shannon,

I'm going to open my big mouth on this thread and you're not likely going to enjoy what I have to say, but if my daughter ever had to turn to a sex abuse forum for support, I hope someone would think of her interests and not so much her feelings.

You are a child. You should not be having sex. Period. You are behaving like an adult, and so I will treat you as such, by telling it to you straight.

At 15, you have a lifetime of pain and sorrow to cope with and children will ONLY exacerbate the situation. My children are honestly, my Achilles Heal. If someone wants to hurt me they can easily use my children to cause an amount of pain that I could never otherwise imagine. You see, when your children are hurt, they cry and they don't just cry when it happens, they cry as they're healing too. If, as a parent, you take on some of the blame for their getting hurt, whether deserved or not, then every time they cry... it is like a knife in your side. Imagine if they are hurt in a way that was quite traumatic, maybe it had elements of the traumas you have faced, then that knife in your side creates an infected wound that just keeps festering until it covers your heart to protect you from your child's pain while eating away at your ability to provide empathy for your child.

What if you don't know all that you've lived through yet, Shannon? What if I told you that at MY age, 40years old, with children who have lived through my trauma ages and have more to come, I am just now coming to terms with how my parents had f*cked up so royally. I didn't know, at your age, that they were so neglectful, that they were so emotionally abusive, that they were (I honestly believe this and at the same time I truly believe that they didn't consciously want this) setting me up for failure because my being a failure made them a success. It's true. You'd have to read why me being a failure would make them justified... but just trust me. Parents don't always make the right choices for their children. I didn't know that at your age. I learned it by parenting my own children.

Further, my parents were married, planned to have two kids, were happy to have me, were financially prepared and committed to raising a family together... PLUS, my dad had graduated from college before they got married and my mom had graduated from high school and worked to help support my dad through college. They meant to have me... and they still f*cked up royally.

You are 15 years old. How can you possibly do anything other than what your mother has done for you? When your child reminds you of yourself, or when you try to respond to your child ... YOU WILL react like your mother... no matter how old you get. The only thing that will change that is analyzing it, and sometimes you won't know until you've done it that you shouldn't have done it... and then you have to deal with the consequences of That.

You know that it actually changes a child's thinking when you YELL at it? Do you know how often I've yelled at my young kids? And I want them, I love them, I can provide for them, I am married with a committed loving husband who is a good father... but I still made mistakes. It's not easy to relate to other people... and your children are going to rely on YOU and the way that you TREAT them... the way you look at them, respond to them... and in a myriad of different nonverbal ways, you will teach your children whether they are valuable, worthy, safe, loved, interesting, funny, intelligent, reliable, useful, productive, enjoyable, ... these things are not easy to teach when mom is depressed, under a lot of social pressure, being put down by others... etc.

You have a LOT of growing up to do. And I remember when that was an insult, but that is truly not what is meant here. Wisdom comes with experience and you don't have enough experience to help your children deal with bullies in school, feelings of sadness, ...etc. You need to experience how to handle those things for yourself, so you can advise your children when it is their turn. Likely it will overwhelm you to pieces when they experience similar social bullying... and likely one of them will. So,

What I'd like to suggest that you do is use this experience of almost motherhood and write down a long list of hopes that you have for your children; including but not limited to:

Educational achievement
Employment Goals
Social Acceptance
Independence
Happiness - and what would that consist of..

I expect you to turn this list on yourself, and keep in mind that at 15 your child will still be very much your responsibility. They will not be ready to move out yet, they will be seeking your approval STILL even though they may not want you to know it, and they will ALWAYS want your love.. they will not be prepared for our world of predators seeking the confidence of a young girl aged 0-25... especially. So, as I see it... really... you have at least 10 more years of being a PRIME target for sexual abuse and other schemes. Not to scare you or anything, but to alert you that you already have a child to take care of... yourself.

I will thank god for you that you had this miscarriage, and I hope you will understand that I am not unfeeling about your disappointment, but I understand what you want vs. what you will get... and it's way off.

Good luck to you Shannon. I'm glad you found this forum and I hope you will keep seeking support along your path. No one is perfect, and everyone's road is different, but you choose for yourself which direction your life takes when you decide what activities to pursue... adult activities are reserved for adults because when they go wrong they go really wrong... and they hurt so much more than losing a football game or flunking a test.
 
Shannon,

I'm so sorry for what you've had to go through, but Muzik is right. As much as it's painful to miscarry, you're still a baby yourself and it may not feel like that now, but when you look back, in 10 years, even 5, you will see that.

Motherhood changes your whole world. When you have someone so completely and utterly dependant on you, if you're having a rough day, tough! You've got a baby to feed, nappies to change, tons of housework to do. Even with a brilliant support network (which it sounds as if you have) it's unbelievably hard and stressful.

I'd just turned 19 when I had my first baby, like you, I didn't plan, but I was already engaged, my husband (then fiance) had just joined the police force and we owned our own house. 19 was still young and although I'd never regret it, I wish I'd dealt with my PTSD first. My children have witnessed alot of depression, seen their mother with little self respect and has moments when I can flip out for no reason. And they KNOW that there's something wrong. At my worst, they become destructive and confused, and they are the main reason I'm trying to heal, so none of my problems run off onto them.

