The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Christmas pain for the parents who lost child

- CHERYL PEEBLES

As Janine Norris enjoys Christmas dinner with her excited children there will be a deep ache in her heart at an empty space at the table.

Daughter Sylvie was stillborn eight years ago, and the joy at seeing Rory, 7, and Adara, 5, tear open their presents will be tinged with pain that their sister will never do so with them.

The festive period can be particular­ly difficult for parents like Janine and husband Callum who have lost a baby during pregnancy or shortly after birth.

Janine told us her family’s story to raise awareness of the Sands winter appeal to support the work of the stillbirth and neonatal death charity in helping bereaved parents, improving care and funding research.

She described Sands as a lifeline and said: “If we didn’t have Sands I genuinely don’t know how I would have survived.”

Sylvie was born asleep on February 1 2013.

Just weeks earlier Janine, then five months pregnant, and Callum had celebrated Christmas thrilled to be expecting their first child.

Janine said: “That Christmas I was pregnant with her was probably the happiest Christmas I’ve ever had. She was starting to move around, it was really, really lovely.”

The Christmas after losing Sylvie there was no tree, no decoration­s and the couple closed the curtains – just seeing a Christmas advert on television would make Janine break down.

Their heartbreak began at Janine’s 28-week check-up when a scan revealed no heartbeat.

When Janine said she hadn’t felt her baby move that day the midwife tried to reassure her, chuckling at her first-time mum nerves. Then she stopped laughing, unable to detect a heartbeat.

A sonographe­r confirmed the devastatin­g news and Janine said: “At that moment, I felt almost like Alice in Wonderland; I felt like I’d just dropped through the world.

“Everything turned upside down.”

The next day Janine delivered Sylvie in the Victoria Hospital, Kirkcaldy.

Distraught, bewildered and shocked, she and Callum left the hospital clutching only a pink memory box with some photograph­s and a lock of their tiny daughter’s hair.

For months Janine, who works for two charities, barely left the house.

She said: “It destroyed me. I cried for months and months on end, pretty much the full first year.”

But a friend had told her about Sands and the couple attended a family day that summer.

They began attending monthly support meetings and when Janine fell pregnant with Rory there was help to deal with the emotions that brought.

Janine, now chairwoman of the charity’s Fife group, said: “Having people to talk to and having that safe place was just absolutely incredible, a lifesaver really.”

“This Christmas the family will attend Sands’ annual service, which Janine now organises.

She said: “We get a little bauble to honour our babies and we write a message on them and hang them on the tree. You see the tree absolutely covered in baubles and you know that every bauble is a baby that’s being missed.”

Christmas – like birthdays and other anniversar­ies – is challengin­g for all the parents Sands supports, Janine said.

“You are always conscious of that missing space at the table,” she said.

“All the parents have their own wee traditions; we all have our own way of rememberin­g our babies at Christmas, just making sure there’s that tiny heartshape­d space carved out for them.”

Sands has a phone helpline – 0808 164 3332 – email helpline helpline@ sands.org.uk and more informatio­n is available on its website.

 ?? ?? REMEMBERIN­G: Janine Norris with husband Callum and children Rory, 7, and Adara, 5. Their daughter Sylvie was stillborn eight years ago.
REMEMBERIN­G: Janine Norris with husband Callum and children Rory, 7, and Adara, 5. Their daughter Sylvie was stillborn eight years ago.

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