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View Full Version : Originally: logansmommy082605's October 15th


CaptHeather
10-19-2007, 12:32 PM
Pages: 1
logansmommy082605
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Reged: 10/01/05
Posts: 10887
Loc: in the land of crazies October 15th * X-posted on gen.board**
#474026 - 10/13/06 03:48 PM Edit Reply Quote Quick Reply



October 15th is Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day across the world. We would like to invite you to take part in the global 'Wave of Light'. Simply light a candle at 7pm and leave it burning for at least 1 hour to join us in remembering all babies that have died durAing pregnancy, at, during or after birth.
This can be done individually or in a group, at home or in a communal space. Wherever you do this, you will be joining a global wave of light in memory of all the babies who lit up our lives for such a short time.



Setting aside such a day as October 15—Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day—becomes a most important step in a parent’s healing. This is a public acknowledgement of the grief that parents are holding deep within their hearts. This day allows parents to say, “My loss was real. It hurts. I want to tell you about it. And, I want to be able to grieve the fact that part of my life was taken away.”



More than 26,000 women each year in the United States, and 4.5 million worldwide will deliver a stillborn baby. The majority will never know why their babies died. Few will be offered adequate guidance on coping with the devastating loss of a child they never got to know.



Many parents who have suffered early child loss find great healing and comfort by coming together with others who have endured a similar loss and doing such things as reading a poem or letter written in memory of their baby. Others find it healing to release a balloon and use that as a ceremonial letting go of some of their grief in an attempt to move forward. Many find great comfort in giving their miscarried baby a name, and having a memorial plaque made in memory of their child. Others find great comfort in going to a chapel and lighting a candle as a symbol of hope in memory of their child.



There is nothing a parent can do to bring complete closure to a grief as deep as the loss of a child. That includes the loss of a child early on in miscarriage, stillbirth, or neonatal death. But, being able to validate publicly those feeling of loss to others is the beginning of that all-important journey of healing. Parents need to know that others acknowledge their loss as real