Try and think of it as a blessing in disguise. You still need to grieve and that will take time. Miscaraige is still very misunderstood and there can be a number of reasons why your body chooses to abort, one of which can be as simple as you have enough on your plate. You've been through something terrible and you need to heal.

I sympathise, I really do, but before you start wanting to take care of a baby, you need to look after yourself. You're young with so much ahead of you. My advice; deal with your trauma and then if you and your BF are still together in a few years and you're in a position (financially and emotionally), you can try then.

Take care xx
 
Thank you, I understand what you are saying.

I've had to grow up a lot sooner then most 15year old's. I honestly do not feel like a 15 year old. Most 15year old's are out partying, or hanging around, round their friends houses having fun, being a normal teen. Where as I'm sat inside on my laptop, music on and mainly on this forum. I only ever go to either my Dad's house, or my boyfriends.

I feel like my friends don't bother, because I don't want to be out getting drunk and having party's like they do. So we only really speak during school, and They are always talking about the Party they have just been to, or planning another party, or what there doing on the week end. (I know were not talking about this, but thought I'd write it anyway)

I know I have years and years ahead of me to have children, but many teen mums would never go back and change what they done, once they meet their little one. And I don't really have a life anyway, This baby would of been the start of a new me, and I didn't just want the baby to help me recover my rape. I wanted it to love me back, love me like I would love it. Be mine, to cuddle, someone I can help, someone I can be there for, someone I can call my own.

Unfortunately I had the miscarriage and yeah, everyone can say that maybe that was the best thing. But to me it wasn't.. I was blessed with a child, and it was taken away from me:'( And I'm going to miss it, the feeling of having YOUR baby growing away inside of you.

I do have experience, not as a mother, but as a loving aunty who lives with her nephew. who see's him every day, who plays with him everyday. Helps my sister out with him everyday. And he treats me like any normal person, where as everyone else treats me as 'the girl who got raped' and they act completely different around me to what they do any other family member. Sometimes I feel like I'm invisible. Sometimes I wish I was invisible.

I do realise that like I would need to concur my fears of going out and walking around if I had a baby, but the baby would be like protection against all that (and no this is not why I wanted this baby) But it would give me a lot of confidence, because I would have to. And people would stop talking about the rape, and talk about me being a 'teen-mum' instead. And I'd be a very proud Teen mum:)

And ill take your advice, and do that list thing. Thank you
 
If you hadn't lost the baby, everyone on here would be very supportive whatever you decided with no judging, but were trying to show you the positives, even if its not what you want to hear.

I've had to grow up a lot sooner then most 15year old's

I get what you're saying, most of us on here can relate. But, (and I think it's quite common or it could just be me) absolutely, we've seen a side to the world that no one should ever see and to an extent, we have to grow, forced to, on the otherhand (and you probably won't see it yet) but now, at 26, there are emotional aspects where I'm stuck, like a teen; it's almost as if you cling to a piece of your childhood because it was robbed from you, again, maybe something you'll understand when you're older.

But you have youth on your side. Healing from trauma will be easier to do while your still young, you still haven't had time to mould and cement your adult mind and put up as many barriers around your trauma. I left it 13 yrs (not from choice; I didn't know there was something wrong with me), and for those who left it longer, their journey will take longer because they put more barriers up.

I'm very proud that you are able to acknowledge your pain and trauma at such a young age, it's a very, very brave thing to do and your journey to recovery should be easier (still difficult) at your age (or in theory) and then maybe by the time you're 17, you can enjoy at least the remainder of your childhood and be like every other teen, only you have the experience to be more cautious because you know what a big, bad world it is out there.
 
(((((((((((Shannon))))))))))))) Hugs

I can highlight many misconceptions in your reply and give you plenty of examples of how it just isn't going to work that way, but I don't want to hurt you Shannon. I don't know if you're able to hear it.

I wish that you could get a German Shepherd puppy. Seriously. They are the greatest dogs. Get a pup and love and nurture the puppy. Take it to bed with you to cuddle. He/she will cuddle you ... of course.. they're kind of hyper to start out and like babies they won't always agree to be what you want them to be for you. But, the pup will settle down in a year or two and be acquainted with sleeping with you at night.

When that puppy is like... 6mths old, it will be large enough to scare the SHIT out of anyone who is bothering you.

Take your new found loving companion and protector to obedience classes and shower that pup with everything you have. Love, gifts, food, and OBEDIENCE obedience obedience. Training, because spending time with him/her will teach it to be more sociable with others... and therefore welcome in more homes and places.

That dog will be your best friend. And, German Shepherds are NOTORIOUS for being protective of their owners, and gentle with kids. They know the difference, and they are instinctively protective.

It will cost way less than having a baby... but will likely be between $600-1200 USD, unless you can find an adorable mix breed which is often a better choice anyway since yk inbreeding and stuff. :D

When people are experiencing loss, it really helps to have a pet... especially if you're feeling parental.

Seriously, think about it. I really care about you Shannon and I hope that you will take positive steps to gain real life experience that creates safety for yourself and your loved ones.
 
Shannon... I think you will be an excellent mum in the future, reading what you write and only being 15... quite impressive. Certainly a lot for any 15 year old to go through, and I am just glad you have hopefully learnt from it, don't make the same mistakes, and continue to take control of your life going forward. Well done...
 
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